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2018 National All-Star Academic Tournament

Round 3 – Tossups
1. Late in life, this composer wrote a Kyrie (KEE-ree-ay) with a slow piano ostinato made of groups of four
sixteenth notes, where the right hand plays a chord during the second note, and the left hand plays octaves
for the others. Ottorino Respighi’s (ress-PEEG-ee’s) “Tarantella ‘puro sangue’” is one of four orchestrations
of this composer’s late piano pieces. This composer used twelve singers, two pianos, and a harmonium
for his Petite messe solennelle (puh-TEET MESS so-len-NELL), which he called the last of his “Sins of Old
Age.” Four cellos accompany the opening E minor cello solo of an overture by this composer that has a
duet for English horn and flute in a Ranz des vaches (RONZ day VAHSH), or “Call to the Cows”; that overture
ends with a galloping “March of the Swiss Soldiers.” For 10 points, name this successful Italian composer
who barely published anything for forty years after William Tell.
ANSWER: Gioachino Rossini [or Rossiniana]
<The above question is for the category Arts Music and was written by Shan Kothari>

2. A child of this woman was the first woman to have a second marriage, Gorgophone (gore-GOFF-uh-nee).
A son of this woman was killed by a club that bounced off a cow’s horns, thrown by her grandson
Amphitryon (am-FIT-tree-on). After this woman’s wedding was disrupted by Phineus (FIN-ee-us), she gave
birth to a son who became the ancestor of the Persians. This woman was intended to be killed as a result
of Ammon’s prophecy in order to end the ravaging of Ethiopia caused by a boast of being more beautiful
than the Nereids made by Cassiopeia (CASS-ee-oh-PEE-uh). This daughter of Cepheus was chained to a rock
as an offering to a sea-monster. For 10 points, name this princess who was saved by her future husband
Perseus.
ANSWER: Andromeda
<The above question is for the category RMP Greek/Roman Myth and was written by Penelope Ashe>

3. This poet wrote “I go where I belong, inexorably, / as the rain that has lain long” in a poem that
contains the lines “the harvester sharpens his steel on the stone; / but this is not our field.” Another of her
poems begins: “An incident here and there, / and rails gone (for guns) / from your (and my) old town
square.” A poem by this writer asks the sea to “hurl your green over us” and “cover us with your pools of
fir,” commanding it to “whirl up.” This author wrote the memoirs Advent and Writing on the Wall about
her experiences in therapy with the subject of her poem The Master, Sigmund Freud. This poet wrote
“Oread” and a Trilogy containing The Walls Do Not Fall and The Flowering of the Rod. For 10 points,
name this bisexual Imagist who usually published under her initials.
ANSWER: H.D. [or Hilda Doolittle; or H. D. Imagiste]
<The above question is for the category Literature American and was written by John Marvin>

4. While trying to enforce this law, James Batchelder became one of the first US marshals to die in the
line of duty. The Habeas Corpus Law in Vermont was meant to challenge this law, whose offenders were
defended by the writer Richard Henry Dana Jr. and other members of the revived Boston Vigilance
Committee. The Wisconsin Supreme Court declared this law unconstitutional, a decision ultimately
rejected in the Supreme Court case Ableman v. Booth. An attempt to enforce this law in Boston in 1854
led to a crowd rioting to save Anthony Burns from arrest. For 10 points, name this controversial law that
was part of the Compromise of 1850 and made it easier to track down certain runaways.
ANSWER: Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 [prompt on Compromise of 1850]
<The above question is for the category History American (pre-1865) and was written by Mike Cheyne>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 1
5. A rhetorical question in this novel asks “Can a man who’s warm understand one who’s freezing?” after
the protagonist is told to work by a man engrossed in writing poetry. A character in this book was arrested
for bringing milk to Benderite partisans in the forest. This novel’s protagonist is woken up at 5 a.m. and
sees three yellow lights outside his window. The muscular Christianity of Tyurin in this book has been
contrasted with the baptism of Alyoshka. This book was originally called “shch-854” (shhh-8-5-4) in
reference to the central character’s identity number in the Special Camp. This novel’s zeks are part of the
104th. For 10 points, name this book by Alexander Solzhenitsyn about a short period in the gulag.
ANSWER: A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich [accept One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich or
Odin den’ Ivana Denisovicha]
<The above question is for the category Literature European and was written by Daoud Jackson>

