24th March - Question Masters
SPECIALIST QUESTIONS
Set by
Vetted by Waters Green
GEOGRAPHY
Q1.
A.
Q2.
A.
Q3. Which English river flows into the North Sea at
A. The Esk
Q4. Which English river flows into
A. The Wyre
Q5. Which
A.
Q6. Which US City stands at the eastern end of Lake Erie where it flows into the
A.
Q7. The Brenner Pass connects
A.
Q8. What is the name of the Italian speaking canton of
A.
Supplementaries
S1. How many countries share borders with
A. Three -
S2. How many countries does the
A. Four -
SCIENCE - THE UNIVERSE
Q1. Between which two planets is the Asteroid Belt?
A. Mars & Jupiter
Q2. If the moon enters the Penumbra, what would you see?
A. A Lunar Eclipse
Q3. What are the maximum minutes of a total solar eclipse?
A. Seven minutes
Q4. In which year was the Challenger space shuttle disaster?
A. 1986
Q5. Who made the first refractory telescope & discovered that the Moon
had craters and Mountains?
A. Galileo
Q6. What is a Nebula?
A. It is an Interstellar Cloud of Dust from which stars are made.
Q7. The Sun will continue to shine until what happens?
A. Its hydrogen is converted into helium
Q8. What is a Nova?
A. Very bright star
Supplementaries
S1. What stopped Jupiter from becoming a star like our Sun, as it has 90% hydrogen & 10% helium
A. Its size it is not big enough for nuclear fusion to begin.
S2. The Sun goes through a period when the sun spot & sun flares reach a
maximum every how many years?
A 11 years
SPORT
Q 1. Who was the first woman swimmer to win gold medals in three consecutive
Olympic Games?
A. Dawn Fraser
Q 2. Which thoroughbred racehorse defeated War Admiral in a celebrated match race held in 1938?
A. Sea biscuit
Q 3. Who was the first European to win the heavy weight boxing title?
A. Max Schmeling
Q4. Of what material were golf balls originally made?
A. Wood
Q5. Who was the first person to win the tennis grand slam twice?
A. Rod Laver
Q6. During which games was the first Olympic village built to accommodate
Competitors & Officials?
A.
Q7. What did the American Jockey Todd Sloan make popular in horse racing?
A. He introduced the monkey crouch riding style
Q8 Tail slides, floaters & reverses are moves in which sport?
A. Surfing
Supplementaries
S1. In which country did speed skating originate?
A.
S2. In which country was the first winter Olympic Games held?
A.
THE ACADEMY AWARDS (OSCARS)
You will be given details of Actors or Actresses who have won an Oscar in a leading or supporting role. Just name them.
Q1. Born 25th December 1899 Died 14th January 1957
Nickname the last century man
Made 75 films won 1 Oscar
Films High Sierra & Maltese Falcon
A. Humphrey Bogart
Q2. Born 12th May 1907 Died 29th June 2003
Nickname First lady of cinema
Made 52 films won 4 Oscars
Films Lion in winter & On Golden Pond
A. Katherine Hepburn
Q3. Born 15th April 1900 Died 10th June 1967
Made 74 films won 2 Oscars
Films Judgment at Nuremberg & Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner,
A. Spencer Tracy
Q4. Born 22nd February 1908 Died 23rd April 2005
Made 46 films won 1 Oscar
Films Hobson’s choice & Colditz Story
A. John Mills
Q5. Born 5th April 1908 Died 6th October 1989
Nickname the first lady of film
Won 2 Oscars made 121 films,
Films All about Eve & Deception
A. Bette Davis
Q6. Born 5th April 1916 Died 12th June 2003
Made 58 films
Won 1 Oscar
Films To kill a Mocking Bird & The big Country
A. Gregory Peck
Q7. Born 4th May1929 Died 20th January 1993
Made 31 Films
Won 1 Oscar
Films Breakfast at Tiffany’s & Roman holiday
A. Audrey Hepburn
Q8. Born 20th May 1908 Died 2nd July 1997
Made 100 films
Won 1 Oscar
He held the highest active military rank of any actor in history
Films The
A. James Stewart
Supplementaries
S!. Born 17th July 1899 Died 30th March 1986
Nickname the Professional Gangster
Made 68 Films
Won 1 Oscar
Films Yankee Doodle Dandy the Public Enemy
A. James Cagney
S2 Born 5th November Died 7th July 1967
Made 20 films
Won 2 Oscars
Films Gone with the Wind & a Streetcar Named Desire
A. Vivian Leigh
T V Sit Coms
Q1. In ‘Allo Allo’ What was the name of the gay German Officer who flirted with Rene Artois?
