Thứ Sáu, 28 tháng 12, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Dec 28 2018

APPLAUSE

Christmas University Challenge!

Asking the questions, Jeremy Paxman.

Hello.

With clean-washed hands and faces in a long and eager line,

alumni sit at the table, for this is the hour they shine.

With apologies to the author of Christmas Day In The Workhouse,

we're about to meet two more teams

of recent, not-so-recent and long-distant graduates

prepared to play for the honour of the institution that nurtured them.

With three matches played and four winning teams going through

to the semifinals, we now know that a winning score tonight of

over 150 means a team will definitely return to fight again.

Now, the four from St Catherine's College, Oxford, include the

author of six novels and a memoir - she has recently edited the

ghost stories of Henry James, and is a director of the Hampstead Theatre.

With her, the author of biographies of Harold Pinter and

Peggy Ashcroft, he's also a highly influential figure in the

role he's performed for the past 47 years, for which he's earned an OBE.

Like trying to comprehend the meaning in the entrails of a

chicken, their captain is responsible for turning the

baroque contortions of the Houses of Parliament into

comprehensible and even entertaining reporting.

And their fourth member has won several Emmys,

a Bafta and an RTS Award for his work on numerous blockbuster

productions, including the film Gravity, for which he won an Oscar.

So let's meet the St Catherine's, Oxford, team.

I'm Susie Boyt, I did English at St Catherine's, graduating in the '90s.

I am now a novelist and I write dark books with high spirits.

I'm Michael Billington, I graduated from St Catherine's Society -

as it then was, before it became a college -

in 1961, having read English.

And I've been a theatre critic at the Guardian for some time.

And here's their captain.

I'm Peter Knowles, I graduated in English in 1983,

I'm the control of the TV channel BBC Parliament,

and editor of Today In Parliament on Radio 4.

And I'm Tim Webber, I read physics at St Catherine's,

and graduated in 1987.

I'm now chief creative officer at Framestore and work as a

visual effects supervisor and director for films.

APPLAUSE

Now, playing them is a team representing Peterhouse, Cambridge.

Their first player started his career on the Big Breakfast

and is the long-time writing partner of Sacha Baron Cohen,

working with him on the characters Ali G and Borat.

With him, an archaeologist who was involved in the early days of

Channel 4's Time team, then presented BBC Two's Time Flyers,

and has featured in 11 seasons of Coast.

Their captain was Leader of the Conservative Party and the

Opposition from 2003 to 2005.

He held several Cabinet positions under Margaret Thatcher and

John Major, including that of Home Secretary.

Now an academic, their fourth player is a former head

of the Iran section of the Foreign & Commonwealth Office.

He is a prolific writer, broadcaster and commentator on that country.

Now, let's meet the team from Peterhouse.

I'm Dan Mazer, I read law at Peterhouse,

and I'm now a screenwriter and director.

I'm Mark Horton, I graduated with a PhD in archaeology in 1984,

and have subsequently worked as an archaeologist,

TV presenter and Professor of Archaeology at Bristol University.

And here's their captain.

I'm Michael Howard, I graduated from Peterhouse in 1963,

with degrees in economics and law, and I'm now in the House of Lords.

I'm Michael Axworthy,

I read history at Peterhouse, graduated in 1985,

and I'm the director of the Centre For Persian And Iranian

Studies at the University of Exeter.

APPLAUSE

Well, the rules are the same as for the student series.

Ten points for starter questions, they are solo efforts.

15 points at stake for bonuses. So, fingers on the buzzers, here's

your first starter for ten.

Described by the writer John O'Farrell as the paramilitary

wing of the London Stock Exchange, which joint-stock company

received its Royal Charter on New Year's Eve 1600?

Trading in cotton, silk, opium and tea,

it was, from the mid-18th century to the rebellion of 1857...

East India company. Correct.

APPLAUSE

Your bonuses are on the works of Leonard Bernstein,

who was born in 1918.

Described as a series of related statements in praise of love,

Bernstein's 1954 orchestral piece Serenade was inspired

by the symposium of which Greek philosopher?

Plato.

Plato? Correct.

In 1953, which playwright suggested to Bernstein that they adapt

Voltaire's Candide for the theatre?

Her works include The Children's Hour and The Little Foxes.

Pass.

That was Lillian Hellman.

Finally, for which 1954 movie did Bernstein compose his first

and only score written directly for film?

It was directed by Elia Kazan and starred Marlon Brando.

THEY WHISPER

I think that's On The Waterfront. Yes.

On The Waterfront. Correct. Ten points for this.

"It is the month of December, and yet the whole city is in a sweat!

"Festivity at state expense is given unrestricted licence. I regard

"as correct the remark of the man

"who said, 'Once December was a month; now it's a year.'"

These words of the Roman philosopher Seneca

referred to which ancient festival?

Saturnalia. Saturnalia is correct.

APPLAUSE

Your bonuses are on the theme of "You'll", broadly speaking.

