//Randomly picks text and displays it. (By Carlo Angiuli)
//So far, used Faculty1999, 2000, part of 1998, EvanstonLoyola, NT Varsity I
var myarray = new Array()
var myarra2 = new Array()
var randomnum = Math.round(Math.random()*100) // Change when appropriate!!!
myarray[0] = 'To one significant digit, what is the ratio of the mass of a proton to the mass of an electron?'
myarra2[0] = '2000 or 2 x 103'
myarray[1] = 'Which city-state allied itself with Sparta in the Peloponnesian War against Athens and soon after allied itself with Athens against Sparta? It was destroyed by Romans in 146 BC, Goths in 395 AD, and an earthquake in 1858.'
myarra2[1] = 'Corinth'
myarray[2] = 'Which American playwright, the son of a well-known actor, started out by writing avant-garde psychodramas and later wrote plays about his family’s problems with alcohol and heroine. The four haunted Tyrones are supposed to represent himself and his father, mother, and brother in his drama Long Day’s Journey Into Night.'
myarra2[2] = 'Eugene O’Neill'
myarray[3] = 'What secondary terpenoid alcohol is the active ingredient in many throat lozenges and mouthrinses? It is sometimes combined with camphor and/or eucalyptus oil in body ointments. Give the common name of this substance which has chemical formula C10H19OH.'
myarra2[3] = 'Menthol'
myarray[4] = 'What organ consists of four lobes: right, left, caudate, and quadrate. Protected by the ribs, it is the largest organ inside the body.'
myarra2[4] = 'Liver'
myarray[5] = 'Which Baroque composition consists of a concerto in E major, one in G minor, one in F major, and one in F minor? It was first published in 1725 and is based on four sonnets which are not meant to be read during a performance. Historians disagree as to whether the sonnets were written by the composer.'
myarra2[5] = 'The Four Seasons'
myarray[6] = 'Which computer company joined the Fortune 500 in 1987, four years after it was founded? It has created about forty million computers, beginning with the first industry-standard portable computer.'
myarra2[6] = 'Compaq'
myarray[7] = 'Which novel was originally called First Impressions? It was rewritten and then published in 1813 and concerns many relationships, the central one being between Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet.'
myarra2[7] = 'Pride and Prejudice'
myarray[8] = 'What is the sum of the first ten positive whole numbers not divisible by three?'
myarra2[8] = '75'
myarray[9] = 'Which group 2 element was used in the experiments of Irene and Frederic Joliot-Curie? It is the first group 2 element in the periodic table of the elements.'
myarra2[9] = 'Beryllium'
myarray[10] = 'This member of the Travelling Wilburys was born with the name Robert Zimmerman. Name this performer, whose albums include Bringing It All Back Home, Blood On The Tracks, and Blonde On Blonde.'
myarra2[10] = 'Bob Dylan'
myarray[11] = 'Which 1937 movie was the first full-length animated movie in cinematic history?'
myarra2[11] = 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (prompt on Snow White)'
myarray[12] = 'Name the noted psychologist who wrote Odysseus, a work describing several days in a person’s life describing everything in meticulous detail.'
myarra2[12] = 'Carl Jung'
myarray[13] = 'What was the most common Egyptian pharaoh name? The name is shared by the Greek astronomer who placed all the heavenly bodies in circular orbs around the Earth.'
myarra2[13] = 'Ptolemy'
myarray[14] = 'This famous children’s writer’s books include Going Solo, The Magic Finger, The Twits, Danny The Champion of the World, Boy, Matilda, and the BFG. Name this late author who wrote James and the Giant Peach.'
myarra2[14] = 'Roald Dahl'
myarray[15] = 'This mathematical logician was born in what is now the Czech Republic in 1906. He did extensive work in Set Theory, but he is best known for weakening the works of Russell and Hilbert with his Undecidability or Incompleteness Theorems. In one well-known book, his work is compared to the works of Bach and Escher.'
