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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Round 2 Questions

The document contains a series of regulation questions and answers from the NHBB C-Set Bee for the 2016-2017 competition. Each question covers a variety of topics, including history, geography, and notable figures, with a focus on providing concise and factual responses. The format includes a question followed by the correct answer, showcasing a range of knowledge required for the competition.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
138 views6 pages

NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Round 2 Questions

The document contains a series of regulation questions and answers from the NHBB C-Set Bee for the 2016-2017 competition. Each question covers a variety of topics, including history, geography, and notable figures, with a focus on providing concise and factual responses. The format includes a question followed by the correct answer, showcasing a range of knowledge required for the competition.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

Bee Round 2
Regulation Questions

(1) The criminal “Soapy” Smith” ran organized crime in Colorado and what is now this state, where he
died. With Louisiana, this is the only U.S. state that does not have counties. Over a hundred people died
in this state during the 1964 Good Friday earthquake, which triggered tsunamis that killed five people in
Oregon. The purchase of this future state, at the price of 2 cents per acre, was dubbed “Seward’s Folly.”
For the point, what future state was bought from Russia in 1867?
ANSWER: Alaska

(2) This country occupied a neighbor after the 1969 Act of Free Choice. One leader of this nation coined
the term “nasakom” to describe a nationalist ideology that appeased communists, then instituted “Guided
Democracy” in 1957. The New Order ousted that leader of this country, which occupied East Timor until
a 1999 referendum. Sukarno and Suharto ruled, for the point, what Asian archipelagic nation that controls
the island of Java and has its capital at Jakarta?
ANSWER: Republic of Indonesia

(3) A 1988 coup d’etat in this country led to the creation of the State Law and Order Restoration
Council, or SLORC. This country’s constitution forbids the President from having a foreign spouse or
child, preventing the election of a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who spent more than a decade in house
arrest. For the point, name this southeast Asian nation whose ruling party is led by Aung San Suu Kyi
[chee] and where, in 1989, a military junta officially changed the name of the country from Burma.
ANSWER: Republic (of the Union) of Myanmar (accept Burma before mentioned)

(4) The most populous county in this state was originally named for Franklin Pierce’s vice president, but
was rededicated in 1986 to a civil rights leader with the same last name. A structure in this state, which
connected the Kitsap Peninsula to its namesake city, collapsed due to aerostatic flutter in 1940 and was
nicknamed “Galloping Gertie.” The Puget Sound was traversed by the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in, for the
point, what state, where King County contains the city of Seattle?
ANSWER: Washington

(5) This President controversially appointed his campaign manager, Harry Daugherty, as Attorney
General. During his presidency, a treaty limiting the amount of battleships that could be produced
emerged after the Washington Naval Conference. This man was elected President by promising a “return
to normalcy,” but his term featured illegal leasing of oil reserves at Teapot Dome. For the point, name
this U.S. President who died in office during his scandal-plagued term in the 1920’s.
ANSWER: Warren Harding

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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

(6) The modern version of this instrument was developed by Theobald Boehm, and Johann Quantz
taught this instrument to Frederick the Great. A small, loud relative of this instrument was used for
infantry signaling in the 18th century along with drums. A descending chromatic scale on this instrument
opens Debussy’s Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun, where it represents the faun’s pipes. For the point,
name this woodwind instrument whose higher-pitched relatives include the fife and piccolo.
ANSWER: flute (accept fife until mentioned)

(7) The Duke of Mayenne failed to block the ascension of this man, who was aided by the Welsh
mercenary Roger Williams in the Battle of Arques [ark]. Francois Ravaillac [rah-vye-ak] assassinated this
man, who had planned to invade the Spanish Netherlands shortly after defeating the Duke of Guise [gheez]
in the Wars of Religion. This man exchanged his Protestant faith for Catholicism in order to become king,
quipping that “Paris is worth a mass.” For the point, name this first Bourbon monarch of France.
ANSWER: Henry IV [fourth] or Henry III of Navarre; prompt on Henry; do not accept or prompt on
Henry III)

(8) Sticky prices were initially explained during the tail end of the Great Depression by positing a
“kinked” variety of this concept. The y-axis of a Keynesian cross shows one form of this quantity. While
a good’s utility may determine the price, this concept is theoretically only determined by income. For the
point, name this economic quantity that represents the willingness of consumers to consume, a concept
often contrasted with supply.
ANSWER: demand (curve)

