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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

486.0. "SF Trivia Quiz" by NUTMEG::BALS (Scribble, scribble, scribble) Wed Jun 10 1987 13:31

Attached is a re-posting from the USENET, a sf trivia quiz you may find
amusing to try ...

Fred

                                   ***

Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-lovers
Path: decwrl!decvax!ucbvax!hoptoad!farren
Subject: Contest! Contest!
Posted: 8 Jun 87 16:14:11 GMT
Organization: Nebula Consultants in San Francisco
 
The Other Change of Hobbit, an SF specialty bookstore in Berkeley,
just celebrated its 10th anniversary with "The Other Change of Hobbit
Tenth Anniversary Scavenger Hunt and Quiz".  They gave away a $50 gift
certificate to the "best" entry.  I am posting the hunt/quiz here,
mostly for your amusement, but also with some incentive (can you say
"Prize"?  I knew you could).
 
I will be accepting entries sent to me via e-mail from now until the
Fourth of July weekend.  Sometime thereafter, I will decide the
winner, based on two criteria - first, the most correct answers, and
second, the most original answers.  All decisions shall be final, and
probably will be reasonably arbitrary, where arbitrariness is called
for.
 
What's that?  The prize?  Oh, yeah, the PRIZE --  the winner will
recieve, from me, $20 worth of books of his/her choice.  There will be
no runners up.  Good luck, and good hunting!  Send your entries to:
 
{sun, lll-crg, ihnp4}!hoptoad!farren
 
PLEASE NOTE:  I am doing this out of the goodness of my heart, and
will make no guarantees that entries will be processed in any sort of
reasonable time.  I will promise to post the answers right after the
Fourth of July, though.
 
FURTHER NOTE:  I am not interested in engaging in any discussion on
the lines of "Well, what did you mean by question #76, anyway?".  I
don't KNOW what I (or they) meant, figure it out yourself.  If you
think you might be way off, tack on an explanation.  Funny answers DO
count.
 
--------------------------------
Herewith follows the hunt/quiz:
 
SCAVENGER HUNT SECTION
 
The Rules:  Please don't feel you have to get the answer to
everything.  None of the folk at TOCH could, why should you?  Also,
you only have to name the story, not provide a copy (please don't).
"Story" means any length of story, including books.  You can use
fantasy and science fiction stories interchangeably unless specified
in the question, however you must stick to science fiction and fantasy
(no mainstream, mysteries, westerns, or "other", please).  If your
story is very obscure (and you'll have to be the judge of that) please
provide further references (first appearance, where published, etc.).
 
THE HUNT:
 
1.  Name an SF novel by a mystery author.
2.  Name a book published under two (or more) different titles.
3.  Name a good science blooper in a science fiction story.
4.  Name at least three baseball stories.
5.  Name a novel featuring Zoroastrianism.
6.  Name two stories based on "Moby Dick".
7.  Name two "Starship Troopers" clones.
8.  Name a story featuring household appliances.
9.  Name two stories with scenes on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley.
10. Name one story set on Telegraph Avenue featuring a good-guy
    werewolf.
11. Name two stories that feature the author writing the story.
12. Name an author who peppers his work with footnotes.
13. Name two books that have been bound in asbestos.
14. Name two novels which only exist within other novels.
15. Name three stories featuring actors.
16. Name a story in which our present is the result of time travel.
17. Name a story that takes place outside of time.
18. Name three weird drugs from three different science fiction
    stories.
19. Name a Jack the Ripper story that isn't by Robert Bloch.
20. Name two stories about carnivals.
21. Name a character with no vowels in his/her/its name.
22. Name a character with no consonants in its/his/her name.
23. Name a character with no vowels or consonants in her/its/his name.
24. Name a scene taking place on a roof.
25. Name a character with two right arms.
26. Give an example of a classic expository lump. ("As you well
    know...")
27. Name a story title from an A.E. Housman poem.
28. Name a series whose last book was published after the author's
    death.
29. Name a piece of art used for more than one book cover.
30. Name a famous painting used as a book cover.
31. Name a book named for a famous painting.
32. Name a book featuring a famous painting.
    (Bonus points if you can name one book which fits all of the above
     three.)
33. Name a trilogy of trilogies (no unpublished works, please).
34. Name two stories about vegetables.
35. Name two stories about Philip K. Dick.
36. Name three stories involving libraries.
 
THE QUIZ - All answers must be exact.  Please include titles and
authors.
 
I. Identify the following catchphrases by naming the book or story
   they are associated with:
 
1.  Tenser, said the tensor.
2.  What I tell you three times is true.
3.  Think of it as evolution in action.
4.  Yngvi is a louse.
5.  Things sure are lousy here since Yngvi arrived.
6.  Millions for nonsense, but not one cent for entropy.
7.  We sell bottles, with things in them.
8.  As a color shade of purple-gray.
9.  What's a bullet?
10. Shards and shells.
11. Don't panic.
12. TANSTAAFL.
13. TANJ.
14. Are you a wonder or a marvel?
 
