Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2012-07-23,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information...
> see my 2021-07-20 companion posting on "Reposted Questions from the
> Canadian Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
> ** Final, Round 1 - Current Events (excerpt)
> Answer these 2012 questions if you like for fun, but for no points.
> 1. Name the Hollywood producer who died this week. He was the
> son of a famous movie mogul, but achieved success on his own
> as producer of films such as "The Sound of Music", "Patton",
> "The French Connection", "The Sting", and "Jaws". The surname
> is sufficient.
Richard Zanuck. (Son of Darryl.) Joshua and Stephen got this.
> 2. Two Seattle men returning from a trip to Vancouver were detained
> by US Customs when they tried to take six of these products
> across the border. In fact, the US has seized more than
> 60,000 of them due to concerns over of a "non-nutritive object"
> embedded in each one. What is this tasty treat?
Kinder Surprise "eggs" (chocolate eggs each enclosing a toy).
Dan Blum and Stephen got this.
In 2012 I wrote: "Wikipedia says they are sold 'all over the world
excluding the United States'". Now it says they are also banned in
Chile, while US customers can legally buy a a variant called Kinder
Joy, where the toy is packaged outside the chocolate.
> 3. Royal Envelope of Concord, Ontario, will cover 50% of the
> costs of adopting a cat or dog from the Toronto Humane Society
> -- if the animal meets a certain criterion. What is the
> requirement?
It must be black. (Black animals aren't adopted as quickly as
others.) Stephen got this.
> ** Final, Round 2 - History
> * Provinces of Ancient Rome
> In each case we name a Roman province and describe some or all of
> the places bordering it. You tell where it was located, by naming
> the corresponding modern country.
> 1. Aquitania -- bordered to the north by Lugdunensis.
France. (Lugdunensis was also in France.) 4 for Dan Tilque, Erland,
Dan Blum, and Stephen. 3 for Joshua.
> 2. Cappadocia -- bordered to the west by Galatia, and to the north
> by Pontus and the Pontus Euxinus.
Turkey. (Pontus was also in Turkey; the Pontus Euxinus was the
Black Sea.) 4 for Dan Tilque, Erland, Joshua, Pete, and Stephen.
> 3. Lusitania -- bordered to the south by Baetica and to the north
> by Tarraconensis. Lusitania extended into two modern countries:
> name either one.
Portugal, Spain. (Tarraconensis was also in those countries;
Baetica was in Spain.) 4 for Dan Tilque, Erland, Dan Blum, Joshua,
and Stephen.
> * Floor-Crossers and Party-Switchers
> In each case, name the politician.
> 4. This man was first elected to the federal Parliament for
> Vancouver Kingsway as a Liberal, later becoming Minister of
> Industry under Paul Martin. On 2006-02-06 he crossed the floor
> to become Minister of Trade for Stephen Harper. He later served
> as the Foreign Affairs Minister. He did not seek reelection
> in 2008.
David Emerson. 4 for Stephen.
> 5. This future Canadian Prime Minister resigned a seat won in the
> provincial legislature while in the Social Credit Party, to
> run federally as a Progressive Conservative.
Kim Campbell.
> 6. In 1990 this man resigned as Mulroney's Minister of the
> Environment to sit as an independent. He later joined with
> 7 other former PC and Liberal politicians to form a new party,
> under which he eventually become Leader of the Opposition.
Lucien Bouchard. (The Bloc Québécois.)
> * National Chiefs
> In each case, name the illustrated National Chief of the Assemblies
> of First Nations (AoFN).
> 7. He <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-2/chief/7.jpg> was National
> Chief from 1982 to 1985. He was elected President of the
> Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations in 1968. In 2002
> he was charged with promoting hatred over anti-Semitic remarks
> made during a speech.
David Ahenakew. (He was convicted, then acquitted on appeal.
He died in 2010.)
Sorry, only giggle points for "ah-choo!"
> 8. He <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-2/chief/8.jpg> was National
> Chief from 1985 to 1991, including he time of the Oka crisis.
> From the Northwest Territories, he was President of the Dene
> Nation. He later co-chaired the Royal Commission on Aboriginal
> Peoples. Made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1999, he
> """has""" honorary doctorates from 7 Canadian universities.
George Erasmus. (Still alive.) 4 for Stephen.
> 9. He <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-2/chief/9.jpg> was National
> Chief from 1991 to 1997. A Cree from Manitoba, as a lawyer
> he was a key strategist for the AoFN during the Oka crisis.
> As National Chief he was a key player in the Charlottetown
> Accord.
Ovide Mercredi. (Still alive.) 3 for Stephen.
(Canadian Reform Conservative) Alliance.
> 11.
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-2/party/11.png
Social Credit.
> 12.
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-2/party/12.png
Reform. (Meaning the one that first became the Alliance [answer 10]
and is now the Conservatives, not the other Reform party that is now
the Liberals, but you didn't have to be that specific.) 4 for Joshua.
> * History of Plastic Payments
> 13. Early charge cards were issued by businesses such as department
> stores, but could only be used at the issuing store. In 1950
> there appeared a charge card that was not so limited, initially
> being accepted at any of two dozen New York City establishments
> -- of a certain type, hence its name. What was this card called?
Diners Club -- as mentioned in the 1963 movie title "The Man from the
Diners' Club". 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Joshua, Pete, and Stephen.
