University of Michigan MLK Tournament 2005 packet by
Pitt Uspal and Rochester Phoenix
Michigan MLK Tournament 2005 Packet by Pitt Uspal and Rochester Phoenix TOSSUPS 1. He served on the Fort Thomas city council from 1977-1979, and later lost the governor’s race in his state in 1983. In 1998, he moved from the House to the Senate, but in August 2004 he demanded a police escort at all times for fear of terroism. In his 2004 re-election campaign, he claimed his democratic opponent looked like one of Saddam Hussein‟s sons, and his staff referred to his opponent as “limp-wristed.” For 10 points, identify this Kentucky senator and Hall of Fame pitcher. Answer: Jim Bunning
2. It was purchased from Charles and Maria Ellis along with an adjacent property known as the “Keith Lot.” Based on the principle of self-reliance, it was the location where the newspaper The Harbinger was printed. Albert Brisbane helped it convert to a phalanx in 1844, three years after it was founded by the Unitarian minister George Ripley. Based on cooperative living and transcendentalism, for 10 points, name this famous experimental farm whose members and visitors included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Answer : Brook Farm 3. Housed in the Musée D’Orsay, this painting contains a small house barely visible on the cliffs on the left-hand side of the background. A dog stands next to a man wearing green socks, and a white hat appears at the feet of a robed man reading from a religious book. Pallbearers, a priest, altar boys, a gravedigger, family and friends in mourning surround the open grave at the center front of the painting. FTP, name this painting that depicts a somber scene of peasant life in Gustave Courbet‟s hometown Answer: Burial at Ornans
4. At one point, the chorus orders Cilissa to alter a message, and Pylades is present but silent for most of the play, reminding his friend that he should rather be hated by all mortals than defy the will of Apollo. At the end of the play, the main character is driven mad by the Furies, and the chorus of slave women laments that despite avenging his father Agamemnon by killing Clytemnestra and Aegisthus, Orestes has not ended the cycle of bloodshed. FTP, what is this second play of Aeschylus's Oresteia? Answer: The Libation-Bearers or Choephoroe
5. The westernmost points in this country are the islands of Hiiumaa and Saaremaa, while most of its eastern border lies along a lake. Its cities include Tartu and Narva, and its capital lies across a narrow sea from Espoo. That narrow sea separates this country's natives from their close linguistic relatives in a country to the north, but the two countries are separated by a small slice of a very large country. Efforts to enforce exclusive use of the native, Finno-Ugric, language rather than Russian, have petered out in, FTP, what eentsy former Soviet republic that borders Latvia and Russia and has its capital at Tallinn?
Answer: Estonia
6. Byron wrote an epitaph for this man that ends by telling the reader to urinate on his grave. At the congresses of Troppau and Laibach was would not support interventions against liberal revolutions in Spain and Italy, thus disappointing his ally Metternich. Shortly before the Congress of Verona in 1822, beset by these failures and possibly being blackmailed for being a homosexual, he committed suicide and was succeeded by Canning. For 10 points, name this reactionary British foreign minister who represented his country in 1814 at the Congress of Vienna. Answer: Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh (castle-ray) (accept either underlined name alone)
7. At the heart of this device is a capacitor structure in which energy band bending occurs with applied bias. With bias of the correct polarity and sufficient magnitude, the intrinsic energy level crosses the Fermi level and inversion occurs, with a switch of majority carriers in the inversion region. Accordingly, modulation of a gate voltage allows for formation of a channel and control of its conductance, while familiar I-V characteristics are also due to depletion with increasing drain voltage. FTP, name this type of transistor ubiquitous in modern integrated circuit technology. Answer: MOSFET (accept metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistor, accept MISFET, prompt on FET)
