• QFTCINO25 Game 2, Rounds 4,6: League of Nations, 1960s Leafs

    From msb@msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) to rec.games.trivia on Thu Oct 2 06:09:38 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Here's the set I meant to post next.

    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-01-20,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Night Owls, and are
    used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
    been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of
    current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2024-08-30
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    This is a round on the League of Nations, which existed between
    1920 and 1946 and was replaced by the United Nations. Be careful
    about table talk.

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?


    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    Answers do not repeat.

    1. Who was the coach and general manager of the Leafs from the
    1958-1959 season to the 1968-1969 season?

    2. In November 1961, Conn Smythe sold nearly all of his shares in
    the club's parent company, Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd., to a
    partnership composed of his son Stafford Smythe and two other
    partners. Name *either one* of the other partners.

    3. When the Leafs won four Stanley Cups in the 1960s, several
    players were members of all four teams. Two of them were
    defensemen: name *either one*.

    4. In game 6 of the 1964 Stanley Cup final series, one of the Leaf
    defensemen suffered a fractured ankle and was taken off the ice.
    He later returned with the ankle frozen and went on to score
    the game-winning goal in overtime to defeat the Red Wings.
    Who was that defenseman?

    5. Please decode the rot13 for this question only after you have
    finished with the above ones. Va 1964, Gvz Ubegba bcrarq gur
    svefg ybpngvba bs Gvz Ubegba Qbahgf, nf vg jnf gura anzrq.
    Vg vf fgvyy va bcrengvba, ybpngrq arne gur vagrefrpgvba bs
    Bggnjn Fg. A. naq Qhafzher Eq. va jung pvgl?

    6. During the 1966-67 season the Leafs experienced a 10-game
    losing streak. <answer 1> temporarily removed himself from
    behind the bench. His assistant replaced him and had a
    10-game unbeaten record before <answer 1> returned. Who was
    this assistant?

    7. In Game 3 of the 1967 Stanley Cup finals, this left-winger
    scored the game-winning goal in double overtime. He went on to
    play for the Los Angeles Kings. From 1967 to 1972 he was the
    NHLPA president; later he coached the Kings and the Black Hawks.
    Who was this player?

    8. In game 6 of that final series, Toronto defeated Montreal 3-1
    to take the Cup. The game-winning goal was scored by a
    player who played for a number of teams and is probably best
    remembered for his time with Chicago; the empty-net goal to make
    it 3-1 was scored by the captain of the Leafs. Name *either*
    of these players.

    9. Who was the MVP of that final series? He is considered to be
    one of the greatest Leaf players of all time.

    10. During the first season after the league's expansion beyond the
    "Original Six", Frank Mahovlich and two other players (and the
    rights to a fourth, retired one) were traded to the Detroit
    Red Wings for three players (and the rights to a fourth,
    minor-league player), two of whom went on to become significant
    Leaf players in the 1970s. Name *any one* of the three players
    the Leafs acquired.
    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto "Verbose better."
    msb@vex.net -- David M. Sherman

    My text in this article is in the public domain.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Erland Sommarskog@esquel@sommarskog.se to rec.games.trivia on Thu Oct 2 14:07:29 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Mark Brader (msb@vex.net) writes:
    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Kant

    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva

    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Wilson

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    China

    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    United Kingdom

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    Soviet Union

    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain

    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Turkey


    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dan Tilque@dtilque@frontier.com to rec.games.trivia on Thu Oct 2 08:52:54 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    On 10/1/25 23:09, Mark Brader wrote:


    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    This is a round on the League of Nations, which existed between
    1920 and 1946 and was replaced by the United Nations. Be careful
    about table talk.

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Immanuel Kant


    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    Versailles


    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva


    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Wilson


    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    USA


    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    Soviet Union


    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain


    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Albania



    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    Answers do not repeat.

    1. Who was the coach and general manager of the Leafs from the
    1958-1959 season to the 1968-1969 season?

    2. In November 1961, Conn Smythe sold nearly all of his shares in
    the club's parent company, Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd., to a
    partnership composed of his son Stafford Smythe and two other
    partners. Name *either one* of the other partners.

    3. When the Leafs won four Stanley Cups in the 1960s, several
    players were members of all four teams. Two of them were
    defensemen: name *either one*.

