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QFTCI5GNM15 Game 9, Rounds 2-3: national animals, named laws

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Mark Brader

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 6:24:39 AM11/25/15
to
These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
and should be interpreted accordingly.

On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.

All questions were written by members of Five Guys Named Moe, and
are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
have been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information
see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


* Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures

Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.

1. Snow leopard.
2. Cow.
3. Komodo dragon.
4. Peacock.
5. Dodo.
6. Dalmatian.
7. Vicuña.
8. Springbok (gazelle).
9. Giraffe.
10. Quetzal.


* Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws

Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
you name the person.

1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
fluid that the body displaces."

2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
are inversely proportional."

3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
current passing through the loop.

5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."

7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
current flowing through it is a constant."

9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
growth of a population.


--
Mark Brader | Could it be that this law has nothing to do with law, justice,
Toronto | morality, liberty, or foreign trade, and everything to do with
m...@vex.net | politics? Shame on me for being so cynical. -- Morley Safer

My text in this article is in the public domain.

Dan Blum

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 9:20:00 AM11/25/15
to
Mark Brader <m...@vex.net> wrote:

> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures

> 1. Snow leopard.

Nepal; Bhutan

> 2. Cow.

India

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia

> 4. Peacock.

Iran

> 5. Dodo.

Mauritius

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia

> 7. Vicu?a.

Bolivia; Peru

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa

> 9. Giraffe.

Kenya

> 10. Quetzal.

Guatemala

> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws

> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Archimedes

> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Boyle

> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Peter

> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.

Faraday

> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

Faraday

> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."

Hubble

> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Kepler

> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."

Faraday

> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Moore

> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.

Malthus

--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum to...@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."

Erland Sommarskog

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 3:51:17 PM11/25/15
to
Mark Brader (m...@vex.net) writes:
>
> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> 1. Snow leopard.

Nepal

> 2. Cow.

India

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia

> 4. Peacock.

Iran

> 5. Dodo.

New Zealand

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia - particularly the coastal parts :-)

> 7. Vicuña.

Peru

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa

> 9. Giraffe.

Kenya

> 10. Quetzal.

Mexico

> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Archimedes

> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Avogardo

> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Murphy

> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.

Fahrad


> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Kepler

> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."

Ohm

> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Miller



--
Erland Sommarskog, Stockholm, esq...@sommarskog.se

Peter Smyth

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 6:04:24 PM11/25/15
to
Mark Brader wrote:

> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
> and should be interpreted accordingly.
>
> On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
> both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
> Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
> based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
> the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
> the correct answers in about 3 days.
>
> All questions were written by members of Five Guys Named Moe, and
> are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
> have been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information
> see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
> to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
> species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.
>
> 1. Snow leopard.
> 2. Cow.
India
> 3. Komodo dragon.
Indonesia
> 4. Peacock.
> 5. Dodo.
Mauritius
> 6. Dalmatian.
> 7. Vicuña.
> 8. Springbok (gazelle).
South Africa
> 9. Giraffe.
> 10. Quetzal.
Peru
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."
Archimedes
> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."
Boyle, Charles
> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."
Peter
> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.
Tesla
> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."
Henry
> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."
Hubble
> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.
Kepler
> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."
Ohm
> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.
>
> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.


Peter Smyth

Joshua Kreitzer

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 7:29:27 PM11/25/15
to
m...@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:Toadne3KY4_rB8jLnZ2dnUU7-
eOd...@giganews.com:

> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.
>
> 2. Cow.

India

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia

> 5. Dodo.

Mauritius

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa

> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Archimedes

> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Hooke

> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Peter

> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

Maxwell

> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Kepler

> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Moore

> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.

Malthus

--
Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

Calvin

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 9:06:55 PM11/25/15
to
On Wednesday, November 25, 2015 at 9:24:39 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
> to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
> species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.
>
> 1. Snow leopard.

Nepal, Kazakhstan

> 2. Cow.

India

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia

> 4. Peacock.

India

> 5. Dodo.

Mauritius

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia

> 7. Vicuña.

Spain, Argentina

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa

> 9. Giraffe.

Kenya, Tanzania

> 10. Quetzal.

Ecuador, Peru



> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Archimedes

> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Boyle

> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Peter

> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.

