Re: Auspicious Incident

> Crap, there was an Elective Affinities tossup....damn, damn, 
> damn....I actually wrote a tossup on that a couple years ago...

On this note, I enjoyed the tossups on fructose, Christopher Dodd, 
the Lumiere brothers, "Anna Christie", and "next to of course god 
america i" at QOTC XI, all things I'd never heard tossups on before.  
The highlight of the tournament was seeing someone actually correctly 
answer my tossup on "Barefoot In The Park", which I was afraid nobody 
had ever heard of.  (I saw it this summer on AMC, and thought "well, 
I've never heard of this movie, but it was written by Neil Simon and 
it has Robert Redford and Jane Fonda in it, so it must be well-
known.  and now that I think about it I can't name a single Neil 
Simon play anyway, except the ones about superannuated 
vaudevillians.")

The playoff packets, though, were insanely and pointlessly hard.  At 
one point there was a bonus asking for titles of novels by an South 
American author none of the eleven people in my room, nor any of the 
nine people in our B team's room, had ever heard of.  Talking about 
not throwing people a bone.  In two of the playoff rounds, Pitt B 
lost 50-25 and won 35-0.  In the first playoff round Pitt A got 8 
tossups and ended up with 105 points.  In the second playoff round we 
got 4 tossups and ended up with 55 points.  In the third playoff 
round we got 7 tossups, ended up with 115 points, and won.  I don't 
think I've ever been on a team that got zero on a 30-20-10-5 bonus 
(about Sir Richard Burton).

Total bonus conversion in playoffs (factoring in negs): (100 points / 
19 boni) = 5.26, for a team that earlier in the day beat South 
Carolina with 275 and Princeton A with 265, and was about as balanced 
a team as you can get with four undergraduate science majors.

I'm not blaming the Swarthmore people, and I'm grateful for people 
who write freelance packets, but it just doesn't please anyone but 
the question-writer when he writes the bulk of the packet based on 
the "I'm tired of nobody ever asking about any Aphra Behn works 
except <i>The Rover</i> and <i>Oroonoco</i>, and I'm going to do 
something about it" principle.

Good job, Swarthmore, with the tournament running smoothly and the 
plenty of moderators and the pizza included in the bill and 
everything.  The questions were creatively written  and original, and 
the trash was above average.  And I'm very happy with the prize I 
got; it's almost like you have ESP.  I was going to buy a book of 
Rilke poems with facing German text anyway.

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