WITHQUIZ

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QUESTION PAPER

April 9th 2003

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The Question voted as 'Question of the Week' is highlighted in the question paper below and can be reached by clicking 'QotW below

WithQuiz League paper  09/04/03

Set by: SWMCC

QotW: R5/Q1

Average Aggregate Score: unknown

(Season's Ave. Agg.: unknown)

It was a pretty mixed bunch: some questions to which I would be very surprised if anybody in South Manchester, yet alone the quiz league, knew the answer (e.g. Round 8 Question 6: Roy Rogers' real name), whilst there were some real gems (e.g. Round 2 Question 1: Which TV character was based on Donald Sinclair?).  Although the Crossword round is not to everybody's taste it gets good marks from most.  The pictures too were good'uns - especially that one of Bob Dylan looking at death's door.  Marks too for innovation for starting what could be a trend: questions about consecutive dotted letters (Round 7 Questions 3 & 4).

 

ROUND 1 - 'Po puree'

1.

On 15th February there were record worldwide peace marches.  Which European country had the most marchers?

2.

Who coined the term 'Axis of Evil'?

3.

3 famous British composers died in 1934.  Name 2 of them.

4.

Which poet died in New York in November 1953?

5.

What’s next in the sequence ...3, 5, 8, 13?

6.

What’s next in the sequence ...3, 6, 10, 15?

7.

This is said to be the most printed photograph ever.  What’s her first name?

8.

This statue of Andy Capp is to be put up in his creator’s home town.  Which town?

Go to Round 1 questions with answers

ROUND 2 - 'Leisurely'

1.

Which TV character was based on Donald Sinclair?

2.

The Olton Hall (or Great Western locomotive express 5972) shot to film fame as what?

3.

A Yankee involves 4 horses.  How many bets are there?

4.

A Patent involves 3 horses.  How many bets are there?

5.

What does a tegestologist collect?

6.

What does an arctophilist collect?

7.

Who was voted BBC sports personality of the year in 1967 and 1970?

8.

Who was voted BBC sports personality of the year in 1986 and 1992?

Go to Round 2 questions with answers

ROUND 3 - 'Cricket'

(sorry but we are a cricket club)

1.

5 players have played in more than 300 One-Day Internationals.  Name three of them.

2.

4 players have scored centuries in a World Cup final.  Ponting did it this year for Australia. Who were the other three?

3.

Who wrote The Art of Captaincy in 1986?

4.

Who wrote A Lot of Hard Yakka, which was Sports Book of the Year in 1997?

5.

At South West Manchester CC's ground there are 2 ash trees within the boundary.  Which county ground has a lime tree on it?  (not the name of the county, but the name of the ground or the place)

6.

What sport was Sarah Bernhardt actually watching, when she said: “I do love cricket – it’s so very English!”?

7.

Whose 1954 autobiography, called Flying Stumps, was 'as full of revealing bumpers as his devastating bowling'?

8.

Whose 'outspoken autobiography' in 1977 was called Ball of Fire?

Go to Round 3 questions with answers

ROUND 4 -  ‘Very cross word’

Question-person please hand a blank crossword grid to each team and read out these instructions:

Both teams are completing the same diagram.  Bonuses work as usual.  If both teams fail to solve a clue, you'll be given the correct answer so that you can fill it in.  The earlier clues may be easier, because you have fewer letters in the grid to help you.  For those not used to cryptic crosswords, the definition is usually at either the beginning or the end of the clue.

                     
 

1

2

 

3

 

4

 

5

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

6

 

 

 

 

7

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

8

 

 

 

 

9

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

10

 

 

 

 

 

 
                     

Cryptic Clues

1.          2. Down:            Figure not a cog broken (7)

2.          9. Across:           Live from French venerable one (4)

3.          8. Across:           Starts to amass gelatine and reconstitutes jelly from seaweed (4)

4           5. Down:            CIA prod around for mounted bullfighter (7)

Plain Clues

5.         3 Down:              Yes, but what type of penguin? (7)

6.         4 Down:              Name the instrument - an ancestor of the trombone (7)

Back to Cryptic

7.         6 & 7 Across:     No more chicken?  It interrupts the flow (4,4)

8.         1 & 10 Across:   Bar of soap? (6,6)

Go to Round 4 questions with answers

ROUND 5 - 'Science'

1.

Who died in the village of Roslin in February?  She was six and a half and had a progressive lung disease.