Thomson, Faraday

> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

Thomson, Faraday

> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."

Hoyle

> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Kepler

> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."

Thomson, Faraday

> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Moore

> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.

Malthus

cheers,
calvin

Jason Kreitzer

unread,
Nov 25, 2015, 9:29:04 PM11/25/15
to
Mexico
>
> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."
>
> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."
>
> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."
Laurence J. Peter

Dan Tilque

unread,
Nov 26, 2015, 7:24:14 AM11/26/15
to
Mark Brader wrote:
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
> to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
> species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.
>
> 1. Snow leopard.

Japan

> 2. Cow.

India

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia

> 4. Peacock.

Thailand

> 5. Dodo.

Mauritius

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia

> 7. Vicuña.

Peru

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa

> 9. Giraffe.

Sudan

> 10. Quetzal.

Mexico

>
>
> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Achimedes

>
> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Boyle

>
> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Peter

>
> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.

Coulomb

>
> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

Maxwell

>
> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."

Hubble

>
> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Kepler

>
> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."

Ampere

>
> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Moore

>
> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.
>
>


--
Dan Tilque

Björn Lundin

unread,
Nov 26, 2015, 1:51:46 PM11/26/15
to
On 2015-11-25 12:24, Mark Brader wrote:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
> and should be interpreted accordingly.
>
> On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
> both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
> Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
> based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
> the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
> the correct answers in about 3 days.
>
> All questions were written by members of Five Guys Named Moe, and
> are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
> have been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information
> see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures
>
> Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
> to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
> species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.
>
> 1. Snow leopard.
Nepal
> 2. Cow.
> 3. Komodo dragon.
East Timor

> 4. Peacock.
India
> 5. Dodo.
> 6. Dalmatian.
> 7. Vicuña.
> 8. Springbok (gazelle).
> 9. Giraffe.
Kenya
> 10. Quetzal.
Mexico

>
>
> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws
>
> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.
>
> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Arcimede's principle


>
> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."


>
> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."
>
> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.
>
> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."
>
> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."
>
> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

>
> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."
>
> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Moore

>
> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.
>
>


--
--
Björn

Mark Brader

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 6:29:53 AM11/28/15
to
Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
> see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


> * Game 9, Round 2 - Geography - National Creatures

> Many countries adopt birds and/or animals as national symbols --
> to preserve heritage, to promote tourism, or to help protect the
> species. In this round, we have 10 questions on such national
> birds and animals adopted by countries. In each case, we give
> you an animal or a bird, and you name the country.

> 1. Snow leopard.

Afghanistan.

> 2. Cow.

Nepal.

> 3. Komodo dragon.

Indonesia. 4 for Dan Blum, Erland, Peter, Joshua, Calvin,
and Dan Tilque.

> 4. Peacock.

India. 4 for Calvin and Björn.

> 5. Dodo.

Mauritius. 4 for Dan Blum, Peter, Joshua, Calvin, and Dan Tilque.

> 6. Dalmatian.

Croatia. 4 for Dan Blum, Erland (particularly, Joshua, Calvin,
and Dan Tilque.

> 7. Vicuña.

Peru. 4 for Erland and Dan Tilque. 2 for Dan Blum.

> 8. Springbok (gazelle).

South Africa. 4 for Dan Blum, Erland, Peter, Joshua, Calvin,
and Dan Tilque.

> 9. Giraffe.

Tanzania. 2 for Calvin.

> 10. Quetzal.

Guatemala. 4 for Dan Blum.


> * Game 9, Round 3 - Science - Eponymous Laws

> Laws, theorems, adages, and other succinct observations have often
> been named after a person. Newton's laws of motion are a well
> known example. This round is on such eponymous laws. In each
> case, we give the person's years of birth and death, the field
> of observation, and a statement or a summary of the observation;
> you name the person.

> 1. 287-212 BC. Physics. "The upward buoyant force that is exerted
> on a body immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the
> fluid that the body displaces."

Archimedes. 4 for Dan Blum, Erland, Peter, Joshua, Calvin,
Dan Tilque, and Björn.

> 2. 1627-1691. Gas law in chemistry. "The volume and pressure
> of an ideal gas of fixed mass held at a constant temperature
> are inversely proportional."