8. When done in the shallow way, it is often completed in the oven and the food being prepared is covered with a cartouche. The deep way, meanwhile, fittingly involves submerging the food being cooked. It is used mostly as a way to cook tender foods quickly without adding fats or oils. Water, stock and wine can all be used as liquids to bring foods to a temperature just under a boil in, for 10 points, what method of cooking that is used to cook poultry, fish, and most commonly eggs? Answer: Poaching
9. Geirrod captured him by his feet in the form of a hawk, but the giantess Grid foiled any plans he had. When he took the form of a mare and got knocked up by Hrimthur’s horse, he eventually gave birth to the eight-legged Sleipnir. Also the father of Hel and the Midgard Serpent, he was responsible for the death of Balder when he tricked Hoder into chucking some mistletoe. He is bound to some rocks until Ragnarok arrives. For ten points name this Norse trickster god. Answer: Loki
10. Once booed off stage at the Apollo Theater, his larval stages include a trilobite, a squid, a starfish, and a lamprey. He grew up on Decapod 10 being bullied by a horseshoe crab named Vinnie, and was forced to abandon his dream of being a comedian to study human medicine, eventually getting a low-paying job with Planet Express. FTP name this crustacean with a thick Jewish accent, one of the major characters on Futurama. Answer: Dr. John Zoidberg
11. This composer once claimed that his cook knew more about counterpoint than Gluck did. He himself got his later musical education in Italy before returning to serve a monarch of a small German state, who continued to patronize him when he became monarch of a larger country. "Zadok the Priest" is one of the coronation anthems he wrote for that king's successor, George II. His two most famous orchestral works date to 1717 and 1749 and are both named for occasions of royal ceremony. FTP, name this German-born composer of the operas Xerxes and Julius Caesar, as well as Music for the Royal Fireworks, Water Music and the Messiah. Answer: George Frederick Handel
12. John 7.39 explains that at the time in question, this was not given, because Christ was not yet glorified. In Matthew 12.32, Jesus says that although he who speaks against the Son of Man will be forgiven, he who speaks against this will not. In all four Gospels, John the Baptist says that while he baptizes with water, Jesus will baptize with this. In its most famous appearance in Acts, it descends as "cloven tongues like as of fire" upon the Apostles at Pentecost. Its precise relation to its two counterparts is a major point of contention between the Roman and Greek churches. Pneumatology is the study of, for 10 points, what person of the Trinity that, for the purposes of this tournament, proceeds from the Father and the Son. Answer: The Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost or Third Person of the Trinity
13. He has written extensively on the public/private and system/lifeworld distinctions, such as in The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, and on legitimation crises in a similarly titled work. He has participated in the Historikerstreit, more recently joining Derrida in calling for a common European foreign policy, co-writing the book Philosophy in a Time of Terror. FTP, name this German sociologist, philosopher, and intellectual heir of the Frankfurt School, the author of The Theory of Communicative Action. Answer: Jürgen Habermas
14. It began on February 29, the attacking army was outnumbered nearly 10-to-1, and General Baratieri spread his troops out too far by failing to account for rough terrain. Defensive commander Ras Makonnen ordered a counter-attack and surrounded the Europeans, eventually routing them. It occurred after violations of the Treaty of Wichale. For 10 points, what was this 1896 battle in which Menelik II beat down some Italian troops, resulting in Italy recognizing Ethiopia as an independent nation? Answer: Battle of Adowa (accept Adwa or Adua)
15. Dr. Bledsoe expels the title character after he takes Mr. Norton to the Golden Day, a brothel near campus. After working as a scab for the bitter Lucius Brockway at Liberty Paints, he witnesses the death of Tod Clifton at the hands of police and later burns all of his papers from the socialist Brotherhood after an encounter with Ras the Destroyer. For 10 points, identify this 1952 work whose nameless hero notes that people only see his surroundings, themselves or figments of their imaginations when looking at him, a novel by Ralph Ellison.