6. One medication used to treat this disease is foiled by mutations in pncA, while another can’t be used in
children under six because it can cause optic neuritis. The causative agent of this disease shares a genus
with bacteria of the species marinum, kansasii, and leprae. This disease is often treated with medications
remembered by the “RIPE” mnemonic; those medications include ethambutol and pyrazinamide. Purified
protein derivative is injected under the skin to screen for this disease. Patients infected with this disease,
which is caused by an acid-fast bacteria, often present with cavitations visible on chest X-rays and a
cough that produces bloody sputum. For 10 points, name this disease caused by a mycobacterium which
was commonly treated at sanitariums.
ANSWER: tuberculosis [or TB]
<The above question is for the category Science Biology and was written by Eric Mukherjee>

7. Richard Ankiewicz painted a red one of these shapes within another of these shapes within yet another
purple-edged one of these shapes in the piece Intrinsic Harmony. Another Op Artist, Bridget Riley,
created a Movement in these shapes. The Bauhaus teacher Josef Albers created a series of paintings called
Homage to this shape. Talking about a painting of one of these shapes, its artist said “it is from zero, in
zero, that the true movement of being begins” and said that the painting was meant to express “the
experience of pure non-objectivity in the white emptiness of a liberated nothing.” That painting of one of
these shapes at the 0,10 Exhibition was placed in the upper corner like an Orthodox icon. For 10 points,
name this shape, a Black one of which was depicted by Kazimir Malevich (mal-YEV-itch).
ANSWER: squares [prompt on quadrilaterals; prompt on rectangles]
<The above question is for the category Arts Painting and was written by John Marvin>

8. Sodium in this layer of the atmosphere is responsible for a phenomenon called airglow. The rare blue
jets and more common red sprites are found in this layer. This layer of the atmosphere, which mainly
overlaps with the ionosphere’s D layer, is where the first indications of the greenhouse effect are found.
This atmospheric layer is where noctilucent clouds are found. Meteors are typically first seen as they pass
through this part of the atmosphere, which is the coldest layer. This area of the atmosphere is sometimes
referred to as “near space” or, due to the lack of studies on it, the “ignorosphere.” For 10 points, name this
layer of the atmosphere that is above the stratosphere.
ANSWER: mesosphere [do not accept “near space”]
<The above question is for the category Science Earth Science and was written by Fred Morlan>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 2
9. Sadhus (SAH-dhooz) arrive at some of these events in the Peshwai Procession. Two of the locations of
one type of these events have staggered cycles, while the other two are celebrated either in the same year
or one year apart due to the locations of Jupiter, the Sun, and the Moon. Four of these events mythically
exist because Vishnu spilled Amrita, the drink of immortality, from a pot. Every twelve cycles, a type of
these events is designated “Maha,” or great; the most recent “great” example was in 2013 in Allahabad,
where it is celebrated at the confluence of the intangible Sarasvati, Yamuna, and Ganges rivers. One of
these events is held every twelve years at each of four cities, including Ujjain and Haridwar, in a tradition
known as the Kumbh Mela. For 10 points, name these events in which people bathe in sacred rivers to
cleanse themselves of sins.
ANSWER: Hindu pilgrimages [or Kumbha Mela until it is read; or river pilgrimages; prompt on Hindu
festivals]
<The above question is for the category RMP Non-Christian/Bible Religion and was written by John Marvin>

10. During this event, Alexander Hays reportedly shouted “Hurrah! Boys, we’re giving them hell!” and
kissed a subordinate afterwards. After a long campaign from Wisconsin politicians, Alonzo Cushing
posthumously received the Medal of Honor in 2014 for his actions in this event. Certain fourteen-year-old
boys constantly picture this event, according to an oft-quoted passage from Intruder in the Dust. North
Carolinians object to being blamed for this event’s failure, an assessment usually singling out Johnston
Pettigrew’s regiments. The namesake of this event sadly told his superior, “General, I have no division”
afterwards. For 10 points, name this so-called “high water mark of the Confederacy,” a failed attack on
the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg.
ANSWER: Pickett’s Charge [prompt on Battle of Gettysburg until it is read]
<The above question is for the category History American (pre-1865) and was written by Mike Cheyne>

11. In this sort of place, a man says “I wish I was a frog. Or a eel!” After he reads her name written in one
of these places, a character imagines his father as a “square, stout, dark man” and his mother Georgiana as
“freckled and sickly.” Mr. Pumblechook and Mr. Wopsle search through one of these places before
heading out onto a marsh. “A man who had been soaked in water, and smothered in mud, and lamed by
stones, and cut by flints,” says “Keep still, you little devil, or I’ll cut your throat!” in one of these places,
telling a boy to stop crying before threatening to eat his cheeks. A character first seen in this location asks
for a file and wittles. For 10 points, in the first chapter of Great Expectations, Pip meets Magwitch in
what sort of place while looking at the tombstones of his family?
ANSWER: churchyard [or graveyard; or cemetery]
<The above question is for the category Literature British Non-Shakespeare and was written by Daoud Jackson>

