Fri, 27 Sept 2002 12:04:20 -0500 (EST) _ ® _ _____ _____ ______ _____ _____ _____ _ _ | | | || || || || || || || | | || | | || || || || || || || | | || | | || ___|| _ || __ || _ || _ || _ || | | || | | || |___ | | | || |__| || |_| || |_| || | | || |_| || | _ | || ___|| | | || ____|| _ || _ < | | | ||___ ||_| | |_| || |___ | |_| || | | | | || | | || |_| | ___| | _ |_____||_____||_____||_| |_| |_||_| |_||____/ |_____||_| JEOPARDY 25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION FAQ version 1.00 for NES by Wilson Lau Copyright © 2002 Wilson Lau This FAQ is best viewed in Courier, 10 point font. This FAQ may be distributed FREELY so long as it remains unaltered AND is the latest version (see above for where to obtain the latest version). It is intended for PRIVATE USE and may NOT be reproduced for commercial or non-commercial purposes by mechanical, electronic, or any other means. Do not try to sell it even if no profit is made off this work. In addition, this FAQ may not be used for personal gain by submission to game magazines, web sites, etc. It may not be used as part of any archive, compilation, or anything similar without prior consent by me. Email any changes, typos, etc. to me at darktoshi@yahoo.com. Make sure that you are reading the latest version BEFORE you email me. Jeopardy 25th Anniversary Edition is copyright © 1990 I.J.E. Inc., Jeopardy Productions Inc., and GameTek. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- You may find this FAQ and all future revisions at: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dark Toshi's Home Page (me) www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Realm/4610/ GameFAQS www.gamefaqs.com ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- CREDITS ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Daniel Engel for providing other great FAQs for Jeopardy and Jeopardy Jr. which is partly responsible for my writing this FAQ. I used his format as a reference model for my question layout. The NES Files Game manual information. ============================================================================= CONTENTS ============================================================================= I. FAQ History II. Story III. Controls IV. Gameplay V. Question Categories VI. All Questions and Answers VII. Credits VIII. Disclaimer ============================================================================= I. FAQ HISTORY ============================================================================= Version 1.00 (09/27/02) [189k] Initial release ============================================================================= II. STORY ============================================================================= America's favorite TV quiz show, Jeopardy, returns in the latest addition to the Jeopardy series from Game Tek. This edition of Jeopardy features almost 2,000 new questions from nearly 400 categories. ============================================================================= III. CONTROLS ============================================================================= One Player / Two Players ------------------------ Up : buzz in / move cursor up Down : buzz in / move cursor down Left : buzz in / move cursor left Right : buzz in / move cursor right B : lock in letter or number A : lock in letter or number Select : not used Start : start game (player one only) Three Players ------------- Player 1 and Player 3 share controller 1 Player 1 uses D-Pad to buzz in Player 3 uses A or B button to buzz in Player 2 uses controller 2 ============================================================================= IV. GAMEPLAY ============================================================================= Pregame Selections ------------------ Before starting play, you must decide how many players will compete, how many CPU opponents to play against, the skill level, and your character and his/her name. First choose the number of players. Then you'll select the skill level. Level 1 is the left choice. You get 50 seconds to answer a question. Level 2 is the middle choice. You get 45 seconds to answer a question. Level 3 is the right choice. You get 40 seconds to answer a question. Only player 1 may choose the level so agree among the other players beforehand. If less than 3 human players are playing, then you may choose to play against a computer opponent. Then the first player will enter his/her name. Finish entering your name by selecting "END." Now you will select a portrait for your character. Select "YES" to get a new character or "NO" to accept the current character. Player two will now follow the same procedure as player one did only player two will use controller 2. Player three will then repeat the process only player three uses controller 1. If any computer opponents are playing, their names/faces will appear after the last human player finishes entering the name and character choice. How to Play Jeopardy -------------------- The game follows the same rules and format as its television counterpart. For those unfamiliar with the rules of Jeopardy, please read below. You may skip this section if you are already familiar with the rules of the game. Jeopardy has three rounds of play. The first round is the Jeopardy Round. The second round is Double Jeopardy. The third round is Final Jeopardy. In the first two rounds, you will have 6 categories to choose from. Each category has 5 questions worth different dollar amounts. The dollar values range from $100-$500 in the Jeopardy Round. They range from $200-$1000 in Double Jeopardy. You will choose a category and then and wager an amount. You will be asked a question in the form of an answer. You must reply in the form of a question. The questions are generally harder for the higher dollar amounts. Example. Question asked: This company makes the Windows operating system. Your answer: What is Microsoft? So in the above example, the game would phrase the question in the form of an answer (This company makes the Windows operating system.). You would reply in the form of a question (What is Microsoft?). Note you MUST reply in the form of a question. Saying just Microsoft cannot and will not be accepted as a response. Once the question is selected, the question will appear on the screen. A 10 second timer appears in the lower right corner. All players have 10 seconds to buzz in and try to respond. Otherwise the correct answer will be shown. Whichever player buzzes in will have 40, 45, or 50 seconds to respond with the correct answer. If a player answers incorrectly, the amount wagered on the question is deducted from his/her total and he/she may not answer the same question again. Whichever player answers correctly will win the amount wagered on the question and may choose the next category and question. If no players answer correctly or buzz in then the player who chose the question will choose again. Play continues in this way until all 30 questions are chosen. Then the Double Jeopardy Round begins. The player with the lowest score from the Jeopardy Round starts the Double Jeopardy Round. In the first two rounds of play are questions known as "Daily Doubles." They are randomly placed among the questions in each round. When you get a Daily Double, only you may answer the question. You will be asked to make a wager of any amount from $0 to your current score. If you have no money in the Jeopardy Round, you may choose a wager from $100 to $500. You may wager $200-$1000 in the Double Jeopardy Round. The Jeopardy Round has one Daily Double and Double Jeopardy has two. The third and final round of play is called Final Jeopardy. Contestants who do not have positive scores (i.e. $1 or more) are eliminated from the game. There will be a final category shown. Then each player will make a wager from $0 to your current score. Other human players are asked to look away when another player is wagering. Then you will have 30 seconds to phrase your response in the form of a question. Please have any other human players look away during this time. After all players have wagered and answered the question, the correct answer is shown. All players with the correct answer will have the amount they wagered added to their totals. Incorrect answers will have the amount deducted. The winner is the person with the highest score after Final Jeopardy. In the event of a tie, the tied players will each win. Gameplay Tips and Spelling Rules -------------------------------- 1. Words should be spelled as accurately as possible, though some very minor misspellings may be accepted. Be sure to check the spelling of a word before you finish. 2. Erase letters by selecting the arrow icon on the letter/number screen. 3. If your question deals with a person's name, try to give both the first and last names although entering just the last name is usually accepted. 4. If your question deals with numbers as part of names, like World War II or King James IV, be sure to include the numbers, either as I or IV, or 1 or 4, or ONE or FOURTH. 