Answer: Invisible Man 16. Though he posed for his father’s sculpture Man Cub, his first artistic position was as a sports illustrator for the National Police Gazette, and he parlayed this into his first book, Animal Sketching. He gave animal names to sculptures like The Only, Only Bird, Crested Cow, and he created a motorized mural, Universe, for the Sears Tower. He is better known for incorporating pulleys and cranks into his sculptures, differentiating them from stabiles. For ten points, name this American abstract sculptor whose Lobster Trap and Fish Tail is the most famous example of the form he created, the mobile. Answer: Alexander Calder
17. In 1999, God told him to fulfill his commitment, so he returned to work after retiring the previous year. After just one year, however, his retirement became permanent. He spent two years playing for the Memphis Showboats, though his autobiography In the Trenches may not have mentioned his involvement with Knoxville church arson or his comments about Latinos and Asians in a 1998 speech. For 10 points, name this former Philadelphia and Green Bay defensive end, the “minister of defense” who died in late 2004 of a respiratory ailment at age 43. Answer: Reggie White
18. The Riesz-Fischer Theorem states that a function is L-squared integrable if and only if this is Lsquared convergent for the function. Originally postulated in its discoverer’s memoir On the Propagation of Heat in Solid Bodies, the “Gibbs Phenomenon” results when it is used to represent a discontinuous function, such as a square wave. Studied in the field of harmonic analysis, FTP, name this expansion of a periodic function in terms of an infinite sum of cosines and sines, named for its French discoverer. Answer: Fourier Series
19. Before being accepting his most famous post, the only book on nuclear policy he had read was Kissinger’s Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy. The author of books such as One Hundred Countries, Two Billion People and Out of the Cold, he was the first president of Ford not from the Ford family. Despite missing out on a multiple-warhead ban at the Glassboro Summit, he served as president of the World Bank for 13 years after resigning from his most famous post in 1968. FTP, name this Secretary of Defense under John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Answer: Robert S(trange) McNamara 20. Begun as part of the Dayton Company’s family of stores, it was conceived in 1962. From its first store in Roseville, Minnesota, it has expanded to over 1300 locations nationally. Greatland locations differ from standard outlets, but the only noticeable difference is a second set of doors. For 10 points, name this retailer that received bad press in 2004 for refusing to allow Salvation Army red kettles at any of its stores. Answer: Target
21. Walter Koroshetz found this chemical abundant in the occipital cortex of those with Huntington’s disease, as its presence indicates that neurons are undergoing stress. Commercial production of it generally results in a racemic mixture of its R (*) and S isomers, but only the R type is found in animals. In the bloodstream, some of it is converted to pyruvate and fed into the Krebs cycle. It was discovered by Carl Scheele. FTP, name this carboxylic acid, a product of fermentation following anaerobic glycolysis, which has chemical formula C3H6O3 and causes a burning feeling in muscles after prolonged exercise. Answer: lactic acid [accept lactate or 2-Hydroxypropanoic acid] 22. The narrator observes the title character’s single long eyebrow hair, which the latter regards as a symbol of long life. The main action starts at the Koyokan Restaurant, then moves to Hakone, and finishes in Ito after the protagonist falls ill. Narrated by the journalist Uragami, it chronicles Otaké‟s challenge to the title character, Honnimbo Shsai, which the former ultimately wins after the latter acts too hastily on move 130. FTP, name this novel by Kawabata Yasunari that centers on a board game popular in Japan. Answer: The Master of Go [accept Meijin] 23. One explanation of the more paradoxical aspects of this phenomenon is Zahavi’s handicap principle. The fitness-reducing “handicap” has been variously interpreted as a publicly visible test of survival, the opportunity to display healthfulness or good diet, or “costly” and therefore honest “signaling.” Darwin also devoted two thirds of The Descent of Man to this subject, which is further divided into r- and k- varieties based on offspring quantity. FTP, name this evolutionary pressure which is due to competition for mates and is the counterpart of ecological selection. Answer: Sexual selection
24. His last works in the 1950s, including Good and Evil and The Eclipse of God, dealt with the problem of evil. Much earlier, in 1903, he had been a prominent Zionist but at the fifth World Zionist Congress opposed Herzl and turned to studying the Hasidim, resulting in such books as The Legends of Bal-Shem and Tales of Rabbi Nachman. The conviction that the self can emerge only through mutually affirming relations with other is the central argument of I and Thou, the most popular work of, FTP, what Jewish philosopher who shares his name with a depressed, hat-wearing Fraggle. Answer: Martin Buber