II. Identify the books or stories with the following first lines:
 
1.  The baloney weighed the raven down, and the shopkeeper almost
    caught him as he whisked out the delicatessen door.
2.  The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of
    the human mind to correlate all its contents.
3.  There was a wall.
4.  Lay ordinate and abcissa on the century.
5.  Streaker is limping like a dog on three legs.
6.  The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a
    dead channel.
7.  On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays is was Court Hand and Summulae
    Logicales, while the rest of the week it was the Organon, Repetition
    and Astrology.
8.  Life is a thing - if you'll excuse a quick dab of philosophy
    before you know what kind of picture I'm painting - that reminds me
    quite a bit of the beaches around Tokyo Bay.
9.  Katy drives like a maniac.
10. She was a girly girl and they were true men, the lords of
    creation, but she pitted her wits against them and she won.
11. It was a pleasure to burn.
12. Once a guy stood all day shaking bugs from his hair.
 
III. Identify the books or stories with the following last lines:
 
1.  "Well, I'm back," he said.
2.  Not, however, man.
3.  "Well," the captain muttered, heading hurriedly across the outer
    room to the passage, "here we go again!"
4.  "Will you tell us about the other worlds out among the stars - the
    other kinds of men, the other lives?"
5.  A demon wind propelled me east of the sun.
6.  Two of our opossums are missing.
7.  And then he went into his office, going mrmee, mrmee, mrmee,
    mrmee.
8.  It was going to be fun to play God.
9.  He looked a long time.
 
Have Fun!
 
-- 
----------------
                 "... if the church put in half the time on covetousness
Mike Farren      that it does on lust, this would be a better world ..."
hoptoad!farren       Garrison Keillor, "Lake Wobegon Days"
                                      
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
486.1Fred tries his hand at answersNUTMEG::BALSScribble, scribble, scribbleWed Jun 10 1987 13:41123
I have no real desire to enter the contest, as the prospect of hunting
through my library for answers is terrifying. I did try my hand at
answering as my questions as I could from memory.  The results follow
the <form-feed>.  Feel free to use any of my answers for your own entry
if you wish.  I don't, however, guarantee that they're right. :-).

Fred


THE HUNT:
 
1.  Name an SF novel by a mystery author. : 

"Wine of the Dreamers" by John D. MacDonald

2.  Name a book published under two (or more) different titles. : 

"STARS MY DESTINATION" a.k.a. "TIGER, TIGER" by Alfred Bester.

3.  Name a good science blooper in a science fiction story. :

1st edition of "RINGWORLD." The Earth is rotating in wrong direction. Corrected
in later editions.

6.  Name two stories based on "Moby Dick". : 

"INVOLUTION OCEAN" by Bruce Sterling. "THE DOORS OF HIS FACE, THE LAMPS
OF HIS MOUTH" (title may be incorrect) by Roger Zelazny. If you wanted to
get cute and bend the rules, add "JAWS" by Peter Benchley :-)

7.  Name two "Starship Troopers" clones.: 

Partial answer: "THE FOREVER WAR" by Joe Haldeman.

8.  Name a story featuring household appliances.

"CAN YOU FEEL ANYTHING WHEN I DO THIS?" by Robert Sheckly

13. Name two books that have been bound in asbestos.

Partial answer: "FIRE STARTER" (limited edition) by Stephen King. 
(thanks, jerry :-))

14. Name two novels which only exist within other novels.

"THE KING IN YELLOW" (noted in various books). "MISERY'S RETURN" in MISERY
by Stephen King.

15. Name three stories featuring actors.

1/3 of an answer: "DOUBLE STAR" by Robert Heinlein.

20. Name two stories about carnivals.

Partial answer: "SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES" by Ray Bradbury. 
There's also a novel by Tom Reamy which features a carnival, but the name of 
the title has faded from my memory. Or, "THE SEVEN FACES OF DR. LAO," author
unremembered.

25. Name a character with two right arms.

Gil Hamilton.

36. Name three stories involving libraries. 

Well, I could get cute and name the three books of the "FOUNDATION" series.
 
THE QUIZ - All answers must be exact.  Please include titles and
authors.
 
I. Identify the following catchphrases by naming the book or story
   they are associated with:
 
1.  Tenser, said the tensor.

"THE DEMOLISHED MAN" by Alfred Bester

2.  What I tell you three times is true.

"STAND ON ZANZIBAR," by John Brunner. 

3.  Think of it as evolution in action.

Partial answer. It's the Niven/Pournelle book that takes place in an arcology.
Can't remember the title.

7.  We sell bottles, with things in them.

"Shottle Bop" by Ted Sturgeon.

8.  As a color shade of purple-gray.

"THE FLYING SORCERERS," by Gerrold and Niven

11. Don't panic.

"THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY,"  by Douglas Adams

12. TANSTAAFL. 

"THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS," Robert Heinlein

13. TANJ.

"RINGWORLD," by Larry Niven. (may not be the right answer. May be one
of the Beowolf Shaeffer books instead). 

II. Identify the books or stories with the following first lines:
 
1.  The baloney weighed the raven down, and the shopkeeper almost
    caught him as he whisked out the delicatessen door.

"A FINE AND PRIVATE PLACE," Peter S. Beagle

6.  The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a
    dead channel.

"NEUROMANCER," by William Gibson

10. She was a girly girl and they were true men, the lords of
    creation, but she pitted her wits against them and she won.

