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Question Paper for 31/10/01 set by Electric Pigs

(table of answers follow the table of questions)

 

Questions

ROUND 1

1.

Whose current auto-biography is entitled ‘Learning to Fly’?

2.

Which hymn, written by Eleanor Farjeon, 1881 –1965, was the inspiration for a Top Ten hit of 1972?

3.

Give one of the years during which the Suez Canal was being constructed  

4.

‘Arias and raspberries’ is the title of the auto-biography of which entertainer who died in April this year?

5.

Which of Jesus’ disciples was son of Zebedee, brother of John?

6.

To within 5 miles either way, how long is the Manchester Ship Canal?

7.

In slang, how much is a monkey worth?

8.

How many pennies were there in a guinea?

ROUND 2

1.

In which year did Mallory and Irvine die on Mount Everest?

2.

In which decade was Mount Kilimanjaro first conquered?

3.

What is significant about the turrets, rooms and windows of The Towers, the house now at the centre of the business park next to Didsbury Cricket Club?

4.

Who said – “If you are afraid of loneliness, don’t marry”?

5.

Who said “Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it.”?

6.

At the junction of which two roads was Didsbury’s Capitol Cinema?

7.

In which year did the following artistes reach no 1: The Marcels  with Blue Moon, The Shadows with Kontiki, and Elvis Presley with Surrender?

8.

Similarly, in which year did these artistes reach no 1:  Love Affair with Everlasting Love, The Beatles with Lady Madonna and The Equals with Baby Come Back?

ROUND 3

1.

What would your star sign be if you were born on All Saints Day?

2.

In which situation comedy does the character George Costanza appear?

3.

Which surname connects a current Cabinet Minister, a 1960s England Test cricketer and a statue in Newcastle of one of its favourite sons?

4.

Who was sacked recently as Manager of Sheffield Wednesday?

5.

Which situation comedy character had the line ‘You’re a very special person, and some day a man worthy of you will come along, just as soon as the gods create him’?

6.

What would your star sign be if you were born on St Patrick’s ‘Day?

7.

Who was recently sacked as manager of Barnsley?

8.

Which town connects the former 50s Busby babe Duncan Edwards, a zoo and one of Queen Elizabeth’s favourites, the first Earl of Leicester?

ROUND 4

1.

Currently suspended from the House of Commons, and a former Paymaster General, Geoffrey Robinson has his constituency in which city?

2.

Coronation Street’s Ken Barlow has been married three times – what were his three wives’ first names?

3.

Which three consecutive words in the dictionary are defined thus:  ‘the full name of the line in front of and parallel to the wicket in cricket’, ‘plant with showy, often red flowers’ and slang term for nonsense’?

4.

What two digit number on registration plates will denote vehicles registered from March 2002?

5.

Which actor played the title role in the TV adaptation of ‘The Letters of Henry Root’ where the character’s letters were signed off with phrases such as ‘here’s a pound’ and ‘your man on the doorstep’?

6.

Which three consecutive words are defined thus: ‘tedious fuss and bother’, ‘a pointed  piece of wood for fencing’ and ‘range or choice of colours’?

7.

What two digit number on registration plates will denote vehicles registered from September 2002?

8.

Who is MP for the constituency of Chingford and Wood Green? 

ROUND 5

1.

Name one of the two theatres housed within the Lowry complex at Salford Quays?

2.

Which celebrated steam locomotive engineer, designer of the Flying Scotsman and Mallard, now has plaques mounted in his honour at King’s Cross and Edinburgh Waverley railway stations?

3.

Itelka, a volcano that erupted in 1991 is the highest in which country?

4.

A Northern Branch of which cultural facility, currently situated only in London, is due to open at Salford Quays in the summer of next year?

5.

On 1st January 1923, the railways of Britain were amalgamated into four major companies – name three of them

6.

The volcano Ruapeliu, which last erupted in 1986, is in which country?

7.

In relation to the sun, what is the significance of the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn?

8.

In relation to the sun, which two things are significant about the Arctic Circle?

ROUND 6

1.

What is the Christian festival called that occurs the day after twelfth night?

2.

Who is the Chief Executive of the Football Association?

3.

Which saint was sent from Rome to convert England to Christianity and became the first Archbishop of Canterbury in 601?

4.

What does the acronym ISDN stand for?

5.

What does the acronym GATT stand for? 

6.

According to The Bible, with what precisely did Jesus feed the five thousand at Bethsaida?

7.

Who is the Chief Executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board?

8.

What is the Christian festival called that begins on Ash Wednesday? 

ROUND 7

1.

In which 1936 film, which won an Oscar for Director Frank Capra, does Gary Cooper play the part of a man who inherits twenty million dollars and wants to give it all away?