25. Until its 1980 independence, it was administered under an unusual arrangement known as the Anglo-French Condominium, in which the two powers shared sovereignty and in which natives could choose the legal system under which to be governed. Central to its WWII-era cargo cult is the messianic figure of Jon Frum, an amalgam of Santa Claus, Uncle Sam, and John the Baptist. FTP, name this South Pacific nation previously known as the New Hebrides and which has its capital at Port Vila. Answer: Vanuatu
26. In an 1884 lecture tour, he and Mark Twain billed themselves as the “Twins of Genius.” Like Twain, he was a Confederate veteran, and after the war, he began collecting material and writing for his hometown newspaper, the New Orleans Picayune. His local-color fiction includes such works as “Sieur George” and “Jean-ah Poquelin,”though he also wrote novels such as Bylow Hill and Gideon’s Band. FTP, name this southern author, a supporter of black civil rights and author of Old Creole Days and The Grandissimes. Answer: George Washington Cable
BONUSES 1. Name the composer from works FTPE. (10) The Trout piano quintet; the Death and the Maiden string quartet; Symphony 9, “The Great”. Answer: Franz Schubert (10) Symphonies Harold in Italy and Romeo and Juliet; operas The Trojans and Beatrice and Benedict. Answer: Hector Berlioz (10) The operas Dialogues of the Carmelites and The Breasts of Tiresias. Answer: Francis Poulenc
2. FTP each, identify the following concerning the early Byzantine Empire: (10) Before they were put down by Justinian I, these riots saw the sports hooligans of the Blues and Greens ravage central Constantinople. Answer: Nika riots (10) This Byzantine emperor and Isaurian who shared his name with an Eleatic philosopher refused Odoacer‟s allegiance when it was offered to him. Answer: Zeno (accept Tarasicodissa or Trascalissaeus) (10) In 626, Constantinople was nearly conquered by this mysterious Balkan people who then set up a state that was finally crushed by Charlemagne in 805. Answer: Avars
3. Answer the following about Soviet literature, FTPE. (10) This Solzhenitsyn novel features Gleb Nerzhin‟s fight against the Stalinist prison system. It takes its title from Dante. Answer: The First Circle (or V kruge pervom) (10) This work of Socialist Realism tells of the struggles of the Melekhov, Korshunov, and Koshevoi families. It‟s the most famous novel by Mikhail Sholokhov. Answer: The Quiet Don (or Tikhii Don or And Quiet Flows the Don) (10) Shot for espionage in 1940, this author is best known for short story collections such as Red Cavalry and Tales of Odessa. Answer: Isaac Emmanuilovich Babel
4. Answer the following about a type of cell, FTPE. (10) These cells contain the end branches of excretory bodies in certain organisms, capping protonoephridia. Their name comes from the flickering caused by the beating of their cilia. Answer: flame cells (10) Flame cells are found mainly in this phylum, which contains the flatworms. Answer: platyhelminthes (10) These tiny aquatic organisms which feed using a wheel-like ring of cilia, also use flame cells for excretory purposes. Answer: Rotifers (or Rotifera)
5. Identify these important people in Spanish history FTPE. (10) By marrying Isabella I in 1492, he helped unite his kingdom with that of Castille. Answer: Ferdinand II of Aragon OR Ferdinand V of Castile OR Ferdinand the Catholic (accept Fernando) (10) Isabella and Ferdinand‟s grandson, he extended Spain‟s rule into Europe as part of the Holy Roman Empire Answer: Charles I of Spain OR Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire (accept Carlos) (10) His 17th century reign in Spain was controlled mostly by the Count-Duke of Olivares, whom he trusted too much, and led to political chaos within Spain Answer: Philip IV OR Filipe IV
6. Name these internet words some people learned in 2004 FTPE. (10) This verb describes the act of winning an online auction by bidding at the last second, which can be done automatically with services like AuctionStealer. Answer: sniping (10) About 5% of instant messages in 2004 consisted of unsolicited ads, which have been given this derivative name. Answer: spim
(10) There are no boundaries and no regulations of this internet-based telephone technology, which is included in Microsoft‟s new “Istanbul” communications client. Answer: VoIP or Voice Over Internet Protocol
7. For 10 point each, answer these questions on possible volcanism on planetary bodies in our Solar System that are not the Earth. (10) The most active volcanoes in the solar system are found on this body, and are caused by tidal forces from Jupiter. Answer: Io (10) An extinct shield volcano, this Martian mount is still the tallest known mountain in the solar system. Answer: Olympus Mons (10) There is no volcanism on the Moon. However, the lava flows caused by the meteor impacts that formed the Maria also formed these volcanic tubes and trenches on the moon. Answer: rille