You'll Never Walk Alone is a show tune from which 1945 musical

by Rodgers and Hammerstein?

Carousel.

Carousel. Correct.

You'll Never Eat Lunch In This Town Again is a 1991 autobiography

by which US film producer and writer?

Her films include The Sting,

Taxi Driver and Close Encounters Of The Third Kind.

I can't remember her name.

No? Don't know.

SHE WHISPERS

No.

It's Julia Phillips.

And finally, You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine was

a 1976 hit for which US vocalist also noted for

Dead End Street and Tobacco Road?

No, thanks.

LAUGHTER That was Lou Rawls. Ten points for this.

"For us boys in the Cotswolds, Christmas always started on a

"star-bright night, never prearranged,

"but intuitively recognised."

Laurie Lee. Laurie Lee is correct.

APPLAUSE

Your bonuses this time are on scientific concepts as

defined in Stephen Hawkins' A Brief History Of Time.

In each case, name the concept from the description.

Firstly, a thin tube of space time connecting distant regions of

the universe.

Wormhole? Yes. Wormhole.

Wormhole is correct.

Secondly, for a wave, the number of complete cycles per second.

Frequency. Frequency. Correct.

And finally, the quantity of matter in a body,

its inertia or resistance to acceleration.

Mass. Mass. Mass.

Mass is correct.

APPLAUSE We're going to take a picture round now.

For your picture starter, you'll see the final results for

the 2018 Ryder Cup Sunday singles matches, with two names omitted.

For ten points, I need both the missing names.

No golfers there?

Looks as if you're all going to not get anywhere.

It's Phil Mickelson and Francesco Molinari.

So we'll take the picture bonuses in a moment or two.

In the meantime, here's another starter question.

In Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol,

the Ghost of Christmas Present introduces Scrooge

to two wretched abject children...

Ignorance and Want. I'll accept that, yes.

I only wanted one of them, actually.

They'll do. Hard to please!

Thank you very much. You get the picture bonuses, then.

So, following on from the 2018 Ryder Cup singles results, you're going to

see three more lists of the results of Ryder Cup Sunday singles matches.

This time I want the year that each took place. Firstly...

THEY CONFER

Early... 1999? 1999.

No, it's 1991. Secondly...

Come on, let's have an answer, please.

2000?

2000. It was 2002 at the Belfry. And finally...

THEY CONFER

2005?

2005. It's 2012.

Right, ten points for this.

The Fort and Palace of Tipu Sultan

and the Indian Institute of Sciences are located

in which major city? The capital of Karnataka...

Mysore.

No. I'm afraid you lose five points.

The capital of Karnataka state, it is the location of numerous

hi-tech industries and has been called the Silicon Valley of India.

Mumbai. No.

It's Bangalore. So, ten points at stake for this.

The Mistletoe Murder appears in a 2016 collection of short

stories by which crime writer?

Born in Oxford in 1920, her first novel was published in 1962,

with the title Cover Her Face.

Ruth Rendell?

No. Anyone want to buzz from St Catherine's?

PD James? PD James is correct.

APPLAUSE

Right, your bonuses this time, St Catherine's, are on British Islands.

In each case, identify the island or islands from the description

in Ptolemy's Geography.

Vectis, an island located south of the settlement of

Magnus Portus on the island of Albion.

THEY CONFER

Isle of Wight. Correct.

Located to the East of Hibernia,

the islands called Mona and Monaoeda.

I need you to name both.

Shetland and Orkney.

No, it's Anglesey and the Isle of Man.

And finally, Scetis, near Albion Island and the Orcades

promontory is generally identified as which island?

Um, uh...

Ultima Thule.

No, it's Skye. Ten points for this.

In physics, what six-letter term

indicates the tendency of a force to rotate

the body to which it is supplied?

In archaeology it indicates a neck ornament won by the ancient

Gauls...?

Torque. Torque is correct.

APPLAUSE

St Catherine's, these bonuses are on the 60th anniversary of the

release of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

These three bonuses have answers that contain the letter

combination H-A-L - for example, inhale or apocryphal.

In each case, give the word from the description. Firstly,

which class of molluscs have well-developed heads

surrounded by prehensile tentacles? It includes ammonites,

nautiloids, squid and octopus?

No, sorry. The cephalopods.

The Greek, secondly for navel,

what word was used to name the sacred stone in the Temple of Apollo

at Delphi, which was thought to mark the central point of the Earth?

Omphalos. Correct.

In terms of molecular structure, a chemical that comes between

benzene and anthracene, it's a major ingredient of traditional mothballs.

Naphthalene.

Naphthalene.

Correct. APPLAUSE

Right, time for a music question, I think.

For your music starter you'll hear an excerpt from a symphony.

For ten points, name its composer.

ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYS

Beethoven.

It is Beethoven, yes. APPLAUSE

That was part of the Storm section of Beethoven's Pastoral.

For your music bonuses, you're going to hear three more classical

indications of stormy weather. Name the composer, please, in each case.

Firstly, from a work of 1915.

ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYS

It's Grieg. Grieg?

Grieg?

Grieg.

No, that's Richard Strauss, Thunder and Tempest from An Alpine Symphony.

Secondly, from an opera originally.

ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYS

Peter Grimes.

Benjamin Britten.

Correct. It's from Peter Grimes, as you identified.

And finally.

ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYS

Vivaldi.

It is Vivaldi, you're right - the final movement of Summer.

Right, ten points for this.

The 1961 gospel play Black Nativity was an international success

for which literary figure, born in Joplin, Missouri?

His other works include the short poem Harlem that begins,

"What happens to a dream deferred."

Langston Hughes.

Correct.

Right, your bonuses, St Catherine's, are on clubs that played

in the last 16 of the Uefa Champions League in early 2018.

In each case, identify the club.

Firstly, the name of which club comprises the locations

of two international treaties?

The former concluded war between France and Britain in 1763

and the latter was signed with Austria in 1919.

Livorno.

The Treaty of Livorno?

Lausanne?

We don't know the names of the teams, do we?

What was the... Lausanne...

..we think for the... Other Austrian treaties? Livorno?

Was it the Champions League, yes? No. We haven't got it, have we?

We don't know.

It's Paris Saint-Germain, PSG.

Which club is based in a major city close to the scene

of Mozart's opera The Marriage Of Figaro?

Vienna.

Vienna, but where? We're looking for a team, aren't we? Yes.

Vienna football team?

The Marriage Of Figaro would be Seville, wouldn't it?

Seville.

Correct. Sevilla.

And finally, which club is based in the city that was the birthplace

of the politicians Gladstone and Bessie Braddock?

Liverpool. Liverpool.

Liverpool.

Liverpool is correct. Well done.

Ten points for this.

Which two consecutive letters of the alphabet form the initials

of all of the following?

The first president of the American Equal Rights Association,

the director of The Thief Of Paris and Atlantic City

and the highest goal-scorer

in the history of the Argentinian national football team?

LM.

LM is correct. Well done.

Your bonuses are on species reintroduced into the UK

as depicted on a Royal Mail special edition from 2018.

Firstly, what is the common name of Pandion haliaetus?

Also known as the fish hawk,

its British population is found mainly in Scotland.

Osprey.

Correct. What two-word common name

is given to the reptile Lacerta Agilis?

Found in dry and coastal regions,

the male has green sides that brighten during the breeding season.

We'll pass.

That's a sand lizard.

And finally, Castor fiber is the Eurasian species of which rodent,

recently reintroduced to the Forest of Dean?

Beaver.

Beaver is correct. Ten points for this.

What word was originally used for a preparation drawing...

I... No. I didn't mean touch it. No idea. I'm so sorry.

I'm going to have to fine you five points anyway

because you cut everybody else out.

..was originally used for a preparation drawing on paper

for a picture later executed in a different medium,

such as oil or tapestry? The Oxford English...

Cartoon.

Cartoon is correct, yes.

You get a set of bonuses on debut albums of 1978. Oh, gosh!

Firstly, Power In The Darkness was the debut studio album

of which band named after its lead singer, a prominent gay activist?

Pass.

That was the Tom Robinson Band.

Secondly, Another Music In A Different Kitchen

was the debut album of which band from Greater Manchester?

Its name later appeared in the title of a BBC panel game.

Buzzcocks.

Buzzcocks.

Correct. Which London band released the album

Germfree Adolescence in 1978?

Its cover depicted the band members inside test tubes

with the lead singer Poly Styrene in the centre.

No idea. Pass.

That was X-Ray Spex.

Right, we're going to take another picture round now.

For your picture starter, you'll see a painting.

For ten points, please name the artist.

Bruegel.

Bruegel is correct, yes.

That was his The Harvesters.

Your picture bonuses are three more harvest scenes.

Again, I just want you to name the artist in each case. Firstly.

Bosch. I think it's Bosch. Bosch.

Bosch is correct. Secondly.

Is it Gauguin?

Gauguin? No.

Gauguin.

No, it's Millet. And finally.

Van Gogh. Van Gogh.

It is Van Gogh, near Arles.

Right, ten points for this.

Lalande, Lagrange, Laplace, Lavoisier and Legendre

are among the 18 names escribed on the Trocadero face

of which structure, completed in 1889?

Arc de Triomphe.

Anyone like to buzz from Peterhouse?

Eiffel Tower.

Eiffel Tower is correct, yes. Well done.

So you get three bonuses on a Latin word.

Firstly, what seven-letter Latin word means truth, fact or accuracy?

In a set expression, it follows the words "in vino"?

Veritas.

Veritas is correct.

The word Veritas appears on the seal of which US university,

founded in 1636?

Harvard. Harvard.

Correct.

The political party Veritas was founded in 2005

by which public figure and TV host?

Esther Rantzen.

No, it was Robert Kilroy-Silk.

Ten points for this.

What seven-letter name links the UK Prime Minister in 1910

and the US president in 1930?

Herbert.

