ࡱ > d f c @ Ys jbjbܡܡ " Ym l 4 L > > > > > > > > t v v v v v v , z > > > > > l > > > l l l > > > t l ^ T ^ > t l l @ @ 2 ^ r @ @ 4 @ ; l ; @ l MANU GINOBILI OPEN PACKET #12 1. Its 16th and final point called for a separation of the Executive and Judiciary branches. The fourth point advocated the establishment of a system of weightage and the fifth set 150 as the number of seats in the Central Legislative Council. The penultimate point established the ethnic criterion for at least one of the two Under Secretaries. Its provisions held in place for eight years, only collapsing after the Khilafat Movement. Many of its stipulations were negotiated by B.G. Tilak, the major Congress leader, though he argued against formal recognition of the opposition party. Chiefly orchestrated by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, FTP, identify this 1916 pact for Hindu-Muslim relations reached in the namesake north central Indian city. Answer: Lucknow Pact 2. The character of Vern Dobson is mentioned but never appears onstage. Another character is a former academic who suggests the performance of Romeo and Juliet that commences in Act Two of this play. That character, Dr. Lyman, schemes to meet up with innocent Elma in a nearby city while both of them are stranded at the title location due to a snow storm. Other stranded figures include young Cherie and the rough cowboy who pursues her, Bo Decker. The final pages reveal the extent of the relationship between Carl and Grace, the latter a waitress at the title location, a diner between Kansas City and Topeka. FTP, name this play by William Inge. Answer: Bus Stop 3. In the solar wind they can have wavelengths on the scale of an Earth radius giving a long-scale coherence of them that play a significant role in magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling. First postulated to explain the sunspot cycle, (*) they have been used in the heating of Tokamak plasmas by perturbing the magnetic field in the plasma. The compressional variety is often called a magnetosonic wave and these waves are often derived using the equations of ideal magnetohydrodynamics. FTP what are these ion-carried waves commonly described as the result of plucking the magnetic field lines in a plasma, named for their Swedish formulator? Answer: Alfven waves (prompt on magnetosonic before it is mentioned) 4. A cut-off, golden mirror slopes down on the top left side, while a somewhat, slanted, but partially opened window can be seen in the center of the background. Shoes and pillows lie strewn about a floor whose color matches the wall and the outfits of the persons depicted. Rich splashes of red break up the composition as a black serving woman, who is turning back to face the languorous trio [*] sitting in front of a hookah, is walking towards the right of the painting. Presenting a scene that could be interpreted as a more peaceful version of the same court depicted in its creators previous orientalist masterpiece The Death of Sardanapalus, FTP, identify this 1834 work whose title figures inhabit a harem interior in North Africa, a work by Eugene Delacroix. Answer: Women of Algiers 5. One of his stories tells of a student who desires an Archivists serpent daughter but falls for another woman after the interference of a fortune teller. Another involves the goldsmith Cardillac who is caught up in a series of jewel thefts. Yet another is about Nicholas, who is tormented by the title character, a chemist who killed his father. All of these stories appeared before he published his novels, which include Meister Floh and Kater Murr, the Educated Cat. FTP, name this man whose stories like The Golden Pot, Mademoiselle de Scudery, and the Sandman appeared in his collection The Serapion Brothers, a German romantic writer perhaps best known as the source for a Jacques Offenbach opera. Answer: E(rnst) T(heodor) A(madeus) Hoffmann 6. Their alpha-alkoxy variety undergoes the Thorpe reaction in the presence of tris-methyllithium at -78 degrees Celsius. Their adipo- hydrodimer is key to the production of nylon, and they can be made aromatic via the dehydration of oximes with phosphorus pentoxide. The Ritter reaction (*) is an acid-induced nucleophilic addition of them to a carbenium ion, which eventually results in an amide. Catalytic hydrogenation of them in the presence of nickel or cobalt also results in an amide, but when they are reacted with Grignard reagents, ketones result. Formed by Letts synthesis, FTP, name these organic chemical compounds which contain a nitrogen triple bonded to a carbon. Answer: nitriles 7. Despite the recommendations of leniency by the jury, this man was sentenced to death