8. Name these rivers for 10 points each (10) Only four bridges cross this North American river, despite its length of over 3,000 km. It empties into the Bering sea, and gets its name from the local natives‟ word for “big river.” Answer: Yukon River (10) It begins 150 miles from the Atlantic in Guinea and then flows away from the ocean, curving past Timbuktu and eventually emptying through the Oil Rivers into the Gulf of Guinea Answer: Niger River (10) This river separates the province of Connaught from the rest of Ireland and is the longest river in the British Isles Answer: River Shannon
9. Given a description of a Saturday Night Live parody commercial, name the product being advertised FTPE. (10) A bunch of guys sit around a basketball court wearing these garments and saying things like “Normally I wear protection, but then I thought, „When am I gonna make it back to Haiti?‟” Answer: Bad Idea Jeans
(10) Adam Sandler and Chris Farley are overjoyed to be in a pool full of muscular men with plenty of this beer. Answer: Schmitt‟s Gay (10) Jane Curtin is a farmwife endorsing this, “the only cereal that's pure 100% rocks and pebbles”. Answer: Quarry
10. Name some servants from literature, FTPE. (10) He becomes the loyal servant of Robinson Crusoe after being saved from cannibals. Answer: Friday (10) Rudyard Kipling noted that this “regimental bhisti ... was white, clear white, inside, When 'e went to tend the wounded under fire!” Answer: Gunga Din (10) An “honest man but with very little wit in his pate,” he serves his master from La Mancha as a squire, riding the mule Dapple and eventually governing the fictitious insula Barataria. Answer: Sancho Panza
11. Given a description, give the species of the genus Homo FTPE. (10) Found from the middle of the Pliestocene, these early humans averaged 5 feet 10 inches, and had a brain about 74% the size of the modern man‟s. Java Man is an example. Answer: Homo erectus (10) Predating Homo erectus is this species, whose brain was less than half the size of modern human brains. There is little evidence of controlled fire or cooperative hunting, but nonetheless this species is considered quite handy. Answer: Homo habilis (10) Considered a subspecies of Homo erectus, this hard working species arose in Africa some 1.9 million years ago with a thinner, sulcus-lacking skull. It was so named by Groves and Mazak in 1975. Answer: Homo ergaster
12. Answer the following about a fake-ass force, FTPE. (10) This pseudoforce is equal and opposite to the product of a namesake acceleration and the mass of the body upon which it acts. It‟s commonly used to explain the rotation of hurricanes. Answer: Coriolis pseudoforce
(10) The Coriolis pseudoforce helps adjust the part of this physical law which states that a body moves in the direction of the force that acts upon it. Answer: Newton‟s Second Law of Motion (10) One consequence of the Coriolis pseudoforce is that under certain conditions, all stable solutions to these equations have the same fluid velocity along any line parallel to the axis of rotation. Answer: Navier-Stokes Equations
13. For 10 points each, answer these questions about the Zulu War. (10) This battle between the Zulu and the British on January 22, 1879. The British were victorious despite being outnumbered nearly 30 to 1. Answer: Rorke‟s Drift (10) Give the name of the modern nation where the Battle of Rorke‟s Drift took place. Answer: South Africa (10) A record 11 of these medals were given at the Battle of Rorke‟s Drift. It is the highest award for valour in the British military. Answer: Victoria Cross
14. Answer these things about the recent murder of a Dutch dude FTPE. (10) This director, the great-great-nephew of a famous Impressionist, was shot and stabbed on November 2 by an Islamic extremist in Amsterdam. Answer: Theo van Gogh (10) The murderer pinned a letter to van Gogh‟s stomach threatening this Somali-born Dutch politician, who wrote the script for his most recent film. Answer: Ayaan Hirsi Ali (10) This most recent project of van Gogh, a 12-minute study of a woman abused by Islamic society, takes its title from the English translation of “Islam.” Answer: Submission
15. Relatives of Oedipus, FTPE: (10) His father, who managed to invent pederasty before Oedipus killed him.
Answer: Laius (10) Oedipus' younger daughter, the sister of Antigone who has a bit part in Sophocles' play. Answer: Ismene (10) Either of Odysseus' foster-parents, who raised him in Corinth. Answer: Polybus or Merope
16. Identify these songs released in the year 1968, FTPE: (10) Paul McCartney implores John Lennon's son to "take a sad song / and make it better" in this Beatles tune. Answer: Hey Jude (10) In this song off the album Disraeli Gears, the singer states that "I've been waiting so long / To be where I'm going" within the title entity. Answer: Sunshine of your Love (10) The singer amusingly makes the claim "Gee I think you're swell / And you really do me well" to the title woman in this song by the Turtles. Answer: Elenore
17. Things about Johannes Brahms, for 10 points each: [10] How many symphonies did he write? Answer: four
[10] His best known choral work is this setting of a series of Bible passages in his native language. Answer: A German Requiem or Ein Deutsches Requiem
[10] Brahms was a pain-in-the-ass guy with few friends, but one of the closest was this famous pianist and widow of a famous insane German composer. Answer: Clara Schumann