12. An algorithm of this type can be parallelized up to a speed of big-O of log-n using the Hungarian
method, or Three Hungarians’ algorithm. A satirical “quantum” version of an algorithm of this type has a
runtime of big-O of one if the many worlds interpretation is true, and destroys the universe if the first try
isn’t successful. Algorithms for this task that preserve the relationships of similar elements between the
input and the output are called “stable.” The typical example of how not to write an algorithm for this task
has an unbounded worst-case time and is prefixed “bogo-.” That method of doing this task is analogous to
shuffling a deck of cards until they come out in sequence. Algorithms for doing this task include one
named for “tim,” one named “merge,” and one named “quick.” For 10 points, name this task of
rearranging a given array, list, or other set into the desired order.
ANSWER: sorting algorithms [or quantum sort, stable sort, bogosort, timsort, mergesort, quicksort]
<The above question is for the category Science Computer Science and was written by John Marvin>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 3
13. An innovative player of this instrument wrote the modal waltz “I-Thou” on his album Cathexis, but
eschewed doing jazz full-time to pursue a career in psychiatry. This instrument, played by Denny Zeitlin,
was also used by a self-taught player who habitually sat on two phonebooks when performing and wrote
the standard “Misty.” That musician was Erroll Garner. A virtuoso of one style on this instrument was
effectively blind, but nonetheless had an encyclopedic memory of baseball statistics; another player of
this instrument, Oscar Peterson, quit playing it for two months after hearing that master of the Stride
style, Art Tatum, play his seemingly impossible “Tiger Rag.” For 10 points, name this instrument played
by Jelly Roll Morton and Bill Evans.
ANSWER: piano [prompt on keyboard; prompt on keys]
<The above question is for the category Arts Jazz and was written by John Marvin>

14. Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow proposed fifteen “stabilization wedges” to respond to this
phenomenon. Bill Nordhaus criticized the low discount rates in the assessment of this phenomenon’s
effect on the economy in the Stern Review. Hsiang (shyong), Burke, and Miguel have found evidence that
this phenomenon increases rates of human conflict. Responses to this problem are often divided into
adaptation and mitigation. This problem cannot be addressed by neoliberal capitalism, according to
Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything. The 2007 Nobel Peace Prize went to an intergovernmental
panel that produced several reports on this problem. Rising carbon dioxide levels cause, for 10 points,
what problem that is causing polar ice caps to melt?
ANSWER: global climate change [or global warming]
<The above question is for the category Social Science Economics and was written by Shan Kothari>

15. After losing her virginity by a stream, a character in this novel decides she has no interest in sex and
goes to buy herself cigarettes and ice cream. That character earlier hid in a bush to listen to Mozart
playing on a rich family’s radio through the window. The would-be pageant star “Baby” accidentally gets
shot by a young boy in this novel. A black doctor in this novel has trouble convincing his townspeople of
Marxism without offending them with Marx’s critique of religion; that doctor has a troubled alliance with
the alcoholic labor provocateur Jake Blount, and is named Benedict Mady Copeland. In this novel,
townspeople are surprised when a much-beloved man shoots himself after Spiro Antonopoulos dies. For
10 points, name this novel about Mick Kelly and the deaf-mute John Singer, by Carson McCullers.
ANSWER: The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
<The above question is for the category Literature American and was written by John Marvin>

16. At this battle, the only female nurse on the ground after her plane was destroyed on the runway was
Geneviève de Galard, who became known as the “angel” of this battle. Distraught by his inability to
respond to enemy artillery, Charles Piroth committed suicide in his bunker during this battle. Artillery
was dragged up mountainsides to surround the enemy base during this battle, which caused the victorious
general to liken it to a rice bowl. Operation Vulture was the proposed American intervention in this battle.
Pierre Langlais reportedly wrested command from Christian de Castries during this battle, though both
were eventually overrun and captured by Võ Nguyên Giáp (VO n’win zap). After this battle, the Geneva
Accords awarded the North to the victors and the South to Ngo Dinh Diem. For 10 points, name this
decisive French defeat to Viet Minh forces during the First Indochina War.
ANSWER: Battle of Dien Bien Phu
<The above question is for the category History World and was written by Nitin Rao>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 4
17. At dinner with his friend William Castel, this man became agitated upon seeing a vision of a fire
encroaching upon his home three hundred miles away, a report validated by a messenger days later.
Immanuel Kant mocked this thinker as a “spook hunter” in his Dreams of a Spirit-Seer, despite having
praised his eight-volume magnum opus three years earlier. This theologian’s doctrines inspired Helen
Keller’s Light in My Darkness. He elaborated on his doctrine of correspondence between things in the
physical and spiritual world in his Heavenly Secrets. Johnny Appleseed was a missionary for the New
Church inspired by this theologian. True Christian Religion and Heaven and Hell were written by, for 10
points, what mystical theologian from Stockholm?
ANSWER: Emanuel Swedenborg
<The above question is for the category RMP Christian/Bible Religion and was written by Shan Kothari>