(9) Chalcuchimac [chal-coo-chee-mak] helped recapture Tumipampa for this empire during the War of the
Two Brothers. After insultingly throwing a Bible to the ground, one ruler from this empire was captured
at Cajamarca [ca-ha-mar-ka] and ransomed for a room full of gold. Huascar’s rival, Atahualpa, ruled
this empire but was unable to stop Francisco Pizarro’s conquistadors. For the point, name this South
American empire whose cities included Cuzco and Machu Picchu in modern Peru.
ANSWER: Incan Empire

(10) During this war, the C-3 was sunk in Operation Ursula, a mostly-unsuccessful attempt at submarine
warfare. This war’s victors enjoyed the support of Moroccan forces and were supported by the Carlists.
The term “fifth column” was coined during this war, in which the German Condor Legion bombed
Guernica, an atrocity immortalized by Pablo Picasso. For the point, name this war in which the Falangists
rose to power under Francisco Franco in an Iberian country.
ANSWER: Spanish Civil War

(11) This man was taught the alphabet by Sophia Auld and was later sent to Mr. Covey, who was
defeated by this man after a two-hour long fight. He noted that the Fourth of July “is yours, not mine,”
in a speech describing how slaves viewed the holiday. This publisher of the newspaper The North Star
wrote the book My Bondage and My Freedom, which describes his escape from slavery in Maryland. For
the point, name this former slave who became a leading orator and abolitionist.
ANSWER: Frederick Douglass (or Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey)

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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

(12) This structure is located in the center of a charbagh garden and includes a mosque with four
minarets and “onion” domes decorated with lotus designs. Its interior includes a false tomb, and this
monument stands in front of a reflecting pool adjacent to the Yamuna River. This building was created
to commemorate the wife of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan. For the point, identify this white marble
mausoleum, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Agra, India.
ANSWER: Taj Mahal

(13) The League of Augsburg formed after this king’s interference in the Rhineland. This king received a
Siamese diplomatic mission from King Narai of Ayutthaya. His finance minister Colbert greatly increased
tax revenue, and this king withdrew protection of Protestants by revoking the Edict of Nantes. His
proclamation that “I am the state” exemplified his control of an absolute monarchy centered at Versailles.
For the point, name this Sun King of France.
ANSWER: Louis XIV (prompt on Sun King until mentioned)

(14) This country is home to the artificial Qetafian Island and the retractable-roofed, air-conditioned
Iconic Stadium, both of which are in this country’s new planned city of Lusail. In 2014, allegations were
made that Mohammed bin Hammam, a native of this country, bribed Jack Warner with 2 million dollars
for hosting rights for an upcoming event. For the point, name this Arabian country where the 2022 FIFA
World Cup will be held in and around its capital of Doha.
ANSWER: Qatar

(15) This empire rose to power after the fall of the Mthethwa [m’thay-thwa] Empire. These people were
unable to capture Rorke’s Drift despite a massive numerical advantage. This empire equipped its warriors
with the iklwa spear and cowhide shields and won the Battle of Isandlwana while led by Cetshwayo.
A king of these people developed the impi units and created the buffalo horn formation. The British
conquered, for the point, what South African empire that was united by Shaka?
ANSWER: Zulu Empire (or amaZulu)

(16) During the first of these conflicts, the corvus, a plank designed to board ships, was developed. Fabius
developed a delaying strategy during the second one of these wars after an opponent won the Battle of
Cannae with a massive envelopment. Cato’s repeated insistence that a city must be destroyed helped
spark the third and last of these wars. Hannibal Barca crossed the Alps with elephants during the second
of, for the point, what wars fought between Rome and Carthage?
ANSWER: Punic Wars

(17) This leader’s government passed the Initial Decrees to fulfill his promise of “peace, land, and
bread.” This man attempted to move towards “state capitalism” with his “New Economic Policy,” which
was required by the costs of fighting a civil war against the White Army. After returning from exile in
Switzerland on a sealed train, this man led the Bolsheviks in the October Revolution of 1917. For the
point, name the first leader of the Soviet Union.
ANSWER: VIadimir Ilyich Lenin (or Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov)

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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

(18) This city’s mayor, George Moscone, was killed by disgruntled city supervisor Dan White, who used
the controversial “Twinkie defense” at his trial. The United Nations charter was signed in this city, which
was once led by Mayor Dianne Feinstein. The “Summer of Love” featured hippies converging on this
city’s Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. Gay rights activist Harvey Milk was killed in, for the point, what
California city that was devastated by a 1906 earthquake?
ANSWER: San Francisco