Partial answer. It's by Cordwainer Smith. "THE BALLARD OF LOST C'MELL"?
486.2more answersJLR::REDFORDIt's turtles all the way downWed Jun 10 1987 22:1783
THE HUNT:
 
1.  Name an SF novel by a mystery author.
        Well, Asimov and Boucher wrote both, but were primarily sf authors.

2.  Name a book published under two (or more) different titles.
        Against the Fall of Night/City and the Stars (ok, not quite 
            the same book) 

3.  Name a good science blooper in a science fiction story.
        In Robert Forward's "Dragon's Egg", the lifeforms on the 
        neutron star are powered by the glow of the star itself (the surface
        is at 50,000 degrees Kelvin).  However, this isn't nearly enough
        energy to do the feats described in the book, such as climbing
        a 1 cm high mountain against a billion G's.  Forward dropped
        a couple of decimal places in his blackbody radiation calculation.

8.  Name a story featuring household appliances.
        Disch's "The Brave Little Toaster"

11. Name two stories that feature the author writing the story.
        Clarke has a story about being at a conference and talking to 
        a Chinese scientist who is going to corrupt America by broadcasting
        unjammable pornography onto our TVs.  Can't remember the 
        name, though.

12. Name an author who peppers his work with footnotes.
        Jack Vance

14. Name two novels which only exist within other novels.
        "Lords of the Swastika" by A. Hitler is within Spinrad's "The 
        Iron Dream".  

15. Name three stories featuring actors.
        "Darfstellar" (sp?) by Leiber.

16. Name a story in which our present is the result of time travel.
        "The Proteus Operation"

17. Name a story that takes place outside of time.
        "The End of Eternity" or "The Big Time"

18. Name three weird drugs from three different science fiction
    stories.
        PK Dick has lots, of course, but the only name I can remember is
        Ubik.  What was the one that the Martians used to enter their
        Barbie setup?  A

25. Name a character with two right arms.
        Bill, the galactic hero. (BTW, I thought Gil Hamilton got a normal
        new right arm.)

27. Name a story title from an A.E. Housman poem.
        Now "For a Breath I Tarry",
        Nor yet disperse apart
        Quick, take my hand and tell me,
        What have you in your heart?

33. Name a trilogy of trilogies (no unpublished works, please).
        The Undying Land

36. Name three stories involving libraries.
        "The Library of Babel" by Borges, "Sundiver" by Brin, and ?
 
THE QUIZ - All answers must be exact.  Please include titles and
authors.
 
II. Identify the books or stories with the following first lines:
 
3.  There was a wall.
        The Clarke story "One-face"?

5.  Streaker is limping like a dog on three legs.
        "Startide Rising"?

III. Identify the books or stories with the following last lines:
 
2.  Not, however, man.
        "The Genocides" by Disch

7.  And then he went into his office, going mrmee, mrmee, mrmee,
    mrmee.
        "Repent Harlequin, said the Ticktockman"
486.3My tryAKOV68::BOYAJIANIn the d|i|g|i|t|a|l moodThu Jun 11 1987 07:06300
    What I can answer from memory (I'm too lazy to look things up):
    
THE HUNT:
 
1.  Name an SF novel by a mystery author.
    
    Let's try a bunch.
    
    THE LOST WORLD and other Prof. Challenger novels by Arthur
    	Conan Doyle
    THE MYSTERIOUS MR. QUIN by Agatha Christie
    THE GIRL, THE GOLD WATCH, AND EVERYTHING and WINE/PLANET
    	OF THE DREAMERS by John D. MacDonald
    SS-GB by Len Deighton
    THE DEVIL'S ALTERNATIVE by Frederick Forsyth
    ANARCHAOS by Curt Clark (Donald E. Westlake);
    FIRE, BURN! and THE DEVIL IN VELVET by John Dickson Carr
    A bunch of Dr. Palfrey novels by John Creasey
    KING AND JOKER by Peter Dickinson
    	
    And there's all of the various authors like Anthony Boucher,
    Edward Hoch, Bill Pronzine, August Derleth, Ron Goulart, Sax
    Rohmer, etc., who straddle the genres.
    
2.  Name a book published under two (or more) different titles.
    
    So many to choose from. Let's try one that's appeared under
    *three* titles: PRELUDE TO SPACE aka MASTER OF SPACE aka
    THE SPACE DREAMERS, by Arthur C. Clarke.
    
3.  Name a good science blooper in a science fiction story.
    
    Too easy. The later corrected spinning of the Earth in the
    wrong direction in RINGWORLD.
    
4.  Name at least three baseball stories.
    
    I'd have to look these up, but there were a couple of baseball
    baseball stories (as well as some covering other sports) by
    by Jack Haldeman (Joe's brother) in the late 70's in ASIMOV'S
    SF MAGAZINE. There was at least one novel published by Del Rey
    in the late 70's/early 80's called (I think) THE NEW ATOM BOMB-
    SHELLS author was somebody Browne. And there was some flack
    caused due to the fact that this novel was plaigerized from
    something else.
    
5.  Name a novel featuring Zoroastrianism.
    
    Seems to me that one of Phil Dick's novels did, but I can't
    recall a specific book.
    
6.  Name two stories based on "Moby Dick".
    
    Definitely Phil Farmer's THE WIND WHALES OF ISHMAEL. I suppose
    you could also count Zelazny's "The Doors of His Face, the Lamps
    of His Mouth".
    
