The “Whitman in California “Edition of the Pub Quiz

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

We still have tables available for tonight’s Quiz. Phone (530) 756-4556 to reserve yours.

 

Some regular Pub Quiz participant have joked about hacking into my computer to see what sort of research I do each week to research, write and wordsmith new Pub Quiz questions. Because I like to inspire research, if not illegal activity such as black-hat hacking, I’ll share with you a resource that I discovered this week, and which has already inspired a number of Pub Quiz questions. It’s the Phrontistery, which is a noun meaning “thinking place.” Winnie the Pooh had a thinking place (he actually called it a “thinking spot”), and now, so do I, at least when I want to think about obscure adjectives, such as the long list of “Adjectives of Relation” found at http://phrontistery.info/genitive.html. Expect to see at least one of those words on tonight’s Pub Quiz.

 

This coming Thursday people who love poetry, Japanese culture, and travel stories are in for a treat, for Alan Botsford, Professor of American Literature at Kanto Gakuin University in Yokohama, Japan, will be giving a public reading at the John Natsoulas Gallery. Botsford’s new book, Walt Whitman of Cosmic Folklore (Sage Hill Press, 2010), is filled with stories, essays, poems and even dialogues about everyone’s favorite grey-bearded poet, Walt Whitman. One of Allen Ginsberg’s most famous poems, “A Supermarket in California,” imagines running into the great poet down 1-80 in Berkeley. Here’s a short excerpt:

I saw you, Walt Whitman, childless, lonely old grubber, poking among the meats in the refrigerator and eyeing the grocery boys.

I heard you asking questions of each: Who killed the pork chops?What price bananas?Are you my Angel?

I wandered in and out of the brilliant stacks of cans following you, and followed in my imagination by the store detective.

We strode down the open corridors together in our solitary fancy tasting artichokes, possessing every frozen delicacy, and never passing the cashier.

If you would like to overhear a fuller conversation about Whitman, or the many other topics that might come up during Professor Botsford’s talk and reading this Thursday, please visit http://www.poetryindavis.com to find out some of the specifics. We start at 8pm at 521 First Street.

Tonight’s Pub Quiz will feature questions on ebook readers, inebriation, John Thune and other Republicans who might challenge President Obama in 2012, Alfred Hitchcock, edible animals, the medieval history of the Iberian peninsula, investment acronyms, the police and other law-enforcers, famous baseball players, really old tree parts, the legacy of Herbert Hoover, architecture, unusual words (of course!), really popular music, dancing Aggies, Welsh gorgons, fruits and vegetables, swords, plows, crop-dusting, countries of the world, popular characters, those who are named Garfield, organs, Monty Python, economists and Shakespeare.

See you tonight for the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. I’ve heard that participating in a spelling bee is much more harrowing that participating in a Pub Quiz. If you would like to see a local celebrity on stage this weekend or next as she or he is grilled by judges on the spelling of difficult and obscure words, then you should check out The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, the play that opens this weekend t the Main Theatre on the UC Davis campus. The Washington Post (my former hometown newspaper) called the show “Funniest Thing on Seven Consonants.” Also this weekend, Pub Quiz irregular Gia Batista will be starring in a production of Romeo and Juliet in the Arboretum. To find out more about both productions, see http://dateline.ucdavis.edu/dl_detail.lasso?id=12913.

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Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

The Labor Day Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

Happy Labor Day! Happy end of the summer! Happy celebrations of workers! Happy day off to spend time with family, with a televised football game, and with your friends tonight at the Pub Quiz!

I am reminded of two sorts of celebrations every Labor Day. The first has been well-represented by Walt Whitman in his “varied carol” to America and its workers, that part of Leaves of Grass called “I Hear America Singing”:

I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear;

Those of mechanics—each one singing his, as it should be, blithe and strong;

The carpenter singing his, as he measures his plank or beam,

The mason singing his, as he makes ready for work, or leaves off work;

The boatman singing what belongs to him in his boat—the deckhand singing on the steamboat deck;

The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench—the hatter singing as he stands;

The wood-cutter’s song—the ploughboy’s, on his way in the morning, or at the noon intermission, or at sundown;

The delicious singing of the mother—or of the young wife at work—or of the girl sewing or washing—Each singing what belongs to her, and to none else;

The day what belongs to the day—At night, the party of young fellows, robust, friendly,

Singing, with open mouths, their strong melodious songs.

