Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 1998-02-09,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information...
> see my 2020-06-23 companion posting on "Reposted Questions from
> the Canadian the Canadian Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
Game 3 is over and JOSHUA KREITZER has won pretty handily.
Hearty congratulations!
> I wrote most or all of one of these rounds and I think 3 questions
> in the other.
I wrote most or all of the geography round, and in the challenge round,
I think I wrote question B2 and pair E.
> ** Game 3, Round 9 - Geography - Main Streets
> We name two or three main streets or highways; you name the city.
> Note: most are in Canada or the US, but some are overseas.
This was the 4th-easiest round of the season.
> 1. La Grande Allée, Rue St-Louis, Rue St-Pierre.
Québec. 3 for Dan Blum. 2 for Pete.
> 2. Kingsway, Broadway, Georgia St.
Vancouver. 4 for Joshua and Erland.
> 3. State St., Dearborn St., Michigan Av. (No, it's not Detroit.)
Chicago. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, and Pete.
> 4. Moskovsky Prospekt, Nevsky Prospekt.
St. Petersburg. (We accepted Leningrad.) 4 for Erland. 3 for Joshua
and Dan Tilque.
> 5. Charles St., Commonwealth Av., Beacon St.
Boston. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, and Pete.
> 6. Charles Av., Canal St., Lafayette St.
New Orleans. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, and Dan Tilque.
> 7. Princes St. (note the single S), Queen St., Lothian Rd.
Edinburgh. 4 for Erland and Pete.
> 8. Queensway, Bank St., Wellington St.
Ottawa.
> 9. Sackville St., Barrington St., Lower Water St.
Halifax. 2 for Dan Blum.
> 10. Wilshire Blvd., Vine St., Harbor Freeway.
Los Angeles. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Pete.
> ** Game 3, Round 10 - Challenge Round
> (The categories in this round were named after teams then existing
> in our league. Including, of course, the Usual Suspects. Only two
> of these five teams were still playing at the time of the pandemic
> shutdown in 2020 -- the other one was MI5, who, as you will recall,
> were setting the questions at the time.)
This was one of four rounds all tied for being the hardest of the
season.
> * A. MI5
> A1. We've all met MI5. Some of us have heard of MI6. But there
> were other MIs, too. Who were MI19, or what did they do?
Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre: they interrogated
high-level Nazis. (The name or function was sufficient.)
> A2. And what did MI9 do?
They taught Allied personnel in World War II to escape capture,
and maintained networks in occupied Europe to help agents and downed
flyers return to Allied territory. (A partial answer was sufficient.)
> * B. Azzurri
> B1. There are really two Azzurri teams: the other one is the
> blue-jerseyed Italian national soccer team. Name the Azzurri
> goalkeeper who """holds""" the record for the most minutes
> without allowing a goal in international play.
Dino Zoff (1,142 minutes in 1972-74 -- and *still* the record in 2021).
> B2. We lied: there are three Azzurri teams. The *other* other
> one is the Italian national team that was world champion
> 13 times between 1957 and 1975 and whose members included
> Giorgio Belladonna and Benito Garozzo. What do -- well,
> what did -- they play?
Bridge, of course. 4 for Erland, Dan Blum, and Pete.
> * C. Treppenwitzers
> C1. Either tell us what the German word Treppenwitz means,
> or give the *French* phrase that is its literal translation.
> A literal translation in English will be scored as almost
> correct.
"Esprit de l'escalier", or literally "staircase wit". It's a clever
comeback or remark that you think of when it's too late to use it, as
because you are already on the stairs on your way out. 4 for Joshua,
Erland, and Dan Blum.
In 2009 I scored "having the wit of George Castanza from the TV
show 'Seinfeld'. They did an episode about it" as almost correct,
assuming that the episode was the one mentioned in the next question.
> C2. (Please decode the rot13 only after you are finished
> with C1.) A "Seinfeld" episode has one character tormented
> by Treppenwitz flying to Chicago in order to deliver a quip
> that he did not think of in time. Who is this character?
George Costanza. (Either name was sufficient.) 4 for Joshua
and Dan Blum.
> * D. Too Cool for School
> D1. Otis Redding was too cool for school: he left after grade 10.
> But Redding made it, singing hit songs like "I've Been
> Loving You Too Long" and "Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay".
> For what Memphis *label* did he record these songs?
Stax Records (not Atlantic, which distributed much of the Stax
catalog). 4 for Joshua. 2 for Pete.
> D2. The chorus of a raunchy blues song called "Good Morning
> Little Schoolgirl" asks the little schoolgirl to tell her
> parents a little white lie. What's the lie?
That the man she's bringing home is "a little schoolboy too".
(Anything along these lines was okay.)
> * E. The Usual Suspects
> E1. In the movie "Casablanca", what *actor* delivered the line
> "Round up the usual suspects"?
Claude Rains (as police captain Louis Renault). 4 for Joshua,
Dan Tilque, and Pete.
> E2. The 1995 crime movie "The Usual Suspects" won two Academy
> Awards, one for acting, one not. Name *either one* of the
> two people who won the awards.
Kevin Spacey (Best Supporting Actor); Christopher McQuarrie (Best
Original Screenplay). 4 for Joshua (the hard way) and Dan Blum.
Scores, if there are no errors:
GAME 3 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 BEST
TOPICS-> His Can Art Sci Ent Lit Geo Cha SIX
Joshua Kreitzer 28 4 36 20 28 31 23 20 166
Dan Blum 16 0 24 32 20 18 21 16 131
Pete Gayde 12 16 24 20 12 16 18 10 106
Bruce Bowler 20 8 28 32 -- -- -- -- 88
Dan Tilque -- -- 16 40 -- -- 11 4 71
Erland Sommarskog 16 0 0 11 -- -- 12 8 47
--
Mark Brader | It sure does have some pretty colors. True, the film is...
Toronto | a failure in nearly every other department, but you can't
m...@vex.net | deny that those colors look great. --Stephen Silver