A. Lieutenant Gruber
Q2. In ‘Open All Hours’ by what nickname was Mrs Featherstone known?
A. The black widow
Q3. In ‘Rising Damp’ what was Rigsby first name?
A. Rupert
Q4. In ‘The Vicar of Dibley’ what is the character’s name played by Liz Smith
who created countless dishes which require, shall we say, acquired taste?
A. Leticia Cropley
Q5. In ‘Dads Army’ what is the Verger’s name, who also runs the Sea Scouts?
A. Mr Yeatman
Q6. In ‘Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em’ in the cliff-hanger scene what was the make of car that Frank was hanging on to?
A. A Morris Minor
Q7. In the two Ronnie’s Sketch ‘Four Candles’ Ronnie Barker also asks for Plugs and a saw tip, can you name any of the other four things requested?
A. Os, Ps, Pumps or Washers.
Q8. In ‘Fawlty Towers’ when Mrs Richards complains of the view from her window Basil says ‘What do you expect from a Torquay window the Sydney Opera House’ Name one of the other two things mentioned by him?
A. The
Supplementaries
S1. In ‘Porridge’ Ronnie Barker played Norman Stanley Fletcher, Richard Beckinsale
Played Lenny Gobber but who did Sam Kelly Play?
A. Bunny
S2. In ‘Steptoe & Son’ where did Albert & Harold live
A.
WORLD WAR TWO - THE WAR IN THE AIR
Q1. What was the name of the B 29 super fortress which dropped the Atomic
Bomb on
A. Enola Gay
Q2. What type of aircraft dropped the Bouncing bombs in the Dambusters raid on May 16th 1943?
A. Avro Lancaster
Q3. The spitfire single engine fighter was built by which
A. Super Marine
Q4. By what name was the North American P51 fighter otherwise known?
A. Mustang
Q5. Who was the Commander of fighter command during the Battle of Britain
in 1940?
A. Air Marshal Hugh Downing
Q6. In April to June 1942 the Germans bombed a number of British cities in
retaliation for the RAF raid on
known as?
A. The Baedeker raids. It was thought that the Germans used the Baedeker tourist guides to choose their targets
Q7. Which British fighter aircraft outnumbered the Spitfire during the Battle of Britain?
A. Hawker Hurricane (1,326 to 957)
Q8. Which two-engine British bomber was nicknamed The Wimpey?
A.
Supplementaries
S1 The Germans mounted the first successful airborne invasion on the
20th May 1941 on which Mediterranean island?
A.
S2. Which biplane operated by the Fleet Air Arm from aircraft carriers in a torpedo/
reconnaissance role was nicknamed String bag
A. Fairy Swordfish
Q1. The Winter War was fought from November 1939 to March 1940. Name either of the countries involved?
Ans.
Q2. Which building in
Ans. The
Q3. ‘Temperature’s rising, fever is high, can’t see no future, can’t see no sky’ are the opening lines to which John Lennon song?
Ans. Cold
Q4. In the song ‘Winter Wonderland’ what name will be given to the snowman once built?
Ans. Parson Brown.
Q5. How many sides has a snowflake?
Ans. Six
Q6. What is the name of the first Mrs de Winter in Daphne du Maurier’s novel of 1938?
Ans. Rebecca.
Q7. Which rap star was born Robert Van Winkle?
Ans. Vanilla Ice.
Q8. Which song by Yaz shares its title with a Richard Condon thriller?
Ans. Winter Kills.
Supplementaries
S1. What is the country of origin of the Poinsettia?
Ans.
S”. In the film ‘Miracle on
Ans. Macys.
HISTORY
Q1. With which organisation were Cobden and Bright connected in the 19th century?
Ans. The Anti-Corn Law League.
Q2. Who is said to have written the Casket Letters in the 16th century?
Ans. Mary Queen of Scots.
Q3. What was MP William Huskisson’s unfortunate distinction in 1830?
Ans. He was the first passenger railway fatality (killed at the opening of the Liverpool-Manchester Railway).
Q4. What links King John (1209), Henry VIII (1533) and Elizabeth I (1570)?
Ans. They were all excommunicated by the Pope.
Q5. Which organisation was set up after the Battle of Solferino?
Ans. The Red Cross.
Q6. What name was given to the fortifications built around
Q7. What was first introduced by Pitt the Younger in 1798 and re-introduced by Peel in 1842?
Ans. Income Tax.
Q8. For which monarch was the gold State Coach built?
Ans. George III
Supplementaries
S1. Which U.S. City was named after the future James II?
Ans.
S2.
Ans. Ann Boleyn.
