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Registration rates
Address inquiries to
Noreascon Four
P.O. Box 1010
Framingham, MA 01701
617-776-3243 (fax)
info@noreascon.org
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Traditionally, Worldcons hold at-con trivia
contests, sometimes between competing teams, sometimes between
competing individuals. Noreascon took the at-con trivia contest a step
further by posting a trivia contest here on its website.
The
questions were more difficult than those asked at an at-con
trivia contest since anyone who chose to participate was
able to spend time looking up the answers.
The Rules:
- Entries may be completed by either
individuals or teams.
- Prize(s) will be awarded per entrant. If a
team enters, it will be up to them to determine how to divide
their prize(s).
- The winner will be the entrant with the most
correct answers. In case of a tie, the winner will be selected
by random drawing.
- Entries must be received at the Info Desk in
the ConCourse no later than 6:00 PM on Saturday, September
4.
- All official entrants must be members
(attending or supporting) of Noreascon 4.
Confirmed Prizes:
- Gordon van Gelder: A Two Year Subscription to
the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
- John O'Neill: One year subscription to
Black Gate Magazine
- Plus a membership from
Interaction,
the 2005 Worldcon, and other prizes from Off World Designs and
the Secret Empire.
The Winners:- First Place (tie): Leo Doroschenko and Katherine
Wolf (30/34)
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Second Place (tie): Laura & Robert Nigg and
Todd Dashoff (28/34)
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Third Place: Kevin Hewitt (27/34)
The Questions (and Their Answers)
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How can you be sure your copy of Isaac
Asimov's Foundation and Empire is a true first?
Answer: A true
first edition of Foundation and Empire
will have red boards with black lettering. The Gnome Press
imprint on the spine will measure 2.2 cm.
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Which film or television series includes a
recreation of Georges Méliès's 1902 film Le
voyage dans la lune?
Answer: From the Earth to the Moon, episode 12 [HBO,
1998].
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Which magazine's
first published fiction began with the line,
Sergeant Hank Smiley of the Bunco
squad was a large young man, built somewhat on the scale of a
Norse hammer-thrower, and he did not like appearing in public in
his stocking feet.
Answer: The Magazine of Fantasy, 1949.
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Which novel is framed by a letter from Robert
Walton to his sister, Margaret Saville?
Answer: Frankenstein.
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On what date were long distance phone call
charges abolished?
Answer: 31
December 2000 (from Arthur C. Clarke's 2061:
Odyssey Three [1987, Dey Ray]).
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In what year did Chewbacca receive a medal
which matched those given to Luke Skywalker and Han Solo at the
end of Star Wars: A New Hope?
Answer: 1997
(at the MTV Movie
Awards).
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What is the connection between Gollum in
The Return of the King and Rukh in The Last
Unicorn?
Answer: Both
were voiced by Brother Theodore in the Bass Rankin animated
films.
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What is the home planet to the only alien race
in Isaac Asimov's Foundation universe?
Answer:
Cepheus 18.
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In an alphabetical list of all cities to host
a worldcon, which city appears at number ten?
Answer:
Detroit.
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Which science fiction author was born in
Lexington, Missouri?
Answer:
Randall Garrett.
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Which science fiction author held patents for
tracer ammunition?
Answer: Capt.
S.P. Meek.
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What issue of which magazine has an author
line-up of E.E. "Doc" Smith, Vic Phillips, Colin Keith, Robert
Arthur, Webster Craig, and Malcolm Jameson?
Answer: Astounding, 12/41.
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Who promises Any Place in Spacein 5
Minutes?
Answer:
Moonbeam Rockets (from Tex Avery's The Cat That Hated People
[1948]).
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Besides their profession, what do Karol Bobko,
Anthony England, Manley L. Carter, Jr., James S. Voss, Kathryn
C. Thornton, and Kent V. Rominger have in common?
Answer: All
flew missions with Story Musgrave (scientist/astronaut).