Robert Boyle. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Calvin, and Dan Tilque.
3 for Peter.

> 3. 1919-1990. Management. "In a hierarchy, every employee tends
> to rise to his (or her) level of incompetence."

Laurence J. Peter. 4 for Dan Blum, Peter, Joshua, Calvin, Jason,
and Dan Tilque.

> 4. 1775-1836. Physics. The circuital law which relates the
> circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric
> current passing through the loop.

André-Marie Ampère.

> 5. 1791-1867. Law of induction in physics. "A magnetic field
> changing in time creates a proportional electromotive force."

Michael Faraday. 4 for Dan Blum. 2 for Calvin.

> 6. 1889-1953. Astronomy. "Galaxies recede from an observer at
> a rate proportional to their distance to the observer."

Edwin Hubble. 4 for Dan Blum, Peter, and Dan Tilque.

> 7. 1571-1630. Laws of planetary motion in astronomy. These laws
> describe the motion of planets around the Sun.

Johannes Kepler. 4 for Dan Blum, Erland, Peter, Joshua, Calvin,
and Dan Tilque.

> 8. 1789-1854. Law of electricity in physics. "The ratio of the
> potential difference between the ends of a conductor to the
> current flowing through it is a constant."

Georg Simon Ohm. 4 for Erland and Peter.

> 9. 1929-present. Observation in computing. "The complexity
> of integrated circuits doubles every 24 months." He's also a
> co-founder of the chip maker Intel.

Gordon Earle Moore. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Calvin, Dan Tilque,
and Björn.

> 10. 1766-1834. Economics. Law or model describing exponential
> growth of a population.

Thomas Robert Malthus.
4_for Dan_Blum, Joshua, and_Calvin.


Scores, if there are no errors:

GAME 9 ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Geo Sci
Dan Blum 22 32 54
"Calvin" 22 26 48
Dan Tilque 20 24 44
Joshua Kreitzer 16 24 40
Peter Smyth 12 23 35
Erland Sommarskog 16 12 28
Björn Lundin 4 8 12
Jason Kreitzer 0 4 4

--
Mark Brader, Toronto | Using the wrong software counts as "user error".
m...@vex.net | --Julian Lighton

Mark Brader

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 6:35:33 AM11/28/15
to
These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
and should be interpreted accordingly.

On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.

All questions were written by members of Five Guys Named Moe, and
are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
have been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information
see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


* Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures

Sure you can visit great sculptures in museums and art galleries
and pay top dollar, but you can also see many outside, gratis.
10 questions on famous outdoor sculptures. The pictures:

http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/9-4/out.pdf

are not to the same scale.

I've rearranged the round in picture-number order. There are two
decoys; for those, identify either the sculpture or the location
if you like for fun, but for no points.

1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
sculptures.

4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.

6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.

7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
Christian Anderson.

8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
Who does it *depict*?

9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

10. (decoy)

11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
Name the *book*.

12. (decoy)


* Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto

*WARNING:* Do not play this round on an empty stomach!

1. Name the classic cheeseburger joint that serves "the Red Sea",
a cheeseburger with chili on top. Its first location was on
Queen East.

2. Name the burger joint which has a wall of fame for patrons who
can consume their signature burger (a double cheeseburger
with bacon and caramelized onions) and a speciality milkshake
in 6 minutes. Its first location opened in 2011 on Yonge just
south of St. Clair.

3. Name the Toronto-based burger joint that now has locations in
New York City, Denver, and the Middle East. Its signature burger
has horseradish mayo, caramelized onions and smoked cheddar.
Its flagship location on King West near Portland celebrated its
reopening in February 2015 by offering free food in exchange
for charitable donations.

4. Name the family burger joint which opened its second location in
Toronto last year. It also has a reality show with the same
name. Apparently its BBQ Bacon Burger is Donnie's favorite.

5. Name the burger joint at Broadview and Queen famous for its
massive burgers. Its "Big Kevorkian" burger has fried onion,
fried mushrooms, two slices of bacon, a deep fried pickle,
garlic dressing, and mayo.

6. Name the *burger* that made a number of people sick at the
CNE in 2013. Public officials eventually determined that the
staphylococcus toxin was in the dollop of maple bacon jam and
not the burger itself or its title component.

