Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 1998-03-30,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information...
> see my 2020-06-23 companion posting on "Reposted Questions from
> the Canadian Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
> * Game 9, Round 1 - Current Events (excerpt)
> Answer these 1998 questions if you like for fun, but for no points.
> 1. Why was student Mike Cameron suspended for a day from his high
> school in Evans, Georgia?
He wore a Pepsi shirt to school on "Coke in Education Day".
Stephen got this.
> 2. Yeah, yeah, "Titanic" won enough Oscars to build a bonfire,
> and Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt got theirs. Now tell us which
> humorous film won the award for makeup.
"Men in Black". Joshua and Stephen got this.
> I wrote one of these rounds and part of the other.
The science round was mine; and I contributed some questions to the
sports round, but I'm not sure exactly how much of it.
> * Game 9, Round 2 - Science (sort of) - Coded Abbreviations
> Be as specific and detailed as necessary.
For many of these it was easy to guess part of the answer, so I was
pretty strict on rejecting partial answers.
> 1. In an airline timetable, what does "X67" mean?
Does not operate Saturdays and Sundays. 4 for Bruce, Joshua,
and Stephen.
> 2. On a fertilizer package, what does "21-6-12" mean?
21% (available) nitrogen, 6% phosphoric acid (phosphorus was okay),
12% potash (potassium was okay). 4 for Stephen.
You were asked what it means, not what it refers to. Stephen is
the only one who answered that.
> 3. In knitting, what does "K2 tog, PSSO" mean?
Knit 2 (stitches) together, pass slipped stitch over. And don't
ask me what *that* means! 4 for Stephen.
> 4. In describing steam locomotives, what does "4-6-2" mean?
4 leading wheels, 6 (coupled) driving wheels, 2 trailing wheels.
And *do* ask me what that means, if you like. 4 for Bruce.
Only Bruce explained that the set of 6 wheels are the driving wheels.
> 5. In describing binoculars, what does "7×35" mean?
7 power magnification, 35 mm objective lens diameter. 4 for Bruce,
Stephen, and Dan Tilque.
> 6. In bridge (especially duplicate bridge), what does "6SX" mean?
(A contract of) 6 spades, doubled. 4 for Stephen and Dan Tilque.
> 7. On the copyright page of a book, what does "10 9 8 7 6 5 4" mean?
Fourth printing. (One number is erased from the end with each
printing. In the days of metal type, grinding a digit off the plate
saved the cost of typesetting a whole new page.) 4 for Dan Blum,
Joshua, Stephen, and Dan Tilque.
> 8. In Internet national domains, what does ".es" mean?
Spain. (España.) 4 for everyone -- Bruce, Erland, Dan Blum, Joshua,
Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
> 9. On a *red* Ontario license plate, what does "CD" at the start
> of the number mean?
Diplomatic corps. (So don't have an accident with this guy; he
probably won't be held responsible. The red color is a nice touch.)
4 for Stephen.
> 10. In relation to chess, what type of move do O-O and O-O-O
> refer to?
Castling. 4 for Bruce, Erland, Dan Blum, Joshua, Stephen,
and Dan Tilque.
> * Game 9, Round 3 - Sports - Inventors and Innovators
> 1. What's the main claim to fame of Manon Rhéaume?
First woman professional hockey player. (Also first woman NHL player,
although she only ever appeared in an exhibition game.) 4 for Bruce,
Joshua, Stephen, and Pete.
> 2. What's the main claim to fame of James Naismith?
Invented basketball. (1891, Springfield, MA. He was asked to come
up with an indoor sport for the winter.) 4 for Bruce, Dan Blum,
Joshua, Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
> 3. This question concerns an activity that people have probably
> engaged in for as long as there have been people, but we won't
> ask you to name it. In 1743, Jack Broughton drew up a set of
> rules in an attempt to make it a reputable sport. These rules
> were replaced by the "London rules", and then in 1865 what
> are essentially the present-day rules were produced under the
> auspices of John Sholto Douglas. And the question is, *by what
> title* is Douglas better known?
Marquis of Queensberry. (Boxing.) 4 for Bruce, Dan Blum, Joshua,
Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
A version of this question, not naming the sport and with less
of the historical detail, was the "Final Jeopardy!" question on
"Jeopardy!" on 2020-02-10. Another version, this time mentioning
"fisticuffs" and giving his aristocratic rank (and thus just asking
for "Queensberry"), was an $800 question on the show on 2021-06-03.
Both times all three players missed it.
> 4. In what year did Dick Fosbury's revolutionary Fosbury Flop win
> him the Olympic gold medal for high-jumping?
1968. 4 for Bruce, Erland, Joshua, Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
> 5. We told you a few weeks ago about the Scottish decree of 1457
> that "golff be utterly cryit doune and not usit." What we
> didn't mention was that it also applied, with equal success, to
> "fute-ball". The evolution from the game that most of the world
> calls football to the game of the same name on this continent
> was a complicated one, but it began, or is said to have begun,
> when a player with "a fine disregard for the rules" picked up
> the ball and ran with it. Some sources give his name as Ellis
> and the date as 1823; others say it was Mackie in 1838 or 1839.
> But in what *city or town* did this event allegedly take place?
Rugby (England). 4 for Erland, Joshua, Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
> 6. The subsequent transition to American football is primarily
> credited to one rulemaker. In the period 1880-83 he replaced
> the scrum with the scrimmage, he invented the down, he reduced
> the team from 15 players to 11, and he also adopted the first
> changes that led to the modern scoring system. Name this
> "father of American football".
Walter Camp. 4 for Joshua, Stephen, and Dan Tilque.
> 7. Canadian football developed in parallel. A major influence
> on it was this man, a former Notre Dame ["NOTE-er DAIM"]
> player and coach who came to McGill University in 1912 as the
> first professional football coach in Canada. Innovations he
> instituted in play or recommended in rules included the secondary
> defense, double-teaming, backfield motion, the forward pass,
> and a reduction of teams from 14 to 12 players. Name him.
Frank "Frag" Shaughnessy. 4 for Stephen.
> 8. To the extent that baseball has a single inventor, it was the
> man who founded the Knickerbocker Base Ball Club of New York.
> Many similar games, such as town ball, were played at the time;
> but in this man's rules of 1845, the batter stood at home plate,
> the arrangement of bases was fixed as a 90-foot square, and
> runners had to be put out by tagging them rather than throwing
> the ball at them. His name was *not* Abner Doubleday: what
> was it?
Alexander Cartwright. (The claim that Doubleday invented baseball
was promoted for commercial reasons after his death.) 4 for Joshua
and Stephen.
> 9. Although Harry Gem had previously organized a club where this
> sport was played, Walter Clopton Wingfield was the first to
> produce a set of rules for it. That was in 1873, and he called
> the game Sphairistiké. What do we call it?
Tennis. 4 for Bruce and Stephen.
> 10. Name the figure skater who was the first to spin on one leg
> while holding her other leg straight up with both hands.
Denise Biellmann. (Hence "Biellmann spin", as mentioned in Game 10,
Round 4, of the 2007 season that I posted earlier.) 4 for Stephen
and Pete.
Scores, if there are no errors:
GAME 9 ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Sci Spo
Stephen Perry 36 40 76
Joshua Kreitzer 16 28 44
Bruce Bowler 20 20 40
Dan Tilque 20 20 40
Pete Gayde 4 24 28
Dan Blum 12 8 20
Erland Sommarskog 8 8 16
--
Mark Brader, Toronto "Why do they do that?"
m...@vex.net "Because they can."