NC

2005 Terrapin Invitational Tournament

October 22, 2005 – University of Maryland

Tossups by North Carolina (Brice Russ, Kevin Clair, Daniel Wright, Sara Garnett, Laurel Kehs, Hadley Rouse and Julie Grondin)

1. This author of the book Donald’s School Days commanded troops defending Cemetery Hill during the Battle of Bull Run and, although he lost his arm during the Peninsular Campaign, after his participation in the charge that took Missionary Ridge he was promoted as commander of the Army of the Tennessee. After being transferred West, he fought and negotiated with various Indian chiefs including Cochise and Chief Joseph, but he is best remembered for earlier taking control of a federal project that was established by Andrew Johnson to help emancipated slaves. For 10 points, name this man, the head of the Freedmen’s Bureau, and the namesake of a historically black university in Washington, DC.

ANSWER: Oliver Otis Howard

2. Ultimately the past comes back to haunt the protagonist when the mysterious Rogers shows up to collect money. The guest list at one of this novel’s pivotal scenes includes Miss Kingsbury, Robert Chase, and the Rev. Sewell’s family and it begins during an interview with the title character that will be featured in “Solid Men of Boston” series. It ends with Penelope, the bookish sister, rather than Iris, the cute one, marrying the Brahmin Tom Corey and leaving for Mexico. All the while the Colonel and his family try to fit into high society in Back Bay but fail to make a favorable impression in, for 10 points, this 1885 work by William Dean Howells.

ANSWER: The Rise of Silas Lapham

3. A former pastry cook for Agostino Tassi in Rome, this man included natural details in many of his compositions. Thus Egeria mourning over Numa includes trees that the artist went out to sketch on the actual estate of the Colonna family before presenting it to them. But it was the light in harbor scenes, like Ulysses returning Chryseis, that would later inspire Turner to consciously emulate him in the latter’s Dido Building Carthage. This creator of the sketchbook Liber Veritatis was best known for his depictions of long recessions flanked by strong vertical elements, in scenes with classically inspired figures that seem miniscule compared to their surroundings. For 10 points, name this French artist, born with the last name Gelle, the foremost landscape painter of the 17th century.

ANSWER: Claude Lorrain [prompt on just Claude]

4. He termed the fear of knowing one’s self “the Jonah complex,” and late in his life he pioneered the study of “transpersonal psychology,” which derived a lot of its inspiration from non-Western sources. In a 1968 work he tried to steer people away from what he called “D-perception” and “D-motivation” and Towards a Psychology of Being. Works like Eupsychian Management and Motivation and Personality develop the ideas based on his most revolutionary paradigm, which was introduced to him by his colleague at Brandeis, Kurt Goldstein. This idea posited that persons would be unable to reach their full potential, or self-actualize, without taking care of certain basic necessities. For 10 points, identify this father of humanistic psychology who developed a pyramidal hierarchy of needs.

ANSWER: Abraham Maslow

5. Tinted with red ochre and about four and a half inches tall, its top portion features a gridded cap and it appears much larger due to the exaggerated roundness of its hips, breasts, and thighs. Found by Josef Szombathy, who unearthed it during railway construction on the Donau river in 1908, its emphasis on the pubis, and reduction of body parts like the arms and head, have supported historical arguments about the high status accorded the obese in a hunter-gatherer society and that it served as a fertility figure. For 10 points, identify this limestone sculpture, one of the oldest manmade artifacts known to man, which is commonly called by a name that references the classical goddess of love.

ANSWER: Woman from Willendorf or Venus of Willendorf

6. It has a flux of about 2720 Janskies at 1 gigahertz, and is expanding at the rate of approximately ten million miles per hour. This rate of expansion is slowing, but whether the rate in the change of the rate of expansion is slowing or not is still under debate. Though one of the brightest radio sources in the sky, it was not discovered until 1947 due to large clouds of interstellar dust between it and us blocking optical observations of it. Believed to be about 350 years old, for 10 points, name this supernova remnant located in one of the circumpolar constellations.