5. If your question is shown on the screen as "Who are" or "What are...," be sure to answer in the plural form of the word. 6. If your question calls for a pair of words (or names), be sure to enter them in the order most commonly used, such as BOW AND ARROW, not ARROW AND BOW. 7. Spacing between words is optional. You can connect all the words without using any spaces. You can insert as much space as you want. The word "AND" can be substituted with an ampersand ("&") instead. Also adding additional characters after the correct answer (i.e. Who is SONY THISISFAKEINFO) will not affect the correctness. Putting additional characters in front of or in between the correct answer however will result in an incorrect answer. 8. When playing against the computer, it may sometimes respond with an unusual answer like "XX??+//." This is not a bug in the game but a random string programmed for the computer so it can make an incorrect response. It generally makes more correct answers than incorrect ones though. ============================================================================= V. QUESTION CATEGORIES ============================================================================= Here are the 348 Jeopardy/Double Jeopardy and 29 Final Jeopardy categories in the game. There may be more but out of 115 consecutive games, I found only 348 categories. It only took 65 games to run through the entire list one time with 42 categories being repeated. The game uses a randomizer to select 6 categories from the possible pool. Obviously there will be occasional repetition. If you see repetition, you may press RESET on the your Nintendo system and new categories should be chosen. This is like shuffling a deck of cards and drawing another hand. Note that the categories are randomized each game but you will generally run through all the different categories in about 65 consecutive games after which point the categories will repeat again. "Consecutive" means that you do not turn the power off the Nintendo system. Jeopardy/Double Jeopardy Categories =================================== "B.B." "B.O." "CC" "Con"s "Cross" Words "Cry"ing Songs "D" Words "First" "J" Words "Line"s "MP"s "New" Cities "North" "Rock" & "Roll" Songs "Sick" "South" "T" Time "Table" Talk "Time"ly Songs "Wall"s "Well" 17th Century 1890 to 1899 1890's 1900's USA 1956 19th Century 19th Century Novels 20th Cent. Personalities 20th Century America 2nd World War 3-Letter Names 4-Letter Spelling 4-Letter Words 5-Letter Words '60s British Rock '60s Cinema 6-Letter words '70s Cinema '70s Theater A Way To... Actors & Actresses Actors & Roles Africa African Safari Ages AKA Alabama Alaska Alice in Wonderland Alphabetical Firsts American History American Indians American Literature American Religion American Revolution Ancient History Animal Facts Animal Life Animal World Animals Architecture Arkansas Around Town Art Art Masters Artists Astrology Astronomy Aussie English Australia Auto History Auto Racing Autobiographies Automobiles Aviation Baby Songs Baltimore Battle Arms Beastly Phrases Beer Begins & Ends With "A" Bible Facts Bible Stories Big Animals Birds Birds & Beasts Books & Authors Botanical Songs Botany Bread British History British Royalty British Rulers British TV Candles Candy Cats in the Wild Chemistry Chewing Gum Children's Literature Christmas Songs Classical Music Cloth Colorful Songs Colors Cooking Terms Corporate America Country Music Country Singers Crime and Punishment Dance Detectives Disney Doctor Doctor Drama Dynasties Eat & Drink Education Elephants English History English Literature Europe Europe Facts Europe Trivia Explorers Fabrics Famous Firsts Famous Lasts Famous People Famous Quotes Fashion Fashion People Feminine Firsts Fiction Fictional Animals First Ladies First Lines Fishing Flowers Folk Music Food Food and Drink Food Trivia Foreign Phrases Forms of Address French Phrases Fruit Game Shows Games Generals Geography Geology Georgia Gimme a "Hand" Girls in Song Glass Going in Style Golden Hits Golden Oldies Government Government and Politics Grammar Hats Headlines Heaven & Hell Historical Events Historical People Historical Trivia Hodgepodge Holidays Horse Racing Idaho In the Bible Indian Trivia Indians Initials International Cities Inventions Inventors It Takes a Thief Journalism Kansas Kids TV Law Legal Lingo Lesser-known Names Let's Eat Letter Perfect Links & Ties Literary Lingo Literary Lions & Tigers Literary Quotes Literature Logical Conclusions Lyrics Medical Facts Medical Terms Medicine Medicines Miscellaneous Money Motorcycles Mountains Movie Anatomy Movie First Lines Movie Pairs Movie Trivia Movies Movies & Stars Movies From Books Mythology National Airlines Nature Nature Facts Nature Trivia Nature's Defenses Neighborhoods Notorious Number, Please Numbers Odd Facts Odds & Ends Opera Our Bodies Out in Space Parks Patron Saints Pennsylvania People of Myth Photography Physical Science Physics Poems & Poets Poetry Poland Political Quotes Politics Pop Singers Potent Potables Potpourri Poultry Presidential Dogs Presidential Trivia Presidents Presidents Middle Names Produce Proverbs Rated "EX" Real Names Religion Rhode Island Rhyming Mythology Rulers Russia Saintly Names Sayings Scandinavia Science Science Facts Seasonal Songs Sewing Shakespeare Shaping Up Ships Ships at Sea Sickness & Health Slogans Soap Operas South America South Dakota Soviet Union Space & Aviation Space Travel Speak of the Dickens Sport of Kings Sports Sports Birds Sports Events Sports Facts Sports People Sports Trivia Sports World Stage & Screen Starry Songs Starts With "D" Starts With "G" Starts With "L" Starts With "OK" Sticky Stuff Street Songs Supporting Characters Technology Textiles The 1870's The 1950's The '50s The Beatles The Bible The Body in Question The Calendar The Circus The Civil War The Human Body The Library The Movies The Old Testament The Old West The Solar System The U.N. This & That Tough TV Trivia Toys & Games Trade Centers Transportation Travel and Tourism Trivia Trivia Quiz TV Gals TV Game People TV Themes U.S. Cities U.S. Geography U.S. History U.S. Money U.S. States Universities Utah War Between States War in Fiction War Stories Warlike Words Wars Ways to Travel Weapons Wheels & Wings White House Middle Names Wild Cats Winter Sports Women Wood Word Histories Word Origins Word Sources World Cities World History World War II Wyoming Final Jeopardy Categories ========================= '80s News Awards Cartoons Early America Explorers Famous Americans Famous Americans (different question) Flags Gambling Great Britain Historic Names Holidays Kings & Queens Languages Lifestyle USA Mark Twain September Happenings Sporting Events The Bible The Calendar The Continents The Middle Ages The Movies The Nobel Prize The Old West The Olympics The Supreme Court U.S. States World Leaders ============================================================================= VI. ALL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ============================================================================= Here are all the questions that will be asked in the game. The questions are listed in alphabetical order by category. The questions have been split into two parts. The first part lists all the possible questions asked in the Jeopardy and Double Jeopardy rounds. The second part lists all the Final Jeopardy round questions. The question/answer format is as follows. The category is listed first. Then the game's question in the form of an answer is shown exactly as it would be shown on your screen. Below that is your answer in the form of a question. Enter the letters/numbers shown ENTIRELY IN CAPITAL LETTERS. Example. Category: Games A: This Nintendo character's brother is named Luigi. Q: Who is MARIO? So enter MARIO as your reply. The question words like "What is", "Who is", and "Where is" are already typed in for you so you just need to type the remainder out. There's no need for a question mark as it is already provided for you. However, if other punctuation marks are used like the periods in "E.T.", then you must type them out. No point values are listed because the questions can appear in either the Jeopardy Round or Double Jeopardy. Please be careful not to mix up "A" and "Q". "A" represents the answer that the game asks and "Q" is your reply. Jeopardy/Double Jeopardy Questions ================================== Category: "B.B." A: In cartoon language, it's the Roadrunner's only word Q: What is BEEP BEEP? A: The kind of "Bingo" Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello played in 1965 Q: What is BEACH BLANKET BINGO? A: This U.S. designer says women should dress for women in the daytime but for men at night Q: Who is BILL BLASS? A: Country siblings who "Let" their "Love Flow" to number 1 in 1976 Q: Who are the BELLAMY BROTHERS? A: Hungarian composer inspired by his country's folk music Q: Who was BELA BARTOK? Category: "B.O." A: New York's first big one was November 9, 1965 Q: What was the BLACK OUT? A: "Suddenly," he's one of pop music's top artists Q: Who is BILLY OCEAN? A: He "hees" while Roy Clark "haws" Q: Who is BUCK OWENS? A: Former hockey Bruin who might get "defensive" Q: Who is BOBBY ORR? A: Chile's liberator Q: Who was BERNARDO O'HIGGINS? Category: "CC" A: Ham, bologna, and pimiento loaf, for example Q: What are COLD CUTS? A: TV's Clinton Corners, or Jimmy's Plains, Georgia Q: What is CARTER COUNTRY? A: When 