18. It’s not Hardrad, but a person with this name plotted a revolt due to anger at a queen named Fastrada.
That man with this name ended up living in a monastery in Prum after failing to overthrow his father.
Another man with this name, which is not “Constantine,” had a namesake “donation” providing the legal
basis for the Papal States and deposed Childeric III to become king. In 781 AD, a man previously named
Carloman was given this name by his father, angering Carloman’s brother, who also had this name and
was known as “the hunchback.” A man with this name was the first to go from being “mayor of the
palace” to king. For 10 points, give the name also held by the Frankish king and father of Charlemagne, a
man known as “the short.”
ANSWER: Pepin [or Pippin; or Pepin the Short; or Pepin III; or Pepin the Hunchback]
<The above question is for the category History European to 1400 and was written by Mike Cheyne>

19. In this country, employees of the DRB-HICOM company were accused of receiving preferential
placement in social housing. The shadowy campaigner Datuk Yunos promised to give every voter
500 dollars during an election in this country. Whether a goods and services tax introduced in 2015 will
continue to be in effect was the biggest economic issue in this country’s 2018 elections. The Islamist
coalition Gagasan Sejahtera (seh-JAH-trah) finished third in an election in this country, in which the
Alliance of Hope took an unprecedented majority in the Dewan Rakyat. Najib Razak’s Barisan National
fell for the first time in this country’s history when its 92-year-old former prime minister launched a
political comeback. For 10 points, name this country where 2018 elections returned Mahathir Mohamad
to power.
ANSWER: Malaysia
<The above question is for the category Current Events Non-US and was written by Penelope Ashe>

20. One approach to this technique involves first preparing a gel of monomers and a two-photon-active
photoinitiator, which is subsequently targeted by a precisely focused laser. The Benchy (BEN-chee) model
is often used to calibrate the apparatus used in this technique. Progress towards von Neumann (NOY-mahn)
machines has been made by the RepRap project, which aims to produce systems for this technique. FDM
approaches in this technique sometimes require support materials that are subsequently dissolved in order
to create overhangs, and those approaches often use a heated extruder to melt small beads or pellets of
plastic or metal. The Makerbot (maker-bot) is a common device for this technique, which can be used for
rapid prototyping. For 10 points, name this additive manufacturing technique that assembles materials to
create solid objects.
ANSWER: 3-D printing [prompt on printing; prompt on microfabrication]
<The above question is for the category Science Physics and was written by Ewan MacAulay>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 5
Extra. This man merged his FBO and KAO companies to form the film studio that became RKO. His
eldest son died during Operation Anvil, a program that used remote-controlled aircraft to bomb German
sites in France. This man never visited his eldest daughter, whom he had institutionalized after a failed
lobotomy in 1941. He controversially claimed that “democracy is finished in England” while serving as
ambassador to the UK from 1938 to 1940. This first chairman of the SEC was the father-in-law of people
such as actor Peter Lawford, Peace Corps director Sargent Shriver, and Jacqueline Bouvier (BOO-vee-ay).
For 10 points, name this patriarch of a Massachusetts political family, the father of John and Bobby.
ANSWER: Joseph Patrick Kennedy Sr. [or Joe Kennedy; prompt on Kennedy]
<The above question is for the category History American (1865-1945) and was written by Mike Cheyne>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 6
2018 National All-Star Academic Tournament
Round 3 – Bonuses
1. In a story by this author, Rosa sucks on the fabric that had kept baby Magda alive as she is unable to
recover her body from the electric fence that she was thrown against. For 10 points each:
[10] Identify this author of “The Shawl.”
ANSWER: Cynthia Ozick
[10] Cynthia Ozick’s “The Shawl,” like Tadeusz Borowski’s (tah-DAY-oosh boh-ROFF-skee’s) collection This
Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, is set in one of these places.
ANSWER: concentration camps [or death camps]
[10] In Ozick’s short story “Dictation,” Joseph Conrad’s secretary and this other writer’s secretary have a
lesbian affair and plan to swap out a passage from this writer’s spooky story “The Jolly Corner.” The
ghost of Miss Jessel appears in one of his novellas.
ANSWER: Henry James
<The above question is for the category Literature American and was written by Daoud Jackson>