ANSWER: Cassiopeia A

7. Colonel Rose led a victorious march to capture Jhansi, while the last opposition forces were rounded up in Gwalior. One of the many atrocities carried out during it involved the murder of hostages at the House of the Ladies in Cawnpore, but the major fighting broke out after Bahadur Shah was proclaimed emperor in the city of Meerut. Popularly believed to have originated after one side offended the religious sensibilities of the other by giving them rifle cartridges covered in the fat of cows and pigs, for 10 points, identify this uprising that occurred in 1857 and is often named for the native Indian soldiers used by the British.

ANSWER: Sepoy mutiny

8. First published in the collection The Town Down the River, it features a khaki suit being derided becomes it comes up short next to “iron clothing,” and singles out the Medici for praise. Often “sigh[ing] for what was not,” this title figure “mourned Romance, now on the town” and “dreamed, and rested from his labors”. But all of his imagination leads to nothing; faced with the prospect of being born hopelessly behind his time, he simply “coughed, and called it fate/And kept on drinking.” For 10 points, name this poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson, whose titular protagonist, “a child of scorn, grew lean while he assailed the seasons.”

ANSWER: Miniver Cheevy

9. One section consists of 24 invocations to separate deities while another is loosely translated as “all lords” and consists of 23 kards. Thought to have been compiled by Rasmus Rask on an 1820 expedition, the Fargard subsections include the tale of “Jamshid” or “Yima” and try to make the distinction between the asha, or the righteous, and the druj. The oldest section features the songs, or Gathas, and is the book of oblation, or Yasna, while the Vispered and Venidad include the stories of Ahriman and Ahura-Mazda. For 10 points, name this sacred text of a religion founded by Zarathustra.

ANSWER: Zend Avesta

10. Due to a misquotation, he was once printed in several German newspapers as saying, "I am the Queen of England." His interest in Objectivism likely had some effect on his most famous creation, as did attending the Randolph School, one of the first in America to adopt computer labs. However, neither of these likely changed his life as much as did his tendency, as a child, to spend hours reading the World Book Encyclopedia. For ten points, name this Alabama-born Internet entrepreneur best known for being the founder of the online reference source Wikipedia.

ANSWER: Jimmy "Jimbo" Wales [accept variants of Jim Wales; prompt on Jimbo]

11. His work at the magazine Cite Libre marked him as one of the founders of the Quiet Revolution. This occurred some years before James Cross and Pierre Laporte were kidnapped and he invoked the War Measures Act that put his nation under temporary martial law. Temporarily replaced at the post he is most famous for holding by Joe Clark, he was reinstated after a vote of no confidence in the new government. This former Minister of Justice under Pearson would then go on to supervise the patriation of the new Constitution in 1982, continue to champion bilingualism, and eventually serve for over 25 years as his country’s highest elected official. For 10 points, name this namesake of Montreal International airport, a Liberal prime minister of Canada.

ANSWER: Pierre Trudeau

12. It is home to the second-highest EPA air monitoring station in North America. Standing 6643 feet tall, it was named after a local politician and brigadier general for the Confederacy. Although he originally had hoped to have another nearby mountain named after him, after Dr. Elisha Mitchell fell off of it and died while trying to measure it, he agreed that Dr. Mitchell should be given the honors. For 10 points, name this Tennessee mountain, the highest mountain on the Appalachian Trail and the second-highest east of the Mississippi river.

ANSWER: Clingman’s Dome

13. In order to contact his father late in the novel the protagonist has to deal with his dad’s mistress Bella Brosen, who ignores him. Earlier on he remembers his encounters with the neighborhood fascist Herbert, who is now an upstanding citizen, and also recalls the success he had working on the road, as well as the memory of his dead sister, Henrietta. Ultimately, the character cannot reconcile his true love’s need to raise their family as Catholics with the horrors that his fellow countrymen committed in World War II. When Marie eventually leaves him he cannot get over it and the novel ends with Hans Schnier living as a common beggar at the Bonn train station. For 10 points, identify this work about a comic performer by Heinrich Boll.