This poem resonates for me for familial reasons, as well as lyrical. My grandfather, Marlin Jones, was run out of Oklahoma by hired strike-breakers who didn’t care for his union organizing activities. He heard one afternoon that he was to be roughed up, even killed, the next day, so he brought all the money he had to the bus station and asked how far he could go on what he had. The answer, Winchester, Indiana, ended up being the birthplace of my father and his sister. My father, who worked in a sporting good store and a glass factory before turning to a life in theater, would tell me that story at least once a year, often on Labor Day.

And then I am also reminded that it was 18 years ago this weekend that I had the good fortune to marry my wife Kate, with dozens of friends and family joining us in Hinsdale, Illinois. Tradition says that I should buy her something porcelain on our 18th anniversary. Of course, I don’t know that such a gift would work with the wind-tunnel décor of our home. I shall consider other options.

I hope you have left open the option of joining us this evening for the Pub Quiz. Tonight you can expect to labor upon the answers to questions on the following topics: citrus, telecommuting, Joan Baez, Cinderella, UC Davis, drums, NFL football teams that you’d sooner see on Sunday than Monday, rhinos, early American history, unusual one-syllable words that begin with the letter S, a famous suicide, reality TV shows (ones that, again, I have never watched), Marvel superheroes, a hormone jest, religions of the world, The Beatles, Kevin Spacey, Polish history, friends of Clinton, films that have been nominated for more than a half-dozen Oscars, Europe, young actors, mathematics, your favorite independent bookstores, the heroes of orioles, and a play by everyone’s favorite bard.

See you tonight!

Your Quizmaster

P.S.  You can also follow your Quizmaster on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

The Combating Social Isolation Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

            If you didn’t respond to my earlier reminder to confirm that you would like to stay on this mailing list, then this will be the last newsletter that you will receive that is chock full of hints about an upcoming iteration of the Pub Quiz. If you have confirmed as much via the Aweber link, then you are all set. You’ll have one more chance to confirm via next week’s newsletter. Many of our old and favorite friends have been graduating to other cities this summer, so I hope you will recruit some new friends to join us at Monday Nights. For instance, right now we have a bunch of tables open, and I would glad to see you and your team seated at one of them. If you bring five or more newbies, count on me to spring for the sweet potato fries – just let me know.

            It’s a lot easier in 2010 to do Pub Quiz research than when I was a Pub Quiz regular a decade ago. Faraway friends and relatives send me question ideas, my RSS reader collects topical and substantive details from the day’s news and from history, and a variety of iPhone aps present me possible new topics any time that I care to check. As you might have read, this past week Netflix started streaming movies to iPhones, as well, making it easier for me to review certain scenes for favorite and memorable movie quotations. This new opportunity to stream content though one’s smart-phone represents a continuation of the trend of personalized media; we have moved from movie theaters to television sets to laptop computers to watch movies, and now we can enjoy, on the smallest possible screen, our favorite cinematic offerings in any location and at all times. At UC Davis, for instance, faculty who teach film classes in many cases will no longer need to hold screenings of assigned films or even make them available in a media library, for every student at UCD has access to a computer, and most of them carry around smart-phones as well. A movie theater in every pocket!

