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March 28, 2008

The Friday Quiz: Threat Level

Stop your hunting and gathering for three minutes, and answer three questions about vanishing animals.

What rare subspecies now exists (in the wild) solely on a peninsula bounded by the Arabian Sea, The Gulf of Khambhat and the Gulf of Kutch?

Urocyon littoralis is an endangered species, the smallest of its kind in the country where it is found. Its habitat is six small islands off the coast of what nation? What's the state/province/administrative district those islands are part of? What is the common name for the group of which its species is part?

In the last release of their "Red List" the World Conservation Union changed the classification of the Cross River Gorilla and the Western Lowland Gorilla from "Endangered" to "Critically Endangered." Poaching was one significant factor noted in their assessment. What is the other?

First correct answer in each case wins a copy of my grandpappy's recipe for jackalope stew. No Googling or asking one of those sign-language-speaking gorillas for help on No. 3. One guess at each per comment, but please do your part to save the critically threatened Wombat File comments. A world without them would be intolerable.

March 21, 2008

The Friday Quiz: Even more dated than usual

It falls on May 11 this year (in some places -- June 22 in others). Its most widely-known name comes from a translation, from one language to another, of an instruction for how many days to count to calculate when this holiday falls. The name for the day customary in Iceland and England is possibly In Italy, it is traditionally marked with a scattering of rose petals, while in Poland and in the Ukraine it is associated with the color green.

What is the day typically called in the U.S.? What about England? What do the rose petals represent?

First correct answer posted to comments wins a chocolate wombat -- hollow, like the Wombat's promises. No Googling or arranging a lost weekend in Rekyavik or Kiev for "research" purposes. One guess per comment, but comment as often as you like.

P.S. Final answer to part b of part one of last week's quiz: The Yazoo river.

March 14, 2008

The Friday Quiz: Superlate, Superfast, Superlame

You've already given up on this week's Quiz, but here's a double question for those of you still desperate for our trivial distractions:

The first-ever sinking of an armored warship by an electronically detonated naval mine occurred during what conflict, and in what body of water?

In 1950, the first 200 of these were given out by Frank X. Macnamara to associates (mostly salesmen). By the end of the year, 20,000 people had them. What were they?

First corrected answers posted to comments win autographed sketches of my proposed Trans-Pacific Fiji-America aqueduct, which would pipe a nonstop supply of pure Fiji water to American consumers, cutting out those environmentally wasteful plastic bottles (please note: interested venture capitalists are welcome to contact me, but please don't waste my time if all you've got to offer is weak-ass American currency. Euros or gold, please.) No Googling or electronically detonating anything. One guess at each per comment, but comment -- for god's sake! Tell me it wasn't completely in vain...

March 10, 2008

Mid-Week Not-Quite-A-Quiz: Guess Which Book He Hated!

From the customer reviews of a major book retailer comes this “student’s” opinion of a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.

Junk
A Student, A reviewer, 11/19/2005

This book would be a decent book if the plot stuck to the back of the book, but it didn't. Half of this book is about [Protagonist]'s love life which was mind dulling. The other half is about him building up business's without any obsticals, and let me tell you it gets boring as heck. Sometimes there were chapters that had absolutly no point to them and others were chalk full of unnessary description. I just can't understand why this book won a Pultizer Prize... But over all I strongly believe that this book is better burning material then what it was intended for.

Also recommended: Not '[title of book]'

Any guesses as to the author or title? A couple of hints: it was written within the last two decades, and a subsequent short story by the author was adapted as a fairly successful film in 2006.

March 07, 2008

The Absent Wombat (A Penitential Monologue or Uncontrolled Rant, depending on your Perspective)

Sorry to have been so frustratingly silent on the question of answers. Basically, it comes down to this: I get the quiz up in absurd haste every week, and then the desperate task-fulfillment that now regularly defines my Friday overwhelms me. I leave the office, trailing behind me the detritus of another poorly-managed workweek, and with Sunday night's fill-in-the-missing-pieces marathon already an incipient headache.

The resultant Bad Feelings are treated on Friday evenings by doses of the cheapest wine available (or, in more extreme cases of Bad Feelings, a Manhattan or a Pegu Club) and an avoidance of the computer. Saturday is dominated by an awareness that all of our clothes are filthy, there's no milk in the house, and our feet have been bonded to the floor by a gluelike substance created by a coating of orange juice, sweet potatoes, and various "healthy" cereals that are, let's face it, pretty much Cap'n Crunch made with molasses and brown rice. Various attempts to stave off the final collapse of the household into what is professionally known as a "hell hole" occupy such time as is available between tantrums, playdates, and readings of whatever happens to be the most annoying book Helena brought home from the library.

Saturday evening is dominated by the awareness that we can't drink ourselves into oblivion EVERY night, and so Bad Television is employed to stave off the return of Bad Feelings until exhaustion brings whatever sleep can be garnered between bedwettings, leg pains, and dreams about horrible giraffes that come and put you in jail.

Sunday includes (in no particular order), brunch, a disastrous and usually expensive attempt at a "fun" outing with the kids, the awareness that if I don't cook something in the afternoon we'll be eating pasta with sauce a la Fairway all through the week (baby carrots on the side give that meal a real balance!), and the inexorable arrival of that Sunday night oh-my-god-I've-got-so-much-work-to-do headache.

Not to say there aren't many minutes when I could probably sit down at the computer and provide the quiz answer. But I feel compelled to do more than just spit it out. I have to explain, to defend my stupid question, to argue that even given the idiot way I worded the question, it doesn't mean that boxjam got it in the second comment although at the same time of course he's technically right.

So, I decide to do it later.

Cut to next Friday morning...

Anywhere, here are the answers you're owed. To last Friday's Quiz: Part One was nailed by Jonathan – the actor playing Tybalt accidentally ran his stage foil about seven inches into Mercutio's body. Part Two: Albert Brooks, everyone! And yes, that show would have been SO worth reissuing on DVD. Although Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World was one of the most profound filmic misfire's I've recently seen, I still worship at the shrine of Brooks.

And the clarification on the previous Quiz answer, with regard to the theory about the origin of the name of Oregon – in a 1944 article published in the journal American Speech, etymologist George Stewart cited an early-18th-century French map, on which the Ouisiconsink River (now known as the Wisconsin river) was written as "Ouariconsint", but it was broken across two lines. The "sint" part appeared on the second line, so it looked at first glance as if there was an important river called the "Ouaricon". This error, the theory suggests, was picked up by Robert Rogers and Carver in their papers and maps (with evolving spelling), and then popularized by Bryant.

My humble apologies for the delay in providing the full answers to these quizzes. And if it isn't obvious, I really should take a break this week, so I'll have to beg off from providing a question today. But please feel more than free to hurl insults, counter-rants, or substitute questions in the comments.