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Triwizard Tournament – November 23,
2005
By Sean Sullivan/ Staff
Writer/Lexington Minuteman
Intellects buzzed last Thursday evening at Lexington's
Trivia Bee. The annual event pits teams of three against
each other in a battle of wits – essentially a spelling bee
but with facts instead of letters.
There were 42 teams in all at the event, each representing a
local business or school in the town. Six teams faced off
against each other in each round - swarm - with the winner
earning a place in the final championship match.
Seated onstage under the high ceilings of Lexington's Cary
Hall, the first swarm of six teams readied themselves for
the barrage of questions that was to come. Stage right, a
bumble bee-clad Chew-Hoong Koh conducted her one-woman sting
operation, ready at a moment's notice to buzz across the
stage and deliver the proclamation of elimination for
incorrect answers.
Emcee of the Trivia Bee, Superintendent of Schools Dr. Paul
Ash, delivered the questions from his podium offstage. The
first few questions to each swarm were on the easy side,
giving the teams a chance for a mental warm up while
avoiding a demoralizing early elimination.
The Mona Lisa's painter and Oscar the Grouch's fur color
were among the gimmie questions for the first few rounds in
each swarm.
The Estabrook Estabrains - representing Estabrook Elementary
School's PTA - claimed the distinction of the Trivia Bee's
first elimination. After a round of softy questions to the
swarm, the Estabrains were hit with a 19th-century history
question, asked to give the name of the German ruler known
as the "Iron Chancellor."
Otto Von Bismarck was the correct answer, but lacking that,
the Estabrains offered the educated guess of Derek Jeter.
The team went out with a bang at least, its answer touching
off a wave of laughter from the hundreds of Lexingtonians
who came to see the event.
The bee happily buzzed over to the Estabrains' table and
toppled the team's name card with flair, indicating their
elimination from the Trivia Bee.
After all but two teams in the first swarm were eliminated,
Fiske Phantoms of Fiske Elementary School and the Community
Nursery School's The CNS Pre-Bees, dry-erase boards were
brought out for the final elimination round that would crown
the swarm's victor.
After locking horns for several questions and breaking even,
the Phantoms eventually came out on top, identifying Wyoming
on their board as the state to first give the vote to women.
And so it went through six more grueling swarms of
contestants, the thrill of victory occasionally peppered
among the many more teams that would feel the agony of
defeat as the bee wove her way among the yellow-clad tables
to knock each out of the tournament.
In the Trivia Bee's final championship round, the tournament
was almost decided on the most grave of questions: the names
of all four Teletubbies. All the finalists failed to name
even one of the once-beloved and seemingly now largely
forgotten children's characters.
The Wizards - made up of Scott Burson, Tom Diaz and Tom
Griffiths of Lexington's School Committee - committed the
unforgivable when they offered "pink, red, yellow and blue"
for their answer to this important question. Their response
drew laughter from the gathered masses.
But it would be The Wizards, in fact, who would go on to
claim victory in the 10th annual Trivia Bee. Asked to fill
in the remaining letters of author T. S. Elliot's first two
names, The Wizards flipped their marker board over to reveal
their winning answer.
Thomas Stearns Elliot was the author's full name, and with
it came The Wizards' place in Trivia Bee history.
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