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Who received his first Hugo Award at a
Windycon?
Answer: George
R. R. Martin for the novella "Song for Lya" [1974]. The 1975
Worldcon was held in Australia.
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Who was once known as 8XK40367?
Answer: Thorby
(from Robert Heinlein's Citizen of the
Galaxy [1957]).
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What was Delbert Guyne, Ph.D., D.D.,
proprietor of?
Answer: The
Heechee Hut (from Frederik Pohl's Heechee
Saga).
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By what title is Hogan Zimri Marek Gwernach
better known?
Answer: The
Marluk (Katherine Kurtz's Deryni Rising
[1970]).
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Where did the dirigible Arrowhead fly?
Answer: Mars
(Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars
[1993]).
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In what country would a person find
Fuddlecumjig, View Halloo, Swing City, and Ruby Imp's
Cavern?
Answer:
Quadling Country, Oz.
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Which craft had the registry number
T-1339?
Answer: The
Vorga (Alfred Bester, The Stars My
Destination [1956]).
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On what date was Victoria Luczak's
funeral?
Answer: July
26, 1977 (Dan Simmons, Song of Kali
[1985]).
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Who wrote about the detective David
Silver?
Answer: Lynn
S. Hightower (Alien Blues [1991],
etc.)
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Whose first published story features Professor
Barry Pennywither?
Answer: Ursula
K. Le Guin.* ("April in Paris" in Fantastic [1962]).
* Note: It has been
pointed out that although this was Le Guin's first professional
story, she had previously published "An die Musik" in The
Western Humanities Review, Vol. XV, No. 3, Summer 1961.
"April in Paris" was the first story for which Le Guin was
paid.
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Name the books/stories from which these lines
come:
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Memory dived down and perched on the
rock which had once been the Giant Ingolf. "It's a long story,"
he said.
Answer:
Expecting Someone Taller, Tom
Holt.
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The legend of Jacurutu contained no
story of the cistern poisoned, but it might have been.
Answer:
Children of Dune, Frank
Herbert.
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When he had drained the cup he was
drinking, Golias looked at Beowulf. "Think it's time to make our
beds?"
Answer:
Silverlock, John Myers
Myers.
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But one thing is certain. Man himself,
at the very least, is music, a brave theme that makes music also
of its vast accompaniment, its matrix of storms and stars. Man
himself in his degree is eternally a beauty in the eternal form
of things. It is very good to have been man. And so we may go
forward together with laughter in our hearts, and peace,
thankful for the past, and for our own courage. For we shall
make after all a fair conclusion to this brief music that is
man.
Answer:
Last and First Men, Olaf
Stapledon.
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In those days, far south in Calormen on
a little creek of the sea, there lived a poor fisherman called
Arsheeh, and with him there lived a boy who called him
Father.
Answer:
The Horse and His Boy, C.S.
Lewis.
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About forty years ago a French scientist
and philosopher named Jacques Monod wrote, "Man knows at last
that he is alone in the indifferent immensity of the universe,
whence he has emerged by chance."
Answer:
The Stochastic Man, Robert
Silverberg.
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Every Sunday ministers and priests took
to their pulpits to proclaim that Jesus was the only Messiah,
and every Sunday there were a few less people in their
congregations. A thousand authors and biographers tackled the
enigma of Jeremiah, and came up with a thousand different
conclusions.
Answer:
The Branch, Mike
Resnick.
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Three years here, and he had
accomplished what? A book, appropriated by Sabul; five or six
unpublished papers; and a funeral oration for a wasted life.
Answer:
The Dispossessed, Ursula K. Le
Guin.
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"His is the House of Pain. His is
the Hand that makes. His is the Hand that wounds His is
the Hand that heals."
Answer:
The Island of Dr. Moreau, H.G.
Wells.
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Two more people died on the
twenty-eighth, both of them primaries who had been at the dance
in Headington, and Latimer had a stroke.
Answer:
Doomsday Book, Connie
Willis.
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