(19) Leonhard Euler [OY-ler] finished this mathematician’s connection between Mersenne primes
and perfect numbers. The greatest common divisor of two numbers can be quickly found using this
mathematician’s algorithm. For millenia, mathematicians tried to prove this man’s fifth postulate,
regarding parallel lines, from the first four postulates posed in his most famous work. For the point, name
this Greek mathematician whose Elements revolutionized the study of geometry.
ANSWER: Euclid of Alexandria

(20) One government of this nation martyred peace activist Vı́ctor Jara. This country fully nationalized
its copper mines in 1971 and kept them under state control, even as the “Chicago Boys” promoted
free market policies that led to this country’s economic “miracle.” In 1973, the CIA helped depose a
democratically elected Marxist in, for the point, what South American nation where Salvador Allende
[ah-yen-day] overthrew Augusto Pinochet [pin-oh-shay]?
ANSWER: Chile

(21) During this war, the U.S. army gave preference to Chicago meatpackers over local cattle, so Nelson
Miles’ soldiers suffered through shipments of “embalmed beef.” Frederic Remington was allegedly told to
“furnish the pictures” so that William Hearst could “furnish” this war through yellow journalism. George
Dewey’s victory at Manila Bay clinched the Pacific theater of, for the point, what war that was prompted
by the sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor?
ANSWER: Spanish-American War

(22) The protagonist of this novel feels justified in running away after seeing a squirrel run away from his
tossed pine cone. The protagonist of this novel attempts to distance himself from a “tattered soldier” who
asks him where he was hit. This novel’s depiction of fighting in a forest is often compared to the Battle
of Chancellorsville. Jim Conklin dies after refusing medical care in, for the point, what Civil War novel
about the young, scared soldier Henry Fleming, written by Stephen Crane?
ANSWER: The Red Badge of Courage

(23) After the end of these wars, Perkin Warbeck and Lambert Simnel both pretended to be one of the
Princes in the Tower. Richard Neville was known as the Kingmaker during these wars that ended at the
Battle of Bosworth Field. These wars ended with the ascension of Henry VII Tudor, a member of the
House of Lancaster, who married a daughter of the House of York, the two rival houses that fought these
wars. For the point, name these wars fought for the English throne named for a certain flower.
ANSWER: Wars of the Roses

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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

(24) During preparation for this battle, John Reynolds was killed, forcing Abner Doubleday to take
command of the First Corps. During this battle, James Longstreet commanded George Pickett to make
a charge on Cemetery Ridge; that failed charge was the “high water mark” of the Confederacy. For the
point, name this July 1863 battle in Pennsylvania where, four months later, President Lincoln dedicated
a cemetery with a short speech beginning “Four score and seven years ago...”
ANSWER: Battle of Gettysburg (accept Gettysburg Address after “speech” is read)

(25) In July, this country’s internal security chief, Patrick Calvar, warned that another terrorist attack
could plunge this country into “prolonged civil conflict.” The far right National Front led by Marine Le
Pen has grown in this country, which has been in a state of emergency since the November 2015 attacks,
which included a shooting at the Bataclan Theatre. For the point, name this country that was targeted
by ISIS supporters during Bastille Day celebrations in Nice [”niece”].
ANSWER: France

(26) A practitioner of this religion assassinated a political leader at the Birla House for having advocated
the creation of Pakistan. Members of this religion are traditionally divided into four castes as part of the
Varna system, which excludes the “untouchables.” During this religion’s Kumbh Mela festival, millions of
adherents wash away their sin in the Ganges River. Shiva, Vishnu, and Brahma form the Trimurti in, for
the point, what most prevalent religion in India?
ANSWER: Hinduism

(27) This political party used Mefo bills to finance its economic programs, including militarization. The
White Rose movement opposed this political party, which signed an Anti-Comintern pact with Japan in
1936. It purged its paramilitary, the SA, during the Night of the Long Knives, and sponsored a night of
looting called the Night of Broken Glass in November 1938, burning dozens of synagogues. For the point,
name this fascist party that ruled Germany’s Third Reich until the end of World War II.
ANSWER: Nazi Party (accept National Socialist German Workers’ Party or NSDAP; accept Nazi
Germany; do not accept or prompt on socialism alone)