1,400 actresses show up to audition for 1 part Q: What is a CATTLE CALL? A: In English, this Texas city's name would be "The body of Christ" Q: What is CORPUS CHRISTI? A: Acute virus disease marked by a "ruddy dose" Q: What is the COMMON COLD? Category: "Con"s A: A house for nuns Q: What is a CONVENT? A: When Uncle Sam drafts you Q: What is CONSCRIPTION? A: A gadget Q: What is a CONTRAPTION? A: A hot dog stand at Yankee Stadium Q: What is a CONCESSION? A: "Conniption" and this word mean a temperamental or physical fit Q: What is a CONVULSION? Category: "Cross" Words A: To betray Q: What is TO DOUBLE CROSS? A: This most common form of "Strabismus" occurs in far-sighted children Q: What is CROSS EYED? A: In needlework, it forms an "X" Q: What is a CROSS STITCH? A: Panama is often called this Q: What is the CROSSROADS OF THE WORLDS? A: In bridge, when a player trumps suits by alternating the lead to the dummy Q: What is CROSSRUFF? Category: "Cry"ing Songs A: In 1962, the Four Seasons explained that these people "...Don't Cry" Q: Who are BIG GIRLS? A: This Gerry and the Pacemakers 1964 hit advises against letting this "...Catch You Crying" Q: What is the SUN? A: Melissa Manchester told you, "Don't Cry..." this way in her 1979 hit Q: What is OUT LOUD? A: A top-10 hit in 1955 for Julie London, it's not about the Thames Q: What is CRY ME A RIVER? A: Elvis' top-10 hits that fit this category are "Crying in the Chapel" and this Q: What is DON'T CRY DADDY? Category: "D" Words A: Movie word preceding "Harry," "Dozen," or "Dingus Magee" Q: What is DIRTY? A: In 1969, California was the first state to permit this on a no-fault basis Q: What is DIVORCE? A: Nair, for instance Q: What is DEPILATORY? A: The Eagles asked him, "Why don't you come to your senses, come down from your fences" Q: What is DESPERADO? A: "Out," "vein," and "oil" all contain this kind of vowel sound Q: What is a DIPHTHONG? Category: "First" A: Top notch Q: What is FIRST RATE? A: An army company's ranking NCO Q: What is a FIRST SERGEANT? A: There's a new one every ten yards Q: What is a FIRST DOWN? A: Form of "currency" I.O.U.'d to Rumpelstiltskin Q: What is the FIRSTBORN? A: An envelope postmarked at the stamp's issuing city on original date available Q: What is a FIRST DAY COVER? Category: "J" Words A: It may be named for one of Popeye's pals, or for the initials of "General Purpose" Q: What is a JEEP? A: In 1975, it was the Bee Gees' way of "talkin" Q: What is JIVE? A: "If you shut up your mug, I'll fill up..." this with "good ol' Mountain Dew" Q: What is a JUG? A: Flotsam's "friend" Q: What is JETSAM? A: To place side by side as in an unexpected combination of colors or ideas Q: What is to JUXTAPOSE? Category: "Line"s A: Since 1968, Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" is "Still..." there Q: What is ON THE LINE? A: There's only one of these on a football field Q: What is the 50 YARD LINE? A: Limit that can be charged to a Visa or Mastercard Q: What is a LINE OF CREDIT? A: It's been called the boundary between "y'all" and "youse guys" Q: What is the MASON DIXON LINE? A: French defenses on the German frontier that fell quickly in WW II Q: What was the MAGINOT LINE? Category: "MP"s A: To prepare them, first boil, then drain, add milk and butter, then beat them soundly Q: What are MASHED POTATOES? A: These British M.P.'s are in Westminster Palace, not in the army Q: Who are MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT? A: For the Platters, it was "To linger with you at the end of the day" Q: What was MY PRAYER? A: This G-man pursued Machine-gun Kelly throughout the '30s Q: Who was MELVIN PURVIS? A: This type of map has parallel meridians and latitudes Q: What is a MERCATOR PROJECTION? Category: "New" Cities A: CT. city where some Broadway-bound plays and some Yale students fail Q: What is NEW HAVEN? A: Many claim this southern city's speech pattern resembles New York's Q: What is NEW ORLEANS? A: Delaware's second-largest city and New Jersey's largest are both named this Q: What is NEWARK? A: The world's richest city per capita when it was the leading U.S. whaling port Q: What is NEW BEDFORD? A: Illinois village where Lincoln supposedly fell in love with Ann Rutledge Q: What is NEW SALEM? Category: "North" A: Farms and ranches cover 90 percent of this border state's land Q: What is NORTH DAKOTA? A: Though a "persecuted minority," Catholicism is this English province's largest single denomination Q: What is NORTHERN IRELAND? A: The first to sail it, Roald Amundsen found this "shortcut" a difficult 3- year trip Q: What is the NORTHWEST PASSAGE? A: Begun in 1948, this university's African studies program was the first of its kind in the U.S. Q: What is NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY? A: The founder of this aircraft company also helped form its competitor, Lockheed Q: What is NORTHROP CORPORATION? Category: "Rock" & "Roll" Songs A: Al Jolson and Jerry Lewis did this "with a Dixie melody" Q: What is ROCK A BYE YOUR BABY? A: The other name of "The 59th Street Bridge Song" Q: What is FEELING GROOVY? A: What Peter, Paul and Mary "dug" in 1967 Q: What is ROCK AND ROLL MUSIC? A: This hymn asks, "Let me hide myself in thee" Q: What is ROCK OF AGES? A: Title song of a 1973 concert film featuring Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry Q: What is LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL? Category: "Sick" A: It's junior's longing for mommy and daddy his first time at camp Q: What is HOMESICKNESS? A: Beany's friend, Cecil, was this type of sea serpent Q: What is SEASICK? A: The tool a loyal communist would use to cut wheat Q: What is a SICKLE? A: Thoroughly fatigued and bored, or a Fats Domino hit of '58 Q: What is SICK AND TIRED? A: The compartment in a ship used as a dispensary and hospital Q: What is SICK BAY? Category: "South" A: The state where gold was found in 1874 when Custer led an expedition to explore it Q: What is SOUTH DAKOTA? A: Until 1963, Studebakers were made in this Indiana city Q: What is SOUTH BEND? A: Except for Thailand, all countries here have won their freedom since 1945 Q: What is SOUTHEAST ASIA? A: This major constellation points to the sky's South Pole Q: What is the SOUTHERN CROSS? A: Namibia used to be called this Q: What is SOUTHWEST AFRICA? Category: "T" Time A: Placido Domingo Q: What is a TENOR? A: Without one, a camera wouldn't have a leg to stand on Q: What is a TRIPOD? A: A cable laid from New York to London Q: What is TRANSATLANTIC? A: A type of weight or Donahue Q: What is TROY? A: Lukewarm Q: What is TEPID? Category: "Table" Talk A: Ping pong Q: What is TABLE TENNIS? A: Its entries might include the foreword, preface, and introduction Q: What is a TABLE OF CONTENTS? A: Diner's social "jumping" Q: What is TABLE HOPPING? A: Parliamentary postponement of an item Q: What is TABLE THE MOTION? A: Static scenes of 3-D figures, popular at Christmas Q: What is TABLEAUX? Category: "Time"ly Songs A: "You must remember this" song from "Casablanca" Q: What is AS TIME GOES BY? A: In 1970, Chicago asked, "Does anybody really know..." this Q: What is WHAT TIME IT IS? A: Paul Anka's "The Times of Your Life" was used in a '70s ad campaign by this corporation Q: What is EASTMAN KODAK? A: The captain and Tennille said "Do that to me..." what Q: What is ONE MORE TIME? A: Al Stewart's 1978 hit Q: What is TIME PASSAGES? Category: "Wall"s A: The kangaroo's diminutive cousin Q: What is the WALLABY? A: A performance or a punch can "pack" one Q: What is a WALLOP? A: It's been labeled "The Wall of Shame" Q: What is the BERLIN WALL? A: To engage in obstructive Parliamentary debate or delaying tactics Q: What is STONEWALL? A: Swedish diplomat credited with saving Hungarian Jews in WW II Q: Who was RAOUL WALLENBERG? Category: "Well" A: Appropriate term for a rich man who owns a lot of shoes Q: What is WELL HEELED? A: The only Shakespeare play that fits this category Q: What is ALLS WELL THAT ENDS WELL? A: In 1964, she had a number 1 hit song with "My Guy" Q: Who is MARY WELLS? A: TV psychic who narrated "Plan 9 From Outer Space" Q: Who is CRISWELL? A: Fortune 500 company that "controls the control industry" Q: What is HONEYWELL? Category: 17th Century A: Extinct by 1680, these birds prompted the phrase "As dead as a..." Q: What is a DODO? A: The first of these to appear in a newspaper was for a religious book Q: What is an ADVERTISEMENT? A: To help science in 1631, William Oughtred first proposed "X" as a symbol of this function Q: What is MULTIPLICATION? A: Featuring a dome designed by Michelangelo, this Vatican landmark was dedicated in 1626 Q: What is ST. PETER'S BASILICA? A: London's produce and flower market since 1671 Q: What is COVENT GARDEN? Category: 1890 to 1899 A: In 1890, a new sports arena opened in New York, bearing this same name as its predecessor Q: What is MADISON SQUARE GARDEN? A: In 1895, this Irish playwright was sentenced to 2 years' hard labor on a morals charge Q: Who was OSCAR WILDE? A: In an 1896 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that facilities could be racially separate if they were this Q: What is EQUAL? A: The 400th anniversary of Columbus' discovery of America was celebrated at this event Q: What was the