            Of course, as you might have read me being quoted in today’s Sacramento Bee (http://www.sacbee.com/2010/08/30/2991705/netflixs-iphone-app-adds-another.html), there are potential dark sides of this move to ubiquitous connectedness to streaming video. With these advancements in personal tech and media, we face greater dangers of isolation and the further fragmentation of cultural consumerism. We can almost imagine a scenario whereby a married couple will sit in bed before going to sleep each watching their separate streamed Netflix movie using headphones, and never having to converse once. Gone is the age when we would fight over TV remotes. Now, instead, we can all remain in our separate corners. That is, unless we still seek out communities and camaraderie along with our entertainment, as so many of us choose to do Monday evenings at the Pub Quiz. Almost nobody shares a high five after watching a movie on an iPod or even earning a high score on a video game. But we, we get to share them every week, even if it’s a quotation (what film do you think is most quotable – Animal House?) from a one inch by one inch movie that has us so excited.

            This week Pub Quiz participants will get excited about questions about Malta, asking directions, ultimate luxury goods, butterflies, cheap food, three birds, insects, energetic particles and waves, the midwest, five-letter adjectives beginning with the letter S, pop music, religion, song and dance men, tallest mountains, hives, flight patterns, the shoulder of Orion, miracles and castles, members of the House of Lords, famous sequels, New Orleans, China, Jack Kevorkian, Newton, the name of a rose, and unions that begat Presidents.

            I hope you can join us tonight at 8 for the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. Danny Romero will be performing his poetry on Wednesday, September 1st at 8pm. You should join us! Read below, or visit http://www.poetryindavis.com for more information.

Danny Romero was born and raised in Los Angeles. He has degrees from University of California, Berkeley and Temple University in Philadelphia, where he taught writing for many years. He currently teaches at Sacramento City College. Romero’s poetry and short fiction have been published in literary journals throughout the country, such as Bilingual Review, Colorado Review, Drumvoices Revue, Paterson Literary Review, Pembroke Magazine, Permafrost and Solo. His work can also be found in a number of anthologies, including West of the West: Imagining California (1989), Pieces of the Heart: New Chicano Fiction (1993), Under the Fifth Sun: Latino Literature from California (2003), Latinos in Lotusland: An Anthology of Contemporary Southern California Literature (2008) and Pow Wow: Charting the Faultlines in the American Experience – Short Fiction from Then to Now (2009). He is the author of the novel Calle 10 (1996) and two chapbooks of poetry. A poetry collection is forthcoming from Bilingual Press. He lives with his son in Sacramento, California.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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The Linguistic Adornment Edition of the Pub Quiz

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            I came home one afternoon last week to find a frightening artifact on the kitchen table: a long and thick lock of hair. My four year-old, as many four year olds will do, had started playing the adult scissors, and decided that a first haircut was in order. You are probably wondering why I’ve never had my child’s hair cut, only a few bangs trimmed so he could see. We so adore his hair, and we’ve let it go this far, that now we can’t bear the thought. Plus, its fun to watch him strut down E Street like Samson, shrugging off the comments to me about what beautiful hair my daughter has. When the fateful day of the haircut finally comes, I shall post before and after pictures at https://www.yourquizmaster.com.

            The sight of the lone lock on the table almost inspired a poem right there on the spot. Of course, it wouldn’t have been the first time. As any English Major could tell you (and it’s always good strategy to bring an English Major to the Pub Quiz), Alexander Pope wrote one of his most famous poems about such an incident: The Rape of the Lock. If you were fortunate enough to take a Pope class with retired UC Davis professor Max Byrd, you might remember that Pope compares the taking of a single lock of heroine Belinda’s hair to the abduction of Helen of Troy, (the aftermath of which we can read about in long poems by Homer). You might also recall this Pope couplet:

 

Fair Tresses Man’s Imperial Race insnare,

And Beauty draws us with a single Hair.

 

            Although many enjoyed Pope’s tempest-in-a-teapot humor, I suppose that today a poet might not find success using the central metaphor of this poem, for “rape” is one of those terms that is so charged and inflammatory that one can’t use it in a casual, metaphorical, or certainly humorous way. In 1998 The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda recognized rape during a time of war as a potential crime against humanity, and women’s crisis centers have taught awareness about sexual assault for almost 40 years. Environmentalists once casually used phrases like the “rape of the earth,” but I don’t believe that language is often used today. I suppose words drop from the working vocabulary of most Americans every year, but I’m sure there are ways that we can compensate with new linguistic discoveries. I will do what I can to help you adorn your word choices with new flavors and varieties of diction.