by Judge Hugh Richardson. After the ignorance of his six-point List of Rights, he orchestrated the murder of Thomas Scott, an experience that led him to adopt a later more nonviolent approach by curbing the aggression of his military head, Gabriel Dumont. He would finally be cornered following the fall of Batoche [buh-TOSZH], which occurred about a year after he returned from exile as a teacher of a Jesuit school in Montana. FTP, name this man who was executed in 1885 for his role as a leader of the Metis and the Red River Rebellion. Answer: Louis Riel 8. The preface to this work explains that it is lifted from a translation of the Count Bearhaven. That translation was of a tale by the author of The Voyage of Celeste, one Monsieur de lAubepine. The work itself begins with the hero taking up residence in a mansion kept by Dame Lisabetta. The hero is newly arrived in Padua and is unaware of a feud between his neighbor and the man whose triumphant exclamation ends this work, Signor Baglioni. Thus, Giovanni Guasconti unknowingly effects the death of his love, the title character. FTP, name this work in which that title character is pure poison, a story by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Answer: Rappacinis Daughter 9. An eclipse of the sun that halted fighting occurred about an hour before the end of this battle. The eventual losers were lulled into overconfidence by the presence of their new Martini-Henry rifles and as a result no wagon perimeter was set up by Lord Chelmsford. That same night an equally fierce battle was waged at the nearby site of Rorkes Drift. Despite victory at the latter locale, the British plan to strike toward the enemy kraal at Ulundi was undone by this loss. FTP, name this 1879 defeat of British forces by roughly 20,000 Zulu warriors. Answer: Battle of Isandlwana 10. Saddled with the task of improving a machine to remove shavings, he found that no matter how low a fluids viscosity was, the fluid would always remain stationary at the walls of the pipe. With M.B. Glauert, his name graces a phenomenon in which clouds condense around a supersonic (*) airplanes jet intakes, wings and shockwaves caused by the planes breaking of the sound barrier. With his most famous student, Theodore von Karman, he discovered that vortices could induce drag, leading to a revolution in aircraft design. FTP, name this father of aerodynamic theory, whose namesake dimensionless number is the ratio of a fluids viscosity to its thermal conductivity. Answer: Ludwig Prandtl 11. He claimed to be a descendant of Charlemagne and after serving in the American Revolution he made a small fortune speculating on confiscated lands. Early works like his Letter from a citizen in Geneva were written recoup his fortune, but soon he and followers like Bazard, Enfantin, and Thierry [*] were singing another tune. Arguing for the division of man into families in works like Dissertation on the Knowledge of Man, this man appealed to Louis XIII to shift his administration to a meritocracy and to believe in the power of science and technology. These ideas, presented in works like The Industry and Industrial Catechism, won over a young Auguste Comte and inaugurated French socialism. FTP identify this thinker best known for his reformist manifesto The New Christianity. Answer: Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Comte de Saint Simon 12. Its major section begins with eight unnamed chapters, the only unnamed parts of this work. Three of its fragments are only known by English names: Gray, Westergaard, and Darmesteter. The Westergaard section is followed by the Hadhokt, which gives an explanation of the souls final destination, which itself can be determined based on the ritual specifications outlined in the Nirangistan. Its Khorda part is basically a book of common prayer, while extensions to the liturgy are the subject of the Visperad. FTP, name this work that is also composed of the Vendidad and the Yasnas and Gathas, the sacred collection of Zoroastrian scriptures. Answer: Zend-Avesta 13. He criticizes both Penthouse Forum and Thomas Harris Hannibal in his recent essay collection The War Against Clich. One of his novels tells of the intertwined planning of murders of Nicola Six and the Earth itself, while his most successful novel follows a director of fast food videos, John Slick Self. In Visiting Mrs. Nabokov and Other Excursions he included an obituary of Philip Larkin, a good friend of his fathers, but it is for his tale of the separate consciousnesses in ex-Nazi doctor Tod T. Friendly that he won a Booker Prize. FTP, name this writer of the novels London Fields, Money, and Times Arrow, the son of novelist