CHICAGO EXPOSITION? A: V.P. from 1893-97 and grandfather of a 1952 presidential candidate Q: Who was ADLAI STEVENSON? Category: 1890's A: G.W. Gale Ferris built the first one for the 1893 Columbian Exposition Q: What is a FERRIS WHEEL? A: He survived Little Bighorn and A Wild West Show, but was gunned down by troops in 1890 Q: Who was CHIEF SITTING BULL? A: Proclaimed a republic in 1894, it was annexed by the U.S. in 1898 Q: What is HAWAII? A: After 1892, this New York site was called in several languages "The Isle of Tears" Q: What is ELLIS ISLAND? A: In 1891, this petite painter produced his first music hall posters Q: Who was HENRI DE TOULOUSE LAUTREC? Category: 1900's USA A: In his first inaugural address, he put forth his "Good Neighbor Policy" Q: Who was FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT? A: Levittown, N.Y., was built to provide housing for them Q: Who were the WW II VETERANS? A: General Mcauliffe's one-word answer to German demand for Bastogne surrender in 1944 Q: What is NUTS? A: 39 crewmen and this ship were seized by Cambodia in 1975 Q: What was the MAYAGUEZ? A: This 1940 act makes it unlawful to advocate the violent overthrow of the gov't. Q: What is the SMITH ACT? Category: 1956 A: Britannica called his recording of "Blue Suede Shoes" a "rhythmic monstrosity" Q: Who was ELVIS PRESLEY? A: This American blonde went to England to make a film with Olivier Q: Who was MARILYN MONROE? A: Khrushchev ridiculed the accomplishments of this former Russian leader Q: Who was JOSEF STALIN? A: Ike supported this leader's Taipei government Q: Who was CHIANG KAI SHEK? A: This classroom sitcom was one of the top-rated radio shows in January, 1956 Q: What was OUR MISS BROOKS? Category: 19th Century A: In 1869, pros of this sport earned a maximum of 1,400 dollars a year Q: What is BASEBALL? A: Holiday begun in 1875 to encourage Nebraskans to plant trees Q: What is ARBOR DAY? A: Company set up in 1852 to speed up gold shipments from California Q: What is WELLS FARGO? A: In 1870, a transcontinental train trip took just under this many days Q: What is 7? A: For an 1899 promotion, this publisher sent Nellie Bly around the world Q: Who was JOSEPH PULITZER? Category: 19th Century Novels A: He said "David Copperfield" was his "favorite child" Q: Who was CHARLES DICKENS? A: Harriet Beecher Stowe's memorable novel Q: What is UNCLE TOM'S CABIN? A: Henry James novel whose New York setting is its title Q: What is WASHINGTON SQUARE? A: For over 50 years, one of these was home to "The man without a country" Q: What is the NAVY SHIP? A: Captain Nemo "dies" in both "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" and this other Jules Verne novel Q: What is THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND? Category: 20th Cent. Personalities A: In 1925, he dictated his autobiography to Rudolf Hess Q: Who was ADOLF HITLER? A: It was William John Clifton Haley's chosen career in the 1950's Q: What was ROCK MUSICIAN? A: When he died in 1926, all movie studios stopped production for two minutes Q: Who was RUDOLPH VALENTINO? A: Sec'y of the Interior Albert Fall took the fall in this 1920's scandal Q: What was the TEAPOT DOME SCANDAL? A: In 1935, this bank robber was the first woman shot by the FBI Q: Who was MA BARKER? Category: 20th Century America A: Women have come a long way since 1904, when one was arrested in N.Y.C. for doing this Q: What is SMOKING A CIGARETTE? A: She was a social worker before becoming the first woman to fly the Atlantic Q: Who was AMELIA EARHART? A: In 1926, he declined a Pulitzer Prize for "Arrowsmith" Q: Who was SINCLAIR LEWIS? A: The year of the Senate Watergate hearings and the Arab oil embargo Q: What is 1973? A: J.P. Morgan bought him out to form U.S. Steel Q: Who was ANDREW CARNEGIE? Category: 2nd World War A: "May God help him in his task," this Soviet dictator toasted FDR Q: Who was JOSEF STALIN? A: Yugoslav guerilla leader Josip Broz was better known as this Q: Who was TITO? A: Japanese admiral who initiated attack on Pearl Harbor Q: Who was ISOROKU YAMAMOTO? A: A British bomb skimmed over water to destroy these Q: What are DAMS? A: This last Rhine bridge defied the Nazis, but collapsed under Allied transports Q: What was REMAGEN? Category: 3-Letter Names A: Among the roles this Sandra played were "Gidget," and Mrs. Bobby Darin Q: Who is SANDRA DEE? A: Norwegian for "day" or "brightness," Hammarskjold was one Q: Was is DAG? A: First name of baseball pitchers "Catfish" Hunter and "Mudcat" Grant Q: What is JIM? A: Johnson's first, Bobby's last, Dick Dyke's middle Q: What is VAN? A: Damon Runyon's Mr. Masterson Q: Who is SKY? Category: 4-Letter Spelling A: The state of Old Mother Hubbard's cupboard Q: What is BARE? A: Precedes ended, hearted, and minded Q: What is OPEN? A: A hussy or a pastry Q: What is a TART? A: From German for "announce," to declare cards for a score as in Canasta Q: What is MELD? A: This lets a guitarist change keys and not change fingerings Q: What is a CAPO? Category: 4-Letter Words A: You could find one behind a soda fountain Q: What is a JERK? A: This word isn't difficult Q: What is EASY? A: Stage direction for characters to go out Q: What is EXIT? A: It can follow cape, french, or car Q: What is HORN? A: A large sheet of floating ice Q: What is a FLOE? Category: 5-Letter Words A: Officer between a captain and a lieutenant colonel Q: What is a MAJOR? A: Among his "marx" of success were silence and musical virtuosity Q: Who was HARPO? A: Scottish word for a square of turf, now used by golfers Q: What is a DIVOT? A: 13 witches Q: What is a COVEN? A: Protective cover of sawdust, leaves, etc. for soil Q: What is MULCH? Category: '60s British Rock A: Their 1965 complaint told what the Rolling Stones "can't get" Q: What is SATISFACTION? A: Herman's Hermits told Mrs. Brown she had a lovely one Q: What is a DAUGHTER? A: They provided Gerry Marsden with a drumbeat, not a heartbeat Q: Who were THE PACEMAKERS? A: Better-known first names of Stuart and Clyde Q: Who were CHAD AND JEREMY? A: Their biggest U.S. single was "Tired of Waiting For You" Q: Who are the THE KINKS? Category: '60s Cinema A: Telly Savalas was the scummiest of this "Filthy 12" Q: Who are the DIRTY DOZEN? A: Scary star of director Roger Corman's Poe series Q: Who is VINCENT PRICE? A: Nabokov's May-December romance Q: What is LOLITA? A: Gem with an animal-shaped flaw stolen in the first of a movie series Q: What is the PINK PANTHER? A: Nevada Smith in "The Carpetbaggers" was his last screen role Q: Who was ALAN LADD? Category: 6-Letter words A: 3 miles, or the one for women voters Q: What is a LEAGUE? A: Celtic for "From the red marsh," it's glamorous Marilyn's surname Q: What is MONROE? A: From an old French word which meant "To be out of one's cape" Q: What is ESCAPE? A: A new nun Q: What is a NOVICE? A: Risque or bawdy, from old French for "wanton" Q: What is RIBALD? Category: '70s Cinema A: Tatum O'Neal won an Oscar for her film debut in this 1973 picture Q: What is PAPER MOON? A: "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore" was this film's shout Q: What is NETWORK? A: Sexy "Shampoo"er Q: Who is WARREN BEATTY? A: The movie that helped launch the careers of Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd, and Peter Bogdanovich Q: What is THE LAST PICTURE SHOW? A: George Lucas' top-grossing pre-"Star Wars" film with a budget under one million dollars Q: What is AMERICAN GRAFFITI? Category: '70s Theater A: Andrea Mcardle's 1977 hit Q: What was ANNIE? A: This "babe" made his Broadway debut in 1979's "Sugar Babies" Q: Who is MICKEY ROONEY? A: Ntozake Shange wrote a 1977 play, "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered..." this Q: What is SUICIDE? A: Tony-winning star of 1972's "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" Q: Who is PHIL SILVERS? A: Broadway lights were dimmed Jan. 5, 1980, in tribute to this composer Q: Who was RICHARD RODGERS? Category: A Way To... A: Rubbing 2 sticks together is a way to start this Q: What is a FIRE? A: Passing "Go" is a way to get this Q: What is 200 DOLLARS? A: Unlocking the door "with the key of imagination" is a way to get into this Q: What is the TWILIGHT ZONE? A: Crack, then transfer contents between halves, allowing albumen to drip out is a way to have this remain Q: What is an EGG YOLK? A: Turning a car's front wheels toward it and tapping the brake is a way to get out of this Q: What is a SKID? Category: Actors & Actresses A: This star of "The Great Escape" made his great debut in the N.Y. Yiddish theater Q: Who is STEVE MC QUEEN? A: Buster Keaton was given his start in films by this 320-pound silent screen star Q: Who was ROSCOE FATTY ARBUCKLE? A: A 4-time Oscar nominee and star of TV's "Big Valley," Q: Who is BARBARA STANWYCK? A: 1955's "Guys and Dolls" was the only film in which he ever sang Q: Who is MARLON BRANDO? A: The wholesome type, she won an Oscar as a prostitute in "From Here to Eternity" Q: Who is DONNA REED? Category: Actors & Roles A: Errol Flynn, Douglas Fairbanks, and Sean Connery all played this "hood" Q: Who is ROBIN HOOD? A: Henry Fonda, Raymond Massey, and Hal Holbrook all played this president Q: Who is ABRAHAM LINCOLN? A: Doctor played on film by Elliot