7.  Name two "Starship Troopers" clones.
    
    THE FOREVER WAR by Joe Haldeman is the easy one. Since I haven't
    read it, I can't be sure, but the second might be ARMOR by John
    Steakley.
    
8.  Name a story featuring household appliances.
    
    "And There Will Come Soft Rains" by Ray Bradbury; "The Brave
    Little Toaster" by Tom Disch.
    
9.  Name two stories with scenes on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley.
    
    Possibly Fritz Leiber's OUR LADY OF DARKNESS (it's the only one
    I can think of off-hand that's set in the San Francisco area).
    
10. Name one story set on Telegraph Avenue featuring a good-guy
    werewolf.
    
    	???
    
11. Name two stories that feature the author writing the story.
    
    Argh! I'm drawing a blank right now.
    
12. Name an author who peppers his work with footnotes.
    
    Who else? Jack Vance. C.J. Cherryh did, too, at least once
    once (HUNTER OF WORLDS).
    
13. Name two books that have been bound in asbestos.
    
    What could be more appropriate than FAHRENHEIT 451 by Ray
    Ray Bradbury and FIRESTARTER by Stephen King?
    
14. Name two novels which only exist within other novels.
    
    LORD OF THE SWASTIKAS by Adolph Hitler (in Norman Spinrad's
    THE IRON DREAM).
    
15. Name three stories featuring actors.
    
    "The Darfstellar" by Walter M. Miller; Fritz Leiber's "Four
    Ghosts in Hamlet"; and Robert Heinlein's DOUBLE STAR.
    
16. Name a story in which our present is the result of time travel.
    
    	???
    
17. Name a story that takes place outside of time.
    
    Asimov's THE END OF ETERNITY or Leiber's THE BIG TIME.
    
18. Name three weird drugs from three different science fiction
    stories.
    
    Can't think of any titles off-hand, but there are a number
    number of nagging thoughts at the back of my head. Surely
    Phil Dick's books are rife with them, but I'm not expert on
    his works.
    
19. Name a Jack the Ripper story that isn't by Robert Bloch.
    
    "The Prowler in the City at the Edge of the World" by Harlan
    Ellison, written as a sequel to Bloch's "A Toy for Juliette".
    
20. Name two stories about carnivals.
    
    SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES by Ray Bradbury and THE CIRCUS
    OF DR. LAO by Charles Finney, of course. And BLIND VOICES by
    Tom Reamy.
    
21. Name a character with no vowels in his/her/its name.
22. Name a character with no consonants in its/his/her name.
23. Name a character with no vowels or consonants in her/its/his name.
    
    Well, any character with a number for a name will do for
    all three questions, such as THE PRISONER's #6.
    
24. Name a scene taking place on a roof.
    
    	???
    
25. Name a character with two right arms.
    
    Larry Niven's Gil (the Arm) Hamilton.
    
26. Give an example of a classic expository lump. ("As you well
    know...")
    
    	Hunh?
    
27. Name a story title from an A.E. Housman poem.
    
    Since I'm not acquainted by Housman's works, I'll have to pass.
    
28. Name a series whose last book was published after the author's
    death.
    
    Discounting pastiches, of course, the most obvious is H. Beam
    Piper's "Fuzzy" series.
    
29. Name a piece of art used for more than one book cover.
    
    A Jack Gaughan cover for Murray Leinster's TIME TUNNEL (which
    had nothing to do with the tv show, and, in fact, was published
    two years *before* the tv show) was used again for Leinster's
    THE TIME TUNNEL (which *was* based on the tv show). I suspect
    that Pyramid's art department got confused by the similarity
    of titles.
    
30. Name a famous painting used as a book cover.
31. Name a book named for a famous painting.
32. Name a book featuring a famous painting.
    (Bonus points if you can name one book which fits all of the above
     three.)
    
    	???
    
33. Name a trilogy of trilogies (no unpublished works, please).
    
    God, *is* there one that's actually been finished? The closest
    that comes immediately to mind is Katherine Kurtz's Deryni series.
    
34. Name two stories about vegetables.
    
    "A Pride of Carrots" by Robert Nathan, and DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS
    (if you take the term "vegetable" in its broadest meaning).
    
35. Name two stories about Philip K. Dick.
    
    	???
    
36. Name three stories involving libraries.
    
    Jorge Luis Borges' "The Library of Babel" is the obvious one.
    A couple of novels by Robert Hoskins come to mind, but I don't
    remember the titles.
    
THE QUIZ - All answers must be exact.  Please include titles and
authors.
 
    [Note: I always do badly on these types of questions.]
    
I. Identify the following catchphrases by naming the book or story
   they are associated with:
 
1.  Tenser, said the tensor.
    
    THE DEMOLISHED MAN by Alfred Bester.
    
2.  What I tell you three times is true.
    
    ???
    
3.  Think of it as evolution in action.
    
    Sounds like Pournelle, but a title doesn't come to mind.
    
4.  Yngvi is a louse.
    
    Argh! I should know this one!
    
5.  Things sure are lousy here since Yngvi arrived.
6.  Millions for nonsense, but not one cent for entropy.
7.  We sell bottles, with things in them.
    
    Theodore Sturgeon's "Shottle Bop" (I think).
    
8.  As a color shade of purple-gray.
    
    THE FLYING SORCERORS by Larry Niven and David Gerrold.
    