Kingsley. Answer: Martin Amis (prompt on just last name) 14. Quinolone and coumarin are two antibacterial substances that work by inhibiting one class of these enzymes. Adriamycin, ellipticine, and the alkaloid camptothecin (*) also inhibit the activity of these enzymes, and are thus used as possible anticancer drugs. Their type II class operates by having the substrate molecule bind to tyrosine residues on the active site, forming a G segment and a T segment, and, ultimately, changing the linking number of the substrate. Often used for decatenation and cleavage for assays, all of them are able to relax negative supercoils, effectively opposing the action of DNA gyrase. FTP, name these enzymes which are responsible for sorting out the topological tangles of the DNA double helix. Answer: topoisomerases 15. The third of this name only ruled until the age of thirteen and was controlled by a regent from Austrasia. The second married an Anglian aristocrat whom he bought as a slave. The first consolidated his power with the help of the chieftain Ragnachar. He gained more help via the strategic marrying off of his sister Audofleda and by the time of his victory at Tolbiac, it had been six years since his defeat of the Roman official Syagrius and even longer since he had subdued the Ripuarian branch of his people. FTP, name this man who married Clotilde, the son of Childeric I, and first king of a united Frankish people. Answer: Clovis (or Chlodowech) 16. The Circle of Human Feelings discusses the particulars of bathing, eating, and sexual activity, all the while noting that there is an implicit tension between pleasure and the desire to harden oneself. Other sections of this work focus on the dilemma of virtue and the prevailing theme of obligations to ones land [*] or ones ancestors. Its author took John Embrees earlier work, Suye Mura, as a model and its most perceptive moments occur during the analysis of taking ones station, an idealization of the hierarchical that the author connects to the willingness of pilots to sacrifice themselves. Named for a pair of contrasting symbols, that represent the way of the artist versus the way of the warrior, FTP, identify this work subtitled Patterns of Japanese Culture by Ruth Benedict. Answer: The Chrysanthemum and the Sword 17. Due to some death threats, he was occasionally forced to hold political meetings at his wife Lucille Greens beauty salon. Nearly 40 years later, he planned his most famous event with the help of A.J. Muste. While at City College and with the help of Chandler Owen he founded the radical magazine that he used as his bully pulpit. He proposed such measures as his $185 billion Freedom Budged through that magazine, The Messenger. FTP, name this man who, in 1941, threatened FDR with a March on Washington, 16 years after he organized the strike of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Answer: Asa Philip Randolph 18. According to one legend, it, along with its counterparts, was formed when a herd of flying elephants displeased Indra and he cut off their wings to stop them from moving. Symbolized and worshipped via the sacred Yantras, at the end of each Yuga Vasuki emerges from underneath the seven worlds that lie below it [*] to unveil his fiery breath and destroy the universe. In addition, to Chi Gyatso, a body of water that contains the four mortal worlds, copious tress and fruits can be found on its precious stone encrusted slopes. Surrounded by seven lakes and seven other summits, Brahmas Golden City lies at its peak and the Ganges flows from the very top, FTP, identify this mythical mountain that exists at the center of the Hindu cosmos. Answer: Mount Meru 19. The simpleton Silvano is fooled by a gipsy and never seen again, while the opening of its second section features a veiled woman hunting for herbs and singing the solo Ecco lorrido campo in order to forget her illicit love. The mocking chorus Seguitemi finds the conspirators, Sam and Tom, [*] enjoying the conformation of Ulricas prophecy and planning to make their move at the title event. Eugene Scribe originally wrote the story for a work by Auber, but due to a general uneasiness with depicting regicide, by the time Somma got a hold of the libretto he had to shift the setting from Sweden to America. Thus Amelias husband, the vengeful Renato, is described as a Creole and his one-time best friend, the Earl of Warwick, Riccardo, is the Governor of Boston. FTP identify this work by Verdi that climaxes at a dance where everyone attends in disguise. Answer: Un Ballo in Maschera or A Masked Ball 20. The fourth of them claims that God chose Judea for above all else / it pleased him to exalt