Gould and on TV by Wayne Rogers Q: Who is TRAPPER JOHN MCINTYRE? A: Charles Laughton, Trevor Howard, and Anthony Hopkins were all adrift in this part Q: Who is CAPT. BLIGH? A: Early films didn't show him, until H.B. Warner, and Jeffrey Hunter, and Max Won Sydow did Q: Who is JESUS? Category: Africa A: Africa's largest and the world's 4th largest island Q: What is MADAGASCAR? A: Written in Arabic script, it's the "Lingua Franca" of East Africa Q: What is SWAHILI? A: Patrice Lumumba and Moise Tshombe were involved in a 1960 upheaval there Q: What is the CONGO? A: The most populous South African province Q: What is the TRANSVAAL? A: Half-black and half-Arab, it's Africa's largest country Q: What is the SUDAN? Category: African Safari A: Of Ghana or Burundi, where you'd go to dance the Watusi with real Watusi Q: What is BURUNDI? A: Though named for elephant tusks, this country's main products are coffee, cocoa, and wood Q: What is the IVORY COAST? A: The largest single religion in Africa Q: What is ISLAM? A: Mobutu was president of this large country Q: What is ZAIRE? A: This country's name means "lion mountains" Q: What is SIERRA LEONE? Category: Ages A: By this age, you can drink legally in most U.S. states Q: What is 21? A: The voting age was 16 in his original draft of the constitution for communist China Q: Who was MAO TSE TUNG? A: As of this age, you can receive a birthday telegram from Queen Elizabeth Q: What is 100? A: At 88, he opened a chicken museum at the company's headquarters Q: Who was COLONEL HARLAN SANDERS? A: Girls between 6 and 10 became Rome's temple guardians, known as these Q: Who were the VESTAL VIRGINS? Category: AKA A: "Season"ed disco queen, born Ladonna Gaines Q: Who is DONNA SUMMER? A: Alphonso D'Abruzzo, Jr. or Hawkeye on "M.A.S.H." Q: Who is ALAN ALDA? A: If you don't believe she was born Shirley Beaty, ask her little brother Warren Q: Who is SHIRLEY MACLAINE? A: Honest, Wyatt, his name was originally Hugh Krampe Q: Who is HUGH O'BRIAN? A: "Richard Diamond" actor who was born David Meyer Q: Who was DAVID JANSSEN? Category: Alabama A: This insect turned Alabama farmers from cotton to other crops Q: What is the BOLL WEEVIL? A: The region named for its rich, dark soil, not a karate level Q: What is the BLACK BELT? A: In 1967, she became the third woman governor in U.S. history Q: Who was LURLEEN WALLACE? A: In 1952, rocket scientist Werner Von Braun moved to this Alabama city Q: What is HUNTSVILLE? A: Born in 1880 in Tuscumbia, she overcame handicaps and inspired millions Q: Who was HELEN KELLER? Category: Alaska A: Close to half of Alaska's population lives in this city Q: What is ANCHORAGE? A: Vitus Bering, a Dane, was working for this country when he discovered Alaska Q: What is RUSSIA? A: From 1879 to 1884, this branch of the military ruled Alaska Q: What is the NAVY? A: Over 90 percent of Alaska's oil is found near this Arctic Bay Q: What is PRUDHOE BAY? A: The Indians called the Inuit people "Eskimos," meaning "eaters of ..." this Q: What is RAW MEAT? Category: Alice in Wonderland A: Alice thought the White Rabbit was normal until he whipped this out of his pocket Q: What is a POCKET WATCH? A: To have room to do the Lobster Quadrille, clear these spineless creatures off the shore Q: What are JELLYFISH? A: The character exactly 3 inches high who smoked a hookah Q: Who is the CATERPILLAR? A: The Mock Turtle said 2 of its 4 branches were "ambition" and "distraction" Q: What is ARITHMETIC? A: Alice joined the tea party at his house Q: Who is the MARCH HARE? Category: Alphabetical Firsts A: Alphabetical first of Big 3 TV networks Q: What is ABC? A: Alphabetical first month Q: What is APRIL? A: Alphabetical first of 9 baseball positions Q: What is CATCHER? A: Alphabetical first of numbers from one to ten Q: What is EIGHT? A: Alphabetical first of the "Fab 4" Q: Who is GEORGE HARRISON? Category: American History A: Of Lincoln and Douglas, the one who "challenged" the other to debate Q: Who was LINCOLN? A: Alexander Hamilton fought an 1804 duel with him Q: Who was AARON BURR? A: In 1798, we were in an undeclared naval war with this erstwhile ally Q: What is FRANCE? A: Defeated Tennessee congressman who told his opponent, "You can go to Hell, I'm going to Texas" Q: Who was DAVY CROCKETT? A: Seneca Falls, N.Y., was the site of an 1848 convention advocating this Q: What are WOMEN'S RIGHTS? Category: American Indians A: His name really means "wild" or "unbroken" horse Q: Who was CRAZY HORSE? A: When Indians made peace, they symbolically buried this weapon Q: What is a HATCHET? A: Canadian Indians played the first version of this sport Q: What is LACROSSE? A: The Iroquois supported them in the French and Indian War Q: What was the BRITISH SIDE? A: Inter-tribal language of the North American Plains Indians Q: What is SIGN LANGUAGE? Category: American Literature A: This first U.S. writer to achieve int'l. fame spent nearly 20 years in Europe Q: Who was WASHINGTON IRVING? A: 1976 Nobel Prize-winner for autobiographical "Herzog" Q: Who is SAUL BELLOW? A: He wrote of Arnold Von Winkelried, a Swiss hero, not a Mohican Q: Who was JAMES FENIMORE COOPER? A: Dreiser novel squelched for 12 years by publisher's prudish wife Q: What is SISTER CARRIE? A: This poet's epitaph reads, "I had a Lovers' Quarrel With the World" Q: Who was ROBERT FROST? Category: American Religion A: This tiny state has the highest percentage of Roman Catholics Q: What is RHODE ISLAND? A: This "trembling" sect is now almost extinct due to celibacy Q: Who are the SHAKERS? A: Despite handling these, no Hopi priest is known to have been killed in a snake dance ceremony Q: What are RATTLERS? A: These pentecostalists sometimes writhe on the ground in religious ecstasy Q: Who are HOLY ROLLERS? A: America's largest Protestant denomination Q: Who are the SOUTHERN BAPTISTS? Category: American Revolution A: Bostonians dumped this in the harbor Q: What is TEA? A: This Frenchman named his son George Washington Q: Who was LAFAYETTE? A: Leader of the Green Mountain Boys Q: Who was ETHAN ALLEN? A: Troops covering Washington's retreat gave it its nickname, "Old Line State" Q: What is MARYLAND? A: Individually owned ships licensed as warships Q: Who were PRIVATEERS? Category: Ancient History A: Julius Caesar once had an affair with the mother of this assassin, rumored to be his son Q: Who was BRUTUS? A: 100,000 men worked 20 years to build a great pyramid for this Egyptian king Q: Who was CHEOPS? A: The druids were the priestly class of these ancient British people Q: Who were the CELTS? A: Of the T'ang, the Shang, the Ming, and the Ch'ing, China's oldest dynasty Q: What is the SHANG? A: Ancient times extend until 476 A.D., the date of this pivotal event Q: What is the FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE? Category: Animal Facts A: These insects "wood" like to eat your house Q: What are TERMITES? A: The double-crested basilisk, this type of reptile, can run across water Q: What is a LIZARD? A: At 3 pounds, the human brain weighs about 1/3 as much as this land mammal's Q: What is an ELEPHANT? A: Appropriately named, this bird sews leaves together to make a nest Q: What are TAILORBIRDS? A: Some of these tiny arachnids live in the air tubes of honey bees' bodies Q: What are MITES? Category: Animal Life A: Corn, coral and cottonmouth Q: What are SNAKES? A: A charging elephant spreads these to intimidate enemies Q: What are ITS EARS? A: Pieces of these multi-armed sea creatures can grow into full, new animals Q: What are STARFISH? A: The macaw, lovebird, and cockatoo belong to this bird family Q: What is the PARROT? A: Animal that holds life-span record for vertebrates Q: What is the TORTOISE? Category: Animal World A: Hanging upside-down, they come in 2- and 3-toed varieties Q: What are SLOTHS? A: Beavers slap these on the water to warn of danger Q: What are THEIR TAILS? A: It can dart its 22-inch tongue into a hill 160 times a minute Q: What is an ANTEATER? A: These most successful vertebrates survived 150 million years Q: What are the DINOSAURS? A: The class meaning "belly-footed," a snail is one Q: What is a GASTROPOD? Category: Animals A: A female peacock Q: What is a PEAHEN? A: In the 1800's, these desert animals carried mail in Ariz. and Texas Q: What are CAMELS? A: Family of fish with most species including Gilligan's boat Q: What is the MINNOW? A: Egyptian cobra's common name Q: What is an ASP? A: Only living proboscidea Q: What are ELEPHANTS? Category: Architecture A: Sumerians baked mud for these building materials Q: What are BRICKS? A: A window that projects outward from a wall Q: What is a BAY? A: Where you'd find a nave, transept, and apse Q: What is a CHURCH? A: This architect's remains were moved from Taliesin to Arizona Q: Who was FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT? A: This Roman site, Latin for "large circle," sat 250,000 people Q: What is CIRCUS MAXIMUS? Category: Arkansas A: In "South Pacific," Nellie Forbush's home town or Arkansas' capital Q: What is LITTLE ROCK? A: Lake Village was the "lucky" site of his first night flight in April, 1923 Q: Who was CHARLES LINDBERGH? A: Himself a Rhodes scholar, this senator created a major scholarship program Q: Who is