9.  What's a bullet?
10. Shards and shells.
11. Don't panic.
    
    THE HITCHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY by Douglas Adams.
    
12. TANSTAAFL.
    
    THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS by Robert Heinlein.
    
13. TANJ.
    
    RINGWORLD by Larry Niven. And probably some of his other Known
    Space stories as well, but Louis Wu definitely used this phrase.
    
14. Are you a wonder or a marvel?
 
II. Identify the books or stories with the following first lines:
 
1.  The baloney weighed the raven down, and the shopkeeper almost
    caught him as he whisked out the delicatessen door.
2.  The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of
    the human mind to correlate all its contents.
3.  There was a wall.
4.  Lay ordinate and abcissa on the century.
5.  Streaker is limping like a dog on three legs.
    
    STARTIDE RISING by David Brin.
    
6.  The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a
    dead channel.
    
    Argh! This sounds damn familiar. It's from something I read
    relatively recently, I'm sure.
    
7.  On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays is was Court Hand and Summulae
    Logicales, while the rest of the week it was the Organon, Repetition
    and Astrology.
8.  Life is a thing - if you'll excuse a quick dab of philosophy
    before you know what kind of picture I'm painting - that reminds me
    quite a bit of the beaches around Tokyo Bay.
9.  Katy drives like a maniac.
10. She was a girly girl and they were true men, the lords of
    creation, but she pitted her wits against them and she won.
11. It was a pleasure to burn.
12. Once a guy stood all day shaking bugs from his hair.
 
III. Identify the books or stories with the following last lines:
 
1.  "Well, I'm back," he said.
2.  Not, however, man.
3.  "Well," the captain muttered, heading hurriedly across the outer
    room to the passage, "here we go again!"
4.  "Will you tell us about the other worlds out among the stars - the
    other kinds of men, the other lives?"
5.  A demon wind propelled me east of the sun.
6.  Two of our opossums are missing.
7.  And then he went into his office, going mrmee, mrmee, mrmee,
    mrmee.
    
    "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman" by Harlan Ellison.
    
8.  It was going to be fun to play God.
    
    THE POWER by Frank Robinson.
    
9.  He looked a long time.
 

    --- jerry
486.4It figures I'd think of this after I postedAKOV68::BOYAJIANIn the d|i|g|i|t|a|l moodThu Jun 11 1987 07:1911
30. Name a famous painting used as a book cover.
31. Name a book named for a famous painting.
32. Name a book featuring a famous painting.
    (Bonus points if you can name one book which fits all of the above
     three.)

    VENUS ON THE HALF-SHELL by "Kilgore Trout" (Phil Farmer) fits
    at least the first two questions. I haven't read the book, so
    I don't know if it fits the third.
    
    --- jerry
486.5Cann't remember the title of the book ..RDGE00::ALFORDDragon Riders do it in between ....Thu Jun 11 1987 08:4810
THE HUNT:
 
24. Name a scene taking place on a roof.
    
    Does BLADE RUNNER count ?????

    Right near the end when the chase ends up on the roof when the 
    character played in the film by Harrison Ford is saved from 
    falling (hanging on by a fingernail) by the replicant (?) character
    played by Rutger Hauer who then "dies".
486.6NUTMEG::BALSScribble, scribble, scribbleThu Jun 11 1987 12:1315
    RE: .2
    
    Gil Hamilton *did* get a new right arm.  But he also has his psychic
    right arm (remember, creativity counts :-)).
    
    RE: .5
    
    Like that answer, especially upon re-reading the question, where
    you'll notice nothing is said about a "story."  The title of the
    book that BR is based on btw, is "Do Androids Dream of Electric
    Sheep," by Phillip K. Dick.  This would also be an answer to the
    name a story with two (or more) titles question, come to think of
    it.
    
    Fred
486.7I thought you weren't going to enter into discussions ...RDGE00::ALFORDDragon Riders do it in between ....Thu Jun 11 1987 12:4910

27. Name a story title from an A.E. Houseman poem.

	Hows about "IF" - I'm sure he must have used an IF somewhere
	in his poems !!!!!

	OK I know the story is on celluloid.....

	CJA
486.8This includes some new answers.PROSE::WAJENBERGThu Jun 11 1987 13:28118
THE HUNT:
 
11. Name two stories that feature the author writing the story.

	All of Arthur C. Clarke's "Tales from the White Hart" fall into this
	category.  C. S. Lewis makes brief appearances in each volume of his
	trilogy, "Out of the Silent Planet," "Perelandra," and "That Hideous
	Strength"

16. Name a story in which our present is the result of time travel.

	"Bring the Jubliee," author unknown to me, about a citizen of the
	Confederated States of America who goes back to the Civil War / War
	Between the States and accidentally lets the North win.

17. Name a story that takes place outside of time.

	"The Big Time" by Fritz Leiber

18. Name three weird drugs from three different science fiction
    stories.

	Melange spice from "Dune," Psychedelic-40 from the novel of the
	same name, and boosterspice, the rejuvenation drug from Niven's
	Known Space series.

24. Name a scene taking place on a roof.

	Several occur in Roger Zelazny's "Doorways in the Sand," whose
	hero is fond of climbing buildings.  The book begins and ends
	with such scenes.

25. Name a character with two right arms.

	Gil Hamilton by Larry Niven.  One arm is a telekinetic phantom limb.