humility, and the twelfth ends At least I may be granted for my tears / The comfort of a few belated sighs. The second of them begins by mentioning Loves determination to take up graceful revenge / and punish in one day a thousand wrongs, and the first opens O you who hear within these scattered verses. It was Sir Thomas Wyatts reading of many of the pieces in this collection, also known as Rerum vulgarium fragmenta, that introduced him to the innovation he brought back to England. FTP, name this collection of 365 love poems to Laura, the major work of Francesco Petrarch. Answer: Canzoniere (or Book of Songs; accept early buzz of Rerum vulgarium fragmenta) Bonuses 1. Answer the following about a mythological being FTPE: A. Sometimes associated with Haddad, after defeating the sea god Yam in battle he built himself a sumptuous dwelling on Mt. Saphon. Answer: Baal or Bel B. This ferocious consort of Baals later rescued him after he died at the hands of Mot. Answer: Anat C. To win his battles and for all-around advice Baal often sought out this god of arts and crafts whose name means deft and skillful. Answer: Kothar or Koshar wa Hasis 2. Answer these questions about novels featuring Sikhs, FTP each: A. Kip is a Sikh sapper during World War II in this Michael Ondaatje novel. Answer: The English Patient B. This mans trilogy The Village, Across the Black Waters, and Sword and the Sickle center on Lalu, a Sikh peasant who enlists for the British in World War II. Answer: Mulk Raj Anand C. Her prize-winning 2000 novel What the Body Remembers follows a Hindu and Sikh woman during the partition of India. She shares her surname with the author of the novels Just Above my Head and If Beale Street Could Talk. Answer: Shauna Singh Baldwin [the other novelist is James Baldwin] 3. Name these treaties that, unlike Hercules Brabazon-Brabazon, screwed Turkish people, FTP each: A. This treaty signed at the end of the First Russo-Turkish war ceded Kerch and several other Black Sea ports in the Crimea to Russia and declared the rest of the khanate of Crimea independent. Answer: Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji or Kuchuk-Kainardi B. Signed in the namesake Swiss city in 1923, this treaty imposed on the Ottoman empire virtually destroyed Turkey as a national state, though it was not recognized by Ataturks government. Answer: Treaty of Lausanne C. All Hungary, Croatia, and Slavonia were ceded to Austria by the Ottomans in this 1699 treaty signed following a fourteen war that that the Ottomans lost to a coalition of Austria, Poland, and Venice. Answer: Treaty of Karlowitz 4. 20th century philosophical works from description FTSNOP: A. This 1930 work on Ethics by William David Ross analyzes the title concepts and argues that they are not scientifically discoverable nor can they be explained in terms of feelings, rather we must use intuition to gauge moral value. Answer: The Right and the Good B. Subtitled An Essay on Phenomenological Ontology this work distinguishes between existence in-itself and for-itself. Sarte argues that the former must be anihilated for the latter to triumph and for man to be free. Answer: Being and Nothingness C. In this 1929 work John Dewey argues that we must let go of our distinction between theory and practice during our study of philosophy and that we must embrace experimental science if we are to succeed in the titular endeavor. Answer: The Quest for Certainty 5. Answer some questions about lasers, FTPE. A. (10) Most lasers operate by achieving this condition in the laser medium, in which a higher energy state is more heavily populated with electrons than a lower energy state. Answer: population inversion B. (10) The optical variety of this effect, also known as the quadratic electro-optic effect, can be induced by a laser. It occurs when a materials refractive index is changed due to an external electric field. Answer: Kerr effect C. (10) Creation of laser activity without population inversion was first discovered in a vapor of this alkali element; it was later discovered in rubidium. Answer: Sodium (accept Na) 6. He became president of his country in 1944, but is best known for the fortified line of defense across the Karelian Peninsula that he planned. FTP each A. Name this Finnish leader. Answer: Carl (Gustav Emil) Mannerheim B. In August of 1944 Mannerheim succeeded this man as president of Finland when the parliament deposed this man and appointed Mannerheim in his place. Answer: Risto Ryti C. Mannerheim saw his military action during this war, whose battles included Chemulpo and Ulsan. Answer: Russo-Japanese War 7.. Identify the following works by Edward Munch FTPE: A. This uncompleted