2.

What is the unit of evolutionary change?

3.

Who brought Darwin’s Origin of the Species up to date in Almost Like a Whale?

4.

Who wrote The Blind Watchmaker?

5.

What drug has the formula C9 H8 O4?

6.

There is currently an epidemic of the SARS virus.  What does it stand for?

7.

What does BSE stand for?

8.

What substance has the formula C12 H22 O11?

Go to Round 5 questions with answers

ROUND 6 - 'Popular music of the beat variety'

1.

Who produced the single Those Were the Days by Mary Hopkins?

2.

Who played piano on Leader of the Pack?

3.

Who is this?

4.

Who is this?

BBC 6 MUSIC created the 'best ever' fantasy rock band by putting the best ever vocalist with the best ever guitarist etc. (the listeners added Bez of Happy Mondays for dancing.)……

5.

Who was the vocalist BBC 6 chose?

6.

Who was the guitarist they chose?

7.

Who was the bass guitarist they chose?

8.

Who was the drummer they chose?

Go to Round 6 questions with answers

ROUND 7 - 'Jografee'

1.

Where do Caol Ila and Lagavulin malt whiskies come from?

2.

What region do Margaux wines come from?

3.

Which island contains 3 consecutive dotted letters?

4.

Which capital contains 3 consecutive dotted letters?

5.

Which city is the capital of the Champagne-Ardenne region?

6.

Which city is the capital of the Burgundy region?

7.

Built by Robert Stephenson in 1847, the Royal Border Bridge spans which river?

8.

Built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1859, the Royal Albert Bridge spans which river?

Go to Round 7 questions with answers

ROUND 8 - 'More leisurely still'

1.

In which film did Greta Garbo say “I want to be alone”?

2.

The funniest film line ever is said to be “He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!”  Which actor said it?

3.

After the same tune has been played by: grand piano, reed and pipe organ, glockenspiel, bass guitar, 2 slightly distorted guitars, mandolin, Spanish guitar and acoustic guitar, which instrument joins in?

4.

What was Madame Amantine-Lucile-Aurore Dudevant’s pseudonym?

5.

What is crossword compiler John Graham’s pseudonym?

6.

What was Roy Rogers’ original name?

7.

In Monopoly, everyone knows the pieces include a boot and a car.  What are the other four?

8.

In Cluedo, everyone knows the weapons include a revolver and a Rope.  What are the other four?

Go to Round 8 questions with answers

Spares

1.

BBC 6 MUSIC created the 'best ever' fantasy rock band by putting the best ever vocalist with the best ever guitarist etc. (the listeners added Bez of Happy Mondays for dancing).  Who was the keyboard player they chose?

2.

How many balls on a snooker table at break-off?

3.

The 9th and 23rd presidents of the USA had the same name.  What was it?

4.

In horse-racing, what’s a 'Steamer'?

5.

In horse-racing, what’s 'Top of the Head'?

6.

Who wrote The ABC Murders?

7.

Who wrote Postmortem?

8.

In Cricket: not counting the spares and pencils the umpires have to carry, how many bits of wood are the most the laws allow on the field at any one time?  (don’t count cork or fast bowlers’ brains)

Go to Spare questions with answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 1 - 'Po puree'

1.

On 15th February there were record worldwide peace marches.  Which European country had the most marchers?

Spain

(Madrid and Barcelona)

2.

Who coined the term 'Axis of Evil'?

David Frum

(Bush’s speech-writer)

3.

3 famous British composers died in 1934.  Name 2 of them.

(two from)

Edward Elgar, Frederick Delius, Gustav Holst

4.

Which poet died in New York in November 1953?

Dylan Thomas

5.

What’s next in the sequence ...3, 5, 8, 13?

21

(add the previous 2 numbers - Fibonacci sequence)

6.

What’s next in the sequence ...3, 6, 10, 15?

21

(triangle numbers - think snooker balls)

7.

This is said to be the most printed photograph ever.  What’s her first name?

Fiona

(Fiona Butler, then 18)

8.

This statue of Andy Capp is to be put up in his creator’s home town.  Which town?

Hartlepool

Go back to Round 1 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 2 - 'Leisurely'

1.

Which TV character was based on Donald Sinclair?

Basil Fawlty

(Sinclair was an ex-navy man who owned and ran a hotel in Torquay)

2.

The Olton Hall (or Great Western locomotive express 5972) shot to film fame as what?

