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THE QUIZ KRITTIBAS MAJUMDAR

General quiz, MIT Manipal: Finals

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THE QUIZ

KRITTIBAS MAJUMDAR

FINALS

INPUTS

▸KRISHNA KINNAL

▸SURYA SHEKHAR CHAKRABORTY

THE DEAL

▸CLOCKWISE DRIES-I▸WRITTEN ROUND▸CLOCKWISE DRIES-II

▸ANTI CLOCKWISE DRIES-I▸WRITTEN ROUND▸ANTI CLOCKWISE DRIES-II

CLOCKWISE DRIES-I

+10/-10 on the pounce

+10/0 on the bounce

No part points on pounce, part points

available on bounce

QM is God

“Block Hints” will be conveniently ignored if

the QM feels so.

1 X! our fearful trip is done;

The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won;

The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,

While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:

But O heart! heart! heart!

O the bleeding drops of red,

Where on the deck my _______ lies,

Fallen cold and dead.

X! rise up and hear the bells;

Rise up—for you the flag is flung—for you the bugle trills;

For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths—for you the shores a-

crowding;

For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;

Here ______! dear father!

This arm beneath your head;

It is some dream that on the deck,

You've fallen cold and dead.

Identify X

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

2

X’s glass, is an English glass about the size of an

ordinary drinking glass but with only about one-

quarter of its capacity; the glass creates

the illusion of being full by means of a depression

in its bowl, which in fact is almost solid. It owed its

origin to the clubs of 18th-century England, where

the X had to remain sober enough to carry out his

office.

This is because, a X is someone who conducts or

stays in charge of a major public speaking event

such as civic events, service

organization meetings, and banquets of various

purpose.

Identify X.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

3

Tommy Nutter (17 April 1943 – 17 August 1992),

was a British tailor, famous for reinventing

the Savile Row suit in the 1960s. He described his

suits as a "cross between the big-

shouldered Miami Vice look and the authentic

Savile Row." He created the clothing of The

Joker worn by Jack Nicholson in the 1989

film ’Batman’.

In the late 60’s, three gentlemen wearing his suits

became a worldwide sensation. Although, no one

is quite sure why it was three and not four

gentlemen.

What is being talked about?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

4 Abe Saperstein from Chicago’s north side was the

manager of the newly formed team _____ _______. A

master promoter, Saperstein re-christened the team as the

New York X _____ _______ in the belief that the name

would make the team a greater draw in places like Illinois

and Iowa by giving the impression that they had traveled

far to be there.

The shortest member of the Basketball Hall of Fame,

Saperstein also thought that attaching X to the squad’s

name would help advertise it as an all-black basketball

team at the height of the X Renaissance. Not until 1968 did

the team actually play a game in X.

What is the name of the team?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

5During the Gulf war, Saddam Hussein ordered the

scorching of over 600 oil wells. Steve McCurry, a

keen war photographer took this photograph of

camels escaping the heat and fire. Thus resulted,

one of the more iconic images of that war.

Picture on the next slide

Steve McCurry’s greater claim to fame however

came in the mid 80’s, came in the dusty Nasir

Bagh refugee camp on the edge

of Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

Which greater claim to fame?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

22

6The word X was coined by the Caracci family of Italy who

defended the practice as a counterweight to idealization

and to reserve the right to ridicule. In the 18th century, X

became connected with journalism and was put to virulent

use by political commentators.

In the 1880’s, the photo process engraving made it possible

to illustrate daily newspapers, bringing X to the notice of the

general public. In the 20th century, X became a part of the

editorial, sports and theatrical sections of the news.

What is the good word?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

CARICATURE

7 In an episode of the famous show ‘Last Week Tonight’, John

Oliver tackled something known as ‘Native Advertising’. This

was in response to the recent trend in advertising wherein

media bodies would post advertising content that would be

disguised in the form of regular editorials.

Hence, there remained an issue of the general public not being

able to distinguish between advertising and actual reporting. In

the same episode, we come to know that the practice in ethical

journalism that makes this distinction is known by the same

name as the concept that was introduced by Thomas Jefferson

regarding the functioning of the United States Government and

it’s supposed ‘freedom’ from something?

What concept/name?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

SEPARATION OF CHURCH

AND STATE

8Used to mean someone rescued at the last minute, the

phrase originated in Victorian London, and not in a particular

sporting arena as is often assumed.