Set by The Waters Green
1. When Harold Wilson formed a government in 1963 who was his deputy P.M.?
A. George Brown
2. Who was made Chancellor of the Exchequer in the same government?
A. Jim Callaghan
3. Which architect once said, “A house is a machine for living in”?
A. Le Corbusier
4. Which actor wrote “The Turquoise Mountain” in 1991, an autobiographical account of his attempt to climb
A. Brian Blessed
5. The Hagia Sophia, famous for its massive dome, was the largest cathedral in the world for nearly a thousand years. Where is it?
A. Istanbul (accept
6. In January this year The Royal Society for Chemistry named John Godwin the winner of their competition to solve which conundrum?
A. How to get the gold off the coach at the end of the 1969 film The Italian Job
7. Where did
A.
8. The lowest ever test score is 26. Which country made it?
A.
9. Who was the musical director of the Halle Orchestra before Sir Mark Elder?
A. Kent Nagano
10. Who was the commander of the ill-fated Apollo 13 moon mission?
A. Jim Lovell
11. What abundant element is created from the fusion of helium nuclei in the cores of giant stars?
A. Carbon
12. What is the third most abundant element in the universe?
A. Oxygen
13. What is the group name for the fundamental particles that make up the proton?
A. Quarks
14. What colour is the star on the flag of
A. Black
15. When a metallic element is burnt in a Bunsen flame it gives a characteristic spectral colour; sodium produces a yellow flame. What colour does potassium give?
A. Lilac (accept purple)
16. What colour does barium give in a flame test?
A. Light green, or apple green.
17. Which Beatles song contains the line: “I read the News today, oh boy.”
A. A day in the Life
18. Which Rolling Stones hit contains the lines: “Well he can’t be a man ‘cause he doesn’t smoke the same cigarettes as me.”
A. Satisfaction (I can’t get no.)
19 Which British scientist was the grandson of Josiah Wedgwood?
A. Charles Darwin
20. A run on which British company caused the stock market crash of 1720?
A. The South Sea Company (Crash known as the South Sea Bubble)
21. Calamine lotion is frequently used as an anti-itching application - but what is calamine?
A. zinc ore
22. Who wrote the book Goodbye Mr. Chips?
A. James Hilton
23. Who had “a ruby on her tummy and a diamond big as
A. Little Egypt (the Coasters written by Lieber and Stoller)
24. What was the capital of ‘
A. Turku
25. Funded by the Arts Council, what is the name of the new high-tech arts building in
A. The Public
26. Phillipe Petit recently was the subject of a film - who is he?
A. High-wire artist who walked between the twin towers in
27. Harold Wilson took the name of his baronetcy from which Cistercian abbey?
A. Rievaulx
28. Formed in 1919 which national airline is the worlds oldest?
A. KLM (
29. In 1878 which artist was awarded nominal damages of one farthing after John Ruskin’s criticism of his work “Nocturne in Black and Gold: the Falling Rocket” provoked a law suit for libel?
A. James Whistler
30. What organisation was at
A. Special Operations Executive
31. In
A. The Bullet Train (Accept train or any derivation thereof)
32. In which
33. In what year did the Queen Mother die?
A. 2002 (no leeway – too recent)
34. What is the county town of Wiltshire?
A. Trowbridge
35. How many countries are there in the
A. 53 (leeway: 50 – 55)
36. Byron was a titled Baron - of where?
A. Rochdale
37. The fictional Police detective in a series of books by American author Michael Connolly has the same name as which 15th century Dutch Artist?
A. Heironymus Bosch
38. In which year did Adolf Hitler become Chancellor of Germany?
A. 1933 (no leeway)
39. Which country did transsexual singer Dana International represent in 1998 when she won the Eurovision Song Contest with the song “Diva”?
A. Israel (I know it’s not in
40.
A. Luxor
41. Which British ocean liner was torpedoed in May 1915 resulting in the death of over 100 passengers and crew?
A. RMS Lusitania
42. In 1812 who was shot and killed by John Bellingham?
A. Spencer Percival
43. Lee Hall is the writer of which very successful film and stage show?
A. Billy Elliot
44. According to Stanley Baldwin, what is “the privilege of the harlot”?
A. Power without responsibility (he was attacking the press).
45. In the 1923 silent film “Safety Last!” who is famously seen hanging from the hands of a clock high above the street?
A. Harold Lloyd
46. What is measured by the Torino Scale?
A. It is used to calculate the impact hazard to Earth from near-earth objects such as asteroids and meteors.
47. Where does the Nobel Peace Prize presentation take place?
A. Oslo
48. On 24 March 1944 76 prisoners broke out of POW camp Stalag Luft 3 - this event was later turned into a film, what was its title?