sequence of 22 paintings was Munchs projected masterpiece. It was meant to form a great allegory of mans development from birth to death. Answer: The Frieze of Life B. In this work the title figures red hair flows into the rain of blood that covers her victims neck and head. Answer: Vampire C. One of his final paintings, in this work Munch depicts himself surrounded by his work in between the title fixtures. Answer: Self Portrait between clock and bed 8. Name these men involved in the history of the telegraph, FTP each: A. This painter patented the first electrical telegraph in 1837. Answer: Samuel Morse B. In 1845 this man became Morses business manager and helped promote rapid expansion of the telegraph service. He had earlier served as Postmaster General under Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren. Answer: Amos Kendall C. This financier led the company that successfully laid the first Transatlantic telegraph cable in 1858. Eight years later he laid a more durable quicker cable. Answer: Cyrus Field 9. Another item on list of places Ryan has lived is coming up, so name these things from Idaho geography FTPE. A.Located in Caribou County, this area was located on the Oregon trail and got its name from the the carbonated springs surrounding it. It is also the location of the only man made geyser in the world. Answer: Soda Springs B.Home of the University of Idaho Vandals it is the seat of Latah County. Situated just across the state line from Pullman, WA it is the home to the Kibbie dome, a 16,000 seat football stadium. Answer: Moscow C.Rising in the Sawtooth mountains it is joined by the Lemhi River before joining the Snake River south of the Idaho-Oregon-Washington border. The section before its confluence with the Snake is called the River of No Return because travel upstream was once impossible. Answer: Snake River 10. Name these people who wrote on the life of Peter Abelard, FTP each: A. His 1717 poem Eloisa to Abelard appeared three years after his The Rape of the Lock Answer: Alexander Pope B. In 1921 this Irish novelist wrote the novel Heloise and Abelard, but it was in Paris that he wrote his best known work, Esther Waters. Answer: George Moore C. Peter Abelard was the only novel by this medieval scholar, perhaps best-known for her study of medieval goliards entitled The Wandering Scholars. Answer: Helen Waddell 11. Mass marriages anyone. FTPE A.According to the traditions of this faith, Jesus appeared to a 15-year old boy in 1935. The church was involved in CIA operations in the 1960s and it has sent members to many countries as lightning rods to receive persecution. The Japanese Supreme court has convicted it for fraud and they believe that willingly enduring mistreatment one can receive Gods blessing. Answer: Unification Church or The Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity or The Family Federation for World Peace and Unification B.He fled from North Korea during the Korean war and with his wife Hak Ja Han he is the co-leader of the Unification Church. He was jailed in the US for tax evasion. Members of his church consider him to be the new Messiah. Answer: Sun Myung Moon C.This document published in 2002 by the Unification Church records a ceremony taking place in the spirit world where representatives from the worlds five major religions and several Communist leaders testified that Sun Myung Moon is the Messiah. It ends with a letter from God which expresses Gods love for the Reverend Moon. Answer: Clouds of Witnesses: The Saints Testimonies 12. Answer the following about an economic theory and its creator FTPE: A. Summarized by the policy ineffectiveness proposition this idea argues that workers cannot be fooled again and again, and that, for all the noise and false examples that are proffered, higher inflation will never lead to lower unemployment. Answer: rational expectations B. This man developed the idea of rational expectations and won the 1995 nobel prize in economics the biggest pimple on his ass. Answer: Robert E. Lucas C. Lucass namesake critiques caused him to clash with his former mentor, Milton Friedman, who had argued for policy intervention via a negative income tax in this 1962 work that he co-wrote with his sexy wife Rose. Answer: Capitalism and Freedom 13. Name some things related to meiosis, FTPE. A. (10) In female fetuses, meiosis is initiated but arrested at the end of this division of prophase I. Answer: pachytene B. (10) The post-pachytene arrest is triggered by reduction of the concentration this ubiquitous secondary messenger which is synthesized by adenylyl cyclase. Answer: cyclic Adenosine MonoPhosphate (or cAMP) C. (10) These are the cross-shaped