As the story goes, one night a guard at the Horse Guard

Parade was famously accused of being asleep on duty. He

denied the charge and claimed he had heard Big Ben chime

13 times at midnight, instead of the usual 12.

The clock mechanism was checked and a cog was

discovered out of line, meaning Big Ben would indeed chime

13 times instead of 12. On that evidence, the guard was

freed – literally _____ __ ___ ____.

Give me the phrase.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

SAVED BY THE BELL

WHOSE LINE IS IT ANYWAY?

+10 for each correct answer. Stake +5/-5No negatives if teams do not stake.QM is God.

1

While X is often acknowledged as the author of this

heartbreaking piece of ‘literature’, recent research into

the subject suggests that this might very well have

been a ‘concoction’. There were other material just like

this, much before when X was supposed to have

written this. For example In 1906, when X was just a

just a small boy, an advertisement for a unused baby

carriage was published.

What are we talking about?

2

Drew Bundini Brown [1928-1987]

apart from being an occasional actor

was also a ‘cornerman’. In the mid

60’s he came up a with a certain

verse that is now commonly

attributed to X. This particular verse

was heavily revisited in 2016.

At the time of Bundini’s death, “'They

clipped the wings off the ________,''

X sobbed.

Which verse?

3 The following passage appeared with a date of May 8, 1793 in a

collection of the decrees made by the French National Convention.

Boldface has been added to excerpts:

“The people’s representatives will reach their destination, invested

with the highest confidence and unlimited power. They will show

great character. They must consider that _____ ____________

follows inseparably from _____ ______. To their energy, to their

courage, and above all to their prudence, they shall owe their

success and their glory.”

The blanked out parts form a quote that is attributed to a character

whose death inspired the beginnings of a famous pop culture icon.

Which quote?

4This paranoid monologue was wholly improvised by X,

including what would become the movie’s most famous

line. (The film's screenwriter, Paul Schrader, later said, “It’s

the best thing in the movie, and I didn’t write it.”)

X got the line from Bruce Springsteen, whom he’d seen

perform in Greenwich Village just days earlier, at one in a

series of concerts leading up to the release of ‘Born to

Run’. When the audience called out his name, The Boss

did a bit where he feigned humility and said,

“___ ______ __ me?” Apparently it stuck in X’s mind.

Guessing from the famous line, give me X and the movie.

5Clarence B. Jones was a part of the group that prepared one of

the most legendary drafts of all time. The draft required utmost

secrecy to maintain it’s impact. Thus, it was decided that it would

be prepared in the lobby which would be harder to wire tap as

compared to the hotel rooms, where the entourage was staying.

While the initial ideas were along the lines of a religious sermon,

the group saw it as an a opportunity to stake an ideological and

political marker in the debate over civil rights. Others felt that it

would be wise to address the students who were about to march

that day.

Which draft?

6How did this Grammy winning song,

“If I could fly” by Joe Satriani

become famous for the wrong

reasons, in 2010-2011?

Give me the exact reason.

WHOSE LINE IS IT ANYWAY?ANSWERS

1

While X is often acknowledged as the author of this

heartbreaking piece of ‘literature’, recent research into

the subject suggests that this might very well have

been a ‘concoction’. There were other material just like

this, much before when X was supposed to have

written this. For example In 1906, when X was just a

just a small boy, an advertisement for a unused baby

carriage was published.

What are we talking about?

ERNEST HEMMINGWAY- “FOR SALE,

BABY SHOES, NEVER WORN”

2

Drew Bundini Brown [1928-1987]

apart from being an occasional actor

was also a ‘cornerman’. In the mid

60’s he came up a with a certain

verse that is now commonly

attributed to X. This particular verse

was heavily revisited in 2016.

At the time of Bundini’s death, “'They

clipped the wings off the ________,''

X sobbed.

Which verse?

3 The following passage appeared with a date of May 8, 1793 in a

collection of the decrees made by the French National Convention.

Boldface has been added to excerpts:

“The people’s representatives will reach their destination, invested

with the highest confidence and unlimited power. They will show

great character. They must consider that _____ ____________

follows inseparably from _____ ______. To their energy, to their

courage, and above all to their prudence, they shall owe their

success and their glory.”

The blanked out parts form a quote that is attributed to a character

whose death inspired the beginnings of a famous pop culture icon.

Which quote?

4This paranoid monologue was wholly improvised by X,

including what would become the movie’s most famous

line. (The film's screenwriter, Paul Schrader, later said, “It’s

the best thing in the movie, and I didn’t write it.”)