myarra2[15] = 'Kurt Godel'
myarray[16] = 'Which 19th and 20th Century composer spent a lot of time in New York City and Spillville, Iowa and was fascinated with trains and Negro spirituals? A movie being created about this Bohemian’s life is entitled The New World.'
myarra2[16] = 'Antonin Dvorak (accept pronunciation of Dvorzhak)'
myarray[17] = 'Which book has chapters titled Nightmare, Homeboy, Detroit Red, Mecca, and El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz?'
myarra2[17] = 'The Autobiography of Malcolm X'
myarray[18] = 'Which still living mathematician wrote Fractals: Form, Chance, and Dimension and later refined it into his masterpiece The Fractal Geometry of Nature? He has spent his career working for IBM in both New York City and his native France. An often visualized set bares his name.'
myarra2[18] = 'Benoit Mandelbrot'
myarray[19] = 'What Shakespeare character says the following: "It is nor hand, nor foot, nor arm, nor face, nor any other part belonging to a man. O, be some other name! What’s in a name! That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."'
myarra2[19] = 'Juliet'
myarray[20] = 'Who was drafted in the first round by the Golden State Warriors out of Centenary? Playing with the Charlotte Hornets a few years ago, he broke the record for most games played in the NBA. Though he ended his career alongside Dennis Rodman and Scottie Pippen, he will be best remembered playing with Kevin McHale and Larry Bird.'
myarra2[20] = 'Robert Parish'
myarray[21] = 'Three of these express the laws of Faraday, Ampere, and Gauss, while the other expresses the lack of magnetic charge. What equations bear the name of the nineteenth century British physicist who put them into their current form?'
myarra2[21] = 'Maxwell’s Equations'
myarray[22] = 'What river which is slightly over five hundred miles long begins in northwest Slovenia, travels near Zagreb, and joins the Danube in Belgrade?'
myarra2[22] = 'Sava or Save'
myarray[23] = 'Which Russian composer finished Borodin’s opera Prince Igor and Mussorgsky’s opera Boris Godunov after the deaths of his colleagues? He was a teacher of Stravinsky and composed Snow Maiden, The Golden Cockerel, and Sheherezade.'
myarra2[23] = 'Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov'
myarray[24] = 'What Irish dramatist purchased the Drury Lane Theatre along with his father-in-law and wrote The Critic, which was a short satire performed after plays to poke fun at the critics in attendance? He added the word malapropism to our language, and his best known play is The School for Scandal.'
myarra2[24] = 'Richard Brinsley Sheridan'
myarray[25] = 'Of what category of joints are synchodrosis and symphysis joints? These include the joints between vertebrae and joints which disappear in adulthood.'
myarra2[25] = 'Cartilaginous (Accept cartilage)'
myarray[26] = 'Who became a teacher at the age of fifteen but retired at the age of thirty to take up political causes? She was part of the temperance movement and the American Anti-Slavery Society and founded the Women’s Loyal League. She worked closely with Elizabeth Cady Stanton and often had to deliver Stanton’s speeches when Stanton was too busy with her children. On the issue she is most famous for supporting, this woman started by focusing on the laws in New York but eventually worked on an international level.'
myarra2[26] = 'Susan Brownell Anthony'
myarray[27] = 'Which Leonardo da Vinci work was painted twice? The first one, which was rejected as an altarpiece, is now in the Louvre. The second, which da Vinci worked on while painting The Last Supper and Mona Lisa, is in the National Gallery in London. The foreground of this painting has two women and two babies.'
myarra2[27] = 'The Virgin of the Rocks'
myarray[28] = 'What nineteenth and twentieth century mathematician worked on invariant theory, geometry, analysis, and number theory? His most famous talk was given in 1900 and titled "Mathematical Problems." It outlined twenty-three problems which he thought would further the discipline of mathematics. He spent some of the last years of his life working on one of these problems calling for the axiomization of physics.'
myarra2[28] = 'David Hilbert'
myarray[29] = 'What two fictional characters does the following stanza refer to: "Just then flew down a monstrous crow, As black as a tar-barrel; Which frightened both the heroes so, They quite forgot their quarrel!" One of them recites "The Walrus and the Carpenter" for Alice.'