2.

Which football team are nicknamed The Black Cats?

3.

What was the title of the USA for Africa’s song for Live Aid in 1985?

4.

Why has 12 year old Daniel Radcliffe been much in the news over the last few days?

5.

What is the name of the Afghan Mujhahadeen commander who was murdered by the Taliban last week?

6.

When were the first four moons of Jupiter discovered?  (allow ten years either way)

7.

Which Latin legal phrase means ‘beyond one’s power or authority’?

8.

In which John Ford directed film of 1962 does James Stewart play a naïve lawyer who needs help from John Wayne to help bring civilised order to the west?

ROUND 8

1.

Which song, a US no 1 in 1969, opens with the lines “Hello darkness my old friend, I’ve come to talk with you again”?

2.

When were the two moons of Mars discovered? (allow ten years either way) 

3.

Which ‘alternative medical’ practice may be described as involving the treatment of disorders by massaging the feet?

4.

What is the ancient Japanese massage that ‘uses the palms or fingers to apply pressure to points lying along the body’s meridians in order to control the energy flow’?

5.

Which European football team is known as The Old Lady?

6.

Which Italian phrase means an aside or spoken in an undertone?

7.

Who succeeded Javier Peres de Cuellar as UN Secretary General in 1992?

8.

Who succeeded Mohammed Najib as President of Egypt in 1954?

SPARES

1.

Who is the only racehorse ever to have done the National Hunt double of Gold Cup and Champion Hurdle?

2.

How many pots would you need to make to achieve a 147 break in snooker?

3.

Give a year in the life of the composer Chopin?

4.

Who was the keyboard player with The Doors? 

5.

Name 6 of the 7 actors who have played Dr Who in the British TV  series

6.

Acccording to The Bible, who ‘sold his birthright for a mess of potage’?

7.

Which composer, who died in 1949, is best known for his operas including Daphne, Salome and Der Rosenkavalier?

8.

The spice species ‘Trigonella Foenum-glaecum’ is more commonly known as what?

 

Answers

ROUND 1

 1.

Victoria Beckham

 2.

Morning has broken

 3.

1859 – 1869

 4.

Sir Harry Secombe

 5.

James

 6.

35 miles

 7.

£500

 8.

252

ROUND 2

 1.

1924

 2.

1880s (1889)

 3.

It has 12 turrets, one for every month, 52 rooms, one for every week,  and 365 windows, one for every day

 4.

Anton Chekhov

 5.

George Bernard Shaw

 6.

School Lane and Parrs Wood Road

 7.

1961

 8.

1968

ROUND 3

 1.

Scorpio

 2.

Seinfeld

 3.

Milburn

 4.

Peter Shreeves

 5.

Niles Crane

 6.

Pisces

 7.

Nigel Spackman

 8.

Dudley, (Edwards’ home town where there is a zoo and Robert Dudley, the Earl’s name before his elevation)

ROUND 4

 1.

Coventry

 2.

Valerie (Tatlock), Janet (Reid) and Deirdre (Longton)

 3.

Popping-crease, poppy and poppycock

 4.

02

 5.

George Cole

 6.

Palaver, pale and pallet

 7.

52

 8.

Iain Duncan-Smith

ROUND 5

 1.

Quays Theatre or Lyric Theatre

 2.

Sir Nigel Gresley

 3.

Iceland

 4.

Imperial War Museum

 5.

Great Western Railways, Southern Railways, London, Midland and Scotland Railways and London and North Eastern Railways

 6.

New Zealand

 7.

They represent the limits of the area of the earth’s surface where the sun can be directly overhead

 8.

Within it, there is at least one day per year when the sun never sets and at least one  day a year where it never rises

ROUND 6

 1.

Epiphany

 2.

Adam Crozier

 3.

St Augustus

 4.

Integrated Services Digital Network

 5.

General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade

 6.

Five loaves and two fish

 7.

Tim Lamb

 8.

Lent

ROUND 7

 1.

Mr Deeds Goes To Town 

 2.

Sunderland

 3.

We are the world

 4.

He plays Harry Potter in the new film

 5.

Abdul Haq

 6.

1610

 7.

Ultra vires

 8.

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

ROUND 8

 1.

Sound of Silence

 2.

1877

 3.

Reflexology

 4.

Shiatsu

 5.

Juventus

 6.

Sotto voce

 7.

Boutros Boutros-Ghali

 8.

Gamal Abdel Nasser 

SPARES

 1.

Dawn Run

 2.

36

 3.

1810 – 1849

 4.

Ray Manzarak

 5.

William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, John Pertwee, Peter Davison, Tom Baker, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy

 6.

Esau

 7.

Richard Strauss

 8.

Fenugreek

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