            Speaking of language, and poetry, as a poet I enjoy writing these Pub Quiz Newsletter hint paragraphs, for I’m forced to think associatively and analogically, to give the impression of my meaning, rather than to just come out and say it plainly. Perhaps you’ll be inspired to think or write the same way, and compose something of your own. At tonight’s Pub Quiz you will hear questions about cascades, reaching out, The Beatles, flowers, personable and familiar DJs, stomaching jazz, Bristol, our heavy earth, decorations, mammoth caves, famous people born in 1947, Emmy-winning TV shows, the Commonwealth of Nations, The Simpsons, no Betty White (unfortunately), the aforementioned Homer, Scottish culture, pairings of Oscar-winning actors, baseball (two questions!), African-American actors, and a play be Shakespeare!

            Last week at the sold-out Pub Quiz we were joined by three celebrity participants. I expect at least two such luminaries this evening. And I hope that you can join us as well tonight for the Pub Quiz!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

 

 

P.S. This coming October Pub Quiz participant Scott Fischbein is participating in bikeathon to raise money for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. If you would like to support him in this effort, please visit http://main.nationalmssociety.org/goto/scottfischbein .

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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The Instrumental Jazz Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Although my parents played some jazz on the phonograph when I was a child, it was actually my younger brother Oliver who introduced me to jazz. Having dabbled in the genre here and there, mostly by listening to evening jazz on KDVS and KXJZ, I resolved to teach a class at UC Davis called “Jazz and Literature,” mostly so I could again teach the short story “Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin and some of Langston Hughes’ jazz poems. Oliver came to my rescue that quarter by loaning me his jazz library of about 20 books, and his 500+ CDs. It took me weeks to do the research, but of course I could do it while reading books and playing with the children. Now the Pandora Miles Davis Channel gets ample play in our house, so that means I also get to hear John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Lester Young. I also know that I can choose freely from the huge jazz CD and record collection at KDVS when I am playing bumper music for my public affairs radio show, for I know that I won’t accidentally encounter any swearing. What’s your favorite kind of instrumental music? You may have a chance to answer a question or two on that subject this evening if you can join us at the Pub Quiz.

            Another form of low-cost entertainment is the local poetry reading. This coming Thursday at 8pm at the John Natsoulas Gallery the local poet and publisher Jill Stengel will be performing her work. Jill runs a “micropress” called “a+bend press” that has published more than 41 chapbook titles, with more in the works. How lucky we are to have her as a cultural leader in our city of Davis! Jill’s own work, including the chapbooks lagniappe, late may, and may(be) can be viewed online at www.dusie.org, and her first full-length collection is due out in early 2011 from Black Radish Books. Having lived for many years in Los Angeles and Davis, Jill will be giving her first Davis reading on Thursday, and I get to host the event. You are invited to join us. For more information, see http://www.poetryindavis.com.

            On tonight’s Pub Quiz, you should expect questions on buying and selling, Apple, Inc., Irate Robbers, movies whose narrative structures resemble those of video games, special months, Jersey Shore (forgive me), songs in Spanish that you might sing in the shower, Football, prime numbers, research conducted by Men’s Health magazine, American cities, a preference for Pablo Picasso, Missouri, The 4th of July, rich celebrities who are nevertheless difficult to dislike, blundering helmets, palindromes, Republicans, stoneworks (kinda), the New York Yankees, radical jingles, college basketball, Coney Island, Walt Disney, government programs, legal terms, Valentine’s day, gravity bombs, tennis, New Orleans, and Shakespeare.

