The Teams
Green Templeton
College, Oxford
Will Owens
Annie Roberts
Yusuf Sahin (Capt.)
Fiona Asokacitta
Darwin College,
Cambridge
Lewis Strachan
Ruth Ni Mhuircheartaigh
Louis Cameron (Capt.)
Jonathan White
Green Templeton were
making their first appearance as a matter of note. We began with a starter in
which Brian Aldiss described what seemed to have been from Frankenstein. Indeed
it was, as Lewis Strachan thought, earning a set of bonuses on Breakfast at
Tiffany’s for Darwin. We both took just the two bonuses. Clues to film
portrayals of Sigmund Freud fell to Lewis Cameron. No bonuses on the Portuguese
War of Restoration followed, although I think that they were unlucky not to get
Ceuta. Lewis Cameron knew Clown for the next starter. Sex chromosomes (no sex
chromosomes please, we’re British) amazingly not only produced this week’s
first baby elephant walk moment but the last question in the set brought me a
lap of honour when I knew that temperature changes in the eggs can determine
the sex of turtle offspring. (Look, an NHS clerical officer just KNOWS these
things, ok?) For the picture starter nobody recognized movements in a work by
Ottorino Respighi. Vitamin B1 thiamin brought Annie Roberts and Green Templeton
(henceforth I will call them GT) their first points. This earned the picture
bonuses on movements in other tone poems and brought a further five points. Thus
it was that just after the 10 minute mark that Darwin led 40 – 15.
Lewis Cameron was the
first to recognize the person being described in the next starter as Genghis Khan.
Art of the New York Subway provided an interesting set of which Darwin took
just the one. With the next starter about an artist friend of Edgar Degas you
had to wait until the pronoun ‘she’ was used, at which point I thought it was a
50/50 between Berthe Morrisot and Mary Cassatt. Lewis Cameron went for Cassatt
and took the points. Game theory bonuses brought just the one correct answer. Will
Owen knew the word Ambient as used in various album titles. Poaceae (the plant
family not the Pokemon character) yielded only one bonus to GT, but at least it
took us up to the music starter. Ruth Ni Mhuircheartaigh thought that the voice
might be Leonard Cohen’s and was right. More songs that inspired the names of notable
bands or artists provided just one correct answer. Captain Yusuf Sahin took one
for his team with the next starter, recognizing descriptions of languages that
all begin with the letters sin -. The Beach Boys . . . well the Beach Boys,
like so many sets before them gave up just one correct answer. With the next
starter you had to wait . . . and . . . wwwaaaaiiiitttt, until Menai Strait
Bridge was mentioned, then sling buzzer. Will Owens gave the correct answer of
Thomas Telford. Notable alumni of France’s Ecole des Ponts et Chaussees – nope,
me neither – brought a rare full house. Which really changed the state of the
competition. Darwin had been comfortably outbuzzing GT, yet at the 20 minute
mark they only had a 15 point lead to show for their efforts, with the score at
85-70.
This was further
reduced when Yusuf Sahin took the next starter with the Polish Galicia. We were
back to famine rations of bonuses again though as only one bonus on Little Red
Riding Hood brought the scores level. Lewis Cameron recognized the work of
Heidegger (aka the boozy beggar) for the next starter and with two bonuses for
art installations they began the long run for home. So to the second picture
starter and the kind of illustration that could only be for Milton or Dante.
Lewis Cameron buzzed too early and lost five. Will Owens went with Milton. It
was Dante. Annie Roberts knew Progesterone (another Pokemon?) for the next
starter and earned the bonuses showing three more depictions of Dante’s meeting
with Francesca da Rimini. This brought them the two correct answers that they
needed to level the scores again. A terrific early buzz to identify the
character Clarissa Dalloway from Annie Roberts brought GT the lead. They sadly
squandered a very gettable set on Greek Mythology. Emec and Etic (surely they
are pokemon too) gave both teams the slip. A smut that grows on corn – and let
me tell you that we are not averse to smutty corn or corny smut here at LAM
Towers – lost Darwin five and fell to Yusuf Sahin. Natural world bonuses took
GT to 130 meaning that Darwin needed two unanswered visits to the table. They
took the next starter with residue. With two bonuses taken the next starter
could tie the scores. Jonathan White took it. Was there enough time for any
bonuses? Only just. Darwin took the only one there was time for and won the
contest 135-130.
For the record both
teams managed relatively modest BCRs. Green Templeton posted 42% while Darwin’s
was 44%. Sadly their score of 130 means that GT do not make it onto the
repechage table.
Amol Watch
I’m gratified to see
Amol keeping to the principle of – if it’s not quite right than it’s quite
wrong, even though Darwin may well feel aggrieved about Ceuta.
It appears that Amol is
as fond of Leonard Cohen as he is of Bertrand Russell. Cohen is NOT unmistakeable,
Amol, or GT wouldn’t have mistaken him.
Interesting Fact
That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Roy Lichtenstein
designed a large mural at Times Square 42nd Street Subway Station.
Baby Elephant Walk
Moment
X-inactivation is only
one method of dealing with the asymmetry of sex chromosomes. Some species
instead halve the expression of genes from both female X chromosomes, while
others double that of the single X chromosomes in males. What two word term
refers to these methods collectively? Dum de dumdum dum dum dum dum dumdum.
Repechage Table
Sheffield |
170 |
SOAS |
170 |
New College Oxford |
150 |
Lancaster |
145 |
--------------------------------------- |
|
Grenn-Templeton, Oxford |
130 |
Cardiff |
115 |
Linacre, Oxford |
115 |
Newcastle |
105 |
Bath |
70 |