Viewing the Tri Wizard challenges

xerxes xerxes909 at excite.com
Wed Sep 27 20:26:04 UTC 2000


No: HPFGUIDX 2409


>  
>  S
>  P
>  O
>  I
>  L
>  E
>  R
>  
>  
>  SHENmagic at aol.com wrote:
>  
>  > One possibility, an arguement for viewing,  is that a champion could
LOOK or
>  > even BE in trouble, and might still pull off a last-minute save. The
judges
>  > would not interfere unless the champion signaled for help, or perhaps
was
>  > obviously unconscious and in immediate danger.
>  
>  This is what I had thought. They did say that extra security measures
were in
>  place at this tournament to avoid the high death toll. I imagine not
everyone
>  was magically "watching", just one or more judges, and that they were not
to
>  interfere unless it was just this sort of situation, where a champion in
peril
>  could not signal.
>  
>  I base this on the rapidity with which people were there after Harry and
Cedric
>  reappeared. Yes, a judge would have come in for Fleur and Viktor, but not
the
>  crowd of folks that were apparently there when Harry and Cedric got back.
I
>  don't think they had enough time to search the whole maze and realize
that they
>  were missing. I think something alerted them the minute Harry and Cedric
>  disappeared, and a whole mess of people consquently went in immediately.
Who
>  couldn't do anything *but* wait, since there would have been no trace of
where
>  they'd gone.
>  
>  --Amanda


OK - that is logical. The reaction to Harry's reappearance WAS quite rapid
IIRC. Dumbledore seemed to be right there to turn Harry over.

Poor Dumbledore must have been beside himself with worry.

judy

  
  

***
Press: What do you call that hairstyle?
George Harrison: Arthur
Press: How do you stand in the draft?
John Lennon: About 5'11"





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