            I hope you can join us tonight for the most simultaneously raucous and intellectual Pub Quiz in town!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

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P.S. Inaugural player Rob Roy will be returning from Korea to play the Pub Quiz this evening. Greet him at table 12 or so if you see him.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

If you are a Davis resident, you are lucky to live in a city that cares so much about parks and bicycles. As I write this, I can see from my vantage point a juggler in Central Park (sometimes called Farmers’ Market Park) who somehow can juggle seven balls at once. If this guy were performing this feat in Boston or London, where I went to college and enjoyed interacting with all the buskers, he’d have a guitar case full of bills and change in front of him. But here in Davis, with so much wide-open space where one can practice one’s juggling, play Frisbee, or enjoy live music with a hundred or more friends picnicking nearby, such a sight is almost typical. Some of the people walking by in pairs are laughing, clearly committed to their conversations, and the Davisites biking by are wearing helmets, so obviously they value bike safety and won’t be distracted; neither party thinks to look up as the juggler’s ostentatious ovals become more and more elliptical.

I was thinking about our parks and playgrounds while out on outdoor adventures with my two sons in Davis this weekend. There’s a partially-shaded play structure off Elk Place in far North Davis that offers a view of farmland to the northeast, and almost a mile of bike paths to the south. As is the case with the juggler, we sometimes disregard such quotidian peace and beauty in Davis, having taken such outdoor leisure space for granted. Imagine being a child in a town where the city seems to be designed for play in the sunshine! The designers of our fair city were thinking of our such children when they imagined our city, especially after we had committed ourselves to supporting and making room for our bike-commuters. I learned from my friend Paul Dorn to associate our bike paths with retired Psychology Professor Bob Sommer, the author of many bike-centric (and train-centric) essays that you might have read in the Davis Enterprise. With more than 600 publications on his CV, Bob is what you might call a productive scholar, one who in the 1960s had a bicyclist’s vision of our city; Bob’s plan has benefited so many of us since, whether we use our available green geography for rest or play, for dining or for sports.

“Sports Geography” would make a great Pub Quiz topic. Other topics you should expect tonight include dialogic responses to movie taglines, rich proponents of economist Lawrence Summers, people named “Hutton,” Bank of America, two US states where you likely haven’t spent much time, the swordplay of angry and fated kings, supermodels, volcanoes, the US Constitution, CNN, guitarists, Tony-award-winning producers who have also taught acting, razorbacks, Nicaragua, three sports where Americans excel, poets laureate, San Francisco actors, South Asia, midwestern states, medicine, the territory ahead, CEOs, bears, statues, flight attendants, and Shakespeare.

I hope you will join us tonight. New faces and new teams are always welcome!

Your Quizmaster

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous

The Caught Mouse Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

I’m continually impressed with the energy and activism of our Pub Quiz participants. You might remember that one of our favorite long-time players, Meg, has left Davis to join Teach for America. She’s now inspiring young minds in towns and hamlets of the Mississippi Delta rather than the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Now another one of our Pub Quiz regulars has heeded the call to service, this time in Vietnam. Melissa Chordas has traveled to the Ba Vi Orphanage in rural northern Vietnam to provide desperately-needed support for the staff and orphans there. As she put it in a recent letter to the Davis Enterprise, the orphanage “is home to more than 35 infants and more than 40 school-aged children” and it “provides shelter and care for orphans who have lost one or both parents.” Melissa is working overseas because “Many orphanages in Vietnam are understaffed and the children are badly in need of attention and supplies. We have created [a] group to spread awareness about our outreach effort, gain support and share information about our fundraising efforts and our travels.” If you would like to find out more, and how you can help, visit http://bit.ly/baviorphanage. Congratulations to Melissa and her team for their humanitarian work on behalf of the neediest among us (and a special personal thanks to local teachers and caregivers who support Americans with disabilities).

