![]() |
Withington Pub Quiz League |
![]() |
|||||
Question Paper for 15/02/06 - set by Mad Dogs
(to see the answers move the mouse over the blank line beneath each question whilst at the same time
pressing the select button on the mouse - when you print the page the answers show up on the printed copy)
|
ROUND 1 – Themed Each answer consists of two words starting with consecutive letters in the alphabet |
|
|
1. |
Whose Crazy World had a number one hit in 1968 with Fire? |
|
|
Arthur Brown |
|
2. |
Who was the lead singer of the Bay City Rollers? |
|
|
Les McKeown |
|
3. |
Which football manager was sacked, in part, because of his dealings with Eileen Drewery? |
|
|
Glenn Hoddle (she was the spiritualist who advised him) |
|
4. |
Brand was the first play by which playwright? |
|
|
Henrik Ibsen |
|
5. |
Whose operas include Elektra and Arabella? |
|
|
Richard Strauss |
|
6. |
Who claimed that her husband was “too full of the milk of human kindness”? |
|
|
Lady Macbeth |
|
7. |
In Brideshead Revisited who was the father of Sebastian Flyte? |
|
|
Lord Marchmain |
|
8. |
Which footballer with 24 goals in 49 internationals is 12th in the list of top England goalscorers? |
|
|
Geoff Hurst |
|
ROUND 2 |
|
|
1. |
What links Never Say Die (1954) and Teenoso (1983)? |
|
|
Lester Piggott’s first and last Derby winners |
|
2. |
Which Scottish writer’s novels include Quite Ugly One Morning, A Big Boy Did It and Ran Away and Boiling a Frog? |
|
|
Christopher Brookmyre |
|
3. |
Which motorcycle manufacturer makes the Fat Boy? |
|
|
Harley-Davidson |
|
4. |
At which battle in 52 BC did Julius Caesar defeat Vercingetorix and effectively end resistance in Gaul? |
|
|
Alesia |
|
5. |
What geographical claim to fame is held by Kaffeklubben Island? |
|
|
World’s most northerly piece of land (off north coast of Greenland) |
|
6. |
Why was Stefania Belmondo in the news recently? |
|
|
She lit the Olympic flame in Turin |
|
7. |
Which religion has buildings called stupas? |
|
|
Buddhism |
|
8. |
Which small bird of prey’s Latin name is Falco subbuteo? |
|
|
Hobby (The inventor of Subbuteo table football wanted to call his game ‘The Hobby’, but the Patent Office refused to allow this. He was also a keen ornithologist, hence the name.) |
|
ROUND 3 |
|
|
1. |
Who is the president of the World Bank? |
|
|
Paul Wolfowitz |
|
2. |
Which famous painter was born 400 years ago in Amsterdam? |
|
|
Rembrandt |
|
3. |
Which country has borders with Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Uganda and Tanzania? |
|
|
Kenya |
|
4. |
Which English Cathedral city was refounded in its present situation in the late 12th century? |
|
|
Salisbury |
|
5. |
At which railway junction town and station do trains from Birmingham to the North usually rejoin the West Coast Main Line? |
|
|
Stafford |
|
6. |
“If music be the food of love, play on, give me excess of it” is the first line and a half of which Shakespeare play? |
|
|
Twelfth Night |
|
7. |
Which three countries border the Skagerrak? |
|
|
Denmark, Norway and Sweden |
|
8. |
According to popular tradition Queen Boudicca made much use of isatis tinctoria in her make up. What is it? |
|
|
Woad |
|
ROUND 4 |
|
|
1. |
Why was General A. E. Percival in the news on this day 64 years ago? |
|
|
He surrendered Singapore to the Japanese |
|
2. |
In the Winter Olympics, which event involves competitors travelling head first down the bobsleigh course on a sled no more than 120cm long? |
|
|
Skeleton |
|
3. |
Put these three countries in order of population, highest first: Chile, Ghana, Romania |
|
|
Romania (22.7m), Ghana (16.4m), Chile (13.8m) |
|
4. |
By what name is Curtis Jackson better known? |
|
|
50 cent |
|
5. |
Add the number of players an ice hockey team can have on the ice at any one time, to the number of players in a rugby league team, to the maximum number of players possible on a cricket pitch during play. What total do you get? |
|
|
34 (6+13+15) |
|
6. |
Which British director’s films include Sarajevo, 24 Hour Party People and 9 Songs? |
|
|
Michael Winterbottom |
|
7. |
In Japan, what is a Maiko? |
|
|
A trainee Geisha |
|
8. |
Name the year: Alaska becomes the 49th U. S. state, West German forces join NATO, the last British troops leave Jordan. |
|
|
1958 |
|
ROUND 5 – Themed All the answers have a narcotic link |
|
|
1. |