A. The Great Escape
49. Which early martyr met death on a gridiron over a fire?
A. St Laurence
50. Which Eastenders Actress died on 26th February 2009?
A. Wendy Richard.
51. Where in the
A.
52. What is the requirement for membership of the Bob Graham club?
A. To have done the Bob Graham Round of 42 peaks in the
53. Where is Dyce airport?
A. Aberdeen
54. In which decade was the first atomic-powered ship launched?
A. 1950's
55. As of 27th February 2009, who hosts BBC Radio 4’s “The News Quiz”?
A. Sandy Toksvig
56. Who was Tom Daly’s partner in the synchronised diving event in the Olympics?
A. Blake Aldridge
57. In which country is the
A. Chile
58. Kevin Mcloud presents which series on Channel 4?
A. Grand Designs
59. The Snow Monkey is a species of Macaque native to which country?
A. Japan
60. Which 19th century family produced four siblings, two of whom were founder members of the Pre-Raphaelite movement, and their two sisters were an author and poet?
A. Rossetti (Dante, William, Maria and Christina)
61. Which rock star is also a portrait photographer who was invited to photograph the Queen during her diamond jubilee year with one of the images being used on a Canadian postage stamp?
A. Bryan Adams
62. Who is Harry Potter’s Godfather?
A. Syrius Black
63. Where is the former Labour leader John Smith buried?
A. Iona
64. Which British comedian was born in
A. Tony Hancock
65. Designed by Sir John Sloane and opened in 1817, the first public
A. Dulwich (Dulwich Picture Gallery)
66. Who is the BBC’s business editor?
A. Robert Peston
67. Which canal, opened in 1893, separates the Peloponnesian peninsula from mainland
A.
68. Featuring in the news fairly recently what is The Chief Pleas?
A. Sark’s legislative body
69. Who wrote "Testament of Youth"?
Vera Brittain
70. Who played the “King” in the film “The Man Who would be King”?
A. Sean Connery
71. In which sport are there moves called Triffus, Rudolph and Miller?
A. Trampolining
72. Who is the principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra?
A. Simon Rattle
73. Peel Ports is the name of a transport company – what does it cover?
A. The
74. In which year was the Angel of the North put up?
1998(accept 1997-1999)
75. What part did Marni Nixon play in the film West Side Story?
A. She dubbed for Natalie Wood singing
77. What are the flat, treeless plains of
A. Pampas
78. What is the family name of The Beverly Hillbillies?
A. The Clampetts
79. What is a percheron?
A. A heavy horse (used by armoured knights etc)
80. What are Kathakali (kat-a-karli) and Manipuri?
A. Forms of Indian dance
81. Who produces the wine label Esprit De Corps?
A. The Foreign Legion
82. Sir Arthur Evans excavated which famous archaeological site?
A.
83. Gala was muse and wife to which Surrealist artist?
A.
84. What was the July Monarchy?
A. Reign of Louis Phillippe in
85. In which year did Frank Sinatra die?
A. 1998
86. Which river rises in
A. Orontes
87. Low Cell Count has been in the news recently - what is it?
A. DNA testing from a very low sample – now contentious
88. The
A. Colorado
89. What was the name of Virginia Woolf’s painter sister?
A. Vanesa Bell
90. Who painted The Wreck of the Hesperus?
A. Gericault
91. For how long has Silk FM been broadcasting?
A. 10 years (founded 1998) (accept 9 to 11 – will be 11 later this year)
92. When Tehran became the Persian capital, it replaced which city, for which a red wine grape was probably named?”
A. Shiraz
93. In 1939 a non-aggression pact was signed between
A. Molotov and Ribbentrop
94. In 1746 Sir Francis Dashwood founded which exclusive English club known for its outlandish practices?
A. Hellfire Club
95. What is the brown pigment made from the ink of cuttlefish?
A. Sepia
96. “Waltz In Black” is the signature tune to what?
A. Floyd cookery programmes
SUPPLEMENTARIES
S1. Who, in 1990, went on her “Blonde Ambition” tour?
A. Madonna
S2. Kevin Mcloud presents which series on Channel 4?
A. Grand Designs
S3. Name one of the two horses that beat Red Rum in the Grand National
A. Rag Trade or L’Escargot
S4. In which American state is the Pentagon?
A. Virginia
S5. By what name is Edmond Dantès better known?
A. Count of Monte Christo
S6. SCNT has been in the news recently - what is it?
A. Used to clone cells in an egg from which the nucleus has been removed - Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer.
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