    4. In game 6 of the 1964 Stanley Cup final series, one of the Leaf
    defensemen suffered a fractured ankle and was taken off the ice.
    He later returned with the ankle frozen and went on to score
    the game-winning goal in overtime to defeat the Red Wings.
    Who was that defenseman?

    5. Please decode the rot13 for this question only after you have
    finished with the above ones. Va 1964, Gvz Ubegba bcrarq gur
    svefg ybpngvba bs Gvz Ubegba Qbahgf, nf vg jnf gura anzrq.
    Vg vf fgvyy va bcrengvba, ybpngrq arne gur vagrefrpgvba bs
    Bggnjn Fg. A. naq Qhafzher Eq. va jung pvgl?

    6. During the 1966-67 season the Leafs experienced a 10-game
    losing streak. <answer 1> temporarily removed himself from
    behind the bench. His assistant replaced him and had a
    10-game unbeaten record before <answer 1> returned. Who was
    this assistant?

    7. In Game 3 of the 1967 Stanley Cup finals, this left-winger
    scored the game-winning goal in double overtime. He went on to
    play for the Los Angeles Kings. From 1967 to 1972 he was the
    NHLPA president; later he coached the Kings and the Black Hawks.
    Who was this player?

    8. In game 6 of that final series, Toronto defeated Montreal 3-1
    to take the Cup. The game-winning goal was scored by a
    player who played for a number of teams and is probably best
    remembered for his time with Chicago; the empty-net goal to make
    it 3-1 was scored by the captain of the Leafs. Name *either*
    of these players.

    9. Who was the MVP of that final series? He is considered to be
    one of the greatest Leaf players of all time.

    10. During the first season after the league's expansion beyond the
    "Original Six", Frank Mahovlich and two other players (and the
    rights to a fourth, retired one) were traded to the Detroit
    Red Wings for three players (and the rights to a fourth,
    minor-league player), two of whom went on to become significant
    Leaf players in the 1970s. Name *any one* of the three players
    the Leafs acquired.
    --
    Dan Tilque
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From tool@tool@panix.com (Dan Blum) to rec.games.trivia on Thu Oct 2 21:36:19 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Mark Brader <msb@vex.net> wrote:

    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Kant

    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    Treaty of Paris

    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva

    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Wilson

    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    Fourteen Points

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    USA

    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    Italy

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    Soviet Union

    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain

    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Albania
    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum tool@panix.com
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Joshua Kreitzer@gromit82@hotmail.com to rec.games.trivia on Thu Oct 2 21:45:53 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    On 10/2/2025 1:09 AM, Mark Brader wrote:

    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    This is a round on the League of Nations, which existed between
    1920 and 1946 and was replaced by the United Nations. Be careful
    about table talk.

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Kant
    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    Treaty of Versailles

    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva

    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Wilson

    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    "Fourteen Points"

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    USA

    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    Germany; Russia

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    Russia

    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain

    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Bulgaria; Albania

    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    I'll pass on this one.

    --
    Joshua Kreitzer
    gromit82@hotmail.com

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Pete Gayde@pete.gayde@gmail.com to rec.games.trivia on Fri Oct 3 18:23:15 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Mark Brader wrote:
    Here's the set I meant to post next.

    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-01-20,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Night Owls, and are
    used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
    been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2024-08-30
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    This is a round on the League of Nations, which existed between
    1920 and 1946 and was replaced by the United Nations. Be careful
    about table talk.

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Kant


    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    Versailles


    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva


    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Wilson


    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    14 Points


    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    United States


    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    Italy; Belgium


    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    Soviet Union


    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain


    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Turkey; Albania



    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    Answers do not repeat.

    1. Who was the coach and general manager of the Leafs from the
    1958-1959 season to the 1968-1969 season?

    2. In November 1961, Conn Smythe sold nearly all of his shares in
    the club's parent company, Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd., to a
    partnership composed of his son Stafford Smythe and two other
    partners. Name *either one* of the other partners.

    3. When the Leafs won four Stanley Cups in the 1960s, several
    players were members of all four teams. Two of them were
    defensemen: name *either one*.