myarra2[29] = 'Tweedledum and Tweedledee (either order)'
myarray[30] = 'Perhaps the only physics concept named after a botanist, it was first noted in 1828 by watching pollen grains suspended in water. Jean Perrin did monumental work in this area in 1908 which was used to calculate Avogadro’s number and validate one of Einstein’s theories.'
myarra2[30] = 'Brownian Motion'
myarray[31] = 'The fourth one, who goes by a nickname, is a United States Senator; the third was the first chairman of the Lincoln Performing Arts Center; the second financed the restoration of colonial Williamsburg and donated the land for the United Nations Headquarters; and the first one gave away a total of $550 million in contributions. What name do these men share, having gotten their money from America’s first corporate trust?'
myarra2[31] = 'John Rockefeller'
myarray[32] = 'Who set himself up for criticism by using his web page to ask children for their addresses and claiming that it was open source? There were also rumors that it was funded by a political action committee and set up by government workers. All of this happened soon after this man claimed to be the Father of the Internet.'
myarra2[32] = 'Al Gore, Jr.'
myarray[33] = 'The rulers of what ancient civilization include Telipinu, Mursili, and Labarna? Most of their territory is in modern-day Turkey, and they are considered by many the first civilization in Asia Minor, having conquered territory around 1900 BC.'
myarra2[33] = 'Hittite'
myarray[34] = 'Given the coordinates, find the area of quadrilateral ABCD. A is located at (3,1), B at (0,3), C at (0,9), and D at (6,1).'
myarra2[34] = '21'
myarray[35] = 'What New England poet wrote "Euclid alone has looked on Beauty bare." She also wrote plays for the Provincetown Players and won a Pulitzer Prize for The Ballad Of The Harp Weaver.'
myarra2[35] = 'Edna St. Vincent Millay'
myarray[36] = 'What instrument was invented by John Campbell in 1757? It makes use of a telescope, a fixed mirror, a movable mirror, and a lever. If it is meant to be used on land or in the sky, it also contains some liquid for leveling. Its name comes from the fact that it uses a sixty degree scale.'
myarra2[36] = 'Sextant'
myarray[37] = 'What British philosopher and economist lived from 1806 to 1873? As a politician, he supported public ownership of natural resources, compulsory education, and women’s suffrage. He wrote the book Utilitarianism and the essay On Liberty.'
myarra2[37] = 'John Stuart Mill'
myarray[38] = 'To the nearest whole percent, what percent of the area of a square is taken up by an inscribed circle? Make sure your answer is given rounded to the nearest whole percent.'
myarra2[38] = '79%'
myarray[39] = 'What writer, born in Natchez, Mississippi in 1908, moved to Chicago in 1935 and Paris in 1950? His first book was a collection of short stories titled Uncle Tom’s Children. This was soon followed by his most widely read work, in which the main character Bigger Thomas kills a white woman.'
myarra2[39] = 'Richard Wright'
myarray[40] = 'What king divided England into four earldoms in 1017? He also became the King of Denmark and Norway and married the widow of his rival, Ethelred.'
myarra2[40] = 'Canute II (accept Canute or Canute the Great)'
myarray[41] = 'When Great Britain asked its scientists to create a death ray to knock enemy aircraft out of the sky, what did the scientists build them? Robert Watson-Watt is given most of the credit for this discovery, which was built during a few months in 1935 and put into a complex network over the next few years which aided Britain during German attacks.'
myarra2[41] = 'Radar'
myarray[42] = 'Give the common name of the cyclic imide with chemical formula C6H4COSO2NH. It is a few hundred times sweeter than sucrose and has been banned in some countries as a food additive.'
myarra2[42] = 'Saccharin'
myarray[43] = 'What Greek goddess is similar to the Phoenician goddess Astarte? In some later myths she is married to Ares, though she is usually considered the wife of the fire god Hephaestus. She is sometimes credited for starting the Trojan War because she promised Paris the fairest woman in the world even though that woman was married to a king.'