J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT? A: 6-term Arkansas governor headlined in the '57 integration crisis Q: Who was ORVAL FAUBUS? A: A large one on its state flag boasts its production in Arkansas Q: What are DIAMONDS? Category: Around Town A: The Back Bay is this New England city's "Yuppieville" Q: What is BOSTON? A: The Martin Luther King, Jr. Historic District is in this city Q: What is ATLANTA? A: Its "Golden Triangle" is formed by three rivers Q: What is PITTSBURGH? A: Its North Beach neighborhood no longer has a beach Q: What is SAN FRANCISCO? A: "If you smell gunpowder, you're in ..." this Chicago suburb Q: What is CICERO? Category: Art A: The most delicate of these is made of only 150-200 sable hairs Q: What is a PAINT BRUSH? A: The Mogul School introduced Western perspective to the art of this country Q: What is INDIA? A: "From today, painting is dead," said a French artist upon seeing this type of picture in 1839 Q: What is a PHOTOGRAPH? A: "Reading Le Figaro" by this U.S. artist last sold for 1.1 million dollars Q: Who was MARY CASSATT? A: This French king bought the "Mona Lisa" to hang in his bathroom Q: Who was FRANCIS I? Category: Art Masters A: Judas is 13th at the table in this Da Vinci work Q: What is THE LAST SUPPER? A: Monet's "Impression, Sunrise" supplied the name for this style of art Q: What is IMPRESSIONISM? A: Dutch master Van Rijn Q: Who was REMBRANDT? A: Season in Botticelli's "La Primavera" Q: What is SPRING? A: Spain's Philip II was once the patron of the Greek painter Q: Who was EL GRECO? Category: Artists A: This company paid Andy Warhol to paint their new dry soup box Q: What is CAMPBELLS? A: Paris' "Red Mill," Toulouse-Lautrec sketched dancers there Q: What is the MOULIN ROUGE? A: Bowler hats, pipes, and apples characterize this Belgian surrealist's paintings Q: Who was RENE MAGRITTE? A: In 1985, experts found the "Man with the Golden Helmet" wasn't his Q: Who was REMBRANDT VAN RIJN? A: "Jack the Dripper," he dribbled paint onto canvas spread on the floor Q: Who was JACKSON POLLOCK? Category: Astrology A: The "crabby" sign of the zodiac Q: What is CANCER? A: This sign's symbol resembles the Roman numeral two Q: What is GEMINI? A: Lovely libra ladies are traditionally ruled by this planet Q: What is VENUS? A: Astrologers place this, not the Sun, at the center of the solar system Q: What is THE PLANET EARTH? A: Besides the Sun, the two most important signs in any natal chart Q: What are the MOON AND ASCENDANT? Category: Astronomy A: Most major stars' names are from Greek, Latin, or this Middle Eastern language Q: What is ARABIC? A: A neighbor of Uranus, it's only about 1/2 as dense as Earth Q: What is NEPTUNE? A: Because of planetary pull, all comets travel in orbits of this oval shape Q: What is an ELLIPSE? A: Most asteroids are found between the orbits of these two planets Q: What are MARS AND JUPITER? A: A solar eclipse can only take place when the moon is in this phase Q: What is a NEW MOON? Category: Aussie English A: The "good guts," the whole "good guts," and nothing but the "good guts" Q: What is THE TRUTH? A: Australians call it their "Apple Isle," but we say the devil with it Q: What is TASMANIA? A: In Australia, a "bluey" is a person with this color hair Q: What is RED? A: In "Waltzing Matilda," it's the Aussie term for a hobo Q: What is a SWAGMAN? A: The drink AUSSIES call "plonk" or "lunatic soup" Q: What is WINE? Category: Australia A: Torrid TV Aussie tale starring Richard Chamberlain and Rachel Ward Q: What is THE THORN BIRDS? A: She proclaimed Australian nation on the first day of the 20th century Q: Who was QUEEN VICTORIA? A: Koalas feed on these trees Q: What are EUCALYPTUS? A: 40 percent of all Australians ilve in these two state capitals Q: What are SYDNEY AND MELBOURNE? A: 759 of the first 1,487 British settlers were this Q: What was BEING A CONVICT? Category: Auto History A: An electric spark by the piston ignites air and this Q: What is FUEL? A: Syrup, sawdust, and tennis balls preceded air as filling for these Q: What are TIRES? A: "Synchromesh" allows you to do this, either up or down Q: What is SHIFT? A: The two standard gauges calibrated in miles in a U.S. car Q: What are the SPEEDOMETER AND ODOMETER? A: Ethylene-glycol fluid containing rust inhibitors and lubricants Q: What is ANTIFREEZE? Category: Auto Racing A: Bobby Unser's 4-second refueling in 1976 Indy 500 set record for this Q: What is a PIT STOP? A: This rear deck air deflector helps improve tire traction Q: What is a SPOILER? A: Auto pioneer who set 1-mile speed record of 91 mph in 1904 Q: Who was HENRY FORD? A: N.H.R.A. regulates these racing cars Q: What are HOT RODS? A: In 1977, she reached 252 mph, then the world's dragster record Q: Who is SHIRLEY MULDOWNEY? Category: Autobiographies A: His autobiography is "Eddie, My Life, My Loves" Q: Who is Eddie Fisher? A: Olivia De Havilland's sister who found life "No Bed of Roses" Q: What is JOAN FONTAINE? A: "Casey at the Bat" is his story Q: Who is CASEY STENGEL? A: Former senator and presidential candidate who wrote "With No Apologies" Q: Who is BARRY GOLDWATER? A: A '50s TV superstar, this actor asked, "Where Have I Been?" Q: Who is SID CAESAR? Category: Automobiles A: In 1804, Oliver Evans built a passenger vehicle in the U.S. powered by this Q: What is STEAM? A: "Business Week" did not predict the impact of this country's auto industry on the U.S. Q: What is JAPAN? A: A "glow plug" is used in cold starts for this engine Q: What is a DIESEL ENGINE? A: Entry feature of a 1957 Mercedes 300 SL Q: What are GULL WING DOORS? A: World's oldest continuous car manufacturer, it's French Q: What is PEUGEOT? Category: Aviation A: An airplane exceeding the speed of sound causes this Q: What is a SONIC BOOM? A: These three countries share Scandinavian airlines system Q: What are SWEDEN DENMARK & NORWAY? A: The 747 and these two other U.S.-built passenger planes can carry over 300 people Q: What are the DC 10 AND L 1011? A: The first to fly around the world alone, he later died with Will Rogers in a crash in Alaska Q: Who was WILEY POST? A: This kind of take-off and landing is the defining characteristic of a "stol" aircraft Q: What is SHORT? Category: Baby Songs A: An early Supremes hit asked, "Baby, baby, where did..." this "go" Q: What is OUR LOVE? A: Brook Benton and Dinah Washington told one another, "Baby, you've got..." this Q: What is WHAT IT TAKES? A: "Be My Baby" was this trio's biggest hit Q: Who were the RONETTES? A: A Lawrence Welk hit takes this "baby" on a "walk" Q: What is an ELEPHANT? A: Jackie Wilson hit that sounds like a fitness program for infants Q: What is BABY WORKOUT? Category: Baltimore A: This French emperor's younger brother, Jerome, was married in Baltimore Q: Who was NAPOLEON? A: Poet who died mysteriously in Baltimore in 1849 Q: Who was EDGAR ALLEN POE? A: Dr. Milton Eisenhower was president of this Baltimore university Q: What is JOHNS HOPKINS? A: The Baltimore suburb of Towson is the home of this largest U.S. maker of power tools Q: What is BLACK AND DECKER? A: The "Sage of Baltimore" Q: Who was H.L. MENCKEN? Category: Battle Arms A: It's the "T" in "P.T." boat Q: What is a TORPEDO? A: In movie titles, it happened in Abilene, Dodge City, and at the O.K. Corral Q: What is a GUNFIGHT? A: Italian for "Little Dagger," it can pierce holes for embroidery Q: What is STILETTO? A: From the Latin "Flagellum," it's a staff with a short, free-swinging stick Q: What is a FLAIL? A: A shriner's symbols are a fez and this type of sword Q: What is a SCIMITAR? Category: Beastly Phrases A: Its hard-to-dye wool had little value, so this color sheep came to mean an outcast Q: What is BLACK? A: Fowl get them when plucked. People get whem when cold or scared Q: What are GOOSE BUMPS? A: Since it's tough to open a mollusk's "mouth," this phrase means "to be silent" Q: What is CLAM UP? A: A drunkard is said to "drink like..." this creature Q: What is a FISH? A: To store things in the manner of an arboreal rodent Q: What is SQUIRREL AWAY? Category: Beer A: He founded Ireland's most famous brewery Q: Who was ARTHUR GUINESS? A: The world's best-selling beer, no horsing around Q: What is BUDWEISER? A: Iron City beer is brewed here Q: What is PITTSBURGH? A: America's best-selling imported beer Q: What is HEINEKEN? A: Pilsner beer began in Pilsen, in this country Q: What is CZECHOSLOVAKIA? Category: Begins & Ends With "A" A: A type of rabbit, goat, cat, or sweater Q: What is ANGORA? A: Crop used for livestock feed, growing since prehistoric times Q: What is ALFALFA? A: Todd Rundgren's voice-only rock album, Italian for "As in a chapel" Q: What ia A CAPPELLA? A: London's and N.Y.C.'s Cleopatra's Needles originally stood in this city Q: What is ALEXANDRIA? A: Officially named Catalan, tourists outnumber its residents 30 to 1 Q: What is ANDORRA? Category: Bible Facts A: He performed a burnt offering with some of the animals he saved Q: Who was NOAH? A: Both testaments warn against the attitude "eat and drink" now, for tomorrow this will happen Q: What is WE DIE? A: It was where people first spoke different languages Q: What is BABEL? A: Not just by this "But by every word...of the Lord, doth man live" Q: What is BREAD