2. This artist died of a cold at age 26 in Hoosick Falls, New York, not long after completing his final
painting, Meadow Brook. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this student of Albert Bierstadt and Maurits (MAO-ritz) de Haas who created Morning after the
Snow and Fallen Monarchs.
ANSWER: William Bliss Baker
[10] Baker’s Fallen Monarchs depicts one of these natural environments. Ivan Shishkin depicted one of
these places in a painting titled for its Distance, and Konstantin Savitsky added bears to a Shishkin
painting of Morning in one of these places.
ANSWER: forest [or a pine forest; or the woods; do not accept or prompt on specifically incorrect sorts
of forest such as “rainforest” or “redwood forest”]
[10] A painting by Kanō Eitoku (kah-NOH AY-toh-ku), a National Treasure of Japan, is a screen depicting
this kind of tree. Vincent van Gogh painted three scenes of a Wheat Field with these trees at the right, and
one of these trees appears at the left of his Starry Night.
ANSWER: cypresses [or Cupressus; or Cupressoideae]
<The above question is for the category Arts Painting and was written by John Marvin>

3. Answer the following regarding Kepler’s laws, for 10 points each.


[10] According to Kepler’s third law of planetary motion, the square of this measure of a planet is
proportional to the cube of its orbit’s semi-major axis.
ANSWER: orbital period [prompt on period; prompt on T]
[10] When using Kepler’s laws to predict the positions of planets, this quantity is set equal to the mean
motion times the time.
ANSWER: mean anomaly [prompt on partial answer]
[10] Kepler’s first law states that the planets draw out orbits of this shape with the Sun at one focus.
ANSWER: ellipse
<The above question is for the category Science Physics and was written by Fred Morlan>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 7
4. This island is home to many endemic species of spider, along with a thick-trunked endemic “cucumber
tree.” For 10 points each:
[10] Name this island east of the Horn of Africa, a biodiversity hotspot. Its umbrella-shaped dragon’s-
blood trees have dark red sap.
ANSWER: Socotra [or Suqutra]
[10] Socotra lies near the opening of the Gulf of Aden, which lies between the north coast of Somalia and
the south coast of this country on the Arabian Peninsula. This country administers Socotra, and one of its
port cities lends its name to the Gulf of Aden.
ANSWER: Republic of Yemen [or al-Jumhūriyyah al-Yamaniyyah]
[10] The Gulf of Aden is divided from the Red Sea by this narrow strait; at its widest point there are only
twelve miles between Yemen and Djibouti. Its name comes from the danger of navigating it, and it
contains a small group of islands called the Seven Brothers.
ANSWER: Bab-el-Mandeb [or the Gate of Tears]
<The above question is for the category Geography World and was written by John Marvin>

5. Answer some things about reflection of light at a boundary between optical media, for 10 points each.
[10] If the light enters from a denser optical medium and the angle of incidence is greater than the critical
angle, then this phenomenon can occur. In it, the light reflects entirely back into the original medium.
ANSWER: total internal reflection [or TIR; prompt on reflection]
[10] If the incidence angle equals the Brewster angle, none of the light with this polarization mode will be
reflected. The electric field is parallel to the plane of incidence in this polarization mode.
ANSWER: TM [or transverse-magnetic; or p polarized]
[10] The critical angle for TIR is given by this function of the ratio of the second index of refraction to the
first.
ANSWER: arcsine [or inverse sine]
<The above question is for the category Science Math and was written by Paul Lee>