7. Name the burger chain from the American Southwest that opened
a pop-up shop in Toronto in 2014. The burger chain, known for
its quality and use of fresh ingredients, attracted hundreds
of Toronto foodies to Ganzi Osteria, which hosted the pop-up
location.

8. Name the Danforth diner that has been around since the 1960s
and offers charcoal-broiled hamburgers as its signature menu
item, even though BlogTO has rated its chicken souvlaki as the
third-best in Toronto.

9. Name the local diner chain that offers patrons a choice between
brisket, chuck, and sirloin patties. Signature burgers include
the Riverside, crowned with bacon, mozzarella, and a massive
onion ring; and the Ossington, a mushroom melt.

10. Name the Kensington Market burger joint that offers the Big
Bang, an all-beef patty with spicy Buffalo chicken strips.

--
Mark Brader "Sixty years old and still pulling a train!
Toronto That's more than I can say about most
m...@vex.net people I know." -- Frimbo

Mark Brader

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 6:36:53 AM11/28/15
to
Oops, forgot to post this in a new thread. Here it is again.
Post your answers in either thread.

Erland Sommarskog

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 8:04:43 AM11/28/15
to
Mark Brader (m...@vex.net) writes:
> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

Giant Spider

> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

Manneken Pis

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.

Jeff Kloony

> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

Den lille havsfrue

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Someone who is losing his footing when trying to throw something

> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon

> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto
>
> *WARNING:* Do not play this round on an empty stomach!

Just had lunch, so that is the small problem. However, never having
been to Toronto, I will have to decline.

Björn Lundin

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 8:57:49 AM11/28/15
to
manneken pis

>
> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.
>
> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?
>
> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.
>
> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.
>
> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

Little Mermaid (or in danish Lille Havfrue)

>
> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?
>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

Lennon

>
> 10. (decoy)
>
> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.
>
> 12. (decoy)
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto
>
> *WARNING:* Do not play this round on an empty stomach!

--
Björn

Joshua Kreitzer

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 11:12:58 AM11/28/15
to
On Saturday, November 28, 2015 at 6:35:33 AM UTC-5, Mark Brader wrote:
>
> * Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures
>
> 10 questions on famous outdoor sculptures. The pictures:
>
> http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/9-4/out.pdf
>
> are not to the same scale.
>
> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

Spider

> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

Mannekin Pis

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.

Koons (?)

> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

The Bean

> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

The Little Mermaid

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Prometheus

> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon

> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.

"Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil"

> 12. (decoy)

Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial

> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto
>
> 4. Name the family burger joint which opened its second location in
> Toronto last year. It also has a reality show with the same
> name. Apparently its BBQ Bacon Burger is Donnie's favorite.

Wahlburgers

--
Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

Pete

unread,
Nov 28, 2015, 7:55:21 PM11/28/15
to
m...@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:pIqdnWEV1txJDMTLnZ2dnUU7-
dmd...@giganews.com:
Manneken Pis

>
> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.
>
> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

The Bean

>
> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.
>
> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.
>
> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

The Little Mermaid

>
> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Mercury

>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon

>
> 10. (decoy)
>
> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.
>
> 12. (decoy)

Martin Luther King, Jr.

>

Pete

Calvin

unread,
Nov 29, 2015, 7:25:46 PM11/29/15
to
On Saturday, November 28, 2015 at 9:35:33 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> * Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures

> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

Arachnid

> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

Eros, Cupid

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.

Jeff Koon

> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

The jelly bean

> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.
>
> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.
>
> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

The Little Mermaid
lol if anyone answer "Ariel" :-)

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?
>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

Lennon?

> 10. (decoy)
>
> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.
>
> 12. (decoy)
>
>
> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto

Pass!

cheers,
calvin

Jason Kreitzer

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Nov 29, 2015, 9:58:24 PM11/29/15
to
The Little Mermaid
> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?
>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.
John Lennon

Dan Blum

unread,
Nov 29, 2015, 10:40:03 PM11/29/15
to
Mark Brader <m...@vex.net> wrote:

> * Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures

> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

Spider; Arachne

> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

Mannekin Pis

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.