ANSWER: The Clown

14. Found in the early 19th century by Charles Dawson and Sir Arthur Smith Woodward in Sussex, England, it consisted of unusually thick skull fragments and an apelike jawbone. It was claimed to be the missing link between apes and humans, but in 1953 it was identified as a fake using nitrogen analysis and fluorine-based dating tests. For 10 points, name this hoax skull that still causes controversy today.

ANSWER: Piltdown skull

15. This conflict was almost stifled at its beginning due to the antipathy of the German city-states for the Pope and the English King’s unwillingness to divert force from war with France. However, the preacher Fulk of Neuilly drummed up enough enthusiasm that the city of Venice was engaged to provide transportation for 33,500 soldiers. When the Crusaders arrived and couldn’t pay, they were forced to conquer the city of Zara for Venice, then came upon the Byzantine Prince Alexius Angelos, who convinced them to make their most famous conquest. For ten points, name this wackiest Crusade, which never reached the Holy Land, but did end up sacking Constantinople.

ANSWER: The Fourth Crusade

16. This work was inspired by the name of his then fiancé Ernestine Fricken’s hometown and it features tributes to Chopin and Paganini. Many of its 21 sections, including “Pantelon et Columbine,” are named for Commedia dell’ arte characters, while others like “Chiarina” were inspired by real life. The final section features the composer’s alter egos, Florestan and Eusebius, marching the heroic “David’s Band” into musical battle against the Philistines. A trio of musical “Sphinxes” announces the structural theme that also serves as the subtitle for this work, “Pretty Scenes in Four Notes.” For 10 points, identify this 1835 work for keyboard, which is named for a festive occasion and composed by Robert Schumann.

ANSWER: Carnaval Opus 9

17. The month of Panquetzaliztli, roughly equivalent to December, was devoted to this deity who was celebrated with the consumption of amaranth. Often accompanied by his messenger Paynal, according to another myth his ejaculate created the first bat. His sister was Malinalxochi, who ruled over scorpions and snakes, and he was sometimes called Mextli. Patron of the city of Tenochtitlan, he was born of the union between Mixcoatl and Coatlicue as a ball of feathers, and he would later kill most of his brothers and sisters. For ten points, name this Aztec god of war who was often represented as a hummingbird.

ANSWER: Huitzilopochtli

18. A failed painter, this steward of Ludlow castle, eventually attracted the attention of George Villiers and collaborated with him on The Rehearsal. His own earlier works include the Cynarctomachy, or “Battle between Bears and Dogs,” and a satire on Sir Paul Neale of the Royal Observatory called The Elephant in the Moon. His most famous work, written in cumbersome octosyllabic meter, features characters like Sidrophel a charlatan astrologer and the bumbling squire Ralpho. For ten points, identify this author best known for his mock epic about a grotesque Presbyterian knight called Hudibras.

ANSWER: Samuel Butler

19. This egg-shaped structure makes up more than 80% of the diencephalon and forms the superolateral walls of the third ventricle. Its name means “inner room” in Greek and in some people its bilateral masses of gray matter are held together by the intermediate mass. For 10 points, name this gateway to the cerebral cortex which plays a key role in mediating sensation, motor activities, cortical arousal, learning and memory.

ANSWER: Thalamus

20. It was preceded by an encounter at Ilipa and during it one commander eschewed the usual checkerboard formation and decided to stack his men, including hastati and triari, in columns. Trumpets played a key part in disrupting the first, earth shaking thrust on one side and allowed one of the cavalry units under Laelius to enter the fray. When the advance guard of Ligurian Gauls could not stop the Roman advance, the difference between the competing Numidian units, under Syphax and his rival Massinissa became key. Ultimately the Carthaginians were dispersed and the Roman claimed victory. For ten points, name this battle that saw Scipio defeat Hannibal.

ANSWER: Zama

21. One of the protagonists is courted throughout by a young man who never appears on stage. In fact, no male characters whatsoever appear, though several figures command powerful presences from offscreen. This includes the previously mentioned Pepe Romano and the unnamed husband who leaves the title character a widow. Part of the Rural Trilogy with Bodas de sangre and Yerma, for ten points, identify this Federico Garcia Lorca play about a matroness who enforces a self-imposed seclusion from the world on herself and her five young daughters.