The Hogwarts Express

(in Harry Potter films)

3.

A Yankee involves 4 horses.  How many bets are there?

11

(one 4-fold, 4 trebles, 6 doubles)

4.

A Patent involves 3 horses.  How many bets are there?

7

(one treble, 3 doubles, 3 singles)

5.

What does a tegestologist collect?

Beermats

6.

What does an arctophilist collect?

Teddy bears

7.

Who was voted BBC sports personality of the year in 1967 and 1970?

Henry Cooper

8.

Who was voted BBC sports personality of the year in 1986 and 1992?

Nigel Mansell (personality??!)

Go back to Round 2 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 3 'Cricket'

(sorry but we are a cricket club)

1.

5 players have played in more than 300 One-Day Internationals.  Name three of them.

(Three from)

Wasim Akram; Sachin Tendulkar; Steve Waugh (first name is required); Mohammed Azharuddim; Aravinda da Silva

2.

4 players have scored centuries in a World Cup final.  Ponting did it this year for Australia. Who were the other three?

Clive Lloyd, Viv Richards (West Indies), Aravinda da Silva (Sri Lanka)

3.

Who wrote The Art of Captaincy in 1986?

Mike Brearley

4.

Who wrote A Lot of Hard Yakka, which was Sports Book of the Year in 1997?

Simon Hughes

5.

At South West Manchester CC's ground there are 2 ash trees within the boundary.  Which county ground has a lime tree on it?  (not the name of the county, but the name of the ground or the place)

St Lawrence Ground

(or Canterbury)

6.

What sport was Sarah Bernhardt actually watching, when she said: “I do love cricket – it’s so very English!”?

Soccer

(she was French, which may explain it)

7.

Whose 1954 autobiography, called Flying Stumps, was 'as full of revealing bumpers as his devastating bowling'?

Ray Lindwall

8.

Whose 'outspoken autobiography' in 1977 was called Ball of Fire?

Fred Trueman

Go back to Round 3 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 4 - ‘Very cross word’

Question-person please hand a blank crossword grid to each team and read out these instructions:

Both teams are completing the same diagram.  Bonuses work as usual.  If both teams fail to solve a clue, you'll be given the correct answer so that you can fill it in.  The earlier clues may be easier, because you have fewer letters in the grid to help you.  For those not used to cryptic crosswords, the definition is usually at either the beginning or the end of the clue.

                     
 

1

  R

2

  O

 

  V

3

   E

 

   R

4

   S

 

5

  P

 

 
 

 

 

  C

 

 

  M

 

 

  A

 

 

  I

 

 
 

6

  S

 

  T

 

  O

 

  P

 

7

  C

 

  O

 

  C

 

  K

 
 

 

 

  A

 

 

  E

 

 

  K

 

 

  A

 

 
 

8

  A

 

  G

 

  A

 

  R

 

9

  B

 

  E

 

  D

 

  E

 
 

 

 

  O

 

 

  O

 

 

  U

 

 

  O

 

 
 

 

 

  N

 

10

   R

 

   E

 

  T

 

  U

 

  R

 

  N

 
                     

Cryptic Clues

1.          2. Down:            Figure not a cog broken (7)

OCTAGON is a figure and an anagram of 'not a cog'

2.          9. Across:           Live from French venerable one (4)

BEDE is the best known Venerable; live = be; French for from = de

3.          8. Across:           Starts to amass gelatine and reconstitutes jelly from seaweed (4)

AGAR is a jelly made from seaweed; A,G,A and R are the starting letters of the words 'Amass', 'Gelatine', 'And', and 'Reconstitutes'

4           5. Down:            CIA prod around for mounted bullfighter (7)

PICADOR - mounted bullfighter and an anagram of 'CIA prod'

Plain Clues

5.         3 Down:              Yes, but what type of penguin? (7)

EMPEROR

6.         4 Down:              Name the instrument - an ancestor of the trombone (7)

SACKBUT

 

 

Back to Cryptic

7.         6 & 7 Across:     No more chicken?  It interrupts the flow (4,4)

STOP COCK - Stop! = No more! and a cock is a chicken

8.         1 & 10 Across:   Bar of soap? (6,6)

ROVERS RETURN - the pub or bar of the Soap Coronation Street

Go back to Round 4 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 5 - 'Science'

1.

Who died in the village of Roslin in February?  She was six and a half and had a progressive lung disease.