X got the line from Bruce Springsteen, whom he’d seen

perform in Greenwich Village just days earlier, at one in a

series of concerts leading up to the release of ‘Born to

Run’. When the audience called out his name, The Boss

did a bit where he feigned humility and said,

“___ ______ __ me?” Apparently it stuck in X’s mind.

Guessing from the famous line, give me X and the movie.

ROBERT DE NIRO, TAXI DRIVER

5Clarence B. Jones was a part of the group that prepared one of

the most legendary drafts of all time. The draft required utmost

secrecy to maintain it’s impact. Thus, it was decided that it would

be prepared in the lobby which would be harder to wire tap as

compared to the hotel rooms, where the entourage was staying.

While the initial ideas were along the lines of a religious sermon,

the group saw it as an a opportunity to stake an ideological and

political marker in the debate over civil rights. Others felt that it

would be wise to address the students who were about to march

that day.

Which draft?

6How did this Grammy winning song,

“If I could fly” by Joe Satriani

become famous for the wrong

reasons, in 2010-2011?

Give me the exact reason.

CLOCKWISE DRIES-II

+10/-10 on the pounce

+10/0 on the bounce

No part points on pounce, part points

available on bounce

QM is God

“Block Hints” will be conveniently

ignored if the QM feels so.

1In the decades since the publication of X, there have been

numerous comparisons to the novel Y, which had been

published 17 years earlier, in 1932. While members of the

ruling class of X use brutal force, torture and mind control to

keep individuals in line, but rulers in Y keep the citizens in line

by addictive drugs and pleasurable distractions.

In October 1949, after reading X, the author Y sent a letter to

his counterpart and wrote that it would be more efficient for

rulers to stay in power by the softer touch by allowing citizens

to self-seek pleasure to control them rather than brute force

and to allow a false sense of freedom:

Identify the novels.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

2This particular report was

written by William Willett in

1914, to put forward a certain

proposal. He also happens to

be the Great Grandfather of

Coldplay Singer, Chris Martin,

who wrote the song ‘Clocks’ in

the album 'A Rush of Blood to

the Head‘.

What was the proposal about?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

3The cost of advertising through this method is assumed to

cost the advertiser between $1million to $4 million. It is

somewhat cheaper when compared to a spot on Superbowl

which usually costs the advertiser close to $3.8 million, for a

display of 30 seconds. Apart from grabbing multiple eyeballs

of people close by, it also provides the unusual advantage of

free advertisement on multiple TV shows. This is especially

effective during the early parts of the year.

What advertising is this?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

Advertising

on

Times

Square

4“Only X knows the way to stop Isis - through a

foreign policy that cuts off their funding and

supplies at the source.

Only he has been outspoken in his

condemnation of the oppression of Kurds in

the Middle East at this crucial time, with the

Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces about

to defeat Isis in their capital of Raqqa.

"Along with her toffee-nosed millionaire

colleagues in the________ , she has brought

nothing but instability to this region,” their

statement read.

This was a statement

made by a volunteer

group, that has been

fighting ISIS, alongside

the Kurds in Syria. This

was released in the early

parts of this year.

Who are these

volunteers? [General

Idea is fine]

What were they aiming to

do with this statement?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

BRITISH VOLUNTEERS

CAMPAIGNING FOR JEREMY CORBYN

5The setting for this work of fiction was heavily

inspired by a famous Edward Hopper painting,

“House By The Railroad”

[Picture on the next slide]

The lead character of X was considered as a living

Edward Hopper painting by his eccentric creator,

the figures of which usually appear isolated or

captive with their thoughts in a claustrophobic

(psychological) space: Someone who was trapped

and unable to escape.

Which work of fiction?

68

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

6In 2007, X began its "In An X World" campaign in which the

company posted various, often fanciful scenarios of what the target

audience might think would constitute a perfect, or "X", reality.

In 2008, an ad placed in Mexican publications and on Mexican

billboards featured a map of the U.S. and Mexico with the

boundaries between the two as they were prior to the 1836 Texas

Revolution and the Mexican–American War. Media outlets reported

on some American consumers' reactions at the ad's perceived

insensitivity to immigration issues.

X responded that the ads were purely whimsical, with no political or

nationalist agenda, but its critics were adamant. X later issued a

public apology and withdrew the ad.

