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Withington Pub Quiz League |
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Question Paper for 03/05/06 - set by Electric Pigs
(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)
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ROUND 1 |
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1. |
In which novel of 1954 would you read the words: “Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!”? |
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Lord of the Flies |
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2. |
Which hydrocarbon has the formula C4H10? |
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Butane |
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3. |
With which children’s TV series would you associate Mrs Goggins and Reverend Timms? |
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Postman Pat |
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4. |
Which celebrated artist was knighted by Philip IV of Spain and Charles I of England? |
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Rubens |
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5. |
In which unincorporated town in Virginia are the headquarters of the CIA? |
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Langley |
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6. |
What surname connects a former UK Prime Minister, an American writer who died in 1987 and four American brothers who are all actors? |
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Baldwin |
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7. |
Which very busy American airport was originally known as Orchard Field until adopting its current name in 1949? |
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O’Hare (Chicago) |
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8. |
Who is currently the Shadow Secretary for Trade and Industry? |
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Alan Duncan |
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ROUND 2 |
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1. |
Which Gascon knight was the alleged lover of King Edward II of England? |
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Piers Gaveston |
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2. |
Which David Bowie song opens with the words: “I wish you could swim/ like the dolphins/ like the dolphins can swim/ though nothing/ though nothing will keep us together”? |
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Heroes |
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3. |
Which American Formula 1 driver became world champion in 1978? |
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Mario Andretti |
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4. |
Which character in Greek mythology, with the aid of Pegasus, killed the monster the Chimera? |
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Bellerophon |
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5. |
Which mountain at 3,054 feet is the fourth highest mountain in England and is just north of Keswick? |
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Skiddaw |
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6. |
From which European language is the word Ombudsman taken? |
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Swedish |
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7. |
The juice of which fruit is added to champagne to make a Bellini? |
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Peach |
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8. |
Which film of 1976, directed by Alan J Pakula, was advertised with the tag line: “The most devastating detective story of the century!”? |
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All the President’s Men |
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ROUND 3 |
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1. |
Which P & O cruise ship, affectionately nicknamed ‘The Great White Whale’, served as a hospital ship in the Falklands in 1982? |
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Canberra |
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2. |
Which fish is used in the making of Quenelles de Brochet? |
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Pike |
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3. |
Which politician and former cabinet minister was nicknamed ‘Mogadon Man’? |
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Geoffrey Howe |
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4. |
What is the westernmost province of Canada? |
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British Columbia |
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5. |
Who composed the string quartet Death and the Maiden? |
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Schubert |
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6. |
As an aid to remembering what geographical feature was the mnemonic “Sam’s horse must eat oats” invented? |
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The Great Lakes (in order of size: Superior, Huron, Michigan, Erie, Ontario) |
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7. |
In which TV crime series did Terence Alexander play Charlie Hungerford? |
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Bergerac |
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8. |
Three Australians scored centuries in the Ashes series of last year, Ricky Ponting, Matthew Hayden and who else? |
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Justin Langer |
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ROUND 4 – Themed Round All answers have something in common (apologies to the person answering first) - one of the theme words is part of a larger word The theme is revealed after the answer to Question 8 |
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1. |
For which rugby union club did Jeremy Guscott, Phil de Glanville and Matt Stevens all play? |
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Bath |
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2. |
By what name is the infamous Saloth Sar, sentenced to lifelong house arrest in 1997 and dead supposedly from a heart attack in 1998, better known? |
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Pol Pot |
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3. |
In literature who was the son of Belladonna Took? |
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Bilbo Baggins |
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4. |
As whom were Babs Lord, Ruth Pearson, Dee Dee Wilde, Louise Clarke and Andi Rutherford collectively known? |
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Pan’s People |
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5. |
With which TV series would you associate Huggy Bear? |
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Starsky and Hutch |
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6. |
Who played alcoholic Ben Sanderson in the 1995 film Leaving Las Vegas? |
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Nicholas Cage |
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7. |
Which company, the third-largest corporation in the world by turnover, derives its name from the entrepreneurial activities of Marcus Samuel in the Caspian Sea area in 1892? |
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Shell (he collected sea shells for export to London collectors and realised there was potential for exporting lamp oil from the region) |
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8. |
What is the name of the police Inspector who features in Dickens’s Bleak House? |
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Bucket |
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Theme: all the answers contain a container! |
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ROUND 5 |
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1. |
John of Gaunt was the third surviving son of which king of England? |
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Edward III |
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2. |
Which David Bowie song opens with the words: “Hey man, oh leave me alone you know/ Hey man, oh Henry, get off the phone”? |
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Suffragette City |
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3. |
Which New Zealand driver became Formula 1 world champion in 1967? |
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Denny Hulme |
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4. |
Which Trojan queen in Greek mythology had 19 children, including Paris and Cassandra, with her husband King Priam? |
