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13. Nonfiction

He attended the Versailles Peace Conference in 1919 and was very critical of the high reparations charges against Germany, but he wasn’t German. He became controversial again years later when he argued that governments and businesses control the economic cycle more than consumers. He often argued in favor of full employment even when it was brought about by government deficit spending. Name this British economist who wrote The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money.


ANSWER: (John Maynard) Keynes
14. British Literature

He was criticized for writing a poem sympathetic to a woman who commits suicide, which was titled Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady. His most famous poem begins, “What dire Offence from am'rous Causes springs, What mighty Contests rise from trivial Things.” Containing characters such as Belinda and Umbriel, it was written after he found out that somebody he knew had started a family feud by cutting the hair of the woman he loved. Name this poet who wrote The Rape of the Lock.


ANSWER: (Alexander) Pope
15. Geography/Earth Science/Astronomy

(Note to moderator: Quito is pronounced KEE-toe.) The capital of this country is on the side of Pichincha Volcano and contains a park almost twice as big as Central Park in New York. The Eastern part of the country is a rainforest, the Central part is mountainous, and the Western part is on the Pacific Ocean. It also includes the Galapagos Islands, and it borders Colombia and Peru. Name this nation whose capital is Quito.


ANSWER: Ecuador
16. Algebra (30 Seconds)

Find the y-intercept of a graph showing exponential growth that goes through the points (1,5) and (2,20).


ANSWER: 5/4 (or 1 ¼ or 1.25) (accept (0,5/4) or equivalents)
17. Art/Archictecture

Give the name by which this artist is best known, which is actually where he was born in 1573. Though most of his works are still in his native Italy, John The Baptist, Sleeping Cupid, and The Denial of Saint Peter are on display in the United States. His most famous paintings may be his depictions of Saint Matthew that are very early examples of realistic naturalism. Name this artist who once killed a man in an argument about court tennis.


ANSWER: Caravaggio
18. Chemistry

The second derivative of this quantity with respect to temperature when pressure is held constant is equal to the opposite of enthalpy divided by absolute temperature squared. One way to calculate it is to multiply the opposite of the number of electrons per mole times the faraday constant times the electric potential. Named after the first American engineering Ph.D. recipient, it is used to decide whether or not reactions are spontaneous. Name this quantity calculated by the formula enthalpy minus temperature times entropy.


ANSWER: Gibbs (Free) Energy (or Gibbs Function) (prompt Free Energy)
19. United States Literature

In addition to a well-known textbook he co-wrote called Understanding Poetry, he wrote several poetry collections, including Promises during the 1950s and Now and Then during the 1970s. His first novel, about tobacco growers in Kentucky, was Night Rider, and his second novel, about Sue Murdock, was At Heaven’s Gate. Perhaps influenced by a grandfather who fought for the Confederacy, he associated with the South throughout his life. Name this author whose most famous novel, which is about the Stantons, Jack Burden, and Willie Stark, was All the King’s Men.


ANSWER: (Robert Penn) Warren
20. World History

(Note to moderator: Shunzhi is pronounced SHUN-chih.) The first emperor of this dynasty, the Shunzhi Emperor, took over at the age of six and ruled during the imposition of the Queue Order, which forced people to cut their hair. The last emperor of this dynasty, Puyi, was forced to abdicate just after his sixth birthday but was allowed to stay in the Forbidden City for several years. It took control of China in 1644 and was the last dynasty to rule the country. Name this group founded by people from Northeast China.


ANSWER: Manchu (Dynasty) (accept Ch’ing but not Ch’in)
Tiebreakers:

If you need to replace a question, take the corresponding question from the Replacement Packet rather than one of these questions. In case of a tie, use these questions in order until one is answered correctly.