myarra2[43] = 'Aphrodite'
myarray[44] = 'What playwright wrote The Master Builder, An Enemy of the People, Hedda Gabler, A Doll’s House, and Peer Gynt?'
myarra2[44] = 'Henrik Ibsen'
myarray[45] = 'What jazz artist and band leader recorded Black and Tan Fantasy in 1927 and It Don’t Mean A Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing in 1932?'
myarra2[45] = 'Duke Ellington'
myarray[46] = 'What branch of biology includes subbranches titled developmental, pathological, comparative, plant, animal, and human?'
myarra2[46] = 'Anatomy'
myarray[47] = 'What mythological King of Corinth chained up Death until Ares came to Death’s aid? When death did take him, this character told his wife not to bury his body or make sacrifices. He was allowed to go back to Earth to punish her and was thus allowed to live to old age. For cheating Death, he has been sentenced to an eternity of fruitless labor.'
myarra2[47] = 'Sisyphus'
myarray[48] = 'What disease, also called epidemic parotitis, is caused by a virus and characterized by painful swelling in front of and below the ears? Children are commonly immunized for it at the same time as measles and rubella.'
myarra2[48] = 'Mumps'
myarray[49] = 'Important people in the history of which city include Jan Zelivsky, Jan Zizka, and Jan Hus? It contains the Church of St. George, St. Vitus’ Cathedral, Staromestske Square, and the Charles Bridge, and it is located in Bohemia.'
myarra2[49] = 'Prague'
myarray[50] = 'What is the Welsh name shared by two American locations? It is disputed whether the name came from the Welsh word for brow or a famous Welsh poet. They are located in Scottsdale, Arizona and Spring Green, Wisconsin and were the homes and workplaces of Frank Lloyd Wright.'
myarra2[50] = 'Taliesin'
myarray[51] = 'What was the first movie released in stereophonic sound? Because most theatres were not ready for it in 1940, it was not given a true national release until its fiftieth anniversary in 1990. It featured the music of Leopold Stowkowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra and the animation of Disney.'
myarra2[51] = 'Fantasia'
myarray[52] = 'Which queen used her thirty-six year reign to restore order, reform the Catholic church, and support education in her country? She was the grandmother of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the leader of the Spanish Inquisition but is best remembered around here for buying and sponsoring three ships.'
myarra2[52] = 'Isabella'
myarray[53] = 'The existence of which particle was first proposed in 1930 by Pauli? It is unaffected by strong or electromagnetic forces and is therefore very good at penetrating through matter. For establishing the existence of one of the three types of this particle, the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Steinberger, Lederman, and Schwartz.'
myarra2[53] = 'Neutrino'
myarray[54] = 'What whole numbers are always triangular and always have the sum of the reciprocals of their divisors add up to two? It is not known whether there are any odd examples, and number theory often links them with Mersenne numbers. The four lowest such numbers are six, twenty-eight, four hundred ninety-six, and eight thousand one hundred twenty-eight. In these numbers, all of the factors of the number other than the number itself add up to that number.'
myarra2[54] = 'Perfect numbers'
myarray[55] = 'You must get both parts of the answer correct. What pair of medals was established by Frederic Melcher in 1922 and 1938? One is named after an 18th century publisher, the other after a 19th century illustrator. The former has been won by Madeleine L’Engle, Scott O’Dell, and Hugh Lofting, while the latter has been won by David Macaulay and Maurice Sendak. These medals are awarded by the American Library Association to the most distinguished American children’s book and the most distinguished American picture book for children.'
myarra2[55] = 'Newberry and Caldecott Medals'
myarray[56] = 'What British writer had a great skill at aphorisms, including: "Clear your mind of cant," "Marriage has many pains, but celibacy has no pleasures," and "Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel"? He was a well-known critic and lexicographer in the eighteenth century and the subject of a famous biography by James Boswell.'
myarra2[56] = 'Samuel Johnson'
myarray[57] = 'What unit is equivalent to a weber per square meter? It is the most common unit of magnetic flux density and is named after a Serb-American who invented a widely used coil that is also named after him.'