6. Twenty-four of these people appear during each half of the cosmological cycle. For 10 points each:
[10] Give this title for major spiritual teachers and savior-figures. They are named for the Sanskrit word
for “ford-makers” because they have created a passage through samsara, the cycle of suffering and
rebirths.
ANSWER: Tirthankaras (teer-thun-kuh-ruhs)
[10] Tirthankaras are revered in this Indian religion, which practices a code of nonviolence called ahimsa
and has sects called “sky-clad” and “white-clad” according to their ascetics’ outfits.
ANSWER: Jainism [or Jain dharma]
[10] This scripture by Umaswati (oo-MAH-swah-TEE) is the only text authoritative to both Digambara (DEE-
gum-burr) and Svetambara (SHVET-um-burr) Jains. It contains the Jain aphorism “Souls render service to one
another.”
ANSWER: Tattvartha Sutra [or Tattvarth-adhigama-sutra]
<The above question is for the category RMP Non-Christian/Bible Religion and was written by John Marvin>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 8
7. James Bradley wrote Flags of Our Fathers about the soldiers depicted in this image, though in 2016 it
was discovered that his father John Bradley had been misidentified. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this iconic photograph taken by Joe Rosenthal during a 1945 battle on a Japanese island. Felix
de Weldon later used this image to sculpt the Marine Corps War Memorial.
ANSWER: Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima
[10] Yevgeny Khaldei’s 1945 photograph of this building depicts a Soviet soldier hoisting the Hammer
and Sickle over it during the Battle of Berlin. This building was severely damaged by a 1933 arson attack.
ANSWER: Reichstag (RYKE-shtogg)
[10] A photograph from this war depicts a Royal Marine “yomper” with the Union Jack flying from his
pack on a march from the San Carlos beachhead.
ANSWER: Falklands War [or Guerra de las Malvinas]
<The above question is for the category History World and was written by Nitin Rao>

8. A university campus designed by this architect features a series of ten pavilions around a prominent
“Lawn,” with a large Rotunda at the center. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this architect who designed an octagonal dome for his Palladian-style estate, Monticello.
ANSWER: Thomas Jefferson
[10] Jefferson modeled this state government building on a Roman Temple, though it diverged when it
was rebuilt after a fire and two wings were added.
ANSWER: Virginia State Capitol [prompt on Capitol]
[10] The Virginia State Capitol was inspired by the Maison Carrée (may-ZON kah-RAY), one of the most
well-preserved Roman temples. It is located in this city, which used it as an art museum during the
nineteenth century.
ANSWER: Nîmes (NEEM)
<The above question is for the category Arts Architecture and was written by John Marvin>

9. An immensely erudite novel by a writer with this surname, Darconville’s Cat, chronicles the life of an
English professor who is turned against his former lover Isabel by the misogynist Dr. Crucifer. For 10
points each:
[10] Name this surname of brothers Alexander and Paul, the latter of whom wrote The Mosquito Coast
and The Great Railway Bazaar.
ANSWER: Theroux (thuh-ROO)
[10] Paul Theroux’s book Sir Vidia’s Shadow describes his often tense friendship with this Indo-
Trinidadian writer, whose only rule was “Never give anyone a second chance.” He wrote A Bend in the
River.
ANSWER: V. S. Naipaul [Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul]
[10] This St. Lucian (LOO-shin) writer mocked Naipaul in “The Mongoose,” writing “Once he liked
humans; / How long ago this was!” In a poem, he wrote “The classics can console. But not enough.”
ANSWER: Derek Walcott [Derek Alton Walcott]
<The above question is for the category Literature World and was written by Shan Kothari>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 9
10. In regards to a plan proposed by this man, Austen Chamberlain said “gentlemen do not behave in such
a way.” For 10 points each:
[10] Name this British politician, who proposed with a Frenchman an exceedingly unpopular 1935 plan to
end a war by dividing Abyssinia into an Italian and Abyssinian sector.
ANSWER: Sir Samuel John Gurney Hoare [prompt on Hoare–Laval Pact]
[10] After the failure of the Hoare–Laval Pact, Hoare was replaced as Foreign Secretary by this youthful
conservative, who held the post again in the Churchill ministry during most of World War II.
ANSWER: Anthony Eden [or Robert Anthony Eden]
[10] Historian A. J. P. Taylor said that the Hoare–Laval Pact’s failure damaged both the power and
prestige of this international peacekeeping group, which formed in 1920 and was becoming increasingly
irrelevant by the mid 1930s.
ANSWER: League of Nations
<The above question is for the category History European 1914-present and was written by Mike Cheyne>

11. Edmund Wilson’s book on symbolist literature is titled in reference to this play, whose title character
says “Living? Our servants will do that for us.” For 10 points each:
[10] Name this play by Auguste Villiers de L’Isle-Adam (veel-YAY duh LEEL-ah-DOM), whose title character
meets the rich heiress Sara de Maupers (mo-PAIR) in the crypt of his castle after they both respond “no”
when asked whether they will accept “light, hope, and life.”
ANSWER: Axël
[10] Villiers de L’Isle-Adam’s novel The Future Eve coined the modern sense of this word for a
humanoid robot. A Philip K. Dick novel, despite more often using the term “replicant,” asks in the title
whether these creatures “dream of electric sheep.”
ANSWER: androids [accept Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?]
[10] In Karel Čapek’s (CHOP-ek’s) R.U.R., Alquist realizes that two robots are a new Adam and Eve after
threatening to kill one of them to test their love. Name either of those robots.
ANSWER: Primus OR Helena
<The above question is for the category Literature European and was written by Shan Kothari>