Some of the architects associated with this art movement include Victor Horta, who designed Tassel House in Brussels, and Charles Rennie MacKintosh, who designed the Glasgow School of Art. It had similarities to the Prairie School, often depicting natural forms such as flowers and leaves. Give the name of this movement that was taken from a gallery that opened in 1895 in Paris.
ANSWER: (Art) Nouveau (either order) (prompt New)
He wrote a book which concluded that monogamy would be natural when men stopped worrying about inheritance. It was titled The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State. Forty years earlier, he wrote the book The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844. He became a close friend of the editor of a journal called Franco-German Annals, and they moved to Belgium when that editor was kicked out of France, where they collaborated on a very famous work. Name this editor of Das Kapital who co-wrote The Communist Manifesto with Karl Marx.
ANSWER: (Friedrich) Engels
This country borders Austria, France, Slovenia, and Switzerland. Name this country whose capital is Rome.
ANSWER: Italy

NEW TRIER SCOBOL SOLO

ROUND 8

11:50


1. Interdisciplinary

This noun can refer to a musical arrangement for an instrument other than the one that the original composer planned for. The same term is used for a process that occurs in prokaryotic cytoplasms, creating RNA based on codes within DNA. Give this term that also is used to describe the process of putting oral speech into written words.


ANSWER: Transcription (do not accept alternatives)
2. Pyramidal Math (30 Seconds)

This number is the twentieth term in the arithmetic sequence that begins 21, 19, 17, etcetera. It also equals the determinant of the matrix that has the top row one five and the bottom row four three. Find this number equal to the slope of the line through the points (1,61) and (4,10).


ANSWER: -17 (do not accept 17)
3. World Literature

(Note to moderator: Euripides is four syllables.) This play starts with a conversation between The Nurse and The Tutor in the presence of the title character’s two sons. The title character can be heard crying and muttering, “I can't stand this pain, this misery. What do I do? I wish I could die!” She has been brought to Corinth and abandoned by her husband, who is a great hero. Name this work by Euripides about the wife of Jason.


ANSWER: Medea
4. Current Events

She attended orientation at the University of Hawaii at Hilo and took classes at Hawaii Pacific, North Idaho, and Matanuska-Susitna before graduating from the University of Idaho in 1987. In 2003 and 2004, she chaired an Oil and Gas Conservation Commission following an election loss. She has been investigated by Steven Petumenos and Stephen Branchflower for her firing of Walt Monegan, who had refused to fire Mike Wooten, her former brother-in-law. Name this Governor who was John McCain’s running mate.


ANSWER: (Sarah) Palin (accept Heath)
5. Biology

Research on it was done in the 19th Century by Charles Gerhardt, who studied anhydrides, and Felix Hoffman, who wanted to help his father. Its mechanism was described by John Vane, who showed that it decreased the production of prostaglandins. Ancient Egyptians used it by eating myrtle leaves and Greeks by willow bark. It is known to scientists as acetylsalicylic acid, and in some cases it causes Reye’s Syndrome. Name this medication used as an anti-inflammatory that reduces fevers and relieves pain.


ANSWER: Aspirin (accept Acetylsalicylic Acid before it is mentioned)

6. Music


Her career began in 1935 with four big hits, including What A Little Moonlight Can Do. One of her most controversial songs was written by a Jewish schoolteacher and was included on the B Side of Fine And Mellow. That song was Strange Fruit, which describes a lynching. One of her most popular songs was Lady Sings The Blues, which also was the title of her autobiography. Identify this singer nicknamed Lady Day who wrote the song God Bless The Child.
ANSWER: (Billie) Holliday (or (Eleanora) Fagan)
7. United States History

Its first leader, Edward Maria Wingfield, was jailed and accused of being an atheist after four months in office. A few years later, at the end of Starving Time, Lord Delaware saved it by convincing its residents to stay. It was burned to the ground during Bacon’s Rebellion, almost seventy years after settlers had arrived on The Godspeed, The Discovery, and Susan Constant. Name this settlement in what is now Virginia named after the King of England in the early 17th Century.


ANSWER: Jamestown (Virginia or Settlement) (prompt Virginia)
8. Physics (10 Seconds)

One of the basic assumptions of general relativity is that the two types of this are equal. These types are inertial and gravitational, and no legitimate experiment has ever found a difference between them. The inertial type is equal to net force divided by acceleration, while the gravitational type varies directly with the force of gravity. Name this quantity that can be measured in slugs or grams.