X?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

73

7

This form of white whiskey was named after the time

of the day it was produced in, usually to avoid

detection. While popularized by English smugglers at

first, it later became a rage in the Appalachian trail.

The picture on the next slide is an image from

Harper's Weekly 1877, showing production in

Kentucky.

What was it called?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

MOONSHINE

8

During the unofficial Olympic Games of 1906, held in

Athens, a rather unusual event took place. In this

Pistol event, The shooters used wax bullets but no

gun powder. Instead the primer was all they needed

to propel the wax bullet. Like fencing, the athletes

wore a mask and a handguard was fitted to the gun in

order to protect the shooter’s hand.

[Picture on the next slide]

What event was this?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

DUELLING

ANTI CLOCKWISE DRIES-I

+10/-10 on the pounce

+10/0 on the bounce

No part points on pounce, part points

available on bounce

QM is God

“Block Hints” will be conveniently ignored

if the QM feels so.

1

In recent years, X has seen a lot of renovation. There is now

an underground museum open to the general public. "In-

Residence” programs were started for writers, artistes,

innovators, where they were invited to come and stay, work

on projects and go back as messengers of development and

social cause,” says Mathew. From writer Amitav Ghosh to

artist couple Subodh Gupta and Bharti Kher, several notables

have already been artists in residence.

What is being talked about?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

2

Ted Nash, pictured here with his Grammy awards one of

them being this year's Grammy for 'Best Instrumental

Composition. The Composition is titled “Spoken at

Midnight” and is part of Nash's spoken word and

orchestral project.

Speaking about the inspiration behind the creation:

“You can feel the emotion in his delivery. It gives you

goosebumps" said Nash, describing why he found it so

fascinating when he stumbled upon it five years ago. "He

spoke in a very narrow range, so the resulting thematic

material stayed contained to smaller intervals”

What was the inspiration?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

3In early orchestras the most prominent and high profile

member of the orchestra was the musician who played

the lead (or first) violin. Naturally, there would also be

other violinists in the string section of the orchestra but

these would not be as important or honored as the lead

violinist. These other violinists were referred to as the

______ _______ .

This lead to an expression that means to convey that

some entity or someone is not important or significant in

comparison to their counterpart.

Identify the expression or FITB.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

PLAYING THE SECOND

FIDDLE/ SECOND FIDDLES

4

Ligne Claire (French for “clear line”) is a style of drawing

comic books featuring clear strong lines all of the same

width and no hatching. Contrast is downplayed, while cast

shadows is often illuminated. The style features strong

colours and a combination of cartoonish characters against

a realistic background.

The major exponent of this style of art was also the

protagonist of a movie by Steven Spielberg.

What am I talking about?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

TINTIN

5_____ ____ is an unincorporated community located

within X Township in Middlesex County, New Jersey,

United States. In the 1870’s, this New Jersey community

suddenly became famous worldwide and attracted a lot of

tourists. The reason being, one man’s “creation” had

started attracting a lot of interest in the neighborhood.

The image on the next slide is an illustration of a famous

title given to this person.

Two parts:

Who is being talked about?

Which title?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

6X was originally a textile manufacturing company for

more than 100 years before it became a conglomerate

holding company. It was purchased by _______ _____ in

1964 after then-president Seabury Stanton reneged on

his verbal agreement to pay $11.50 for each of his

shares in the company and instead offered $11.375 per

share in writing. _______ _____was so upset by the

slight reduction in price that he bought enough shares in

the company to become the majority shareholder and

made his first board decision: Stanton was fired.

Identify the company and FITB

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY,

WARREN BUFFETT

7

Recently, in order to determine Maria Pilar Abel

Martinez’s heritage a certain body was exhumed, 28

years after it was buried. This was done to prove her

claim to a certain estate. The body when exhumed,

drove the surrounding people to overwhelming

emotions, when something was found to remain in the

“10 past 10” position despite the passage of time.

What is “10 past 10” referring to exactly?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

SALVADOR

DALI’S

MOUSTACHE

8

“These are the children of liberalization who have

not grown up with X. They do not share the same

nostalgia factor which the earlier generation did”

This has been cited as the reason for the

proposition to change the “eye” to something

else.

What is being talked about?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

108

ICONIC MOMENTS IN SPORTS

+10 for each correct answer. Stake +5/-5No negatives if teams do not stake.QM is God.

1The Arthur Ashe Courage Award (sometimes called the Arthur

Ashe Award for Courage or Arthur Ashe for Courage Award) is

an award that is part of the ESPY awards.