ALONE? A: The Biblically polite way of saying "fathered" Q: What is BEGOT? Category: Bible Stories A: The Lord said, "Heaven is my throne and ..." this "is my footstool" Q: What is EARTH? A: Naomi's daughter-in-law who gleaned Boaz's wheat and married him Q: Who was RUTH? A: "They shall beat their swords into ploughshares" and these "into pruninghooks" Q: What are SPEARS? A: "A man hath no better thing under the sun that to..." do these three things Q: What is EAT DRINK AND BE MERRY? A: To whom God said, "Thou art cursed above all cattle" Q: What is the SERPENT? Category: Big Animals A: The bird that lays the biggest eggs Q: What is an OSTRICH? A: The biggest of these "grouchy" crustaceans can measure 12 feet across Q: What is a JAPANESE SPIDER CRAB? A: This largest known invertebrate starred in "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" Q: What is a GIANT SQUID? A: By weight, the biggest breed of dog Q: What is a ST. BERNARD? A: The biggest of these was a Poland-China weighting 2,552 pounds Q: What is a HOG? Category: Birds A: The one thing that the ostrich, kiwi and penguin cannot do Q: What is FLY? A: He shares his name and color with an ecclesiastic Q: What is a CARDINAL? A: A baby goose Q: What is a GOSLING? A: His oft-quoted words are "Give a hoot, don't pollute" Q: Who is WOODSY OWL? A: Heckle and Jeckle are this type of chattering bird Q: What is a MAGPIE? Category: Birds & Beasts A: The tiniest eggs, smaller than jellybeans, come from this bird Q: What is a HUMMINGBIRD? A: Raccoons' scientific name, "Lotor," comes from this practice Q: What is WETTING FOOD? A: Scavenging wild dog used as a street cleaner in some Asian and African cities Q: What is a JACKAL? A: On the 100th anniversary of its development, it was made the state bird of R.I. Q: What is the RED CHICKEN? A: Mark Twain said a "poor town" has only one of these Q: What is a HORSE? Category: Books & Authors A: Home state of Eudora Welty and William Faulkner Q: What is MISSISSIPPI? A: His predictions for 1985 and beyond were published 419 years after his death Q: Who was NOSTRADAMUS? A: Former vocation of James Kavanaugh, author of "The Celibates" Q: What was CATHOLIC PRIEST? A: One-name French author of "Cheri" and "Gigi" Q: Who was COLETTE? A: Movies made from his books include "Hud" and "Terms of Endearment" Q: Who is LARRY MC MURTRY? Category: Botanical Songs A: Type of tree Tony Orlando wanted his girl to "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round" Q: What is an OLD OAK TREE? A: Peter, Paul and Mary said its fruit was "impossible to eat" Q: What is the LEMON TREE? A: The Coasters said, "You Can Look, But You Better Not Touch" this Q: What is POISON IVY? A: If "It Don't Rain in Indianapolis," then "God didn't make..." this songs's title fruit Q: What are LITTLE GREEN APPLES? A: Tiny Tim tiptoed through these Q: What are TULIPS? Category: Botany A: Artichoke whose name is from the Italian "girasole," not from Israel's capital Q: What is a JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE? A: 2/3 of all timber used in the U.S. comes from this tree named for David Douglas Q: What is the DOUGLAS FIR? A: Also called "giant cactus," it's the world's largest Q: What is a SAGUARO? A: Austrian monk who discovered laws of heredity while breeding pea plants Q: Who was GREGOR MENDEL? A: This tree disease first came to the U.S. in lumber from France, not Holland Q: What is DUTCH ELM DISEASE? Category: Bread A: On his second voyage, he introduced wheat to the New World Q: Who was CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS? A: Since Jesus used matzo at the last supper, Roman Catholic priests use this type of bread for mass Q: What is UNLEAVENED BREAD? A: Ancient Egyptians kneaded their bread with these Q: What is THEIR FEET? A: Title of respect derived from Anglo-Saxon "hlaford," meaning loaf ward or bread giver Q: What is LORD? A: 26 millers merged in 1928 to form this milling company, the world's largest Q: What is GENERAL MILLS? Category: British History A: "Guy" who tried to blow up Parliament in 1605 Q: Who was GUY FAWKES? A: She started learning Hindustani in 1887 Q: Who was QUEEN VICTORIA? A: This church didn't officially exist in England from the 1500's to 1850 Q: What is the CATHOLIC CHURCH? A: In 1913, to publicize the cause of women's suffrage, E. Davidson threw herself under this King's horse Q: Who was KING GEORGE V? A: He became prime minister in 1964, the youngest in the 20th century Q: Who was HAROLD WILSON? Category: British Royalty A: She can't be sued, and she doesn't have to buy dog licenses Q: Who is QUEEN ELIZABETH? A: He met his wife-to-be in a ploughfield in 1977 Q: Who is PRINCE CHARLES? A: George VI called it "an icebox" and Edward VIII said, "It has a dank, musty smell" Q: What is BUCKINGHAM PALACE? A: Honor lists are published on New Year's Day and on this June event Q: What is the QUEENS OFFICIAL BIRTHDAY? A: She's an expert at fly-fishing, pool, the bongos, and opening hospitals Q: Who is the QUEEN MOTHER? Category: British Rulers A: King James I of England was this country's James VI Q: What is SCOTLAND? A: Queen Victoria carried the gene for this "royal" blood disease Q: What is HEMOPHILIA? A: King and queen who signed England's Bill of Rights in 1689 Q: Who were WILLIAM AND MARY? A: This English king had to be placed in a straightjacket in 1788 Q: Who was GEORGE III? A: Martin Luther called him "King Heinz, by God's disgrace, King of England" Q: Who was HENRY VIII? Category: British TV A: This appeared above Roger Moore's head as "The Saint" opened Q: What is a HALO? A: In 1980, John Cleese played Petruchio on the BBC in this Shakespeare play Q: What is THE TAMING OF THE SHREW? A: He played a vet in "All Creatures Great and Small" and then "Dr. Who" Q: Who is PETER DAVISON? A: Number 6 on "The Prisoner" Q: Who is PATRICK MCGOOHAN? A: This American group shot their "show" at Scooter's uncle's theater in London Q: Who are the MUPPETS? Category: Candles A: Candlepins is a form of this sport Q: What is BOWLING? A: For Jews, this candle holder is either 7 or 9 branched Q: What is a MENORAH? A: 12.57 lumens Q: What is a CANDLEPOWER? A: From Latin for "vow," these small candles are used in private prayer Q: What are VOTIVE CANDLES? A: A wall-mounted candlestick Q: What is a SCONCE? Category: Candy A: Both sizes are wrapped in silver foil and topped with a white "plume" Q: What are HERSHEY KISSES? A: This peppermint candy is pulled, twisted and bent, but don't lean on it Q: What are CANDY CANES? A: Jagged sheet candy of cashew, almond, or peanut Q: What is BRITTLE? A: Not a dog breed, but a bitter herb used to flavor cough syrup Q: What is HOREHOUND? A: How you change a sugar syrup from "soft ball" to "hard crack" Q: What is HEATING IT? Category: Cats in the Wild A: The winner of all fights between healthy specimens of lions and tigers Q: What is the TIGER? A: The only country outside Africa where lions still run wild Q: What is INDIA? A: Name often applied to black leopards and mountain lions Q: What is a PANTHER? A: These largest wild cats were once found in the southwest U.S. Q: What are JAGUARS? A: Tufted-eared wild cat found in Asia, Africa, Europe and North America Q: What is a LYNX? Category: Chemistry A: When copper corrodes, it turns this enviable color Q: What is GREEN? A: A high-tech "valley" bears the name of this member of the carbon family Q: What is SILICON? A: To change from solid to liquid state, Q: What is MELT? A: Of acidic, alkaline, or neutral, what a 7 measures on the pH scale Q: What is NEUTRAL? A: This branch of chemistry studies compounds obtained from minerals Q: What is INORGANIC CHEMISTRY? Category: Chewing Gum A: It was first produced in 1928, and manufacturers blew their wad making it Q: What is BUBBLE GUM? A: "Chewing Gum King" who captured 70 percent of the gum market Q: Who was WILLIAM WRIGLEY? A: These Central American Indians chewed a crude form of gum over 1,000 years ago Q: Who were the MAYAN INDIANS? A: A WW II morale booster for Filipinos was gum printed with this famous promise Q: What was I SHALL RETURN? A: A primary part of gum base, it's the natural gum of the sapodilla tree Q: What is CHICLE? Category: Children's Literature A: The ogre caught his scent, saying, "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman" Q: Who is JACK? A: Ben Gunn was marooned there Q: What is TREASURE ISLAND? A: Ken McLaughlin called this wild colt "My Friend" Q: Who is FLICKA? A: What Winnie the Pooh's friend Eeyore is Q: What is a GRAY DONKEY? A: He "monkeys" around with the man with the yellow hat Q: Who is CURIOUS GEORGE? Category: Christmas Songs A: From "choraules," meaning the flutist, comes this word for a hymn of joy Q: What is a CAROL? A: English translation of "Adeste Fideles" Q: What is O COME ALL YE FAITHFUL? A: "All I want for Christmas is..." this Q: What is MY TWO FRONT TEETH? A: In the top Christmas song of 1984, "Grandma got run over ..." this Q: What is a REINDEER? A: It was introduced at an 1847 midnight mass, when "The stars were brightly shining" Q: What is O HOLY NIGHT? Category: Classical Music A: The symbol for "flat" resembles this lower case letter Q: What is B? A: 1954's Belafonte film, "Carmen