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Hecuba |
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5. |
Which lake lies at the foot of Skiddaw and Dodd Wood and covers an area of approximately 2 square miles? |
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Bassenthwaite |
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6. |
From which European language is the word geyser taken? |
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Icelandic |
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7. |
With which fruit is the cocktail a Manhattan traditionally garnished? |
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Cherry (Maraschino) |
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8. |
Which 1973 film, directed by George Roy Hill, was advertised with the tagline, “...all it takes is a little Confidence”? |
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The Sting |
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ROUND 6 – Themed Round All answers have something in common (again, apologies to the person answering first) The theme is revealed after the answer to Question 8 |
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1. |
Which fellow singer did James Taylor marry in 1976, the marriage ending in divorce in 1983? |
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Carly Simon |
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2. |
Which character, beloved of children, is closest in friendship to Anna and Clarabel, although, despite numerous arguments, he is also quite close to Percy as well? |
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Thomas the Tank Engine |
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3. |
What was the name of the father of Alexander the Great? |
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Philip (II of Macedonia) |
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4. |
Which Welsh snooker player was runner-up in the world championship in 2000 and 2005 (forename and surname required)? |
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Matthew Stevens |
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5. |
Who was assassinated in 1882 when he was on a chair dusting a picture and was shot in the back? |
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Jesse James |
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6. |
Which heavy metal band was formed in Birmingham in 1969 by KK Downing and Ian Hill? |
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Judas Priest |
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7. |
Which footballer was nicknamed ‘The Cat’ (forename and surname required)? |
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Peter Bonetti |
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8. |
Which artist, born in 1878 and died in 1961, produced portraits of, amongst others, Thomas Hardy, WB Yeats, George Bernard Shaw and Dylan Thomas? |
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Augustus John |
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Theme: all the answers contain the name of an apostle |
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ROUND 7 |
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1. |
In which novel of 1962 would you read the words: “There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie and Dim”? |
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A Clockwork Orange |
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2. |
Which hydrocarbon has the formula C2H6? |
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Ethane |
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3. |
With which children’s TV series would you associate Texas Pete? |
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Superted |
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4. |
Which celebrated artist was exiled from Rome to Naples in 1606 following his killing of Ranuccio Tomassoni? |
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Caravaggio |
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5. |
In the history of World War II how is Station X more commonly known? |
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Bletchley Park |
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6. |
What surname connects a former UK Prime Minister, a murderer hanged in 1946 and a bandleader? |
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Heath (Neville, Ted and Ted) |
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7. |
How is the Italian Fiumicino International Airport better known? |
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Leonardo da Vinci |
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8. |
Who is Shadow Secretary of State for Health? |
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Andrew Lansley |
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ROUND 8 |
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1. |
Which sister ship to the Titanic served a long career from 1911 to 1935 and earned the nickname ‘Old Reliable’? |
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Olympic |
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2. |
Which fish is used in the making of the soup Cullen Skink? |
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Haddock |
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3. |
What nickname did Clement Freud bestow upon Margaret Thatcher? |
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Attila the Hen |
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4. |
Which Canadian province lies to the immediate east of British Columbia? |
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Alberta |
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5. |
By what nickname is Mendelssohn’s Overture for Orchestra Opus 26, inspired by the composer’s visit to Britain in the late 1820’s, commonly known? |
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Fingal’s Cave (accept Hebrides Overture) |
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6. |
As an aid to remembering what scientific schema was the mnemonic “Kids prefer cheese over fried green spinach” invented? |
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The order of taxonomy in biology (kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species) |
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7. |
In which TV series did Neil Pearson play the ambitious Detective Superintendent Tony Clark? |
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Between the Lines |
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8. |
Who was the only batsman to score two centuries in the Ashes series of last year? |
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Andrew Strauss |
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SPARES |
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1. |
Complete this advertising slogan: “Do you love anyone enough to give them your last….”? |
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Rollo |
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2. |
Which member of England’s World Cup winning team of 1966 also played first class county cricket? |
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Geoff Hurst |
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3. |
The arrival in 1911 of a German gunboat, the Panther, in which North African port triggered an international crisis? |
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Agadir |
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4. |
Which birds belong to the families Strigidae and Tytonidae? |
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Owls |
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5. |
How are the following objects connected: Mobile phone, Roller blade, Hamburger, Jumbo Jet, Racing Car, Skateboard and London Bus? |
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Monopoly (playing pieces in Hasbro’s 2005 anniversary version of Monopoly) |
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6. |
In which Dylan song would you hear the words: “I saw a black branch with blood that kept drippin’/ I saw a room full of men with their hammers a-bleedin’”? |
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A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall |
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7. |
Where in Greater Manchester can you visit Lark Hill Place? |
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Salford Museum and Art Gallery |
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8. |
Which fictionalised biographical film of 1978 was directed by Alan Parker and told of an unfortunate five years in the life of Billy Hayes? |
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Midnight Express |