ANSWER: Mass (do not accept Weight)
9. Vocabulary

This seven-letter term is derived from the surname of a character in the New Testament. The character, a repentant sinner who is often depicted crying in art, witnessed the death of Jesus. Though she was sincere, this term has come to refer to people who are easily moved to tears, sometimes due to drunkenness. Give this adjective beginning with the letter M that refers to sentimental people.


ANSWER: Maudlin
10. Religion/Mythology

Some people believe that these animals have some basis in reality based on Aepyornis Maximus fossils found in Madagascar, but those animals probably were vegetarians. The legendary ones could carry elephants and were described in the writings of Marco Polo and in One Thousand And One Nights. Name this type of bird that destroyed Sinbad the Sailor’s ship.


ANSWER: Roc(s)
11. Pop Culture

(Note to moderator: No singing, please.) Two of the soft rhymes in this song are visions with engines and wire with rider. It mentions Highway 9 and is addressed to a woman named Wendy. First released in 1975 with Meeting Across the River on its B Side, it was also the title track of a successful album. It contains the lines, “The highways jammed with broken heroes on a last chance power drive, Everybody’s out on the run tonight but there’s no place left to hide,” and the phrase “Tramps like us.” Name this hit by Bruce Springsteen.


ANSWER: Born To Run
12. Geometry/Trigonometry (30 Seconds)

Find all solutions in radians between zero and two pi for the equation sine x plus cosine x equals zero.


ANSWER: 3Pi/4, 7Pi/4 (any order, accept equivalents, must have both answers without extras)
13. Nonfiction

He described his experiences in Hawaii in 1980 in The Curse of Lono. Research for his first book resulted in him receiving a vicious beating; that book was Hell’s Angels. Many of his essays and columns, including one titled “The Kentucky Derby is Decadent and Depraved”, were collected into various volumes of The Gonzo Papers. Name this writer associated with the phrase Fear and Loathing.


ANSWER: (Hunter Stockton) Thompson
14. British Literature

James Mortimer appears near the beginning of this novel. Sir Henry plays a major role at the end, and the work revolves around the death of Henry’s uncle Charles, who had been preparing to invest a lot of money. Name this Arthur Conan Doyle novel that includes a family curse involving a black dog.


ANSWER: (The) Hound of the Baskervilles
15. Geography/Earth Science/Astronomy

A good view of this city can be had from Collserola Tower. Its most famous street is La Rambla, found near its Gothic Quarter, and its most famous unfinished building is Sagrada Familia, which was designed by Antoni Gaudi. It is the capital of Catalonia, which is part of Spain. Name this large city on the Mediterranean Sea that hosted the 1992 Summer Olympics.


ANSWER: Barcelona

16. Algebra (30 Seconds)

Include units. At what altitude will two planes collide if one of them starts at one thousand feet and rises at three feet per second, and the other one starts at two thousand feet and goes down at two feet per second?
ANSWER: 1600 Feet
17. Art/Archictecture

Picasso made forty-four versions of this 17th Century painting about three hundred years after it was first completed. The left side of the painting shows the artist working on a very large canvas, and the right side of the painting shows two dwarfs, one of whom has his foot on a dog. The center of the picture shows the girl Margarita dressed in white, and the back of the picture has a mirror reflecting the image of the King and Queen. Name this 17th Century masterpiece by Diego Velazquez.


ANSWER: Las Meninas (accept Maids of Honor, Ladies in Waiting, or Family of Felipe IV)
18. Chemistry

These types of reactions are used to create polystyrene and can be seen in the combination of hydrogen gas with halogen gases. Investigations into the one involving DNA Polymerase won a Nobel Prize for Kary Mullis. A reaction of this type involving fission and neutrons is used in atom bombs. Name these processes in which products become reactants.


ANSWER: Chain (Reaction)
19. United States Literature

The subject of this poem is described as, “Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning as a savage pitted against the wilderness, Bareheaded, Shoveling, Wrecking, Planning, Building, breaking, rebuilding.” It is also described as wicked, crooked, and brutal. Written in 1916, the poem uses phrases such as, “Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler; Stormy, husky, brawling, City of the Big Shoulders.” Name this work by Carl Sandburg about a major city.