(28) A disaster in this state was blamed on the failure of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club to
maintain a dam. A businessman in this state, Henry Clay Frick, fought strikers who were challenging a
company owned by the author of “The Gospel of Wealth.” Over 2,000 people died in the 1889 Johnstown
Flood in this state, which was also where the 1892 Homestead Strike took place. For the point, name this
state where Carnegie Steel was founded in Pittsburgh.
ANSWER: Pennsylvania

(29) This country’s north and south were once ruled by the Nanyue and Champa people, respectively. In
the first century AD, the Trung Sisters rebelled against Chinese control of what is now this country. The
French were removed from power over this country after they lost the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, leaving a
country split at the 17th parallel between an American-supported South and Communist North. For the
point, name this southeast Asian country whose Communist revolutionaries were led by Ho Chi Minh.
ANSWER: Vietnam (accept North and/or South Vietnam)

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NHBB C-Set Bee 2016-2017 Bee Round 2

(30) This man’s brother, James, published his work when this person used the name “Mrs. Silence
Dogood.” This man described perfecting thirteen virtues in his posthumously published autobiography.
He depicted a cut up snake with the caption “Join or Die” in the Pennsylvania Gazette to urge Americans
to stick together during the French and Indian War. For the point, what American thinker published Poor
Richard’s Almanack and invented things like the lightning rod and bifocals?
ANSWER: Benjamin Franklin

Extra Question
Only read if moderator botches a question.
(1) This dynasty created the Grand Secretariat to oversee the Six Ministries. This dynasty allied
with the Joseon during the Imjin War, and it was founded when the Hongwu emperor led the Red
Turban Rebellion. The Yongle Emperor expanded the examination system and moved his capital
to Beijing during this dynasty, which constructed the Grand Canal and the Forbidden City and
sponsored Zheng He’s voyages. The Yuan dynasty preceded, for the point, what Chinese dynasty
known for exporting porcelain vases?
ANSWER: Ming Dynasty

Page 6

Common questions

Powered by AI

The Treaty of Versailles had a profound impact on Germany, as it imposed reparations and military restrictions that fueled economic hardship and resentment. This environment contributed to the rise of extremist groups, including the Nazi Party, which capitalized on national discontent .

Frederick Douglass used his experiences, such as his escape from slavery and subsequent achievements, to highlight the inhumanity of slavery in his speeches and writings. His works like 'My Bondage and My Freedom' provided personal insight, fostering empathy and support for the abolitionist cause .

The Tacoma Narrows Bridge failed due to aerostatic flutter, a type of dynamic instability phenomena. This failure highlighted the importance of considering aerodynamic forces in bridge design and led to advancements in wind tunnel testing and aerodynamics to avoid similar collapses .

Lenin implemented the New Economic Policy, which introduced elements of state capitalism to stimulate economic recovery amidst a backdrop of civil unrest and economic collapse following the Russian Civil War. Lenin faced challenges such as resistance within the Communist Party and the broader task of rebuilding a war-torn economy .

The Punic Wars significantly impacted Rome by positioning it as a dominant Mediterranean power and expanding its territory. Rome's military strategies evolved, including the use of naval innovations like the corvus and leadership tactics exemplified in victories despite significant losses as seen in the Battle of Cannae .

Euclid's Elements systematized geometry by presenting a comprehensive framework of definitions, axioms, theorems, and proofs. This work established the foundation for the deductive structure of mathematics, greatly influencing subsequent mathematical thought and education .

Sukarno contributed to Indonesian political evolution by coining the term "nasakom" to integrate nationalism, religion, and communism and implementing 'Guided Democracy' in 1957 to stabilize the nation. Suharto's 'New Order' regime followed, ousting Sukarno and leading to significant economic growth while suppressing political dissent .

The United States acquired Alaska in 1867 after purchasing it from Russia for 2 cents per acre. This transaction was referred to as "Seward's Folly" due to widespread belief that the region was a barren wasteland and not worth the purchase price .

Aung San Suu Kyi was unable to become President of Myanmar due to a constitutional provision that forbade presidential candidates from having a foreign spouse or children, which directly applied to her case .

Henry IV converted to Catholicism, declaring "Paris is worth a mass," to secure his acceptance as the King of France and end the Wars of Religion. His rule was significant as he established the Bourbon dynasty and laid the groundwork for religious tolerance with the Edict of Nantes .

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