Dolly the Sheep

(Roslin Research institute, near Edinburgh)

2.

What is the unit of evolutionary change?

Darwin

3.

Who brought Darwin’s Origin of the Species up to date in Almost Like a Whale?

Steve Jones

4.

Who wrote The Blind Watchmaker?

Richard Dawkins

5.

What drug has the formula C9 H8 O4?

Aspirin

6.

There is currently an epidemic of the SARS virus.  What does it stand for?

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome

7.

What does BSE stand for?

Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy

8.

What substance has the formula C12 H22 O11?

Sucrose

(accept sugar)

Go back to Round 5 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 6 - 'Popular music of the beat variety'

1.

Who produced the single Those Were the Days by Mary Hopkins?

Paul Macartney

(it was the 2nd Apple single)

2.

Who played piano on Leader of the Pack?

Billy Joel

3.

Who is this?

Bob Dylan

(January 2003)

4.

Who is this?

Cerys Matthews

(formerly of Catatonia, at her wedding, February 2003)

BBC 6 MUSIC created the 'best ever' fantasy rock band by putting the best ever vocalist with the best ever guitarist etc. (the listeners added Bez of Happy Mondays for dancing.)……

5.

Who was the vocalist BBC 6 chose?

Bono

(U2)

6.

Who was the guitarist they chose?

Jimi Hendrix

7.

Who was the bass guitarist they chose?

Flea

(Red Hot Chili Peppers)

8.

Who was the drummer they chose?

Keith Moon

(The Who)

Go back to Round 6 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 7 - 'Jografee'

1.

Where do Caol Ila and Lagavulin malt whiskies come from?

Islay

(if they say Scotland, ask for more)

2.

What region do Margaux wines come from?

Bordeaux

(accept Haut Medoc)

3.

Which island contains 3 consecutive dotted letters?

Fiji

4.

Which capital contains 3 consecutive dotted letters?

Beijing

5.

Which city is the capital of the Champagne-Ardenne region?

Rheims

6.

Which city is the capital of the Burgundy region?

Dijon

7.

Built by Robert Stephenson in 1847, the Royal Border Bridge spans which river?

Tweed

8.

Built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1859, the Royal Albert Bridge spans which river?

Tamar

Go back to Round 7 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROUND 8 - 'More leisurely still'

1.

In which film did Greta Garbo say “I want to be alone”?

Grand Hotel

2.

The funniest film line ever is said to be “He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!”  Which actor said it?

Terry Jones

(in The Life of Brian)

3.

After the same tune has been played by: grand piano, reed and pipe organ, glockenspiel, bass guitar, 2 slightly distorted guitars, mandolin, Spanish guitar and acoustic guitar, which instrument joins in?

Tubular Bells

4.

What was Madame Amantine-Lucile-Aurore Dudevant’s pseudonym?

George Sand

5.

What is crossword compiler John Graham’s pseudonym?

Araucaria

6.

What was Roy Rogers’ original name?

Leonard Slye

7.

In Monopoly, everyone knows the pieces include a boot and a car.  What are the other four?

Ship, Top hat, Dog, Iron

8.

In Cluedo, everyone knows the weapons include a revolver and a Rope.  What are the other four?

Candlestick, Lead pipe, Spanner, Dagger

Go back to Round 8 questions without answers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spares

1.

BBC 6 MUSIC created the 'best ever' fantasy rock band by putting the best ever vocalist with the best ever guitarist etc. (the listeners added Bez of Happy Mondays for dancing).  Who was the keyboard player they chose?

Chris Martin

(Coldplay)

2.

How many balls on a snooker table at break-off?

22

(15 red, 6 colours, white)

3.

The 9th and 23rd presidents of the USA had the same name.  What was it?

Harrison

4.

In horse-racing, what’s a 'Steamer'?

A horse backed significantly on the morning of the race, causing it’s odds to shorten markedly

5.

In horse-racing, what’s 'Top of the Head'?

9-4

(in tic-tac)

6.

Who wrote The ABC Murders?

Agatha Christie

7.

Who wrote Postmortem?

Patricia Cornwell

8.

In Cricket: not counting the spares and pencils the umpires have to carry, how many bits of wood are the most the laws allow on the field at any one time?  (don’t count cork or fast bowlers’ brains)

14

(6 stumps, 4 bails, the 4 batters’ bats - 2 runners are allowed if the batters are injured)

Go back to Spare questions without answers