26. Give an example of a classic expository lump. ("As you well
    know...")

	James White uses these over and over in his Sector General stories.
	He has a lump describing the function and personel of Sector General
	Hospital, a lump for describing Dr. Prilicla, a lump for describing
	the Chief Psychologist, and so forth.

27. Name a story title from an A.E. Housman poem.

	"For a Breath I Tarry" by Roger Zelazny

THE QUIZ - All answers must be exact.  Please include titles and
authors.
 
I. Identify the following catchphrases by naming the book or story
   they are associated with:
 
1.  Tenser, said the tensor.

	"The Demolished Man" by Alfred Bester.  The phrase is a mind-screen.

2.  What I tell you three times is true.

	"The Hunting of the Snark" by Lewis Carrol (Chas. Dodgson)

4.  Yngvi is a louse.

	"The Incomplete Enchanter," by Pratt & DeCamp

8.  As a color shade of purple-gray.

	"The Flying Sorcerors" by Niven & Pournel.  It's a mechanical 
	translator's bungled rendering of the name "Asimov" ("As a mauve")

11. Don't panic.

	"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" by Douglas Adams

12. TANSTAAFL.

	"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Robert Heinlein.  It means
	"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch."

13. TANJ.

	"Ringworld" by Larry Niven.  It means "There Ain't No Justice."

 
II. Identify the books or stories with the following first lines:
 
7.  On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays is was Court Hand and Summulae
    Logicales, while the rest of the week it was the Organon, Repetition
    and Astrology.

	"The Sword in the Stone" by T. H. White

8.  Life is a thing - if you'll excuse a quick dab of philosophy
    before you know what kind of picture I'm painting - that reminds me
    quite a bit of the beaches around Tokyo Bay.

	"Isle of the Dead" by Roger Zelazny


III. Identify the books or stories with the following last lines:
 
1.  "Well, I'm back," he said.

	"The Lord of the Rings" by J. R. R. Tolkein.  The speaker is
	Sam Gamgee.

3.  "Well," the captain muttered, heading hurriedly across the outer
    room to the passage, "here we go again!"

	I'm not sure, but I think "The Witches of Karres" by James Schmidt

5.  A demon wind propelled me east of the sun.

	"Nine Princes in Amber" by Roger Zelazny


Earl Wajenberg
486.9It ain't me, babeNUTMEG::BALSScribble, scribble, scribbleThu Jun 11 1987 15:5311
    RE: .7's title (plus the fact that I've already gotten one mail
                   message from a confused person)
    
    I was afraid this might happen. Please note that I am *not* the
    author of .0.  I re-posted it from a USENET sf-lovers article. I
    am not offering any prizes, nor am associated with the original
    poster in any way, shape or form. If you want to actually enter
    the contest, then you have to contact him directly with your answers,
    not me. His address is shown in .0.
    
    Fred
486.10Sorry ...RDGE00::ALFORDDragon Riders do it in between ....Thu Jun 11 1987 17:545

	OK, please forgive me, you can discuss with us all you like !!!

	CJA    ;^}
486.11A Small Attempt.HYMM::WOODALLI Think ICON, I Think ICONThu Jun 11 1987 17:587
    
    re: Catch Phrase 10...
    
    Isn't "Shards and Shells" from one (or more) of Asprin's 'Myth'
    series?
    
    David.
486.12DDMAIL::ANDREWSJust living a life of illusionFri Jun 12 1987 00:063
    Re Catch Phrase 10:
    
    Actually it is from Anne Mcaffrey's(sp) Pern series
486.132 mills worthMYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiFri Jun 12 1987 16:519
  From the 'scavenger hunt' section:

  5.  Name a novel featuring Zoroastrianism.
 
  I think this would be any novel by Mack Reynolds.  I am glad to have
  forgotten the names of all these novels.

  JP
486.14RAHIRT::BOWERSCount Zero InterruptFri Jun 12 1987 18:034
    re -.1;

    In RAH's _Tunnel_in_the_Sky_ I believe the protagonist's family
    is Zoroastrian
486.15a couple of strange ones...LITRBX::EDECKFri Jun 12 1987 19:1316
    
    A story about baseball:
    
    		"The Mighty Casey"--originally a teleplay on the Twlight
    Zone, reprinted in a TZ anthology. Written by Charles Beaumont(?)
    
    Two about household appliances: (Bet no one else thinks of THESE!)
    
    		"The Twonkey" by ?; (Probably antholigized in "Adventures
    in Time and Space") A slightly confused man from the future builds
    a TV. (Remember the movie of the same name?)
    
    		"The Proud Robot" by Lewis Padget (Henry Knutter) (Well,
    he was SUPPOSED to be a can opener.)
    
    		
486.16Another character with 2 right armsRACHEL::BARABASHBill BarabashFri Jun 12 1987 19:564
  Another character with two right arms is Tash from C. S. Lewis' Narnia
  series.

  -- Bill B.
486.17not sure of this oneSTUBBI::B_REINKEthe fire and the rose are oneFri Jun 12 1987 20:244
    Don't the moties from Niven's "A Mote In God's Eye" have two
    right arms and one left?
    