Koons

> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

Kidney Bean

> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

The Little Mermaid

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Prometheus

> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon

> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil


> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto

> 7. Name the burger chain from the American Southwest that opened
> a pop-up shop in Toronto in 2014. The burger chain, known for
> its quality and use of fresh ingredients, attracted hundreds
> of Toronto foodies to Ganzi Osteria, which hosted the pop-up
> location.

In-and-Out Burger

Dan Tilque

unread,
Nov 30, 2015, 5:30:54 AM11/30/15
to
The Mermaid

>
> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Prometheus

>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon
Dan Tilque

Marc Dashevsky

unread,
Nov 30, 2015, 8:08:01 AM11/30/15
to
In article <pIqdnWEV1txJDMTL...@giganews.com>, m...@vex.net says...
>
> * Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures
>
> Sure you can visit great sculptures in museums and art galleries
> and pay top dollar, but you can also see many outside, gratis.
> 10 questions on famous outdoor sculptures. The pictures:
>
> http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/9-4/out.pdf
>
> are not to the same scale.
>
> I've rearranged the round in picture-number order. There are two
> decoys; for those, identify either the sculpture or the location
> if you like for fun, but for no points.
>
> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.
>
> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.
Little Pisser

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.
>
> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?
>
> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.
>
> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.
>
> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.
Little Mermaid

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?
>
> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.
John Lennon

> 10. (decoy)
>
> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

>

bbowler

unread,
Nov 30, 2015, 2:53:03 PM11/30/15
to
Little peeing boy

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.
>
> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely refer
> to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

The Bean

> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.
>
> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.
>
> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans Christian
> Anderson.

The Little Mermaid

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Prometheus

> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City, was
> created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence in 1980.
> Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon

> 10. (decoy)
>
> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

> 12. (decoy)

M.L.King, Atlanta

>
> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto
>
> *WARNING:* Do not play this round on an empty stomach!

As much as I love burgers, the only place I've been to in Toronto is the
airport. No love here.

Mark Brader

unread,
Dec 1, 2015, 3:43:12 AM12/1/15
to
Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-06-22,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
> see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


> * Game 9, Round 4 - Arts - Outdoor Sculptures

> Sure you can visit great sculptures in museums and art galleries
> and pay top dollar, but you can also see many outside, gratis.
> 10 questions on famous outdoor sculptures. The pictures:

> http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/9-4/out.pdf

> are not to the same scale.

> I've rearranged the round in picture-number order. There are two
> decoys; for those, identify either the sculpture or the location
> if you like for fun, but for no points.

> 1. There are multiple versions of this sculpture by Louise
> Bourgeois, including this one outside the National Art Gallery
> in Ottawa. Name the sculpture.

Maman (Mother).

> 2. No clues, just name this iconic sculpture. Giggling encouraged.

Mannekin Pis. I scored translations like "Little Pissing Man" as
almost correct. It's in Brussels. 4 for Erland, Björn, Joshua,
Pete, and Dan Blum. 3 for Marc and Bruce.

> 3. Name the American artist who is famous for his balloon animal
> sculptures.

Jeff Koons. I scored "Jeff Kloony" as almost correct. 4 for Joshua,
Calvin, and Dan Blum. 3 for Erland.

> 4. Officially this Anish Kapoor sculpture is called "Cloud Gate",
> but residents of Chicago and visitors to Millennium Park rarely
> refer to it as such. What is this sculpture's nickname?

The Bean. 4 for Joshua, Pete, and Bruce. 3 for Calvin and Dan Blum.

> 5. Name this Alexander Calder statue, which can be found on
> Île Ste. Hélène in Montreal.

L'Homme (Man).

> 6. You've seen (and probably climbed on) this Henry Moore work
> outside Toronto City Hall. Name the sculpture.

"Three Way Piece #2: The Archer". Either part was sufficient.

> 7. This bronze statue, located in Copenhagen, stands 1.25 m tall.
> Name the statue, which is based on a fairy tale by Hans
> Christian Anderson.

"The Little Mermaid". 4 for everyone -- Erland, Björn, Joshua,
Pete, Calvin, Jason, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Marc, and Bruce.

> 8. This bronze gilded statue is said to be the fourth most
> recognizable statue in the US (after the Lincoln Memorial,
> Mt. Rushmore, and the Statue of Liberty). However,
> the artist, Paul Manship, is said to not be fond of it.
> Who does it *depict*?

