A not-so-trivial 50th birthday

Lawrence University trivia contest celebrates half century as nation's granddaddy of intellectual scavenger hunts.
 
APPLETON, Wis. - Jan. 22, 2015 - PRLog -- Can anything that survives for half a century really still be considered “trivial?”

A year older than the Super Bowl and tougher than the Seattle Seahawk's defense, the Lawrence University Great Midwest Trivia Contest — the country's oldest ongoing salute to all-things insignificant — celebrates its 50th birthday Jan. 23-25.

After 2,450 hours of competition and more than 18,000 questions since then-Lawrence senior J.B. deRosset first asked “Who was Superman’s father?” back in 1966, Lawrence's 50-hour intellectual scavenger hunt has established itself as the game's granddaddy, asking students and others to ponder the offbeat and obscure long before minutia ever became en vogue.

"Going into that first contest, I don’t think any of us contemplated this happening a second time," said deRosset, who will travel from the warmth of Miami to chilly Cheeseland this weekend to help commemorate the contest’s milestone moment. "My mind was on being draft eligible for Vietnam, raging hormones and where to go to graduate school."

Following tradition, the 50th edition of the contest kicks off at precisely 37 seconds after 10 p.m., Friday, Jan. 23 and runs continuously through midnight Sunday, Jan. 25. As it has since 2006, the contest will be webcast worldwide on the Internet at www.wlfm.com

Senior Weronika Gajowniczek, who presides over the weekend’s craziness as this year’s Grand Trivia Master, says trivia can "infect" players a little like the flu.

"Trivia is like a 50-hour super bug," said Gajowniczek, who served as one of the contest's 12 trivia masters the past two years before being chosen as the grand master this year. "You don't want to eat, you can't sleep and the whole weekend is pretty much a weird fever-dream.

"Most people don't just play trivia, they live trivia," added Gajowniczek, who spent 16 straight hours answering phones at trivia headquarters as a freshman. "For that one weekend in January, you forget about everything else — homework, sleeping, eating, hygiene, your sanity. Nothing becomes more important than answering those arbitrary questions."

Aah yes, the questions. Written by the trivia masters, the goal is to make them as "unGoggleable" as possible. The result is such brain teasers as On how many episodes of "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" has the game Party Quirks been played? (129) or Who is immortalized on a blanket as Altoona Area High School's top football player of 1965? (Dick Bard).

Questions are asked every 10 minutes and teams have three minutes to call in answers, earning five or 10 points for each correct answer. The last hour of the contest is the "Garruda hour," featuring the most difficult of qeustions, culminating with the virtually unanswerable "Super Garruda."

"You just dedicate your weekend to frantically searching in the weirdest corners of the internet," said Gajowniczek, one of only a handful of women to oversee the contest in its long history.

In addition to the usual array of wacky questions and theme hours — Death and Destruction, Meowour (a segment devoted to felines) and, in tribute to Gajowniczek's heritage, an all Polish-related set of questions — this year's 50th edition will feature a tip of the hat to its 49 predecessors. Once each hour, Gajowniczek said they will ask a throwback question taken from the archives of the previous contests.

"Since there is 50 hours and 50 years, it works perfectly, so we'll base a question off every year."

Last year's contest had 19 on-campus teams and 57 off-campus teams battling wits and busy signals for the loosest definition of the word "prizes." Gajowniczek promises a return to more traditional prizes this year.

"The last few years, the trivia masters would just find something in the studio and give it out as a prize and mostly it was just things no one would keep," said Gajowniczek. "We definitely want to bring back the tradition of the prizes, make them more memorable keepsakes, commemorative. I'm not promising anything special, but nothing like a jar full of cream cheese, like last year."

For all of its silliness, the contest actually grew out of a serious academic endeavor, one for which deRosset was bypassed. After not being asked to join a select group of students and faculty for an off-campus academic trip then known as "Encampment" to the general student populace and "Entrapment" to its detractors, deRosset came up with an alternative to the academic retreat: a contest on the campus' radio station for "the trivial minds left behind."

"My junior year set it up," recalled deRosset, an attorney. "I had accumulated some extra credits from an off-campus program at Argonne National Labs and arrived my senior year with little stress and plenty of time and brain space for some creativity. It has kept going because it went so well the first year and my partner in crime, Dave Pfleger ,was ready, willing and able to do it again. With two contests under the Lawrence belt, it had the momentum to keep on truckin’. I know it takes a lot time for the students to put this together. More power to them for keeping the tradition alive."

Again per tradition, Lawrence President Mark Burstein will have the privilege of blowing out the first birthday candle as it were by asking the  50th contest's first question, which, also by tradition, is always the Super Garruda from the previous year's contest.

No team was able to add 100 points to its total last year by answering this question: In the final resting place of Copernicus there are pillars with graffiti scratched into them. One of these pillars has graffiti that reads "EM is cool" and "DW is ok." What does the only music-genre related graffiti on that pillar say?"

Come 10:00.37 Friday night, every self-respecting trivia team will know the answer is "Punks is not Death."

Media Contact
Rick Peterson
***@lawrence.edu
920-832-6590
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