This week’s Pub Quiz newsletter is a bit shorter and a bit later than I had planned, for I was called home to take care of our latest pet, a mouse that we unwillingly adopted some time last week. My four-year old, Truman, named the house mouse “Dolly,” and was not at all concerned that the mouse was recently spotted scampering beneath his bed just before bedtime. Although we had set out a number of small plastic “have-a-heart” traps, this mouse would somehow trigger them without ever stepping inside. The debate began about what more expeditious means we might use to find Dolly a new home (and perhaps a celestial one). Finally today I bought a deluxe, complex metal trap that not only immobilized Dolly within hours of setup, but also gave the kids a chance to see her continue to dine on the peanut butter that we had set out for her. And just now Truman and I drove Dolly out to a field where Dolly could be released and, the story goes, be reunited with her family. I may add a picture of proud animal lover Truman to the web version of this newsletter, so check yourquizmaster.com later for visual evidence of our adventure.

Speaking of adventure, what fun we will have tonight at the Pub Quiz! You can expect two questions about baked goods and desserts, at least two on ancient civilizations, and one or more apiece on topics such as favorite candy bars, Linda McCartney, the subject of one of my favorite Hoagy Carmichael songs, Star Trek, Chelsea Clinton, Lady Gaga and other four-syllable musicians, fatter verbs, human anatomy, countries separated by a common language (as George Bernard Shaw put it), platinum records, NBC, famous people with limited income potential, Yul Brynner (who I once saw perform in The King and I at the Kennedy Center), confederacies, loyalty and honor, going rogue, scary movies, famous dogs, mountain ranges, erotic thrillers, healthcare reforms, skipping to my lou, Sean Astin, John Coltrane, and Shakespeare. As far as we know, Shakespeare did not declare himself to be a vegetarian – that might have been impractical.

I hope you can join us tonight at 8 pm at 226 F Street for the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. You are also invited to attend Wednesday’s poetry reading with Nevada City Molly Fisk in the banquet room. We start at 8, with the open mic beginning at 9. See http://www.poetryindavis.com for more information.

Mouse Truman

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

I participated in an inspirational poetry reading in Lodi yesterday. In addition to the featured reader, the Starry Night Poetry Series at the Lodi Public Library featured an open mic by a great number of local poets, several of them over 70. Many of you youngsters would consider what I’ve just described to be a ho-hum affair, perhaps one that would confirm your suspicions about dull modern poetry readings. As the event unfolded, however, I was struck by how sharp, curious and witty the local poets were. One in particular, Jim Turner, who turns 85 this week, showed me recently-written poems that were intellectually and imaginatively vibrant: first-rate work. He read a couple poems before announcing that he didn’t have the breath to share his final poem, a long three-voiced work about a wife helping his husband struggle with PTSD after the Civil War. He asked me to read it, and I was delighted to do so – it reminded me of Frost’s “Death of the Hired Man” (see http://www.bartleby.com/118/3.html). I think my interpretation of the Turner poem touched the audience much more than any of the poems I had brought. It was a special moment, really moving.

So I began to wonder if poetry, and other such intellectual activities (such as researching Pub Quiz questions!) can keep us young. I look forward to finding out, and found some hints about the future from three old friends. During recent trips to Washington DC I took advantage of opportunities to enjoy long conversations with three East Coast journalists who I knew as a child. Former Natural History magazine editor Alan Ternes; former CBS news anchor (and member of the Johnson administration), Roy Meachum; and former Washington Post Religion Editor William MacKaye (of the famous DC MacKaye clan) were all born in the 1920s and early 1930s, and all three continue to impress me with their eloquence and intellectual rigor. And two of them are uncles! As a child, I didn’t realize how privileged I was to have such intellectual heroes in the family (counting, as well, my Mom and Dad).

Speaking of great journalists, all of us lost an American intellectual hero last Friday week with the passing of Daniel Schorr. NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday played a long remembrance of Schorr, and this coming Thursday afternoon at 5pm on KDVS (90.3) occasional Pub Quiz participant (and winner) Douglas Everett will feature his archived interviews with Daniel Schorr on “Radio Parallax.” If you get to hear the interview, you’ll be impressed by the cerebral acuity of this nonagenarian and protégé of Edward R. Murrow. He will be missed.