18. How much do you know about the Federal Reserve? Identify these terms FTPE. (10) The principal tool for the implementation of monetary policy, this is an activity in which the Fed buys and sells U.S. Treasury securities. Answer: Open market operations
(10) The Fed also has at its disposal this method of influencing markets and business by communicating with the force of its authority without taking particular action. Answer: moral suasion (10) In the aftermath of the 1929 crash, the Fed acquired the power to set these restrictions on the use of credit for the purchase of securities. Answer: margin requirements
19. Name some Hindu holidays, FTPE. (10) This celebration commemorates the defeat of a namesake demoness at the hands of a follower of Vishnu. The partying includes throwing colored water and powder. Answer: Holi (10) Even though it is a fast day, one can still get high, as smoking herb is allowed. The namesake god is worshipped by repeatedly washing a lingam with various sweet liquids. Answer: Maha Shivaratri [accept Maha Sivaratri or comedy Yom Kippur at Paul Litvak‟s option] (10) The fourth day of this holiday, Bestavarsh, is the first day of the new year. The most notable aspects of its celebration are the lighting of lamps and firecrackers. Answer: Diwali [accept Divali or one of the many variations that sounds really close to either] 20. Let‟s get metaphysical! Answer the following questions about 17th century English poets FTPE: (10) He wrote “The Grashopper” and “The Fair Beggar” as well as a bunch of poem‟s about Lucasta Answer: Richard Lovelace (10) This cavalier poet, author of “Why so pale and wan fond lover?,” is generally credited with having invented cribbage. Answer: Sir John Suckling (10) While he is buried alongside Chaucer and Spenser, Pope asked “Who now reads [him]?” His “paraphrastically translated” Anacreontics include “Drinking,” a celebration of gaiety. Answer: Abraham Cowley (pronounced “cooley”)
21. FTP each, identify the following equations or rules in thermodynamics:
(10) This rule describes the number of degrees of freedom in a closed system at equilibrium, stating that F equals C minus P plus 2. Answer: Gibbs Phase Rule (10) For a multicomponent system, this equation states that a sum taken over each mole fraction times its corresponding differential partial molar quantity equals zero. Answer: Gibbs-Duhem Equation (10) This equation relates the variation of pressure with temperature (dP/dT) necessary to maintain twophase equilibrium to the deltaH and deltaV of a phase transformation. Answer: Clausius-Clapeyron or Clapeyron Equation
22. Answer these questions about a philosopher FTSNOP. (10) This 17th century British philosopher, the author of Thoughts Concerning Education and Conduct of the Understanding, apparently influenced the Declaration of Independence. Answer: John Locke (5/5) In Locke‟s An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, he splits human ideas into these two categories, one passively acquired, such as an observation, and one actively built, such as causes and effects. Answer: Simple and Complex (10) In this other Locke work, he notes that the title entity cannot succeed without the consent and support of the people. Answer: Two Treatises of Civil Government or Second Treatise of Government
23. Answer the following about a scandal, FTPE. (10) Henry McComb‟s leaks to the New York Sun in 1872 claimed that this company reaped a hefty profit in at the expense of Union Pacific. Answer: Credit Mobilier of America (10) This vice president of Ulysses Grant had his career ruined by Credit Mobilier, and failed to win reelection in 1872. Answer: Schuyler Colfax (10) This Massachusetts representative replaced Thomas Durant as head of Credit Mobilier in 1867 and sold shares of it to his colleagues at a greatly deflated price. Answer: Oakes Ames
24. Given a partial list of characters, identify the play by Tennessee Williams for 10 points each. (10) Jim O‟Connor, Tom Wingfield, Amanda Wingfield Answer: The Glass Menagerie (10) Maxine, Hannah Jelkes, T. Lawrence Shannon Answer: Night of the Iguana (10) Alvaro Mangiacavallo, Jack Hunter, Serafina Delle Rose Answer: The Rose Tattoo
25. FTPE, name these artistic movements (10) Referring to the principles of Greek and Roman art of antiquity, this style is seen in the works of Ingres and Canova. Answer: Neoclassicism (10) This was a Russian abstract movement founded by Tatlin, Gabo, and Pevsner. It focused on art for the industrial age. Answer: Constructivism (10) An eighteenth-century European style exemplified by Boucher and Tiepolo, it was a reaction to the grandeur and massiveness of the baroque. Answer: Rococo
26. Basic earth science, FTSNOP: (5/5/5) For 5 each, name the three most general types of fault boundaries between tectonic plates. Answers: convergent fault, divergent fault, transform fault (5) This process, which leads to the creation of oceanic trenches and volcanic arcs, describes one plate sliding below another at a convergent boundary. Answer: subduction (10) When an oceanic plate is subducted below another plate, it descends into this region of the mantle, consisting of partially molten rock. Answer: asthenosphere