12. The Bandiera brothers’ expedition to Naples failed because the British government spied on this
man’s mail during his exile in London. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this Genoese republican who founded the Young Italy movement. Cavour called this man
“chief of the assassins,” though he expressly disclaimed the “theory of the dagger.”
ANSWER: Giuseppe Mazzini (mah-TSEE-nee)
[10] Mazzini was briefly a triumvir (try-UM-ver) of this city, which formed a republic after Pope Piux IX
fled to Gaeta (gah-AY-tah). This city’s republic ended when Napoleon III sieged it and restored the Pope to
the Vatican Palace in this city.
ANSWER: Rome
[10] Mazzini sent an 1831 letter to this King of Sardinia-Piedmont urging him to oust the Austrians and
unify Italy. This monarch lost the battles of Novara and Custoza and he names the first constitution of
unified Italy.
ANSWER: Charles Albert of Sardinia [do not prompt on “Charles” or “Albert”]
<The above question is for the category History European 1400-1914 and was written by Nitin Rao>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 10
13. Contrary to Jacques Maritain, Umberto Eco argued that this philosopher’s theory of aesthetic
perception, or visio, was strongly cognitive rather than intuitive. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this philosopher who described beauty in terms of the three qualities of integritas,
consonantia, and claritas.
ANSWER: St. Thomas Aquinas [or Tommaso d’Aquino; prompt on St. Thomas]
[10] Although Aquinas was an Aristotelian, his views on divine beauty were influenced by Pseudo-
Dionysius the Areopagite (air-ee-OP-ug-ite), a member of this school of thought whose other members
included Porphyry.
ANSWER: Neoplatonism
[10] The views of Plotinus and other Neoplatonists on beauty were often derived from this Platonic
dialogue about love. In this dialogue, Socrates recounts how Diotima taught him about a hierarchy of
kinds of love.
ANSWER: Symposium
<The above question is for the category RMP Philosophy and was written by Shan Kothari>

14. This environmental design theory comprises the five factors of territoriality, natural surveillance,
image, milieu, and safe adjoining areas. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this theory in urban planning developed by Oscar Newman. It links crime deterrence to
physical factors built into small communities that evoke feelings of personal investment, security, and
control in their residents.
ANSWER: defensible space
[10] Evidence that a community is not cared for, such as the presence of namesake unrepaired structures,
encourages crime according to this theory proposed by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling.
ANSWER: broken windows
[10] The dilapidated title tower block in the film Paradise Hotel was part of an ambitious project to house
these people. In the nineteenth century, some of their subgroups lived in ornate vardos, which are now
mostly used at horse fairs.
ANSWER: Romani [or Romanichals; or Rumneys; or Gypsy]
<The above question is for the category Social Science Sociology and was written by Joelle Smart>

15. These pieces, collected in eight volumes, include three “Venetian Boat Songs.” For 10 points each:
[10] Name these short piano pieces. One of them is a presto entitled “Spinnerlied” (SHPIN-er-leed), or
“Spinning Song.”
ANSWER: Songs Without Words [or Lieder ohne Worte]
[10] This composer of the Scottish Symphony dedicated book two of his Songs Without Words to his sister
Fanny.
ANSWER: Felix Mendelssohn [or Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy]
[10] The sixth entry in book five of Songs Without Words is this piece in A major that depicts a season. It
shares its name with a 1949 Benjamin Britten symphony that sets poems such as “The Merry Cuckoo”
and “Out on the Lawn I Lie in Bed.”
ANSWER: Spring Song [or Allegretto grazioso; or Frühlingslied]
<The above question is for the category Arts Music and was written by Penelope Ashe>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 11
16. Under William Mahone, this party abolished the poll tax and the public whipping post. For 10 points
each:
[10] Name this biracial political party that held power in Virginia during the 1870s. This party was named
for its stance on the repayment of prewar debt, in opposition to the Funders.
ANSWER: Readjusters [or Readjuster Party]
[10] The Readjusters opposed this legislation that benefited bondholders, calling it the “Broker’s Bill.”
This act shares its name with the petitioner in a case that ruled “the power to tax is the power to destroy.”
ANSWER: McCulloch Act
[10] Grover Cleveland’s election and the Danville Riot led to the collapse of the Readjusters and the
political dominance of the Democrats, who enacted racial segregation laws named for this fictional Black
trickster.
ANSWER: Jim Crow [or Jim Crow laws]
<The above question is for the category History American (1865-1945) and was written by Nitin Rao>

