Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2011-07-11,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information...
> see my 2021-07-20 companion posting on "Reposted Questions from
> the Canadian Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
Game 9 is over and JOSHUA KREITZER has an easy win. Hearty
congratulations!
> ** Game 9, Round 9 - Canadiana History - Trudeaumania
> These questions are about Pierre Trudeau. (Yes, it's the third
> Canadiana round in the same game. Not my doing!)
And on top of that, half of the challenge round was Canadiana.
> 1. In 1949 Trudeau gave a speech on human rights in a Quebec mining
> town which was suffering through a bitter strike. Name the town.
2011 answer: Asbestos. 2021 answer: It's now called Val-des-Sources.
> 2. Which influential political journal did Trudeau co-found in 1950?
"Cité Libre".
> 3. On 1966-04-04, Trudeau was appointed to his first federal
> cabinet -- in what post?
Minister of Justice.
> 4. Before entering politics, Trudeau was a law professor at which
> university?
Université de Montréal.
> 5. What was the maiden name of Trudeau's mother, Grace?
Elliot -- his middle name.
> 6. In 1966 he met Margaret, later his wife. What was her maiden
> name?
Sinclair.
> 7. "If all politicians were like Pierre Trudeau, there would be
> world peace." Who said this in 1969 after a meeting, in Canada,
> with the PM?
John Lennon. 4 for Pete.
> 8. The CBC made """two""" dramas on the life of Pierre Trudeau,
> "Trudeau" and the prequel "Trudeau 2: A Maverick in the Making".
> Name either of the two actors who played Trudeau.
Colm Feore, Stephane Demers.
I don't know if there have been more since.
> 9. In 1971 Trudeau mouthed some naughty words beginning with F at
> opposition MPs in the House of Commons. When asked by reporters
> about it, he told them he had said what now-famous phrase?
"Fuddle-duddle". 4 for Joshua.
To be exact: "'fuddle-duddle', or something like that".
> 10. During the 1970s FLQ crisis, Trudeau was asked how far he
> would go to stop the terrorists. What was his response?
"Just watch me." 4 for Joshua.
You will remember this as the title of a biography of Trudeau that
was a decoy on a handout in another season.
> ** Game 9, Round 10 - Challenge - Brought to You by the Letter G
> In each case name the person, place, or whatever that's being
> described *and* has the initials indicated in each category title.
> *NOTE*: In each case you must name the person, place, or whatever
> that's being described *and* has the initials indicated in each
> category title or preamble.
In the original game, this round was tied with Round 3
(the geography round) for being the easiest.
> * A. Sports GGs
> A1. What is the name shared by the athletic teams that represent
> Queen's University? (The long form, to fit the category.)
Golden Gaels.
> A2. What is the name shared by the athletic teams that represent
> the University of Guelph?
Guelph Gryphons.
> * B. G-ography: Canadian Towns
> B1. The Newfoundland town where you'll find streets named
> after Amelia Earhart, Eddie Rickenbacker, Charles Lindbergh,
> and Marc Garneau.
Gander. 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Joshua, and Pete.
Aviation was important to the town in the days when transatlantic
flights generally needed refueling en route, because this was one
of the places where they could do it.
> B2. The Manitoba town where you'll find the largest concentration
> of Icelanders outside of Iceland.
Gimli. 4 for Dan Tilque and Joshua.
This town also has an important aviation connection, since it's where
an airliner that ran out of fuel made a succesful emergency landing
in 1983.
> * C. Golly Gee! Cartoon Exclamations
> These exclamations each contain two or more words, at least two
> of which begin with the letter G.
> C1. What exclamation is associated with Perry White,
> editor-in-chief of the Daily Planet?
"Great Caesar's Ghost!" 4 for Dan Tilque, Joshua, and Pete.
> C2. What exclamation do Charlie Brown and other Peanuts
> characters frequently use?
"Good grief!" 4 for everyone -- Dan Blum, Erland, Dan Tilque,
Joshua, and Pete.
> * D. New Wave BGs
> D1. He sang "Soviet Jewelry (Nyet, Nyet, Soviet)".
B.B. Gabor.
> D2. He was the lead singer for The Boomtown Rats.
Sir Bob Geldof. 4 for Erland and Joshua.
> * E. "Better Known As" GGs
> E1. 1970s British TV personality Graham Kerr: better known
> as the...?
Galloping Gourmet. 4 for Dan Tilque, Joshua, and Pete.
> E2. Elusive Confederate Army commander John Singleton Mosby:
> better known as the...?
Gray Ghost. 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.
Someone tried "Galloping Ghost". *That* nickname belonged to Red
Grange, a star player with the Chicago Bears in the 1920s and '30s.
> * F. Can-Lit GGs
> These Canadian authors won Governor-General's Awards for fiction,
> and their last names (but *not* their first names) begin with G
> as well.
> F1. Toronto-based TV personality and author of the 2005
> GG-award-winning novel "A Perfect Night to Go to China".
David Gilmour.
> F2. Paris-based doyenne of Canadian letters and author of the
> 1981 GG-award-winning short story collection "Home Truths".
Mavis Gallant.
Scores, if there are no errors:
GAME 9 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 BEST
TOPICS-> Can Geo Spo Can Ent Sci Can Cha SIX
Joshua Kreitzer 8 34 36 0 36 0 8 28 150
Dan Blum 0 24 32 10 20 8 0 12 106
Pete Gayde 2 23 12 11 22 4 4 16 88
Dan Tilque 4 12 20 0 16 12 0 20 84
Erland Sommarskog 0 20 16 0 12 0 0 8 56
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "What caused the submarine to sink?"
m...@vex.net | "Dad, it was the 20,000 leaks!!"