    Bonnie J
486.182 right arms (again)AIAG::LUTZFri Jun 12 1987 20:457
    re: .16, .17
    
    What about Tars Tarkas, et. al.?  After all, just because the being
    has to have two right arms, it doesn't mean he can't have two *left*
    ones as well.
    
      Scott
486.19INK::KALLISHallowe'en should be legal holidayMon Jun 15 1987 12:2724
    re .15:
    
>        A story about baseball:
>    
>    		"The Mighty Casey"--originally a teleplay on the Twlight
>    Zone, reprinted in a TZ anthology. Written by Charles Beaumont(?)
 
    There was also "The Fabulous No-Hit Inning," but the author's name
    eludes me. 
    
    >    "The Twonkey" by ?; (Probably antholigized in "Adventures
    >in Time and Space") A slightly confused man from the future builds
    >a TV. (Remember the movie of the same name?)
    
    It was spelled "Twonky."  It was written by Henry Kuttner as Lewis
    Padgett.   Hans Conried played in the film.  In the original story,
    the Twonky was a console radio (TV wasn't widespread when it was
    written.  "Great Snell!  I've hit a temporal snag!")
    
    Haw about "A Logic Named Joe," by Fredrick Brown (an early look
    at the personal computer.  Sort of)?
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.                                   

486.20Warning - sidetrack ahead.HARDY::KENAHand shun the Furious Ballerinas.Tue Jun 16 1987 17:238
   > Haw about "A Logic Named Joe," by Fredrick Brown (an early look
   > at the personal computer.  Sort of)?
    
    Tsk!  Two speeling :-) errors in one sentence -- shame on you, Steve!
          
    How, not Haw... and it's Fredric (no "k").

    					(-: andrew :-)
486.21One more answer (Scavenger 23)PIGGY::GEORGETue Jun 16 1987 21:157
    Scavenger # 23 
    	Name a character whose name has no consonents or vowels-
    
    <> or <|> or <()> etc in C.J. Cherryh's Hunter of Worlds.
    She wanted to get across a totally alien consciousness and found
    using nested punctuation for various aspects of the alien psychology
    worked. 
486.22Spelling, schmellingAKOV68::BOYAJIANIn the d|i|g|i|t|a|l moodWed Jun 17 1987 04:596
    re:.20 re:.19
    
    An even grosser mistake on Steve's part is that "A Logic Named
    Joe" is by Murray Leinster, not Fredric Brown.
    
    --- jerry
486.23Who or What is Joe?PROSE::WAJENBERGWed Jun 17 1987 12:305
    Okay, I'm curious now.  What is "A Logic Named Joe" about?  Is the
    title character a character at all?  Is the story really about a
    formal axiom system?  Or os "logic" future slang for "robot"?
    
    Earl Wajenberg 
486.24What is right; who's on first. :-)ERASER::KALLISHallowe'en should be legal holidayThu Jun 18 1987 13:1914
    Re .21
    
    Geez!  I guess I'm getting old ... <sigh>...  [I haven't read it
    in about 20 years, and somehow it _felt_ like a Fred Brown story...]
    
    re .23:
    
    The story takes place in a [future, naturally] time where houses
    have relatively small computerlike devices called "Logics" that
    are used to answer questions, help run things, etc...  The central,
    er, character, is a Logic that exceeds its performance specifications
    rather spectacularly.  It is a humorous story.
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.                              
486.25If Fantasy Counts...35223::WOODALLI Think ICON, I Think ICONThu Jun 18 1987 17:3712
    
        A series of books where the last book was published after the author's
    death was:
    
    		The OZ books by L. Frank Baum.

    The final book Baum wrote ("Glinda of OZ") was published after he
    died.
    
    ( I discovered this last night as I was finishing reading the set.)
    
    David.
486.26I still miss Doc ...INK::KALLISHallowe'en should be legal holidayThu Jun 18 1987 17:5212
    Re .25:
    
    One might also include the "Subspace" series by Doc Smith, if you
    have a two-book "series."  The first (_Subspace Explorers_) was
    published a year or so before his death; he worked on [and for that
    matter, showed me] the manuscript for what was to be the second
    of three books [to be called _Subspace Second_ and _Subspace Safari_
    respectively]; he died while the manuecript was in about its fuurth
    draft.  The second and third books were merged into what was finally
    published as _Subspace Encounter_, years after his death.  
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
486.27The Yellow Brick Road Goes On and OnPROSE::WAJENBERGFri Jun 19 1987 12:5710
    Re .24
    
    By the way, "Glinda of Oz" was Baum's last Oz book, but it was far
    from THE last Oz book.  Ruth Plumly Thompson took over as "Royal
    Historian of Oz" and wrote more than a dozen more.  After she quit,
    some other people took over, but the spark was gone and the series
    petered out around #39 or #40, depending on how you want to define
    the Oz canon.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
486.28Not too late to join in the fun, I hopeCHEFS::ORFORDAnother Pulitzer NominationFri Jun 26 1987 15:0628
       
    Here are a few more answers 
       
    HUNT 
       
    2 - Books published under 2 titles
        
        Samuel R Delaney's "Einstein Intersection" was first published
        as "A fabulous formless darkness"
                      
    25 - Two right arms
       
         Zaphod Beeblebrox
       
    32 - Famous painting triple answer
       
         "The Gardens of {Earthly} delight" by Ian Watson
       
    QUIZ
       
    II.4 "Lay ordinate and abcissa on the century"
       
         comes from Samuel R Delaney's "Time considered as a helix of
         semi-precious stones"
       
       
    Ken
       
486.29AKOV76::BOYAJIANIn the d|i|g|i|t|a|l moodTue Jun 30 1987 05:349
    re:.28
    
    Where did you get the alternate title for the Delany book?
    No reference book I own lists any kind of alternate title for
    THE EINSTEIN INTERSECTION. At any rate, it certainly wasn't
    "originally" called anything else, since its first ever edition
    was from Ace Books in 1967 as THE EINSTEIN INTERSECTION.
    