ANSWER: Chicago
20. World History

This battle’s outcome was due in part to Marshal Ney’s slow seizing of a nearby town. The losing side was also harmed by a delay caused by strong rains the day before and by their General’s reluctance to use the Imperial Guard. This allowed the British to hold their position until Prussian support joined them, and the combined forces eventually broke down the French Army. The fighting took place on June 18th, 1815 in what is now Belgium. Name this victory by the Duke of Wellington over Napoleon.


ANSWER: Waterloo
Tiebreakers:

If you need to replace a question, take the corresponding question from the Replacement Packet rather than one of these questions. In case of a tie, use these questions in order until one is answered correctly.


This unit of measure was coined in 1782 as a marketing tool. In scientific studies, a unit named after the man who invented this unit has replaced it. Though conversions vary, it is equivalent to about 2500 British thermal units per hour, 550 foot pounds per second, or 750 Watts. It was originally based on how much coal animals could lift. Name this unit still used to rate car engines.
ANSWER: Horsepower
In the Book of Mormon, this is the name of the youngest brother of Nephi and Jacob. The name is shared by two major characters in the New Testament Gospels, one of whom wraps the body of Jesus in a clean linen cloth and places it in his tomb. The other prominent man with this name is told by an angel of the Lord to go to Egypt because Herod is going to try to kill his adopted son. Give the name of the husband of Mary.
ANSWER: Joseph (do not accept Joe)
This country borders Afghanistan, Bhutan, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Vietnam. Name this country whose capital is Beijing.
ANSWER: China

NEW TRIER SCOBOL SOLO

ROUND 9

1:00


1. Interdisciplinary

An unfinished one can be seen in a portrait of Thomas Gainsborough’s daughters, and Rossini wrote a comic duet for them. Maneki Neko is one, as is Behemoth in The Master and Margarita. While they are associated with the diseases panleucopenia and toxoplasmosis, historians think the plagues of the Middle Ages would have been much milder if more of these animals had been around. The fictional Bustopher Jones, Mungojerrie, and Old Deuteronomy were created by TS Eliot and used by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Identify these animals whose breeds include Birman, Abyssinian, and Siamese.


ANSWER: Cat(s) (accept any answer that contains cat, feline, felis, or felid in it, do not accept others)
2. Pyramidal Math (10 Seconds)

This type of function gives a solution to the differential equation d y d x equals k times the quantity one minus y end quantity times y. A type of sigmoid function, it can also be represented by the equation y equals one divided by the quantity one plus e raised to the minus x power. It is used to represent the spread of a disease or the growth of a population that has a carrying capacity. Identify this curve that is almost flat on the left and right ends of the graph but approximates exponential growth over certain intervals.


ANSWER: Logistic (accept additional words such as Growth, Function, or Curve) (prompt Sigmoid, do not accept Log or Logarithmic)
3. World Literature

One of his best-known novels is about a woman who resents the attitude of the rich relatives who support her and takes revenge on them. Cousin Pons and that novel, Cousin Bette, were grouped together as his Poor Relations novels. An early realist, he wrote many novels set in Paris. Name this author whose novels were collected together under the title The Human Comedy.


ANSWER: (Honore de) Balzac
4. Current Events

This country is the home of the National Congress for the Defense of the People, which is currently based in its North Kivu Province. A few years ago, the group took over Bukavu, which is in the South Kivu Province. Recently, they have tried to take over the towns of Kiwanja and Goma. Much of the fighting has taken place near this country’s borders with Uganda, Burundi, and Rwanda. Name this nation currently headed by Joseph Kabila.


ANSWER: (The) Democratic Republic of (the) Congo (prompt Congo, do not accept Republic of Congo)
5. Biology

A tumor in this gland can lead to acromegaly. One of its lobes produces vasopressin, which affects the kidneys, and oxytocin. Some of the hormones produced by the other lobe affect other hormones, and their release is controlled by hypothalamic hormones. Name this gland located below the hypothalamus near the base of the skull.