    4. In game 6 of the 1964 Stanley Cup final series, one of the Leaf
    defensemen suffered a fractured ankle and was taken off the ice.
    He later returned with the ankle frozen and went on to score
    the game-winning goal in overtime to defeat the Red Wings.
    Who was that defenseman?

    Bobby Baun


    5. Please decode the rot13 for this question only after you have
    finished with the above ones. Va 1964, Gvz Ubegba bcrarq gur
    svefg ybpngvba bs Gvz Ubegba Qbahgf, nf vg jnf gura anzrq.
    Vg vf fgvyy va bcrengvba, ybpngrq arne gur vagrefrpgvba bs
    Bggnjn Fg. A. naq Qhafzher Eq. va jung pvgl?

    Windsor; London


    6. During the 1966-67 season the Leafs experienced a 10-game
    losing streak. <answer 1> temporarily removed himself from
    behind the bench. His assistant replaced him and had a
    10-game unbeaten record before <answer 1> returned. Who was
    this assistant?

    7. In Game 3 of the 1967 Stanley Cup finals, this left-winger
    scored the game-winning goal in double overtime. He went on to
    play for the Los Angeles Kings. From 1967 to 1972 he was the
    NHLPA president; later he coached the Kings and the Black Hawks.
    Who was this player?

    8. In game 6 of that final series, Toronto defeated Montreal 3-1
    to take the Cup. The game-winning goal was scored by a
    player who played for a number of teams and is probably best
    remembered for his time with Chicago; the empty-net goal to make
    it 3-1 was scored by the captain of the Leafs. Name *either*
    of these players.

    Mikita


    9. Who was the MVP of that final series? He is considered to be
    one of the greatest Leaf players of all time.

    Paul Henderson


    10. During the first season after the league's expansion beyond the
    "Original Six", Frank Mahovlich and two other players (and the
    rights to a fourth, retired one) were traded to the Detroit
    Red Wings for three players (and the rights to a fourth,
    minor-league player), two of whom went on to become significant
    Leaf players in the 1970s. Name *any one* of the three players
    the Leafs acquired.

    Norm Ullman



    Pete Gayde
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From msb@msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) to rec.games.trivia on Tue Oct 7 07:49:20 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-01-20,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2024-08-30 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 2, Round 4 - History - League of Nations

    This is a round on the League of Nations, which existed between
    1920 and 1946 and was replaced by the United Nations. Be careful
    about table talk.

    1. The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed
    as early as 1795, with this philosopher's "Perpetual Peace: A
    Philosophical Sketch", which outlined the idea of a league of
    nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.
    He is a German philosopher who is best known for his work the
    "Critique of Pure Reason". Who was he?

    Immanuel Kant. 4 for everyone -- Erland, Dan Tilque, Dan Blum,
    Joshua, and Pete.

    2. The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 1919-06-28
    as part of which treaty?

    Treaty of Versailles. 4 for Dan Tilque, Joshua, and Pete.

    3. The League of Nations was originally headquartered in London.
    It quickly moved to which continental European city?

    Geneva. 4 for everyone.

    It opened a new headquarters building in 1938; the building still
    exists and has belonged to the UN since the League shut down in 1946,
    even though Switzerland did not join the UN until 2002.

    4. Which US president received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role
    in the founding of the League of Nations?

    Woodrow Wilson. 4 for everyone.

    5. On 1918-01-08 <answer 4> gave a speech to a joint session of
    Congress. In it he outlined various principles that were
    relevant to a resolution to World War I and peaceful world
    order beyond it. What is the name of this speech?

    "Fourteen Points". 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Pete.

    6. There are 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council.
    One of these permanent members *never* joined the League
    of Nations. We're not talking about countries that took over
    the membership of what were in effect treated as just another
    version of the same country. Which Security Council permanent
    member country *(in any version) was never* a League of Nations
    member?

    The US. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Joshua, and Pete.

    The Senate voted to 49-35 to join, 7 votes short of the required
    2/3 majority.

    China, i.e. the People's Republic of China, replaced the Republic
    of China, i.e. Taiwan; Russia replaced the USSR.

    7. The League of Nations had a Council not unlike the UN Security
    Council. It had four permanent members. Two of those countries
    were Great Britain and France. Name *either one of the other
    two* countries.

    Italy, Japan. 4 for Dan Blum. 3 for Pete.