Correct.

You get a set of bonuses on a temperature scale.

According to Ray Bradbury, what, in degrees Fahrenheit,

is the temperature at which book paper catches fire and burns?

451.

451.

451.

Correct.

In the Fahrenheit temperature scale,

at standard atmospheric pressure, the interval between the freezing

and boiling point of water is divided into how many degrees?

212.

212.

212, I think. 212.

No, that was the boiling point.

It's 32 to 212 - in other words, 180.

And finally, 50 degrees Fahrenheit

corresponds to how many degrees Celsius?

15?

12 or 13.

Try 13. 13.

No, it's ten. Right, ten points for this.

Which novel by Virginia Woolf was inspired in part by Knole House

in Kent and by members of the Sackville family who owned it?

The novel is subtitled A Biography.

Orlando.

Orlando is correct, yes.

Get these bonuses, you'll be on absolutely level pegging.

Three questions on anniversaries that fell in 2018.

2018 marks the 800th anniversary of the Treaty of Worcester.

This acknowledged the territorial acquisitions of Llywelyn the Great

and was signed early in the reign of which English king?

800, so 1218.

Would be what? 1218 would be John. John, I think.

Do we think it's John? John.

No, it was Henry III.

Which Lord Chancellor negotiated the Treaty of London in 1518?

It led to the meeting of Henry VIII and Francis I of France

at the Field of the Cloth of Gold two years later.

Thomas More. Thomas More.

No, it was Thomas Wolsey.

And finally, which treaty of 1918 ended the active participation

of Russia in the First World War?

Brest-Litovsk.

Correct.

Right, ten points for this.

Which semi-opera by Henry Purcell includes a frost scene

featuring a chorus and dance of the Cold People?

Its title character is a legendary ruler who is the subject...

King Arthur.

King Arthur is correct.

These bonuses are on US presidential assassinations.

Abraham Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theatre

in Washington in what year?

1874... Come on.

1880? No, that's too late.

1860...

1865. 1865.

Correct.

Secondly, which president died

80 days after being shot at a railway station in Washington?

He was succeeded by his vice-president Chester A Arthur.

We don't know. That was Garfield.

And finally, the Secret Service assumed official responsibility

for protecting US presidents after whose assassination in 1901?

Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson.

No, it was McKinley. Ten points for this.

A widespread theme of visual art,

the Jatakas are several hundred popular stories

of the former lives of which figure?

I'll tell you. It's the Buddha. Ten points for this.

Who is the only British Prime Minister to date to have won

the Nobel Prize for literature?

Sorry. Pass.

Oh, you don't want to answer.

Churchill.

Winston Churchill is correct. Winston Churchill.

That gives you the lead again and you get a set of bonuses

on books in the Virago Modern Classics series.

In each case, name the author from the titles.

First, the Sadeian Woman, The Passion Of New Eve

and The Magic Toyshop.

Any guesses? No.

Pass.

By Angela Carter.

Secondly, The Lost Traveller, The Sugar House and Frost In May.

No.

GONG That's by Antonia White.

So, St Catherine's, we're going to have to say goodbye to you.

Thank you very much for joining us, though.

Peterhouse, you left it pretty late, but you did it.

I don't know whether that will be

one of the four highest scores of a winning team,

but if it is, we'll look forward to seeing you again and if it's not,

we shall say goodbye to you, and you go home with your heads held high,

although clearly with a need to read some Virago classics.

Thank you both very much.

None of you had to do it but you just did it for fun.

I hope you can join us next time for another first-round match,

but until then it's goodbye from St Catherine's, Oxford.

ALL: Goodbye.

It's goodbye from Peterhouse, Cambridge.

ALL: Goodbye.

And it's goodbye from me. Goodbye.

For more infomation >> University Challenge - Christmas 2018 E04 St Catherines Oxford v Peterhouse Cambridge - Duration: 28:31.

-------------------------------------------

University of Alabama System | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 6:58.

For more infomation >> University of Alabama System | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 6:58.

-------------------------------------------

Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 3:24.

For more infomation >> Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 3:24.

-------------------------------------------

Cambridge Universities Labour Club | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 25:52.

For more infomation >> Cambridge Universities Labour Club | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 25:52.

-------------------------------------------

University Challenge - Christmas 2018 E05 Exeter University v Birmingham University - Duration: 28:31.

Christmas University Challenge.

Asking the questions, Jeremy Paxman.

Hello.

Time to unwrap another tasteful,

well-chosen present in the shape of 30 minutes of entertainment given

to us by two teams of alumni who really ought to know better.

There are seven fixtures in this first round of the contest,

but only the four winning teams with the highest scores will earn the

right to play again.

If tonight's winners score over 150,

they will definitely return.

Now tonight, the University of Exeter is represented first by a

roving reporter frequently seen in his wellingtons in front of

scenes of flooding and storms.

He also discovered the latter-day oracle and internet sensation,

Brenda from Bristol.

With him, an academic whose doctoral thesis examined what happens

to your blood when you put alcohol into your body so she will

have ample opportunity for some fieldwork after the match.