    --- jerry
486.30tallySTUBBI::B_REINKEthe fire and the rose are oneWed Jul 01 1987 02:301
    has anyone figured out how many questions are unanswered?
486.31DelaneyTOLEDO::LARSENGlen LarsenWed Jul 01 1987 02:5513
        .28 simply got it backwards.

        "The Einstein Intersection" has a 1967 copyright, my Bantam
        copy gives a first published date of 1968 in Great Britain
        by Victor Gollancz Ltd.

        It is my impression that Delaney prefers to call it "A Fabulous
        Formless Darkness".  In "The Complete Nebula Award Winning Fiction"
        Delaney never refers to this novel as "The Einstein Intersection"
        (noticed this in the forward to the afterword of this book, typical
        Delaney ramblings & notes during the period around Babel-17).
      
	gl.
486.32?????OPG::CHRISCapacity Planner Who Almost Got it Right!Tue Aug 16 1988 07:268
    
    	Hello,
    
    	Could someone answer the following question:
    
    
    	1.	What other career is Isaac Asimov famous?
    	
486.33Gotcha, I think.....SCOMAN::BOURGAULTI have a story to tell.....Tue Aug 16 1988 11:3928
    
    Hmmmm.... you mean FOR what other career...  don't you?
    
    Asimov was a professor of Biochemistry at Boston University
    until (as he told me) writing became more profitable than
    teaching.  When I wrote (1969) and asked, he was still on
    Boston U.'s list as a professor, but (quoth he) "I keep the
    job as a sinecure."  I had to look it up... it means
    "a well-paying job, involving little or no work".  
    
    If I remember correctly, he wrote a tongue-in-cheek 
    "article" on Presublimated Thiotimoline shortly before
    taking his orals for his Doctorate.  (This amazing
    substance would go into solution a second or two
    BEFORE being placed in the liquid... but only IF
    you actually would go through with the action....
    sort of a miniature time-machine...)
    At the tail end of his (grueling) orals, one of
    the examiners said "What can you tell us about
    Presublimated Thiotimoline, Doctor Asimov?"  
    The shock that this person had read the "article"
    was reportedly almost as great as realizing that he
    had been addressed as DOCTOR.... and they wouldn't
    do THAT unless.... HE'D MADE IT!!
    
    How's that for a trivia-killer?
    
                           - Ed -
486.34TFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkTue Aug 16 1988 13:198
    I think it was "Resublimated Thiotimoline" (not Presublimated)
                    ~~                              ~~~
                                                   
                  /
                 (  ___
                  ) ///
                 /
    
486.35>C<MARKER::KALLISAnger's no replacement for reasonTue Aug 16 1988 13:596
    Re .34:
    
    It was, but since thiotimoline has the ability to dissolve before
    a solute hits it, the confusion is certainly legitimate.
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
486.36Look this up in Chem Abstracts :-)SMURF::REEVESJon Reeves, ULTRIX compiler groupWed Aug 17 1988 01:463
    And if you want to look it up, the "paper" is "On the Endochronic
    Properties of Resublimated Thiotimoline."  Sorry, but I don't remember
    which collection I've read it in.
486.37try the Journal of Irreproducible Results :-)TFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkWed Aug 17 1988 13:3812
    re .36:
                       
    >  Look this up in Chem Abstracts :-) 
    
    Asimov relates that after the paper was published, libraries all
    over the country were swamped with requests for the phoney references
    he had sprinkled throughout the paper.
    
                  /
                 (  ___
                  ) ///
                 /
486.38more trivial triviaASIC::EDECKHappy 85th, Harley D.Wed Aug 17 1988 14:204
    
    -< try the Journal of Ireproducible Results >-
    
    I remember the JIR when it was _The Worm Runners' Digest_
486.39QUASER::JOHNSTONLegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.!Thu Nov 08 1990 20:1117
Not sure if this is a Trivia question, or what?

I think there's probably a shocking gap in my education.

Anyway:

In several different SF novels, I've run across reference to 
Liberty Hall. A couple of the books said something to the effect
of `where you can spit on the floor and call the cat a bastard' (or
words similar). Other novels have merely referenced `Liberty Hall'.
I have also run across this reference in books which are NOT Science
Fiction, leading me to believe I've missed some bit of common knowledge
somewhere along the way.

Any help out there?

Mike JN
486.40The Celts write againAYOV27::ANDERSONMDuty above all else :: 823-3470Mon Nov 12 1990 13:0812
    First reference I can find is in 
    
    	"She stoops to conquer"
    
    	Oliver Goldsmith  - 18th. Century Irish Writer
    
    
    but I'm always open to be corrected.
    
    <If only I could use my reference books in Trivia contests!>
    
    Murray