17. This compound is commercially synthesized through the Cativa process. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this acid that serves as the main component of vinegar. A highly concentrated form of this
compound is called “glacial.”
ANSWER: acetic acid [or ethanoic acid; accept glacial acetic acid]
[10] This derivative of acetic acid is commonly used to cleave peptides from Wang resin during solid-
state peptide synthesis. This compound can also reduce benzyl halides with hydrosilanes.
ANSWER: trifluoroacetic acid [or TFA]
[10] TFA is commonly used as a counter-ion during this technique used to fragment ions prior to mass
spectrometry. Unlike ESI, this soft ionization technique produces fewer multi-charged ions.
ANSWER: matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization [or MALDI; or MALDI-TOF]
<The above question is for the category Science Chemistry and was written by Paul Lee>

18. This play opens in 1809 as Septimus Hodge challenges Thomasina to prove Fermat’s last theorem to
distract her from “carnal embrace.” For 10 points each:
[10] Name this play which also follows Hannah Jarvis as she researches an old house in the present day.
ANSWER: Arcadia
[10] Arcadia is by this Czech-born British author, who also wrote The Real Thing, Professional Foul and
The Coast of Utopia.
ANSWER: Tom Stoppard [or Tomáš Straussler]
[10] Stoppard wrote a play about these two minor characters from a Shakespeare play, who in the title
“Are Dead.” That play opens with these characters flipping a coin, only for it to come up heads every
time.
ANSWER: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern [accept Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead]
<The above question is for the category Literature British Non-Shakespeare and was written by John Marvin>

19. In 1994, this man’s supposed gravesite was discovered. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this founder of the City of God, or Sinsi, who invented moxibustion and acupuncture, and was
born after the intervention of a divine birch tree and his father Hwanung (HWAH-noong).
ANSWER: Dangun (DAHN-goon) [or Tangun]
[10] Dangun’s mother was one of these animals. This is the most common type of animal sacrificed in the
“Iomante” (ee-oh-MAHN-tay) ritual of the Ainu, and the daughter of Lycaon (lye-KAY-on) was turned into one
of these animals.
ANSWER: bear
[10] Hwanung and Dangun are mythical founders in this culture’s mythology. Some people currently
living in this culture practice the juche (JOO-cheh) religion invented by Kim Il-Sung.
ANSWER: Korea [or Korean culture; or North Korea]
<The above question is for the category RMP Non-Greek/Roman Myth and was written by Penelope Ashe>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 12
20. This equation can be used predict the number of defects in a crystal. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this empirical equation used to calculate the rate constant for a reaction. The Eyring (EYE-ring)
equation is a version of this equation consistent with transition state theory.
ANSWER: Arrhenius equation
[10] According to the Arrhenius equation, raising the temperature of the reaction by 10 degrees Celsius
will result in this fold increase in reaction rate in room temperature. Approximate to the nearest integer.
ANSWER: two [or double]
[10] While the pre-exponential factor of the Eyring equation is linear with respect to T, collision theory
predicts that the pre-exponential factor of Arrhenius equation should be proportional to this function of T.
ANSWER: square root [or one-half power; or 1/2 power]
<The above question is for the category Science Biology and was written by Paul Lee>

Extra. This disease is characterized by an unstable triplet expansion of CGG repeats, which may progress
from premutation levels in the mother to full mutation in her children. For 10 points each:
[10] Name this most common heritable intellectual disability disorder. It is named for the appearance of
the chromosome where the FMR1 gene is silenced.
ANSWER: fragile X syndrome [or FXS]
[10] FXS inheritance is an example of this dynamic phenomenon in which the probability of further
triplet expansion in offspring increases with the number of triplet repeats in the parent, resulting in more
severe or earlier symptoms in subsequent generations. It is also seen in Huntington’s disease.
ANSWER: anticipation [or Sherman paradox]
[10] Trinucleotide repeats arise from “loop out” structures appearing in the daughter strand during this
process. Polymerases add nucleotides to leading and lagging strands in this semiconservative process.
ANSWER: DNA replication [or DNA synthesis]
<The above question is for the category Science Biology and was written by Joelle Smart>

2018 NASAT Presented by and © International Quiz Bowl Tournaments, LLC Round 3 Page 13

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