myarra2[57] = 'Tesla'
myarray[58] = 'Which Civil War battle, also called the Battle of Pittsburg Landing, resulted in 10,000 casualties on each side? It started with a surprise attack by General A.S. Johnston against General Grant and ended with Grant recovering lost ground and Johnston mortally wounded. It took place in April, 1862 in southwestern Tennessee.'
myarra2[58] = 'Shiloh'
myarray[59] = 'What suffix is added to the following words to make them plural: Carcinoma, Dogma, Lemma, Miasma, Schema.'
myarra2[59] = '-TA'
myarray[60] = 'What female athlete from East St. Louis was chosen by Sports Illustrated as Illinois’ greatest sports figure from the twentieth century? She won six Olympic medals, including three gold medals, and set the heptathlon world record in 1988. She was the sister-in-law of Florence Griffith-Joyner.'
myarra2[60] = 'Jackie Joyner-Kersee'
myarray[61] = 'Book I denies the existence of innate ideas, Book II discusses experience, Book III discusses language, and Book IV discusses knowledge. Name this major empiricist work from 1690 by John Locke.'
myarra2[61] = 'An Essay Concerning Human Understanding'
myarray[62] = 'What element was discovered by Johan August Arfvedson in Sweden in 1817? Compounds including this element can be used for battery anodes, high strength ceramics, high-temperature lubricants, and treatments for manic depressive disorders. This alkali metal is the lightest of the solid elements.'
myarra2[62] = 'Lithium'
myarray[63] = 'Which author wrote the sentence, "It had already begun on that day when he first wrote his age in two ciphers and his cousin McCaslin brought him for the first time to the camp, the big woods, to earn for himself from the wilderness the name and state of hunter provided he in his turn were humble and enduring enough." It appears in The Bear, which is a chapter from the novel Go Down, Moses.'
myarra2[63] = 'William Faulkner'
myarray[64] = 'What poem consists of five sections which have several vignettes linked by the search for the Holy Grail? It was published in 1922 after being shortened based on the advice of Ezra Pound. Name this work by T.S. Eliot.'
myarra2[64] = 'The Waste Land'
myarray[65] = 'Who first used the term fission to describe the appearance of barium in neutron-bombarded uranium and was in the group which discovered proactinium-231? She fled Nazi Germany for Sweden in 1938.'
myarra2[65] = 'Lise Meitner'
myarray[66] = 'It began trading February 5, 1971 with a base value of 100. It skyrocketed at the end of 1999, taking less than two months to go from 3000 to 4000 points, and going up over 80% for the year. What is this composite index which used to only include small companies but now includes Intel and Microsoft?'
myarra2[66] = 'NASDAQ'
myarray[67] = 'Which physical effect is analagous to a Christoffel voltage? It is numerically equal to two times the velocity of an object times the angular velocity of a frame of reference times the sine of the latitude of the frame of reference, and is significant in ballistics and the study of sunspots.'
myarra2[67] = 'Coriolis Effect (or Force or Deflection)'
myarray[68] = 'What bandleader’s career was cut short when his plane disappeared over the English Channel in 1944? His band’s best-known songs were Tuxedo Junction, In the Mood, and Moonlight Serenade.'
myarra2[68] = 'Glenn Miller'
myarray[69] = 'Name the electronics engineer who started his own firm in 1972, left it to be a consultant in 1981, and in 1985 built a computer capable of over one billion calculations per second. He did most of his work in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin before dying in 1996. He named his computers, with models such as the 1-M, X-MP, and Y-MP, after himself.'
myarra2[69] = 'Seymour Cray'
myarray[70] = 'This collected work of poetry, whose title translates into English as Quatrains, were not translated well into English until 750 years after they were written. The translation by Edward Fitzgerald contains lines such as "A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--and Thou." Name these works of Persian poetry by Omar Khayyam.'