structures formed during crossing over that hold together homologous chromosomes. Answer: chiasmata 14. Just as she realizes her love for Jem Wilson he is accused of the murder of Harry Carson, a crime actually committed by her father. FTP each A. Name this title character of an 1848 novel. Answer: Mary Barton B. Mary Barton is perhaps the masterwork of this novelist of North and South and an 1857 Life of Charlotte Bronte. Answer: Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell C. A little after 1842 Elizabeth Gaskell started writing for Household Words, where she published stories alongside this novelist of The Moonstone and The Woman in White. Answer: Wilkie Collins 15. Identify these non-Operatic works by Benjamin Britten FTPE: A. Written to commemorate the patron saint of his chosen profession, this five-part chorus, with text by Auden, seeks to emphasize the emotional and erotic power of music. Answer: Hymn to St. Cecilia B. This song cycle which features some impressive string effects, which is framed by the line I alone hold the key to this savage parade, is based on and takes its name from the verses of Arthur Rimbaud. Answer: Les Iluminations C. Written as the soundtrack for an educational film, this series of variations on a Purcell theme culmiates in an exuberant fugue. Answer: Young Persons Guide to the Orchestra 16. Answer some things about a type of star, FTPE. A. (10) The short period white giants that pulsate with a period of less than 1 day. They are found in globular clusters, and they are older and less massive than Cepheids. Answer: RR Lyrae variables/stars B. (10) This type of RR Lyrae star pulsates simultaneously in the fundamental and the first-overtone radial modes. They can apparently be found in the Draco dwarf galaxy. Answer: double-mode RR Lyrae variables/stars C. (10) The RR Lyrae variable XZ Cygni displays this effect, named for a Russian astronomer, in which there is a secondary variation in the stars period and/or amplitude. Answer: Blazhko effect 17. Name these works of early Japanese literature, FTP each: A. This epic work chronicles the titular clan and its eventual collapse in 12th-cenury Japan after utter defeat by the Minamoto clan. Answer: Tales of the Heike (or Heike Monogatarai) B. Along with Back Roads to Far Towns this major haiku collection of Basho Matsuo is drawn from a 1000 mile journey he took in the 46th year of his life. Answer: The Narrow Road to the Deep North C. Its first section is titled Age of the Gods and its first biography is that of Jimmu Tenno. This Chronicle from Earliest Times to AD 697 was written around 720. Answer: Nihongi (prompt on Chronicle or Ancient Chronicle) 18. Name some industrial processes from descriptions, FTPE. A. (10) In this process, nickel tetracarbonyl is heated until it decomposes to form pure nickel and carbon monoxide. Answer: Mond process B. (10) Ammonia and carbon dioxide are put in a saturated solution of sodium chloride. This eventually forms sodium bicarbonate if the temperature is below 15 degrees Celsius. Answer: Solvay process [prompt on ammonia-soda process] C. (10) A carbon-lined bath of molten cryolite awaits a bunch of bauxite in this process. The whole thing is electrolyzed, producing a useful metal at the cathode. Answer: Hall-Heroult process 19. Name these Wampanoag leaders, FTP each: A. This was name adopted by Ousamequin, the Great Sachem and Wampanoag chieftain who negotiated a treaty with the Plymouth colonists to gang up on the Narragansetts. Answer: Massasoit B. This eldest son of Massasoit only assumed control of the Pokanokets upon his fathers death. Rule over the Wampanoags passed to his younger brother. Answer: Wamsutta (or King Alexander) C. The younger brother of Wamsutta, he was known as King Philip to the colonists and waged an unsuccessful two year war against the English colonists between 1675 and 1676. Answer: Metacomet 20. Name these films based on some fine novels, FTP each: A. Dan Aykroyd and Jim Broadbent are two of the few adults in this 2003 film that follows some young rich Londoners in the 1930s and which was based on Evelyn Waughs Vile Bodies. Answer: Bright Young Things B. Wes Bentley and Milla Jovovich star in this film that transplants the plot of Hardys Mayor of Casterbridge to the American West. Answer: The Claim C. Mr Knightley, aka Paul Rudd, does end up with Emma, aka Alicia Silverstone, in this Amy Heckerling take on Austens novel. Answer: Clueless " ( * # b F G O U V b f g Z a h : 5 z ! ! ! P" o" " +# O# # 6B*CJ OJ QJ ph 56>*B*CJ OJ QJ ph 56B*CJ OJ QJ ph 5>*B*CJ OJ QJ ph 5B*CJ H*OJ QJ ph 5B*CJ OJ QJ ph B*CJ OJ QJ ph ? 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