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BBTranscriptTeam
- Keeper of the Transcripts
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#1
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by BBTranscriptTeam » Thu Oct 14, 2010 6:38 pm
Denise Mallory
New Jersey
Denise introduces herself, saying she's from Jersey and that her friend, Sarah Novella, invited her here.
Denise will see the next question that Dan Kelly would have seen, his $250,000 question. If Denise gets it right, she'll win $1,000.
The inscription "Pass and Stow" appears on which of these U.S. landmarks?
A: Statue of Liberty B: Liberty Bell
C: Plymouth Rock D: Lincoln Memorial
Denise goes with B: Liberty Bell
and wins $1,000.
B: Liberty Bell
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drew scheeler
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#2
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by drew scheeler » Thu Oct 14, 2010 7:36 pm
This question should have been in round one. I'd peg this as a Teen Tournament level FJ!.
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TheConfessor
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#3
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by TheConfessor » Thu Oct 14, 2010 7:50 pm
drew scheeler wrote:This question should have been in round one. I'd peg this as a Teen Tournament level FJ!.
I didn't know it, but I'm not a teen.
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jaybee
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#4
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by jaybee » Thu Oct 14, 2010 9:15 pm
Would make a good Q for an ATA as "Pass and Stow" was an important plot line in the movie "National Treasure"
Jaybee
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Bob78164
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#5
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by Bob78164 » Fri Oct 15, 2010 1:54 am
jaybee wrote:Would make a good Q for an ATA as "Pass and Stow" was an important plot line in the movie "National Treasure"
I saw
National Treasure and I didn't remember that. --Bob
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
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TheConfessor
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#6
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by TheConfessor » Fri Oct 15, 2010 2:54 am
Bob78164 wrote:jaybee wrote:Would make a good Q for an ATA as "Pass and Stow" was an important plot line in the movie "National Treasure"
I saw
National Treasure and I didn't remember that. --Bob
I've seen the Liberty Bell up close at least twice and I didn't remember Pass and Stow. When I heard the question, I was trying to imagine those words as verbs and couldn't see why they would be on the Liberty Bell.
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vettech
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#7
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by vettech » Fri Oct 15, 2010 6:26 am
TheConfessor wrote: When I heard the question, I was trying to imagine those words as verbs and couldn't see why they would be on the Liberty Bell.
Oh, I get it now. That was my mistake, too. Now I'm remembering the National Treasure thing, but I wouldn't have pulled that one out in a million years.
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earendel
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#8
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by earendel » Fri Oct 15, 2010 8:35 am
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Denise Mallory
New Jersey
Denise introduces herself, saying she's from Jersey and that her friend, Sarah Novella, invited her here.
Denise will see the next question that Dan Kelly would have seen, his $250,000 question. If Denise gets it right, she'll win $1,000.
The inscription "Pass and Stow" appears on which of these U.S. landmarks?
A: Statue of Liberty B: Liberty Bell
C: Plymouth Rock D: Lincoln Memorial
Denise goes with B: Liberty Bell
and wins $1,000.
B: Liberty Bell
She made a great guess; I wouldn't have had any idea. As to why those words appear on the Liberty Bell:
On November 1, 1751, a letter was sent to Robert Charles, the Colonial Agent of the Province of Pennsylvania who was working in London. Signed by Isaac Norris, Thomas Leech, and Edward Warner, it represented the desires of the Assembly to purchase a bell for the State House (now Independence Hall) steeple. The bell was ordered from Whitechapel Foundry, with instructions to inscribe on it the passage from Leviticus.
The bell arrived in Philadelphia on September 1, 1752, but was not hung until March 10, 1753, on which day Isaac Norris wrote, "I had the mortification to hear that it was cracked by a stroke of the clapper without any other viollence [sic] as it was hung up to try the sound."
The cause of the break is thought to have been attributable either to flaws in its casting or, as they thought at the time, to its being too brittle.
Two Philadelphia foundry workers named John Pass and John Stow were given the cracked bell to be melted down and recast. They added an ounce and a half of copper to a pound of the old bell in an attempt to make the new bell less brittle. For their labors they charged slightly over 36 Pounds.
The new bell was raised in the belfry on March 29, 1753. "Upon trial, it seems that they have added too much copper. They were so teased with the witticisms of the town that they will very soon make a second essay," wrote Isaac Norris to London agent Robert Charles. Apparently nobody was now pleased with the tone of the bell.
Pass and Stow indeed tried again. They broke up the bell and recast it. On June 11, 1753, the New York Mercury reported, "Last Week was raised and fix'd in the Statehouse Steeple, the new great Bell, cast here by Pass and Stow, weighing 2080 lbs."
In November, Norris wrote to Robert Charles that he was still displeased with the bell and requested that Whitechapel cast a new one.
Upon the arrival of the new bell from England, it was agreed that it sounded no better than the Pass and Stow bell. So the "Liberty Bell" remained where it was in the steeple, and the new Whitechapel bell was placed in the cupola on the State House roof and attached to the clock to sound the hours.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."