She has worked with numerous eminent organisations,

including the National Institute for Health Research.

She is a fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and she's

been awarded an OBE for services to medicine.

Their captain's name is whispered with awe throughout

the television industry.

He is the founding chairman of Comic Relief and, as a producer,

his output includes The Two Ronnies, The Generation Game, Top Of

The Pops, Blankety Blank, Red Dwarf and The Young Ones, a show

which treated this programme with precisely the respect it deserves.

LAUGHTER

Their fourth player is a playwright and film director who won an

Olivier award for her play Nell Gwyn.

She is a regular writer at the Globe Theatre and in the West End.

She also creates community theatre in war-torn and developing

countries with the international NGO, Youth Bridge Global.

Let's meet the Exeter team.

Hello, I'm Jon Kay, I graduated from Exeter with a degree in

politics in 1992.

I am now a news correspondent with

the BBC and a presenter on BBC breakfast.

Hello, my name is Deborah Ashby and I graduated from Exeter

in 1980 with a degree in mathematics.

I am now the director of the School of Public Health at

Imperial College London and I'm going to be the next

President of the Royal Statistical Society.

And here's their captain.

I'm Paul Jackson, I read English and played rugby at Exeter

in the 1960s and I am recently

retired from a career in television entertainment.

Hello, I'm Jessica Swale.

I'm a film writer and director and I work in the theatre,

in television and radio and anywhere else that will have me.

APPLAUSE

The team from Birmingham University includes an academic who in her work

with Defra advises ministers and industry about pests and diseases

and in doing so looks after the nation's bee population.

Her colleague's career began working behind the scenes

on Blue Peter before a ten-year stint reporting on

Newsround. In his current position he is often to be found on

Hollywood's red carpet.

Their captain was nominated for a Perrier award for his

stand-up and won an Emmy award for the HBO series Veep.

We've also seen him in the British TV series,

The Thick of It and the film In The Loop.

Their fourth player is a very familiar face on television,

stage and screen.

He has appeared in everything from Alan Partridge to Victoria.

He received a British comedy award nomination for his

appearances in the film Four Lions and perhaps the one occasion

when he wasn't immediately recognisable, fortunately,

was when he played the title role in Shrek The Musical.

Let's meet the Birmingham team.

Hello, I'm Nicola Spence,

I graduated from Birmingham with a PhD

in plant virology in 1993 and I am

now Defra's chief plant health officer.

Hi, I am Lizo Mzimba, I graduated from Birmingham with a degree in

law. I have since then worked for the BBC and am currently their

entertainment correspondent. This is their captain.

Hi, I'm Chris Addison.

I graduated from Birmingham in 1994 with a degree in English and

since then, among other things, I've been a stand-up comedian,

actor, writer, film and television director and sandwich shop cashier.

Hello, I'm Nigel Lindsay.

I graduated from Birmingham in combined honours in French

and English in the '80s and I'm an actor.

APPLAUSE

OK, I guess you all know the rules, they are the same as for the

students so fingers on the buzzers, here's your first starter for 10.

In the Oxford English Dictionary,

a device for catching game and to remove the seeds from cotton

are among definitions of what three-letter head word?

In its most familiar usage,

the definition is colourless to pale straw-coloured alcoholic

spirit, flavoured with juniper berries and a variety...

Gin. Gin is correct, yes.

So the first set of bonuses are on words that appear in the

Beatles' song Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds.

In each case give the word from the description.

Firstly, a device invented by the Scottish physicist

David Brewster in the early 19th century.

It operates on the principle of multiple reflection.

THEY CONFER

Kaleidoscope. Correct.

Secondly, a flexible, transparent, plastic film developed

in the early 20th century.

Lucy in the sky... THEY WHISPER

Polythene.

No, it's cellophane - as in cellophane flowers of yellow and green.

And finally, a variety of small citrus fruit named after a seaport

that was briefly under British rule in the late 17th century.

Tangerine? Yeah.

Tangerine.

Tangerine trees and marmalade skies, yes. 10 points for this.

Molly, a vain materialistic white mare is a representative of

the bourgeois middle classes in which political satire...

Animal Farm. Correct.

Your bonuses, Exeter, are on the South African jazz pioneer

and anti-apartheid activist Hugh Masekela,

who died in January 2018.

As a teenager, Masekela was given

which brass instrument by Trevor Huddleston,

who become president of the British anti-apartheid movement?

Trumpet. It's trumpet.

Trumpet. Correct.

In 1967, Masekela appeared at which Californian musical

festival that also introduced Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and

Ravi Shankar to wider American audiences?

Monterey, no?

It was. Monterey.

Correct.

In 2012, Masekela joined Paul Simon on a world tour that

marked the 25th anniversary of which critically-acclaimed album?

Graceland?

Graceland.

Correct. 10 points for this.

Since an apparent deliverance from bubonic plague in 1634,

which village in the Bavarian Alps has been the location for a

Passion play...