And how many Pub Quiz questions will you miss this evening? It depends on how much you know about the following topics: ubiquitous TV slogans, internet culture, today’s news, Aussies, gems, trucks, sports initials, organic compounds, Duke Ellington (also of a friend of my Uncle Roy), Native American tribal customs, multi-platinum albums, talk show rumors, this whole Shirley Sherrod scandal, superheroes, American authors, Uma, film planets, famous painters, matrimonio, Louise Mandrell, Bell Telephone Laboratories, two of my favorite poets, willful blindness, and German walls (but maybe not the ones you are thinking of).

I look forward to see you at this evening’s edition of the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. Ifyou haven’t done so already, check out the website of the Pub Quiz at https://www.yourquizmaster.com.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

For some people, summer is a time for major projects. Some will finally clean out the garage, visit a faraway country with the family, or reunite with old friends. For many academics, summer finally leaves one time to work on writing and research projects now that the distractions of the classroom and the faculty meeting room are finally behind us. As I might have mentioned last week, for his summer project, my friend James Kaelan is supporting his new novel, We’re Getting On, with a book tour from Los Angeles to Vancouver on his bicycle. He rolled into Davis Sunday night, and tonight he will be giving a reading just before Pub Quiz, at the Davis Avid Reader at 7:30. I will be MCing that event as well as our Quiz, so if you would like to see my professional schizophrenia on public display, I invite you to attend both events. And no one at the Avid Reader will require you to buy anything to enjoy the James Kaelan show. If you want to find out more about Kaelan’s bicycle odyssey, or see a picture of him on the cover of the current Poets and Writers magazine, visit http://www.zeroemissionbook.com/. If you want to register your interest in joining us at that event, visit http://bit.ly/zeroemission.

For me, one of my summer projects has been to imagine, research, write and wordsmith (with some help from an ingenious web designer) the completed webpage of the Pub Quiz. If you visit https://www.yourquizmaster.com, you will see a prior Pub Quiz, photographs from past quizzes, a list of some of the resources I use to research Pub Quiz questions, etc. I welcome your feedback or suggestions. Each of these newsletters will appear as a post, so I am now officially a blogger, though for a rather esoteric readership made up of bar-goers who, for some reason, usually jump right to the third paragraph. For a much more interesting blog by a frequent Pub Quiz participant, one that touches upon cupcakes, Davis cows and restaurants, and San Francisco street art by the elusive Banksy, visit http://blog.keithbradnam.com/. If you have a web-based or creative resource that you would like me to plug in a future newsletter, let me know. If you need help setting up your own blog or site, I could give you the name of my web designer.

Tonight’s Pub Quiz will feature five questions that you should really know the answer to. Really. That’s the subject of the five single-topic questions tonight. I’m hoping everyone will score in double digits (on the Quiz) this evening. Those teams that actually win prizes will most likely correctly answer questions about insurance companies, social web 2.0 applications, young and fated geniuses, clever riddles found in children’s books, Danes, graduates of the School of Rock, Olympians, frigidity, the day jobs of American Presidents, unusual words that begin with S as in “Sam,” electrical impulses, Mel Brooks movies, Benjamin Franklin’s business, cyborgs, bicameral elks, US states, World War II, classical music, villains and their henchmen, city nicknames, a guy named Merrick, Native Americans, Europeans, pretty actresses who somehow don’t seem substantive enough to have won Academy Awards, candles, fauxtobiographies (I just coined that – do you like it?), the US Senate, players getting kicked off their professional sports teams, and a really long Shakespeare play, such as Hamlet.

I expect tonight’s Pub Quiz to sell out, but you might want to reserve a table for a future Pub Quiz at (530) 756-4556. I hope to see you this evening at the James Kaelan reading at the Avid Reader, or at the Pub Quiz.

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

Three questions from last week’s quiz:

21.Books and Authors.What Pulitzer-Prize- winning 47-year old author wrote the novels The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (2000), and The Yiddish Policemen’s Union (2007)?