Although it is a sport-oriented award, it is not limited to sports-

related people or actions, as it is presented annually to

individuals whose contributions "transcend sports". Often these

figures are also athletes who have been at the top of their sport,

such as Muhammad Ali, Dean Smith, and Cathy Freeman.

The 2008 award was given to a duo because of something they

were involved in, about a few decades prior.

Video on the next slide.

What are we talking about?

2

This gentleman here is Bao

Tialing, a photographer for

Chengdu Economic Daily. In

recent years back he came up

with an iconic photograph titled

‘The Final Game’. The prevalent

feeling of that photograph was on

the lines of ‘What could have

been’ and how the best players

don’t often reach the summit of

their sport.

It was taken on the aftermath of

which event?

3

What

happens at

the end of

this video?

Hint: Iconic

in the wrong

sense.

4“It was a wet day. We had to get a wicket. There was

big storm in Brisbane that afternoon so the ball was

wet,” recalled X

“In those days, batting second with a rain-rule was very

tough. They were at the crease and were going crazy.

But also in [our] defence, our players couldn’t hold the

ball as it was a very wet outfield,” he reminisced.

X said he had already seen Y running towards the non-

striker’s end, and also _____ raising his hand as if

signaling, ‘I am not coming’.

The Prelude to which event is being talked about here?

5President Ferdinand Marcos sought to hold the event in his

country and sponsor it in order to divert attention from the social

turmoil that the country was experiencing,

having declared martial law three years earlier (1972).

In the lead-up to the event as well as each of their other two

encounters, X verbally abused Y. X nicknamed Y "The Gorilla",

and used this as the basis for the rhyme, "It will be a killa and a

_____ and a chilla when I get the Gorilla in ______," which he

chanted while punching an action-figure-sized gorilla doll.

X: "I like to get a man mad, because when a man's mad, he

wants ya so bad, he can't think, so I like to get a man mad.“

Give me X and Y.

6"We played that game with boots and rifles," X said.

"After the game we celebrated until we cried.

"It felt like we had done justice, well maybe not justice

but made good for the mothers who had lost sons in

the Y.

"For that goal I thought Shilton was going to clatter

me. But it was like he'd taken a Xanax, he pulled out.

"A little guy of 1.67 metres beat a big guy of 1.88

metres to the ball... but ____ ___ ____. It was like I

robbed their wallets!

Identify Y and what is being talked about here.

ICONIC MOMENTS IN SPORTSANSWERS

1The Arthur Ashe Courage Award (sometimes called the Arthur

Ashe Award for Courage or Arthur Ashe for Courage Award) is

an award that is part of the ESPY awards.

Although it is a sport-oriented award, it is not limited to sports-

related people or actions, as it is presented annually to

individuals whose contributions "transcend sports". Often these

figures are also athletes who have been at the top of their sport,

such as Muhammad Ali, Dean Smith, and Cathy Freeman.

The 2008 award was given to a duo because of something they

were involved in, about a few decades prior.

Video on the next slide.

What are we talking about?

BLACK POWER SALUTE

TOMMIE SMITH

JOHN CARLOS

2

This gentleman here is Bao

Tialing, a photographer for

Chengdu Economic Daily. In

recent years back he came up

with an iconic photograph titled

‘The Final Game’. The prevalent

feeling of that photograph was on

the lines of ‘What could have

been’ and how the best players

don’t often reach the summit of

their sport.

It was taken on the aftermath of

which event?

123

FIFA WC’14 FINAL

3

What

happens at

the end of

this video?

Hint: Iconic

in the wrong

sense.

STABBING OF MONICA SELES

4 “It was a wet day. We had to get a wicket. There was

big storm in Brisbane that afternoon so the ball was

wet,” recalled X

“In those days, batting second with a rain-rule was very

tough. They were at the crease and were going crazy.

But also in [our] defence, our players couldn’t hold the

ball as it was a very wet outfield,” he reminisced.

X said he had already seen Y running towards the non-

striker’s end, and also _____ raising his hand as if

signaling, ‘I am not coming’.

The Prelude to which event is being talked about here?

127

JONTY RHODES

RUNNING INZAMAM

OUT, 92’WC

5 President Ferdinand Marcos sought to hold the event in his

country and sponsor it in order to divert attention from the social

turmoil that the country was experiencing,

having declared martial law three years earlier (1972).