Oberammergau. Correct.

Your first bonuses, Birmingham, are on cinematic adaptations

of winners of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

In each case give the novel from the description.

Firstly, a novel of 1920 by Edith Wharton,

adapted for the screen by Martin Scorsese in 1993.

Age Of Innocence. OK.

The Age Of Innocence.

Correct. Secondly, a novel of 1918 by Booth Tarkington adapted for the

screen by Orson Welles in 1942.

THEY WHISPER

The Magnificent Ambersons.

Correct. And finally, a novel of 1994 by E Annie Proulx, directed

in a 2001 film version by Lasse Hallstrom.

Yeah. The Ice Storm.

The Ice Storm.

No, it's The Shipping News.

We are going to take a picture round now.

For your picture starter,

you are going to see a sovereign island country shown in isolation.

10 points if you can name the country.

Greenland.

No, anyone want to buzz from Exeter?

You can't confer, one of you can buzz.

Iceland. It is Iceland, yes.

APPLAUSE

Iceland became the smallest nation by population to participate in the

tournament phase of the men's FIFA World Cup when it did so in 2018.

Your picture bonuses are maps showing three more of the

smallest countries that have reached the FIFA World Cup finals

measured by population at the time of qualification.

Five points for each you can name.

Firstly, I want the country highlighted here, please.

THEY WHISPER

Croatia?

Croatia?

I think Croatia because Trieste is...

Croatia.

No, it's Slovenia, Croatia is further south.

Secondly, the country magnified here.

That's Jamaica.

Trinidad and Tobago. Yes?

Trinidad and Tobago.

Correct.

And finally, the country circled here.

Honduras. No, it's Jamaica.

Honduras is on the mainland.

Right, 10 points for this starter question.

In the first scene the entire stage is filled with children, who run

about, blow their whistles, hop and jump,

are naughty and interfere with the oldsters dancing.

This was among the many negative reviews of which ballet on its

premiere in...

Nutcracker. Nutcracker is right.

You get a set of bonuses on toads, Birmingham.

The taxonomic order Anura, comprising frogs and toads is

so called because members of this order lack what anatomical feature?

THEY CONFER

THEY WHISPER

Nerves.

No, they lack a tail.

What common name is given to the toad Alytes obstetrician,

a small European toad noted for the male tendency to carry

strings of eggs on its hind legs until they are ready to hatch?

Pass. Natterjack.

That's the midwife toad.

And finally, what is the common name of Bufo calamita,

a nocturnal toad characterised

by a light yellow stripe running along the length of its back?

Cane toad.

No, that was the natterjack toad. Bad luck.

10 points for this.

What term for a celestial body links the common name of

the carambola fruit,

a prerogative court abolished by the Long Parliament in 1641...

Star. Star is correct. Yes.

Your bonuses, Exeter, are on the wives of Henry VIII in the

words of the historian Alison Weir.

In each case, name the person from Weir's description of her.

Firstly, her portraits show in nearly every case a dark-haired

woman with a thin face, high cheekbones and a pointed chin.

Facial characteristics all inherited by her daughter.

Mary is her daughter...

Who's the one...

The portrait...

Shall we go for it? Yes.

Anne of Cleves.

No, it's Anne Boleyn.

Secondly, people were drawn more to her warm and amiable personality

and her intellectual qualities, she exuded goodwill,

she was a good conversationalist and loved a friendly argument,

especially on matters of religious doctrine.

THEY CONFER

Anne of Cleves.

Anne of Cleves.

No, that was Catherine Parr.

And finally, her tall stature may well have made her seem ungainly.

Furthermore, she suffered from excessive body odour

according to the King.

Yes. This is Anne of Cleves.

That is Anne of Cleves, yes.

Right. 10 points for this.

Which play by Shakespeare contains the line,

"Fie, foh and fum, I smell the blood of a..."

SHE WHISPERS

"I smell the blood of a..." Come on.

The Tempest.

No, you lose five points for an incorrect interruption.

You may not confer,

one of you can buzz when I've read the rest of the question.

"I smell the blood of a British man."

The words are spoken by Edgar disguised as a madman.

King Lear.

Of course.

Your bonuses are on cheese dishes,

in each case name the dish from the description.

Firstly, an Indian dish with the name describing its main

ingredient, leafy green vegetables such as spinach

and soft curd cheese.

I need the two-word Hindi name.

Sag paneer.

Sag paneer is correct.

Secondly, a dish said to have originated in Quebec in the 1950s.

It consists of chips topped with gravy and cheese curds.

Poutine.

Correct.

And finally, a toasted or fried cheese sandwich sometimes with ham.

Its two-word French name includes a word meaning crunch.

Croque Monsieur. Well done.

APPLAUSE

We're going to take a music round now.

For your music starter you'll hear a piece of popular music.

10 points if you can name the singer.

FEMALE VOICE SINGS THE BLUES

Aretha Franklin.

It is Aretha Franklin, yes.