> 14. The first card that allowed credit over time (instead of full
> payment every month) was this US card, first sent unsolicited
> in 1958 to 60,000 residents of Fresno, California. In 1977 it
> changed its name to Visa. What was the original name?
BankAmericard. 4 for Dan Tilque, Joshua, Pete, and Stephen.
3 for Dan Blum.
To expand into some other countries, Visa bought into existing
card systems, such as Chargex in Canada and Barclaycard in the UK.
The name change to Visa was worldwide, but for a while after it,
I had a card clearly marked as a Visa card, but on which the fine
print referred to it as "This Chargex card".
> 15. In 1985, Sears introduced a credit card that had no annual fee.
> What was this card called?
Discover. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Joshua, and Stephen.
> ** Final, Round 3 - Arts & Literature
This was the hardest round in the original game.
> * Posthumous Publishing
> Name the authors of these posthumously published works.
> 1. "Portrait of an Artist, as an Old Man".
Joseph Heller. 4 for Stephen.
> 2. "The Original of Laura".
Vladimir Nabokov. 4 for Stephen.
> 3. "Armageddon in Retrospect".
Kurt Vonnegut. 4 for Stephen.
> * Museum Collections
> In each case, name the museum whose permanent collection includes
> all the works shown.
You will, of course, remember some of the paintings from Game 8,
Round 3.
> 4.
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/museum/4.png
National Gallery (London). 4 for Joshua and Stephen.
They are:
* "The Umbrellas" by Pierre-Auguste Renoir;
* "Bathers at Asnières" by Georges Seurat;
* "The Arnolfini Portrait" by Jan van Eyck;
* "Sunflowers" by Vincent van Gogh;
* "Virgin and Child with St. Anne and Infant St. John the Baptist"
by Leonardo da Vinci.
> 5.
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/museum/5.png
Musée d'Orsay (Paris). 4 for Stephen.
* "Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette" by Pierre-Auguste Renoir;
* "Luncheon on the Grass" by Édouard Manet;
* self-portrait by Vincent van Gogh;
* "Arrangement in Gray and Black #1, Portrait of the Artist's
Mother" by James Whistler;
* "The Gleaners" by Jean-François Millet.
> 6.
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/museum/6.png
Museum of Modern Art (New York). 4 for Stephen. 3 for Joshua.
* "Sleeping Gypsy" by Henri Rousseau;
* "Christina's World" by Andrew Wyeth;
* "The Starry Night" by Vincent van Gogh;
* "The Dance" by Henri Matisse;
* "The Young Ladies of Avignon" by Pablo Picasso.
Gemini Awards.
Arthur Ellis Awards for crime fiction. 4 for Stephen.
As I noted in connection with the answers to Game 1, Round 3, the
organization apparently later decided decided that naming them after
an executioner was in bad taste, dropped the name Ellis, and now
just call them the Crime Writers of Canada Awards of Excellence.
Presumably they no longer look like this either!
> 9. These awards <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/award/9.png>
> are given to Quebec artists for excellence in music, TV, and
> film; they are named after a famed singer/songwriter/actor/radio
> host. In 1990 Céline Dion refused an award as anglophone artist
> of the year.
Prix Félix. 4 for Stephen.
> * Canadian Photographers
> In each case, name the photographer whose work is shown.
> 10. This Vancouver photographer creates large-scale genre scenes
> that are often staged, photographed in individual sections,
> and digitally assembled. In 2012 his picture "Dead Troops
> Talk" <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/photo/10.jpg> sold
> for $3,600,000 in New York, then a record price for a Canadian
> photograph and the third-highest price ever paid for any photo.
Jeff Wall. 4 for Stephen.
> 11. He is well known for his black-and-white photographs, usually
> taken in long exposures on old panoramic cameras. His subjects
> <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/photo/11.jpg> 18th-century
> include gardens in France and Italy, North American parks of
> F.L. Olmstead, asbestos slag heaps in Quebec, and the running
> fence along the California-Mexico border.
Geoffrey James. 4 for Stephen.
> 12. This photographer is famous for his large-format images
> of industrial landscapes. His subjects include mines, the
> Alberta tar sands, and the Three Gorges Dam in China. See:
> <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/photo/12.jpg>.
Edward Burtynsky. ("Accumulation".)
> * Born in 1912
> Last week in current events we called to mind the 100th birthday
> of Northrop Frye. Name these other people born that same year.
> (None of them lived to 100, though.)
> 13. This <
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/f-3/born/13.jpg> American
> author and critic wrote "Memoirs of a Catholic Girlhood",
> "Birds of America", and "The Group". She was famous for her
> feud with Lillian Hellman, of whom she said that every word
> Hellman wrote was a lie, including "and" and "the".
Mary McCarthy. 4 for Joshua and Stephen.
Eugene Ionesco. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Stephen.
Patrick White. 4 for Stephen.
In 2012 Dan Tilque said he was "pretty sure this guy's a Ferengi",
but I suggested he looked more like an Organian:
http://images3.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20081224091339/memoryalpha/en/images/9/9f/Organian_council_of_elders.jpg
Scores, if there are no errors:
FINAL ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
TOPICS-> His A+L
Stephen Perry 35 52 87
Joshua Kreitzer 27 15 42
Dan Tilque 24 0 24
Dan Blum 19 4 23
Pete Gayde 12 0 12
Erland Sommarskog 12 0 12
--
Mark Brader "I am taking what you write in the spirit in
Toronto which it is intended. That's the problem."
m...@vex.net -- Tony Cooper