In the lead-up to the event as well as each of their other two

encounters, X verbally abused Y. X nicknamed Y "The Gorilla",

and used this as the basis for the rhyme, "It will be a killa and a

_____ and a chilla when I get the Gorilla in ______," which he

chanted while punching an action-figure-sized gorilla doll.

X: "I like to get a man mad, because when a man's mad, he

wants ya so bad, he can't think, so I like to get a man mad.“

Give me X and Y.

6"We played that game with boots and rifles," X said.

"After the game we celebrated until we cried.

"It felt like we had done justice, well maybe not justice

but made good for the mothers who had lost sons in

the Y.

"For that goal I thought Shilton was going to clatter

me. But it was like he'd taken a Xanax, he pulled out.

"A little guy of 1.67 metres beat a big guy of 1.88

metres to the ball... but ____ ___ ____. It was like I

robbed their wallets!

Identify Y and what is being talked about here.

131

Falklands, Hand of GOD

ANTI CLOCKWISE DRIES-II

1

FUNDA/ What is the purpose of this font?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

OPENDYSLEXIA FONT

2

The phenomenon shown on the next slide is a rare

event that happens in New York. The name given to

this phenomenon is derived from a famous monolithic

structure, often assumed to be paying homage to the

sun.

What is the good word?

138

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

MANHATTANHENGE

3“On the year's shortest day, 60 years ago, in

Gori, near Tiflis, a son was born to a poor,

hard-working Georgian cobbler named

Vissarion Djugashvili. The boy's pious mother

named him after the husband of Mary,

mother of Jesus. But names were not to stick

very long to this newest subject of the Tsar;

he was to answer to Soso, Koba, David,

Nijeradze, Chijikov and Ivanovich until at

length he acquired the pseudonym of

______.”

Time Magazine excerpt for the person who’s

face has been blanked out here.

Identify.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

4 On this route, in order to keep costs low, journeys were carried out

by hitchhiking, or cheap, private buses that travelled the route. There were

also trains that travelled part of the way, particularly across Eastern

Europe through Turkey and to Tehran or east to Mashhad, Iran. From these

cities, public or private transportation could then be obtained for the rest of

the trip.

The bulk of travelers comprised Western Europeans, North Americans,

Australians, and Japanese. Ideas and experiences were exchanged in well-

known hostels, hotels, and other gathering spots along the way, such as

Yener's Café and The Pudding Shop in Istanbul, Sigi's on Chicken Street in

Kabul or the Amir Kabir in Tehran.

However, the 70’s Iranian revolution alongwith the Yom Kippur war in Syria,

led to the closure of this route, especially to westerners.

What was the name of this route? [picture on the next slide]

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

HIPPIE TRAIL

5While critics lost no time in proclaiming him to be India’s first

post-modernist writer, his second book on Bollywood attracted

criticism from most. Most claim that the superstar protagonist

in his book, Ashok Banjara was based on Amitabh Bachchan.

Despite the fact that in the novel, Bachchan exists as a rival to

Ashok.

The writer later clarified that Ashok Banjara was a pseudonym

used by him, when he wrote articles protesting ragging on the

DU campus.

Who?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

6

Identify this movie from the 70s. An

actor who played the character on the

right in a sequel also played another

character in an 80s movie whose

name is mentioned somewhere in this

shot.

Name that movie too.

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

7When John Sculley joined Apple, he found that the company

was essentially divided into two warring factions. The Macintosh

team consisted of the group tasked to create the computer of the

future and were granted various perks not given to other

employees. The Apple II team however was tasked with

producing the money making machine for Apple. And thus

resulted multiple conflicts between the two factions. The two

teams however, were located on adjacent buildings separated by

a street.

What term did John Sculley use to describe that street, often

used in the context of International Relations?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS

DMZ (Demilitarized Zone)

8A video about a soap dispenser has recently gone viral. Richard

Whitney, from tech-company Particle, explained why soap

dispensers and other technology have these problems

He said: ‘The soap dispenser uses near-infrared technology, which

sends out invisible light from an infrared LED bulb for hands to

reflect the light back to a sensor.

‘The reason the soap doesn’t just foam out all day is because the

hand acts to, more or less, bounce back the light and close the

circuit.

‘If the reflective object actually absorbs that light instead, then the

sensor will never trigger because not enough light gets to it.’

What’s the hilarious (and politically incorrect) outcome of this?

▸ANSWER FOLLOWS