She died in August 2018 and for your music bonuses you will hear

three of Franklin's notable duets,

all you need to do is name her partner in each case.

First, here I just need the name of the second singer.

# Sisters are doing it for themselves... #

That's Annie Lennox.

It is Annie Lennox. Secondly...

# What y'all came to do? What y'all came to do?

# Put on your dancin' shoes

# Yeah, we're about to burn it up

# About to burn it up... #

James Brown.

No, that's John Legend. And finally.

# The river was deep, I didn't... #

Yeah, George Michael.

George Michael is correct.

APPLAUSE

10 points for this.

Listen for the statement and answer the question that follows.

In 1938, the BBC broadcast the first science-fiction television

programme, a live adaptation of Karel Capek's play R U R.

What five-letter word has this play introduced to the English language?

Alien.

No. Anyone want to buzz this from Exeter?

You have nothing to lose. One of you buzz, don't confer!

LAUGHTER

What a waste of effort that was. That was a sitting opportunity.

It's a robot. 10 points for this.

How many toes does the common ostrich have on each foot?

The same number appear on the fore limbs of certain species

of sloth.

Three. No, you lose five points.

..and the total number of toes per ostrich is equal to the

number of digits on either hand of Bart Simpson.

LAUGHTER

Three-toed sloth and two-toed.

There's only two. Three and two. You can't confer!

I'm so sorry, I thought we'd gone through to the other. OK.

No, no, just buzz.

One of you. Come on.

Two.

Two is correct. Yes.

It was Bart Simpson that gave it away, wasn't it?

I have held a sloth, that is why I am trying to remember how many toes he had.

I am impressed.

No knowledge is ever wasted.

Right, you get a set of bonuses on flowers in works of art.

Thought to represent Elizabeth Delph and dating to the 1660s,

Woman with a Pink is a portrait by which prominent artist?

THEY CONFER

Da Vinci?

Da Vinci.

No, it's Rembrandt.

Secondly, Lawrence Alma-Tadema's 1888 painting of the Roman

Emperor Heliogabalus, depicts him

observing his guests being smothered

to death by a sudden deluge of the petals of what flower?

Lilies?

Lilies?

No, they are roses.

He had them shipped in everyday from the south of France, apparently.

And finally, depicting two young girls playing in a garden,

Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose, now in the collection of the Tate is

the work of which artist, born in 1856?

Think of an artist born then.

THEY CONFER

Have a guess at an artist.

Come on.

Manet.

No, it's John Singer Sargent. 10 points for this.

Recorded in a work written by his pupil, who made this

statement often translated as,

"The unexamined life is not worth living,"

during his speech in his own defence during his trial in 399 BC?

Cicero.

No. Anyone like to buzz from Exeter?

That's the end of the question? Yes, that's the end of the question!

And apparently the end of the answer too.

Have you got it? No.

Plato. It was Socrates. Of course it is.

Another starter question now.

What double letter appears in words meaning an extinct

South American zebra...

L, double L.

No. You lose five points.

A yearling sheep, an insect larva for example of the order Diptera and

a non-pedigree or otherwise unremarkable cat?

A.

No, it's G.

As in moggy. Right, 10 points for this.

Shown in an image in the title sequences of many of their

films, what name did Michael Powell and Emmerich Pressburger give

to their production company?

Its output in the 1940s included Black Narcissus and The Red Shoes.

Green Door Films.

No. Anyone like to buzz from Birmingham?

Is it Rank?

No, it's The Archers or Archers Film Production. Ten points for this.

In early December, which French city holds the annual event known

as the Fete des Lumieres or Festival of Lights?

This features the illumination of the Fourviere Basilica,

a few miles north of the confluence of the Rhone and the Saone.

Avignon.

No.

Anjou. No.

It's Lyon, so I am going to give you another starter question now.

The Siberian Husky and Samoyed and the Alaskan Malamute are among

the breeds of dog most commonly used for which means of transport?

Sledding.

Sledges is correct, yes.

That means you get a set of bonuses and they are on charades.

In which 19th-century novel does Harriet Smith read a cryptic

message described as a charade representing the word

courtship which she is persuaded has been written for her by Mr Elton?

Emma. You don't need to... Oh, I don't need to buzz!

I'm sorry. You're right though. OK.

I'll accept it, of course.

Try and do it through your captain cos he's feeling a bit left out.

So sorry, sir.

Secondly, which novel of 1848 includes a scene in which several of

the principal characters take part in acting charades at Gaunt House,

the residence of Lord Steyne?

Steyne?

Did you say 1848? I did.

Still don't know. Good.

We don't know. You don't know.

It's Vanity Fair.

And finally, which novel by George Eliot includes a scene in

which Gwendolen Harleth appears in a charade as the statue of

Hermione in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale?

Middlemarch?

Middlemarch.

No, it's Daniel Deronda.

We are going to take a picture round now.

For your picture starter you'll see a photograph of a British athlete.

10 points if you can give me her name, please.

Lizzy Yarnold.

It is Lizzy Yarnold, yes.