ANSWER: Pituitary (Gland) (or Hypophysis)
6. Music

His first opera to receive praise was based on Walter Scott’s The Fair Maid of Perth, but it closed after eighteen performances. In 1872, he wrote an opera about a slave in love with her master. In 1875, he completed an opera that was poorly received, and he had two heart attacks and died, but that opera is now considered one of the all time greats. It contains the Habanera and the Toreador Song. Name this composer of Carmen.


ANSWER: (Georges) Bizet
7. United States History

He was shot in the shoulder at the Battle of Trenton, and he traveled with Robert Livingston to Paris to negotiate the Louisiana Purchase. At one point, he served simultaneously as Secretary of State and Secretary of War. He then went on to win two Presidential Elections, winning all but thirty-four electoral votes the first time and all but one the second time. His Presidency included a major bank panic, the purchase of Florida, and the passage of the Missouri Compromise. Name this President of the Era of Good Feelings who stated that he was against European nations interfering in the Americas.


ANSWER: (James) Monroe
8. Physics (30 Seconds)

(Note to moderator: Joules is pronounced like Jewels.) How many Joules of energy are stored on a capacitor if it is ten to the negative eighth farads and it holds ten to the negative third coulombs? If you don’t know the formula, you might be able to derive it using the facts that the differential of work is equal to the electrical potential difference times the differential of charge. In a capacitor, the electrical potential difference equals the charge divided by the capacitance.


ANSWER: 50 (Joules) (accept 5 times ten to the first or equivalents)

9. Vocabulary

This adjective describes things that are appropriate for courts of law or for public discussion. It sometimes is used to describe scientific investigations used to establish evidence in a legal case, and it can precede the words medicine or evidence. Give this term beginning with the letter F that, when it has the letter s added on to it, refers to the art of speaking and debating.
ANSWER: Forensic(s)
10. Religion/Mythology

Forty-four years after this man died, the Pope ordered his bones dug up, crushed, and thrown into a river. During his lifetime, his closest assistant was John Purvey and his patron was John of Gaunt. He was closely associated with the Lollard Movement and may have been its founder. In the 1380s, he oversaw the first translation of the Bible from Latin into vernacular English. Name this man who became known as the Morning Star of the Reformation.


ANSWER: (John) Wycliffe
11. Pop Culture

After starring for Dan Devine at Notre Dame, he was selected in the third round of the 1979 draft. He spent his first year-and-a-half in the NFL backing up Steve DeBerg, but he spent the next ten years as a starter before missing most of 1991 and 1992 with injuries and then being traded to the Kansas City Chiefs. His most famous passes were a ten-yard touchdown to John Taylor with thirty-four seconds left in Super Bowl Twenty-Three and a six-yard pass to Dwight Clark that is known as The Catch. His best receiver usually was Jerry Rice. Name this San Francisco 49er quarterback who won four Super Bowls.


ANSWER: (Joe) Montana
12. Geometry/Trigonometry (30 Seconds)

Point C is between Points A and D. Find the measure of Angle ABC if Angle BAC is sixty degrees and Angle BCD is one hundred degrees.


ANSWER: 40 (degrees)

13. Nonfiction

This work begins with the speaker claiming that he almost forgot who he was and that he is not eloquent, and the first part also includes questions as to which people are good for horses. In the second section, the speaker claims that he has always been interested in the truth rather than wealth and family interests. The third part ends with a plea to give good advice to his sons and with the words, “We go our ways - I to die, and you to live. Which is better God only knows.” Name this work written by Plato which includes the speeches Socrates made at his trial.
ANSWER: (The) Apology (of Socrates) (accept Apologia) (do not accept Trial of Socrates)
14. British Literature

(Note to moderator: Hesperides has four syllables.) Give the most common title for this poem, which is not its first line. It contains the lines, “The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun, The higher he's a-getting, The sooner will his race be run, And nearer he's to setting. That age is best which is the first, When youth and blood are warmer; But being spent, the worse, and worst Times still succeed the former.” This work was first published in 1648 in a work called Hesperides. Its first line is, “Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,” and its writer never married. Name this work by Robert Herrick.


ANSWER: “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” (must be exact)
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