Which film of 1994, starring Keanu Reeves and Dennis Hopper, was directed by Jan van Bont? |
|
|
Speed |
|
2. |
How is the tree aesculus hippocastanum better known? |
|
|
Horse chestnut |
|
3. |
Which Austrian born philosopher’s works include The Logic of Scientific Discovery and The Open Society and its Enemies? |
|
|
Karl Popper |
|
4. |
In which film of 1965 did Charlton Heston star as Michelangelo? |
|
|
The Agony and the Ecstasy |
|
5. |
Black and White Rag was the theme tune to which TV series? |
|
|
Pot Black |
|
6. |
In which fictional town is the novel Hard Times set? |
|
|
Coketown |
|
7. |
Whose autobiographical novel, Maurice, wasn’t published until after the author’s death in 1971? |
|
|
E. M. Forster |
|
8. |
Which long running TV series’ presenters included Peter Glaze, Don McLean and Stu Francis? |
|
|
Crackerjack |
|
ROUND 6 |
|
|
1. |
. In which 3 years did Red Rum win the Grand National? |
|
|
1973, 1974 and 1977 |
|
2. |
Which Scottish writer’s novels include Blue Genes, The Wire in the Blood and The Torment of Others? |
|
|
Val McDermid |
|
3. |
Which motorcycle manufacturer makes the Bonneville? |
|
|
Triumph |
|
4. |
Who led the Goths who sacked Rome in 410 AD? |
|
|
Alaric |
|
5. |
Which lake is so deep that it contains about 20% of the world’s unfrozen fresh water? |
|
|
Lake Baikal |
|
6. |
Who was Great Britain’s flag bearer in the Turin Winter Olympics opening ceremony? |
|
|
Rhona Martin |
|
7. |
With which religion are the Towers of Silence (dakhma) associated? |
|
|
Zoroastrianism |
|
8. |
Which small garden and woodland bird’s Latin name is Troglodytes troglodytes? |
|
|
Wren |
|
ROUND 7 |
|
|
1. |
Who is the president of the EU Commission |
|
|
Jose Manuel Baroso |
|
2. |
Which composer is the subject of birth centenary celebrations with a run of concerts in Manchester? |
|
|
Shostakovitch |
|
3. |
Which country has borders with Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Togo? |
|
|
Ghana |
|
4. |
Which English Cathedral City is the smallest, being nowadays only a city in name? |
|
|
Wells |
|
5. |
At which railway junction town and station do lines to Northampton and Birmingham diverge from the West Coast Main Line? |
|
|
Rugby |
|
6. |
“Full Fathom Five thy Father lies; of his bones are corals made” comes from which play by Shakespeare? |
|
|
The Tempest |
|
7. |
Which three countries have Atlantic and Mediterranean Coasts? |
|
|
France, Spain and Morrocco (no not Portugal!) |
|
8. |
Conium maculatum, a plant which is found in British ditches, riversides and damp ground as well as Greece, was responsible for the death of which famous figure in the ancient world? |
|
|
Socrates (the plant is hemlock) |
|
ROUND 8 |
|
|
1. |
On this day, 73 years ago a deranged, unemployed bricklayer named Giuseppe Zangara, shouted “Too many people are starving”. What did he do next? |
|
|
Attempted to assassinate Franklin Roosevelt |
|
2. |
In the Winter Olympics, which event involves competitors performing on snow tricks derived from Skateboarding? |
|
|
Snowboarding Half Pipe (do not accept just Snowboarding) |
|
3. |
Put these countries in order of population, highest first: Venezuela, Portugal, Mozambique |
|
|
Venezuela (20.7m), Mozambique (15.3m), Portugal (9.8m) |
|
4. |
What is Eminem’s real name? |
|
|
Marshall Mathers |
|
5. |
Add the maximum break in snooker, to the minimum number of darts required to finish a 501 game, to the number of teams left it this year’s F. A. Cup? |
|
|
172 (147+9+16) |
|
6. |
Who directed the 1958 film A Touch of Evil? |
|
|
Orson Welles |
|
7. |
In Germany, if you were going to the Rathaus, where would you be going? |
|
|
To the Town hall |
|
8. |
Name the year: Irish Free State becomes Eire, Shangai falls to the Japanese, Franco’s forces take Bilbao. |
|
|
1937 |
|
SPARES |
|
|
1. |
Why was lawyer Harry Whittington in the news this week? |
|
|
Dick Cheney shot him (we haven’t asked a Dick Cheney question for ages!) |
|
2. |
Which nations contested last Friday’s African Cup of Nations final? |
|
|
Egypt and Ivory Coast |
|
3. |
What was the name of the tanker that ran aground off Milford Haven ten years ago tonight? |
|
|
Sea Empress |
|
4. |
Who won BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing? |
|
|
Darren Gough |
|
5. |
Who won Channel 4’s Celebrity Big Brother? |
|
|
Chantelle (Houghton) |