myarra2[70] = 'Rubáiyát'
myarray[71] = 'What country is the home of writers Robertson Davies, Margaret Atwood, and Lucy Maud Montgomery? Montgomery wrote Anne of the Green Gables.'
myarra2[71] = 'Canada'
myarray[72] = 'What eight-letter verb has the transitive meanings to cause to lose flesh so as to become very thin and to make feeble? It has the intransitive meaning to waste away physically. It begins with the letter e.'
myarra2[72] = 'Emaciate'
myarray[73] = 'At the left there is a window, and at the top there is a chandelier. The woman on the right is wearing a green dress, while the man on the left is wearing black clothing with a black hat. In the back at center is a mirror, in which the artist is visible. Name this 1434 painting, currently on display at the National Gallery in London, by Jan van Eyck.'
myarra2[73] = 'The Arnolfini Wedding (accept Arnolfini Portrait or Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife; prompt on Arnolfini)'
myarray[74] = 'Samuel Beckett helped him write one of his most famous works. Another of his books is set during a day in 1904. The character Stephen Daedalus, based on himself, appeared in two works, including “Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man”. Name this author of “Ulysses” and “Finnegan’s Wake.”'
myarra2[74] = 'James Augustine Aloysius Joyce'
myarray[75] = 'A Lagrange point exists where this type of force and the gravitational force cancel between two bodies, so anything placed there stays in the same place relative to the two bodies. This pseudoforce only appears to exist in certain reference frames, and is actually due to a real force of a similar name. Name this force once thought to cause revolving objects to pull away from the object around which they revolve, whose name comes from the Latin for “center fleeing.”'
myarra2[75] = 'Centrifugal force (do NOT accept centripetal)'
myarray[76] = 'Born on July 17, 1954 in Hamburg, this politician heads the Christian Democratic Union. Other accomplishments include an appointment as the Minister for the Environment and Reactor Safety, as well as breaking the Social Democrat/Green coalition’s hold on the Bundesrat. One thing that may interest you more than these accomplishments, however, is that she is a woman. Name this person who has succeeded Gerhard Schroder as the chancellor of Germany.'
myarra2[76] = 'Angela Merkel (accept (Angela) Kasner)'
myarray[77] = 'The surname’s the same. Nigel is a British violinist. John Pendleton was the Secretary of the Navy under Millard Fillmore. Arthur Edward was a British Colonial governor over Hong Kong, West Australia, and Sierra Leone. Adam plays second base for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Robert was a US Senator and Attorney General for his brother. John Fitzgerald was a US president who was shot and killed in Texas.'
myarra2[77] = 'Kennedy'
myarray[78] = 'Some of his early works were published under the pen name Zachary Stone, and he published his first international bestselling novel, ”Eye of the Needle,” in 1978. Name this British author of “A Dangerous Fortune,” “Hornet Flight,” and “Pillars of the Earth,” whose most recent novel is “Whiteout.”'
myarra2[78] = 'Ken Follett'
myarray[79] = 'This Italian man was born in Florence in 1454 and died in 1512. He sailed along the South American coast and proclaimed it to be a new continent, rather than an extension of the East Indies. Name this famed mapmaker and friend of Christopher Columbus, who the Americas were supposedly named after.'
myarra2[79] = 'Amerigo Vespucci (prompt on Amerigo)'
myarray[80] = 'First studied by Thomas Graham in 1861, the eight types of these include sols and solid sols. Particles in these scatter light to a degree directly proportional to concentration, but proportional to the cube of the size of the particles, an effect known as the Tyndall effect. Name this type of mixture between homogeneous and heterogeneous, consisting of a dispersed phase and continuous phase. More common types include foams, aerosols, and emulsions.'
myarra2[80] = 'Colloids'
myarray[81] = 'Born with the name Jean, this man was only eight when Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses. Later, he published Institutes of Christian Religion, a seminal text in theology. Name this man, a notable Protestant reformer who is often associated with the belief of predestination. He is probably better known by many as the partner in crime to Hobbes'
myarra2[81] = 'John Calvin'
myarray[82] = 'This novel, published in 1936, follows three southern families. The two primary narrators are Rosa Coldfield and Quentin Compson, who tells the story of one of the characters to his father and his roommate at Harvard, Shrevlin. One of the characters comes to Mississippi from Virginia to get rich and become the head of a powerful family. Name this novel about Thomas Sutpen by William Faulkner. Its title refers to a Biblical son of King David.'
