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|    rec.games.trivia    |    Discussion about trivia games    |    32,813 messages    |
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|    Message 31,217 of 32,813    |
|    Dan Tilque to Mark Brader    |
|    Re: RQFTCINO13 Game 9, Rounds 4,6: geome    |
|    24 Dec 22 05:51:45    |
   
   From: dtilque@frontier.com   
      
   On 12/23/22 13:23, Mark Brader wrote:   
   >   
   >   
   > * Game 9, Round 4 - Science - Geometric Formulas   
   >   
   > We all were taught some geometry in math class, either in elementary   
   > school or high school. In this round, we will test much how you   
   > remember from these classes. In each case, please select the   
   > correct answer from the following list.   
   >   
   > *NOTE*: In order for this to be posted in ISO 8859-1, every instance   
   > of the # sign represents pi. The characters ², ³, and × should show   
   > correctly as "squared", "cubed", and the "times" sign respectively.   
   > [Obviously, in some of the formulas the × sign is not used.   
   > For forms like x/y × z, the intent is to divide and then multiply.]   
   >   
   > [A] 4L [K] 2W + 2L   
   > [B] L² [L] B × H/2   
   > [C] L³ [M] B² × H/3   
   > [D] #r² [N] 4/3 × #r³   
   > [E] 2#r [O] L × W × H   
   > [F] #r²H [P] 2#r(r + H)   
   > [G] 4#r² [Q] L × H × B/2   
   > [H] B × H [R] L × W × #/4   
   > [I] #r²H/3 [S] (L + W)/2 × H   
   > [J] 6 × L² [T] 2(L × W) + 2(W × H) + 2(H × L)   
   > where   
   > r = radius   
   > B = Base   
   > H = Height   
   > L = Length   
   > W = Width (or in one of the decoys, a second length)   
   >   
   > Also note: if there is more than one possibility, select the   
   > simplest one. Which one, then, is the formula for the...   
   >   
   > 1. Area of a circle?   
      
   D   
      
   > 2. Area of a square?   
      
   B   
      
   > 3. Surface area of a cube?   
      
   J   
      
   > 4. Surface area of a sphere?   
      
   G   
      
   > 5. Perimeter of a rectangle?   
      
   K   
      
   > 6. Circumference of a circle?   
      
   E   
      
   > 7. Volume of a sphere?   
      
   N   
      
   > 8. Volume of a cylinder?   
      
   F   
      
   > 9. Area of a triangle?   
      
   L   
      
   > 10. Volume of a cube?   
      
   C   
      
   >   
   >   
   > And if you would like to identify the decoys for fun, but for no points,   
   > decode the rot13 and continue.   
   >   
   > 11. Fhesnpr nern bs erpgnathyne cnenyyrycvcrq (gung vf, n "fubrobk"   
   > svther, yvxr n phor ohg jvgu erpgnathyne snprf)?   
   > 12. Ibyhzr bs n gevnathyne cevfz?   
   > 13. Nern bs n gencrmbvq?   
   > 14. Ibyhzr bs n fdhner-onfrq clenzvq?   
   > 15. Nern bs na ryyvcfr?   
   > 16. Ibyhzr bs n "fubrobk" svther?   
   > 17. Ibyhzr bs n pbar?   
   > 18. Crevzrgre bs n fdhner?   
   > 19. Nern bs n erpgnatyr?   
   > 20. Fhesnpr nern bs n plyvaqre?   
   >   
   >   
   > * Game 9, Round 6 - Canadiana Arts & Literature   
   >   
   > 1. This Canadian author won the first Arthur C. Clarke award   
   > in 1987. The award is given for the best science-fiction novel   
   > that was first published in the UK during the previous year.   
   > Name either the author or the award-winning book.   
   >   
   > 2. "I would walk to the end of the street and over the prairie   
   > with the clickety grasshoppers bunging in arcs ahead of me,   
   > and I could hear the hum and twang of wind in the great prairie   
   > harp of telephone wires. Standing there with the total thrust   
   > of prairie sun on my vulnerable head, I guess I learned --   
   > at a very young age -- that I was mortal." This excerpt was   
   > recited by Donald Sutherland at the opening ceremonies of the   
   > 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Again, name either the   
   > author or the book it was taken from.   
   >   
   > 3. In 2006 the Guardian described this Canadian author as   
   > "possibly the most gifted exegete of North American mass culture   
   > writing today." In 2009 the Daily Telegraph said he was "one   
   > of the great satirists of consumerism." He gave us the terms   
   > "McJob" and "Generation X". Name this author.   
   >   
   > 4. This Canadian writer is best known for his humorous observations   
   > on Canadian history and culture. In 1997 he wrote "Why I   
   > Hate Canadians", followed the next year by "I was a Teen   
   > Aged Katima-Victim". In 2000 he gave us "Canadian History   
   > for Dummies". In 2001 he co-wrote "How to be a Canadian" with   
   > his brother Ian. And he won the Giller prize in 2012 for "419:   
   > A Novel." Name this author (the surname is sufficient).   
   >   
   > 5. Within 1,000, what is the generally acknowledged number of   
   > copies that must be sold in a week for a book to become a   
   > Canadian bestseller?   
   >   
   > 6. This talented individual had many careers: for him, writing   
   > was a sideline. He wrote "Face-Off at the Summit", "Home Game:   
   > Hockey and Life in Canada", "The Moved and the Shaken", and   
   > "In School: Our Kids, Our Teachers, Our Classrooms". Who was he?   
   >   
   > 7. The no-holds-barred "Frank" magazine referred to this person   
   > by substituting the uncomplimentary moniker "Tubby" for his   
   > first name, and referred to his 1993 autobiography "A Life in   
   > Progress" by calling it "A Thesaurus in Progress". Name the   
   > recipient of these barbs.   
   >   
   > 8. He was a Canadian painter and sculptor. In 1969 he was   
   > made a Companion of the Order of Canada. One of his largest   
   > compositions, "Point de rencontre" ("Meeting Point"), was   
   > originally intended for the Toronto airport, but is """now"""   
   > in the Opéra Bastille in Paris. He was made an Officer of the   
   > National Order of Quebec in 1988, and was promoted to Grand   
   > Officer in 1994. In 2000 he was inducted into Canada's Walk   
   > of Fame. Who?   
   >   
   > 9. In what Canadian city is the art gallery that """claims"""   
   > to have the largest public collection of contemporary Inuit   
   > art in the world?   
      
   Edmonton   
      
   >   
   > 10. It's a huge canvas with just two colors of acrylic paint --   
   > twin vertical stripes of ultramarine blue flanking a middle   
   > one of cadmium red. Canadians were outraged when the National   
   > Gallery of Canada paid $1,800,000 for this work in 1989.   
   > *Name the American artist* who created "Voice of Fire".   
   >   
      
   --   
   Dan Tilque   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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