    8. Which country was expelled from the League of Nations in 1939
    for its invasion of Finland?

    The USSR (accepting Russia). 4 for everyone.

    9. Which European country withdrew from the League of Nations in
    1939 following a dictator's rise to power? This dictator
    remained in power until 1975. Name the country.

    Spain. (Francisco Franco.) 4 for everyone.

    10. The League of Nations was not successful in that it utterly
    failed to prevent World War II. But it was successful in
    mediating and resolving some lesser conflicts between nations.
    One such example was its intervention in what is known as the
    Incident at Petrich or the War of the Stray Dog, when Greece
    invaded a neighboring country in October 1925. This conflict
    was resolved in 10 days. What was the other country?

    Bulgaria. 3 for Joshua.


    * Game 2, Round 6 - Canadiana Sports - Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1960s

    In the original game the audio round was hardest, and this one was second-hardest.

    Answers do not repeat.

    1. Who was the coach and general manager of the Leafs from the
    1958-1959 season to the 1968-1969 season?

    "Punch" Imlach.

    2. In November 1961, Conn Smythe sold nearly all of his shares in
    the club's parent company, Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd., to a
    partnership composed of his son Stafford Smythe and two other
    partners. Name *either one* of the other partners.

    Harold Ballard, John Bassett.

    3. When the Leafs won four Stanley Cups in the 1960s, several
    players were members of all four teams. Two of them were
    defensemen: name *either one*.

    Tim Horton, Allan Stanley.

    4. In game 6 of the 1964 Stanley Cup final series, one of the Leaf
    defensemen suffered a fractured ankle and was taken off the ice.
    He later returned with the ankle frozen and went on to score
    the game-winning goal in overtime to defeat the Red Wings.
    Who was that defenseman?

    Bobby Baun. 4 for Pete.

    5. Please decode the rot13 for this question only after you have
    finished with the above ones. In 1964, Tim Horton opened the
    first location of Tim Horton Donuts, as it was then named.
    It is still in operation, located near the intersection of
    Ottawa St. N. and Dunsmure Rd. in what city?

    Hamilton.

    6. During the 1966-67 season the Leafs experienced a 10-game
    losing streak. <answer 1> temporarily removed himself from
    behind the bench. His assistant replaced him and had a
    10-game unbeaten record before <answer 1> returned. Who was
    this assistant?

    "King" Clancy.

    7. In Game 3 of the 1967 Stanley Cup finals, this left-winger
    scored the game-winning goal in double overtime. He went on to
    play for the Los Angeles Kings. From 1967 to 1972 he was the
    NHLPA president; later he coached the Kings and the Black Hawks.
    Who was this player?

    Bob Pulford.

    8. In game 6 of that final series, Toronto defeated Montreal 3-1
    to take the Cup. The game-winning goal was scored by a
    player who played for a number of teams and is probably best
    remembered for his time with Chicago; the empty-net goal to make
    it 3-1 was scored by the captain of the Leafs. Name *either*
    of these players.

    Jim Pappin, George Armstrong.

    9. Who was the MVP of that final series? He is considered to be
    one of the greatest Leaf players of all time.

    Dave Keon.

    He was also the Leafs' next captain.

    10. During the first season after the league's expansion beyond the
    "Original Six", Frank Mahovlich and two other players (and the
    rights to a fourth, retired one) were traded to the Detroit
    Red Wings for three players (and the rights to a fourth,
    minor-league player), two of whom went on to become significant
    Leaf players in the 1970s. Name *any one* of the three players
    the Leafs acquired.

    Paul Henderson, Floyd Smith, Norm Ullman. 4 for Pete.


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    GAME 2 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 TOTALS
    TOPICS-> Geo Lit His Can
    Joshua Kreitzer 40 30 35 0 105
    Pete Gayde 29 12 35 8 84
    Dan Blum 20 24 32 0 76
    Erland Sommarskog 40 12 20 0 72
    Dan Tilque 26 16 28 0 70
    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto, msb@vex.net
    "You take the bottle out of the box, take the cotton out of the
    bottle ... and if they'd just used the box and not used the bottle
    ... look at this, all these pills would've fitted into the box and
    they'd have had room for 3 times as much cotton!" -- Andy Rooney

    My text in this article is in the public domain.
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