myarra2[82] = 'Absalom, Absalom!'
myarray[83] = 'Directed by William Wyler, this is one of several films based on a book by Lew Wallis of the same title. It was produced with over 300 sets, and filmed in wide-screen almost three times wider than it was tall. One famous scene used 8,000 extras on 18 acres and no special effects, which is understandable because it premiered in 1959. Name this film, one of only three to win 11 Academy Awards, which starred Charlton Heston as the title character.'
myarra2[83] = 'Ben-Hur'
myarray[84] = 'Boeing and Airbus. Proctor and Gamble, Lever Brothers, and Colgate-Palmolive. Coke and Pepsi. Disney and AOL Time Warner. All of the sets of these firms share a market structure that is characterized by mutual interdependence. Because of this, this market structure is often associated with John Nash’s game theory, because it could determine whether there is collusion. Name this market structure where several large firms dominate the industry and often use excessive advertising.'
myarra2[84] = 'Oligopoly'
myarray[85] = 'A narrator named “Mrs. De Winter” tells the story of a young girl who is working in the French Riviera where she meets a wealthy Englishman. The opening line is, “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.” Name this work, published in 1938, by Daphne du Maurier.'
myarra2[85] = 'Rebecca'
myarray[86] = 'A possible origin for its name may be the name of a region in Normandy noted for styles of songs with topical themes. This style of theater began to flourish in the 1880’s and reached a peak in the Gilded Age of the 1920’s, featuring extravagant theaters showing acts ranging from music, to acrobats, to magicians, to animals, to performances by intellectuals and celebrities of all kinds. Name this style of theater that declined with the advent of the cinema and featured constantly revolving acts in just a single show. Its name is often considered a corruption of the phrase “voice of the city” or “voix de ville” (VWAH day VEE).'
myarra2[86] = 'Vaudeville'
myarray[87] = 'Exhibited by some aphids, rotifers, and whiptail lizards, this method of reproduction is preferred by many polyploid species. Variants include apomixis, a version for plants where seeds are not fertilized, and gynogenesis, where sperm is needed to stimulate eggs but do not contribute any genetic material. Name this type of reproduction, defined as the development of an embryo without male fertilization, that takes its name from the Greek for “virgin birth.”'
myarra2[87] = 'Parthenogenesis (prompt on asexual reproduction)'
myarray[88] = 'Give the full name. It currently has 268 members, and has big plans for April 22, 2006. The chair is David Reinstein, and it coordinates such things as the new moderator certification and the tryouts for Team Illinois. In relation to the activity you’re currently playing, what does IHSSBCA stand for?'
myarra2[88] = 'Illinois High School Scholastic Bowl Coaches Association (prompt on IHSSBCA)'
myarray[89] = 'He lived from 483-565, and his uncle, an Emperor, helped care for him. Born Flavius Petrus Sabbatius Iustinianus, his career featured many military victories. Name this Byzantine emperor, whose most famous legacy is his namesake code.'
myarra2[89] = 'Justinian I'
myarray[90] = 'This work published in 1903 was banned by Italy in 1929. Critic Maxwell Geismer said it was “a beautiful prose poem.” The protagonist’s owner is killed by a group of Yeehat Indians, after which the protagonist is released, where he has to learn a new way of life. Name this book about a dog named Buck, written by Jack London.'
myarra2[90] = 'The Call of the Wild'
myarray[91] = 'This prolific composer wrote over 600 works, identified now by the numbers Ludwig Köchel (KER-shull) assigned them in the 1800s. Among these works are 41 numbered symphonies, the last of which is nicknamed the Jupiter. Name this composer who died before his 36th birthday while writing a Requiem.'