22.Name the Year. All of these events happened in the same year. What year was it? Gavin Newsom started marrying gay and lesbian people at SF City Hall, Janet Jackson’s wardrobe malfunctioned at the Superbowl, and, in Davis, people first started using both Harper Junior High and the Davis Wiki (at http://www.daviswiki.org).

23.Musical Instruments. You are probably familiar with the word that refers to the Hawaiian stringed lute that resembles a small guitar. Are there one, two, three or four repeated letters in that word? (As an aside, my favorite local player of this instrument is the KDVS DJ Gary Saylin.)

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous

The Zero Emissions Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

I’ve been impressed with the turnout at the Pub Quiz this summer, despite these being traditional vacation months. We can thank one of my favorite educational reformers, Horace Mann, among others for the timing of our summer vacations. In the 1840s, (a decade before becoming the founding President of Antioch College, alma mater of both my father and my wife Kate), Mann worried that crowding schoolchildren into humid classrooms would encourage the spread of diseases, and that the overstimulation of young minds would drive children to agitation, and even insanity. Oliver Wendell Holmes was a schoolchild around that time, and he must have agreed with Mann, for he once said, “Insanity is often the logic of an accurate mind overtaxed.” One can only conclude from this logic that you should bring your “accurate” and overtaxed mind tonight to answer some tough questions. As Holmes also said, “A man may fulfill the object of his existence by asking a question he cannot answer, and attempting a task he cannot achieve.” You can start on those tasks and questions tonight at 9!

Speaking of your regular attendance at the Quiz, it has been brought to my attention that sometimes on the same Monday night that the hostesses have turned away teams of players who wish to participate in the Quiz (as may be the case tonight), other teams have gladly enjoyed the entertainment and camaraderie that we have grown used to on Monday nights, but chosen to order almost no food or drink. Although I get to focus only on the fun and challenge of amusing you for a couple hours, I do recognize that is a business that pays for the time and labor of the excellent wait staff and barkeeps that keep you happy and nourished while I prattle on about Supreme Court Justices and educational reformers. So if you enjoy the show, please support the restaurant that provides you that show. Other folks (folks who don’t plan ahead or remember to call 756-4556 by Sunday or so) are often available to take your booth if you don’t fill it – sometimes you see these folks crowding around the bar, hoping that SportsCenter will provide them an advantage on questions numbers eight and twenty-nine.

In addition to making Pub Quiz happen, also supports the Poetry Night Reading Series. This coming Monday night, before Pub Quiz, the reading series brings UC Davis alumnus James Kaelan to town. You might have seen Kaelan on the cover of the current Poets and Writers magazine, talking about his Zero Emission Book Project book tour – Saturday he left Los Angeles on his BIKE, and he is stopping in cities and bookstores from LA to Vancouver as he wends his way up the West Coast this summer. He’ll be stopping at The Avid Reader on 2nd Street this coming Monday, July 19th. I’ll be hosting that event at 7:30, just before hosting our trivia event at 9, so this week I will have to read Kaelan’s novel We’re Getting On. To find out more about Kaelan’s bike tour (with maps, pictures and movies), visit http://www.zeroemissionbook.com/, or register your interest in attending this event via Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=107634285951344&ref=ts .

Here are the hints regarding tonight’s Pub Quiz. Expect questions about publishing companies, internet culture, Canadians, state flowers, potent potables, philosophical economists, Chaka Khan (karaoke hint!), football, insects, Sesame Street, public servants, words beginning the letter “E,” fight songs, those who labor in freedom, basketball, actors and more actors, novelists, questions whose answers you can find on DavisWiki.org, Gary Saylin, Seeds and Grasses, famous socialists, California cities, remarkable California buildings, the obligatory LeBron James question (sort-of), and a Shakespeare play that you might actually have seen. I hope you have fun tonight.

See you tonight for the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. Last week’s Pub Quiz can be found in its entirety on the new website of the Your Quizmaster. I will be launching the site for real perhaps next week.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous