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Show Trivia fad sweeping U - , ,, ro nnw storking two hooks on Leo said paperback counters are now siocKing two houks on the subject: "Trivia" and "More Trivia." Leo feels that the Chronicle staff could beat any group in the school in real trivia competition. "Journalists" he notes, "cover so many silly, insignificant stories, that they really pick up a lot of trivia. Who else would know how many people come to the Governor s Ball, ai.J who always plays there. Incidentally, tho.se are two good trivia "AnTwho else has daily access to the BYU Universe which prints up to eight pages of trivia daily." "In light of the highlv successfully College Bow' contest. and in view of several trial run trivia contests we've had in the Commons, we plan to sponsor through .!, Chromd,. University-wide trivia contests during winter quar.er. Leo said. It will be run with teams like the Collie Bowl, and I..-o is forming an ad hoc committee to organize and run the "Jrivia Bowl." hi , -r ------- " ' There's a new sport sweeping ($S the college campus. It's the average : tude s ff 0 bUlW the anti-intellectual's response to the College Bowl. The new fad: trivia. questions. But the Students get in a group and staJ ""nJig.rette has the least questions are all trivial. Things like: -eSt? and Who tar and nicotine according to the Reader " 8 really said, "Go West young man, go West, t Horace Greeley). , imstructured. There is Trivia sessions are for t most part unstruc one rule-questions can't get toe 'JJr. Too is the circumference of the eartn. intellectual. ictpH flS long as there have been "Trivia is nothing new. It s ex s ed as long siHy silly, little, inconsequential fls i them said Darrell inconsequential, little people to rememD t at the Leo, one of the persons spearheading the trivia University. |