myarra2[91] = 'Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart'
myarray[92] = 'Also called “compulsory purchase,” what power is granted to the U.S. government at the end of the fifth amendment? It allows the government to take private property for public use as long as it justly compensates the owner, and is exercised when roadways are being built and private property lies in the way.'
myarra2[92] = 'Eminent domain (prompt on compulsory purchase)'
myarray[92] = 'This philosopher invented the concept of Wille zur Macht (VEEL zur MOCKT), a driving force of nature caused by creative energy. To him, the ideal person was the overman, someone who can contain their passions and use them toward creative ends. Name this German author of Thus Spake Zarathustra (ZARR-a-THOO-struh) and The Anti-Christ.'
myarra2[92] = 'Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (NEE-chuh)'
myarray[93] = 'Though she was English, what poetess was nicknamed “My little Portuguese” by her husband Robert? The nickname came from her best known work, a collection of original love sonnets that she pretended were translations. Called Sonnets from the Portuguese, it includes the famous line “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.”'
myarra2[93] = 'Elizabeth Barrett Browning'
myarray[94] = 'What kind of music file can be either Type 0 or Type 1? Every file has one or more tracks, each with a certain instrument that needs a corresponding patch to synthesize its data. Name this music file format released in 1983 as a compact, though auditorially unfaithful, way to store musical events, by keeping a record of when every note starts and stops instead of the actual audio data.'
myarra2[94] = 'MIDI (accept .MID or Musical Instrument(s) Digital Interface)'
myarray[95] = 'In 1902, Italian anarchist Gennaro Rubino unsuccessfully tried to assassinate this European monarch, but had Rubino’s attempt been successful, the lives of many African rubber and ivory workers might have been saved. Although he commissioned many buildings and projects in his country of Belgium, he is probably better remembered for his zeal for overseas colonies. Name this ruler of Belgium who claimed he wanted his share of the ”magnificent African cake” at a conference in Berlin.'
myarra2[95] = 'Leopold II or Leopold Louis-Philippe Marie Victor (prompt on Leopold; require II if only Leopold is given; II not necessary in second answer)'
myarray[96] = 'First published at age 15, this man is a leading computer scientist in the field of cellular automata, and in 2002 published a book about them called A New Kind of Science. He had his own company publish the book to keep the price as low as possible. This company, named after himself, is better known as the creators of Mathematica, a computer algebra system which debuted in 1988. Name this Brit whose last name is German for tungsten.'
myarra2[96] = 'Steven Wolfram'
myarray[97] = 'This 1600 play set in the Forest of Arden is said to be based off of Thomas Lodge’s Rosalydne. In the final scene of this play, four couples are married, among them Silvius and Phebe and Touchstone and Audrey. Name this Shakespearean work centering around Celia, Aliena, and Rosalind.'
myarra2[97] = 'As You Like It'
myarray[98] = 'It occurred in 1819, after a desire to expand the nation’s borders. It involved a future President of the United States and a Spanish official, and bore their names. Name this treaty that redrew the boundary of Spanish control to above Texas, and also ceded Florida to the United States.'
myarra2[98] = 'Adams-Onís Treaty'
myarray[99] = 'You can give the full name or the abbreviation. Formed in 1919, what international organization determines standards in chemistry, such as chemical nomenclature, atomic weights, and the names of new elements?'
myarra2[99] = 'The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (accept IUPAC)'
myarray[100] = 'Born in Canton, New York, this artist led an active life that included football and boxing at Yale University, and traveling to witness the Rough Riders’ charge at San Juan Hill in the Spanish-American War. Despite this, he still managed to become morbidly obese and die of an appendectomy. Notable works of his include The Hunters’ Supper and Shotgun Hospitality, which followed his famous theme of depiction of life in the American West. Name this creator of Coming and Going of the Pony Express, and Bronco Buster.'
myarra2[100] = 'Frederic Remington'
document.write(''+myarray[randomnum]+'
'+'Answer: "'+myarra2[randomnum]+'"
(Highlight in between quotes to reveal answer)')