APPLAUSE

In 2018 she became the UK's most successful

Winter Olympian when she won a second gold medal in the skeleton.

Your picture bonuses are three of that still select group of

British athletes who have won one Winter Olympic Gold Medal.

Five points for each you can name. Firstly...

THEY CONFER

Pass.

That's Amy Williams who won in the skeleton in 2010.

Secondly, who's this?

WHISPERING

Sorry, pass.

That's Rhona Martin and finally...

Is it Robin Cousins or Curry?

Hang on.

Robin Cousins. OK.

Robin Cousins.

It is Robin Cousins, yes. Right, 10 points for this.

"I am undoubtedly a liberal,

"which means that I am in almost total agreement with the

"Eisenhower-era Republican party platform."

Which US political commentator said that in 2010?

The recipient of several Emmy awards,

she has since 2008 been the host of her own eponymous cable news...

Oprah?

No. ..cable news show on MSNBC. You lose five points.

Anyone like to buzz from Exeter?

You may not confer, one of you can buzz.

No? It's Rachel Maddow.

10 points for this. Fingers on the buzzers, please.

What work of the 1860s is retold in Geraldine Brooks's Pulitzer

prize-winning novel March?

It's Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. 10 points for this. What?

Have you got lots of questions?

Yeah, we're going to carry on until you get one right.

LAUGHTER

10 points for this.

Simmered in hot water before being glazed with egg white and baked,

what word derived from Yiddish denotes a dense, ring-shaped...

Bagel.

Bagel is correct. Yes.

You get a set of bonuses, Birmingham, on a Christmas cantata.

First performed in 1954, Hodie or This Day,

is a Christmas cantata by which English composer?

1954.

1954.

To late for... Yeah, yeah.

How about Vaughan Williams? Elgar?

Erm...

Let's do it. Tippet.

No, it was Vaughan Williams.

Secondly, the third movement of Hodie is a setting of part of

an ode entitlement On The Morning Of Christ's Nativity,

a work by which English poet?

Tennyson.

Tennyson.

No, it's John Milton.

And finally, the ninth movement sets the poem Christmas by which

port and clergyman, born in 1593?

The poem is one of a pair on the theme,

published in the posthumous collection, The Temple.

John Donne. John Donne.

No, it was George Herbert. 10 points for this.

"Nobody saw him, still he was there,

"nose-biting, prank-playing, everywhere."

These words of the poet Charles Sangster referred to which

seasonal figure?

Sharing a name with a fictional creation of RD Wingfield and

a pseudonym used by Bob Dylan, he personifies ice and cold.

Jack Frost.

Jack Frost is correct, yes.

That takes you over the 100, Exeter.

Your bonuses are on capital cities of the Nordic countries.

In each case name the city that corresponds to the following.

Firstly, the title of a 1998 played by Michael Frayn,

it concerns a meeting held in 1941 between two prominent physicists.

Copenhagen. Correct.

Secondly, the venue of the equestrian events of

the 1956 Summer Olympics.

Strict quarantine laws made it unfeasible to move horses to

Melbourne, the host city.

Helsinki.

No, it was Stockholm.

And finally, a diplomatic accord of 1975 signed by most European

countries in an effort to reduce tension during the Cold War.

Oslo Accords, Oslo.

No, that was Helsinki. They are called the Helsinki Accords.

Right, 10 points for this. GONG

And at the gong, Birmingham University have 85.

Exeter University have 110.

Birmingham, you didn't quite make it to 100 but you...you were

within striking distance, had you got another question or two right.

Exeter, congratulations to you. Thank you very much for joining us.

I doubt you will be returning as one of the four highest scoring

teams, which will doubtless break your heart.

Thank you very much indeed. You didn't have to do it.

I hope you can join us next time another first-round match but

until then it is goodbye from Birmingham University... Goodbye.

It's goodbye from Exeter University. Goodbye.

And it's goodbye from me, goodbye.

APPLAUSE

For more infomation >> University Challenge - Christmas 2018 E05 Exeter University v Birmingham University - Duration: 28:31.

-------------------------------------------

Cambridge University Moral Sciences Club | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 11:08.

For more infomation >> Cambridge University Moral Sciences Club | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 11:08.

-------------------------------------------

Abby Johnson | Newman University 2018 Graduate - Duration: 1:03.

I teach at Bishop Carroll, I'm a religion teacher there so this is just

continuing that so that I better understand the content to help be a

better catechist for my students. Being able to make time again to study a

lot of the church fathers and things like that, so it was good a lot of Vatican II

as well, which I enjoyed probably the most. We were the first group

to go to the Holy Land, so that was a wonderful experience with Dr. Umbarger

and Father Gile, so yeah, just being able to, I don't know, in live basically

scripture. Yeah, I mean I think it's one that continues to be improved and I

like that they're continuing to do like the more abroad programs and just

continuing to revamp that and so it's worth and I appreciate that the

diocese supplemented my tuition for that, so I'm forever grateful

for that.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét