From: pete.gayde@gmail.com   
      
   Mark Brader wrote:   
   > These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-13,   
   > 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 the Usual Suspects and   
   > are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have   
   > been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of   
   > current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting   
   > of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24   
   > companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition   
   > (QFTCI*)".   
   >   
   >   
   > I wrote one of these rounds and most of the other.   
   >   
   >   
   > ** Game 8, Round 9 - Literature - Shakespeare   
   >   
   > 1. William Shakespeare was the author or co-author of about   
   > 38 plays. 36 of them were published in a single book in 1623,   
   > the first time this had been done. That's twice as many as had   
   > been individually published before, and the book also shows   
   > many variations from those earlier versions, so it's very   
   > important to literary historians. By what description is the   
   > book generally known?   
   >   
   > 2. In , the plays are classified into three categories:   
   > comedies, tragedies, and what else?   
      
   Histories   
      
   >   
   > 3. In which tragedy would you find the characters Benvolio,   
   > Mercutio, and Friar Laurence?   
      
   Romeo and Juliet   
      
   >   
   > 4. In which tragedy would you find the characters Goneril, Cordelia,   
   > and Regan?   
      
   Macbeth   
      
   >   
   > 5. In which comedy would you find the characters Rosalind, Orlando,   
   > Celia, and Touchstone?   
   >   
   > 6. In which comedy would you find the characters Antipholus of   
   > Ephesus, Antipholus of Syracuse, Dromio of Ephesus, and Dromio   
   > of Syracuse?   
      
   Titus Andronicus   
      
   >   
   > 7. Which character has the most lines in *any one* of Shakespeare's   
   > plays?   
   >   
   > 8. Which character has the most lines if *all* of Shakespeare's   
   > plays are counted together?   
      
   Henry V   
      
   >   
   > 9. In which of Shakespeare's plays are the remains of two of the   
   > characters served to another character in the form of pie?   
      
   Titus Andronicus   
      
   >   
   > 10. In which of Shakespeare's plays does one of the characters   
   > magically transform another character's head into the head of   
   > an ass, which is to say, a donkey?   
      
   A Midsummer Night's Dream   
      
   >   
   >   
   > ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round   
   >   
   > * A. Geography: Passes   
   >   
   > A1. The original route of the Trans-Canada Highway and the   
   > first railway across the Canadian Rockies both cross the   
   > Rockies using the same pass. Name it.   
   >   
   > A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that   
   > has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of   
   > the ancient Silk Road.   
      
   Khyber   
      
   >   
   >   
   > * B. History: Failures   
   >   
   > B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across   
   > Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival   
   > British expedition began the same journey, with determination   
   > that in their case exceeded their competence. They too   
   > reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the   
   > way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader   
   > of this ill-fated expedition?   
   >   
   > B2. The British do seem to love to commemorate their heroic   
   > failures. Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem "The Charge of   
   > the Light Brigade" celebrates a disastrous attack against   
   > Russian troops, initiated accidentally by an unclear order,   
   > during *what battle* of the Crimean War?   
   >   
   >   
   > * C. Science: Batteries   
   >   
   > C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,   
   > such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?   
      
   1.5   
      
   >   
   > C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA   
   > alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word   
   > refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the   
   > word "battery" got established as common usage, what were   
   > we supposed to call just one of the things?   
   >   
   >   
   > * D. Miscellaneous: Political Terms   
   >   
   > D1. What is it called when a party chooses a candidate from   
   > elsewhere to run in what they think is a safe district?   
   >   
   > D2. What is it called when one party gets to adjust the   
   > electoral-district boundaries and uses this power to improve   
   > their own future chances?   
      
   Gerrymandering   
      
   >   
   >   
   > * E. Leisure: Game Masters   
   >   
   > E1. The following people have been known for their mastery   
   > of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,   
   > José Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.   
      
   Chess   
      
   >   
   > E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of   
   > what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,   
   > Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.   
      
   Bridge   
      
   >   
   >   
   > * F. Literature: Complete the Title   
   >   
   > F1. Complete the title of this 1974 book by Robert Pirsig.   
   > The main title will do; you don't need to give the subtitle.   
   > "Zen and..."   
   >   
   > F2. The main title of this 2007 book by Stephen Colbert   
   > ["coal-BEAR"] is "I am America". Give the 4-word subtitle --   
   > punctuation marks not required.   
      
   and you can too   
      
   >   
      
   Pete Gayde   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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