Prometheus. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Bruce.

> 9. Known officially as "Nonviolence", this statue is often referred
> to as the "Knotted Gun". This version, found in New York City,
> was created as a memorial for a famous victim of gun violence
> in 1980. Name the New Yorker who is so honored.

John Lennon. 4 for everyone.

> 10. (decoy)

"Hand of God", Atacama Desert, Chile.

> 11. This bronze statue called "Bird Girl", which stands only 50
> inches tall, resides in a cemetery in Savannah, Georgia.
> It became famous as the cover for a 1993 true-crime book.
> Name the *book*.

"Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil". 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum,
Marc, and Bruce.

> 12. (decoy)

"Stone of Hope", Washington, DC.


> * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana - Burgers and Burger Joints in Toronto

> *WARNING:* Do not play this round on an empty stomach!

This was the hardest round in the original game and the third-hardest
of the entire season. I live here and I hadn't heard of *any*
of these places except for the CNE. (Okay, for #7, what I hadn't
heard of was them popping up here.)

> 1. Name the classic cheeseburger joint that serves "the Red Sea",
> a cheeseburger with chili on top. Its first location was on
> Queen East.

Burger's Priest.

> 2. Name the burger joint which has a wall of fame for patrons who
> can consume their signature burger (a double cheeseburger
> with bacon and caramelized onions) and a speciality milkshake
> in 6 minutes. Its first location opened in 2011 on Yonge just
> south of St. Clair.

Holy Chuck.

> 3. Name the Toronto-based burger joint that now has locations in
> New York City, Denver, and the Middle East. Its signature burger
> has horseradish mayo, caramelized onions and smoked cheddar.
> Its flagship location on King West near Portland celebrated its
> reopening in February 2015 by offering free food in exchange
> for charitable donations.

Big Smoke.

> 4. Name the family burger joint which opened its second location in
> Toronto last year. It also has a reality show with the same
> name. Apparently its BBQ Bacon Burger is Donnie's favorite.

Wahlburgers. 4 for Joshua.

> 5. Name the burger joint at Broadview and Queen famous for its
> massive burgers. Its "Big Kevorkian" burger has fried onion,
> fried mushrooms, two slices of bacon, a deep fried pickle,
> garlic dressing, and mayo.

Dangerous Dan's.

> 6. Name the *burger* that made a number of people sick at the
> CNE in 2013. Public officials eventually determined that the
> staphylococcus toxin was in the dollop of maple bacon jam and
> not the burger itself or its title component.

Cronut.

> 7. Name the burger chain from the American Southwest that opened
> a pop-up shop in Toronto in 2014. The burger chain, known for
> its quality and use of fresh ingredients, attracted hundreds
> of Toronto foodies to Ganzi Osteria, which hosted the pop-up
> location.

In-n-Out. 4 for Dan Blum.

> 8. Name the Danforth diner that has been around since the 1960s
> and offers charcoal-broiled hamburgers as its signature menu
> item, even though BlogTO has rated its chicken souvlaki as the
> third-best in Toronto.

Square Boy.

> 9. Name the local diner chain that offers patrons a choice between
> brisket, chuck, and sirloin patties. Signature burgers include
> the Riverside, crowned with bacon, mozzarella, and a massive
> onion ring; and the Ossington, a mushroom melt.

BQM Diner.

> 10. Name the Kensington Market burger joint that offers the Big
> Bang, an all-beef patty with spicy Buffalo chicken strips.

The Burgernator.


Scores, if there are no errors:

GAME 9 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Geo Sci Art Can
Dan Blum 22 32 27 4 85
Joshua Kreitzer 16 24 28 4 72
"Calvin" 22 26 15 0 63
Dan Tilque 20 24 12 0 56
Erland Sommarskog 16 12 15 0 43
Peter Smyth 12 23 -- -- 35
Björn Lundin 4 8 12 0 24
Bruce Bowler -- -- 23 0 23
Pete Gayde -- -- 16 0 16
Marc Dashevsky -- -- 15 0 15
Jason Kreitzer 0 4 8 0 12

--
Mark Brader "I used to think that the name C++
Toronto was a euphemism for D-."
m...@vex.net --Peter Moylan
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