Jones," was based on his opera Q: Who was GEORGE BIZET? A: Heinrich Stolzel's 1818 patent for this allowed a horn's pitch to change Q: What is the VALVE? A: Instrument which gives orchestra members their tuning "A" note Q: What is the OBOE? A: His "Farewell Symphony" hinted that he wanted to leave for Vienna Q: Who was FRANZ JOSEF HAYDN? Category: Cloth A: Linen is made from fibers of this plant Q: What is FLAX? A: Coarse cloth coated with heavy paint, and used as a waterproof table cover Q: What is OILCLOTH? A: A tufted velvety yarn used mostly for bedspreads Q: What is CHENILLE? A: Its fibers are not spun, but matted with heat, just ask Minnesota Fats Q: What is FELT? A: The Latin word for textile, "texere," means to do this Q: What is WEAVE? Category: Colorful Songs A: John clanged bells and made absurd U-Boat noises in this Beatles hit Q: What was YELLOW SUBMARINE? A: Song in which Los Bravos insist, "I want my baby back" Q: What is BLACK IS BLACK? A: Hugo Winterhalter and Les Baxter popularized this colorful '50s tango Q: What is the BLUE TANGO? A: It's what the Kingston Trio "Don't give a hoot about" Q: What is a GREENBACK DOLLAR? A: If these "Do the trick, I'll hurry back to pick your best white orchid for her wedding gown" Q: What are RED ROSES FOR A BLUE LADY? Category: Colors A: An apple blossom's color Q: What is WHITE? A: Willie Nelson, Elton John, and Steve Lawrence's hit songs had this color eyes in the titles Q: What is BLUE? A: The tallest known trees in the world Q: What are the REDWOODS? A: The sand color on Hawaii's Kaimu Beach Q: What is BLACK? A: Vermont's nickname Q: What is the GREEN MOUNTAIN STATE? Category: Cooking Terms A: To brush melted butter on poultry while cooking Q: What is TO BASTE? A: French for "white," it's to boil food for a short time Q: What is BLANCH? A: Satan's favorite method of cooking ham or eggs Q: What is TO DEVIL? A: A way to pamper your eggs Q: What is TO CODDLE? A: To brown meat, then simmer it covered in a small amount of liquid Q: What is TO BRAISE? Category: Corporate America A: In 1973, this company built a simulated chocolate factory for tourists Q: What is the HERSHEY COMPANY? A: Every year, this company delivers well over a billion packages more than the post office Q: What is UNITED PARCEL SERVICE? A: The 1980 failure of "Heaven's Gate" led Transamerica to sell this movie company to MGM Q: What is UNITED ARTISTS? A: Delaware's largest single employer Q: What is DU PONT? A: It publishes the "Wall Street Journal" Q: What is DOW JONES AND COMPANY? Category: Country Music A: He roomed with Waylon Jennings before marrying June Carter Q: Who is JOHNNY CASH? A: He sang, "Thank God I'm a Country Boy" Q: Who is JOHN DENVER? A: His "Take These Chains From My Heart" hit number 1 after his death Q: Who was HANK WILLIAMS? A: He was the first living member of the country music Hall of Fame Q: Who is ROY ACUFF? A: Shreveport, LA, rival to the Grand Ole Opry Q: What is the LOUISIANA HAYRIDE? Category: Country Singers A: Surname shared by singers Johnny, Brenda, and Dickey Q: What is LEE? A: He warned "Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow up to be Cowboys" Q: Who is WILLIE NELSON? A: These "Brothers" have been "Countin' Flowers on the Wall" since 1966 Q: Who are the STATLER BROTHERS? A: In 1972, her career dawned with "Delta Dawn" Q: Who is TANYA TUCKER? A: This Brooklyn boy "Loves a Rainy Night" Q: Who is EDDIE RABBITT? Category: Crime and Punishment A: This type of thief breaks into houses to steal Q: What is a BURGLAR? A: In the U.S., the crime with the highest conviction rate is the murder of these Q: What are POLICEMEN? A: J. Edgar Hoover kept the death mask of this "public enemy" in his own office Q: Who was JOHN DILLINGER? A: In 1978, two non-Arabs were publicly flogged in this Mideast country for making alcohol Q: What is SAUDI ARABIA? A: Famous Frenchman falsely imprisoned for 11 years on Devil's Island Q: Who was ALFRED DREYFUS? Category: Dance A: A Spanish dancer's instrument Q: What is CASTANET? A: "Stooge" for whom a 1983 "shuffle" was named Q: Who is CURLY? A: Twyla Tharp's 1973 ballet, "Deuce Coupe," featured their music Q: Who are the BEACH BOYS? A: Argentinian dance, with long steps and frequent posturing Q: What is THE TANGO? A: Some of its steps are cramp roll, ball change, and shuffle Q: What is TAP DANCING? Category: Detectives A: This fictional detective's original first name was "Sherrinford" Q: Who is SHERLOCK HOLMES? A: He tried to find out who took "A Shot in the Dark" Q: Who is INSPECTOR CLOUSEAU? A: In a sequel, Mark Twain wrote about him as a detective Q: Who is TOM SAWYER? A: The homeland of the inscrutable Judge Dee Q: What is CHINA? A: Rex Stout's stout detective Q: Who is NERO WOLFE? Category: Disney A: Bela Lugosi posed for Chernobog, the dark god, in this 1940 "concert feature" Q: What is FANTASIA? A: Cruella De Vil wanted to make a coat out of them Q: Who are 101 DALMATIANS? A: The 1977 Helen Reddy musical that could have been called "Elliott" Q: What is PETE'S DRAGON? A: With Jose Carioca and Panchito, he was the third "Caballero" Q: Who is DONALD DUCK? A: Pinocchio's boss at the puppet show Q: Who is STROMBOLI? Category: Doctor Doctor A: It's between medical school and residency Q: What is an INTERNSHIP? A: A defibrillator can restart this Q: What is the HEART? A: Temperature, pulse rate, respiration rate and this are the 4 vital signs Q: What is BLOOD PRESSURE? A: Non-surgical treatment of nervous system diseases is the practice of this specialty Q: What is NEUROLOGY? A: English physician who authored important treatise on circulation Q: Who was WILLIAM HARVEY? Category: Drama A: He was a successful playwright, as well as author of "War and Peace" Q: Who was LEO TOLSTOY? A: "Drama" comes from the word meaning "to do" in this ancient language Q: What is GREEK? A: Ionesco's "The Bald Soprano" is an example of this style of theater Q: What is THEATER OF THE ABSURD? A: In his "The Great God Brown," actors wore masks Q: Who was EUGENE O'NEILL? A: Grieg wrote music for this Ibsen classic Q: What is PEER GYNT? Category: Dynasties A: Hugh and Christie of "Playboy" Q: Who are the HEFNERS? A: John D., John D., Jr., Nelson, and Winthrop Q: Who are the ROCKEFELLERS? A: Sir Michael, Corin, Vanessa, and Lynn Q: Who are the REDGRAVES? A: Movie producers Darryl and Richard Q: Who are the ZANUCKS? A: Artists N.C., Andrew and Jamie Q: Who are the WYETHS? Category: Eat & Drink A: Meat from calves less than a year old Q: What is VEAL? A: This catch-all name squeezes in a variety of small fish Q: What are SARDINES? A: The long necks on this condiment's bottles were designed to deter discoloration Q: What is KETCHUP? A: From Italian for "little worms," it's a thin spaghetti Q: What is VERMICELLI? A: Arachibutyrophobia is a fear of having this food stick to the roof of the mouth Q: What is PEANUT BUTTER? Category: Education A: "Fat Albert" helped him earn an ED.D. from the Univ. of Mass. Q: Who is BILL COSBY? A: Of 4, 14, or 24, the percentage of Americans with college degrees in 1910 Q: What is 4 PERCENT? A: Students at a "normal school" in 1900 learned this career Q: What is ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHER? A: Italy's first woman doctor, she created the teaching method that bears her name Q: Who was MARIA MONTESSORI? A: Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem, and Nancy Reagan all went to this women's college Q: What is SMITH COLLEGE? Category: Elephants A: He says, "I meant what I said and I said what I meant, an elephant's faithful 100 percent" Q: Who is HORTON THE ELEPHANT? A: He used elephants as battle tanks against the Romans Q: Who was HANNIBAL? A: Timothy the Mouse was his flight instructor Q: Who is DUMBO? A: A dangerous, antisocial, loner-type elephant Q: What is a ROGUE? A: A male elephant in musth feels he must do this Q: What is MATE? Category: English History A: Winston Churchill's political party Q: What is the CONSERVATIVE? A: In 1209, the Pope punished King John by doing this to him Q: What is EXCOMMUNICATING HIM? A: In 1915, the British created this mobile weapon that crossed trenches Q: What is the TANK? A: 16th century Tudor king who abolished the privilege of clergy issuing coins Q: Who was HENRY VIII? A: The first Englishman to sail around the world Q: Who was SIR FRANCIS DRAKE? Category: English Literature A: Dickens told "a tale of" these two capital cities Q: What are LONDON AND PARIS? A: In 1155, a Norman poet first mentioned this monarch and his knights Q: Who was KING ARTHUR? A: 1949 novel about Winston Smith, a Newspeak writer at the Ministry of Truth Q: What is 1984? A: 7 stanzas about Daniel Boone are included in his epic poem, "Don Juan" Q: Who was LORD BYRON? A: Under this male name, Mary Ann Evans wrote "Adam Bede" Q: What was GEORGE ELIOT? Category: Europe A: The highest peak on Cyprus Q: What is MT OLYMPUS? A: In June, it's never completely dark in this city, formerly St. Petersburg Q: What is LENINGRAD? A: Charles University was founded in this Czech city in 1348 Q: What is PRAGUE? A: One of this country's main papers is "Le Figaro" Q: What is FRANCE? A: Burned often throughout history, it is Italy's second largest city Q: What is MILAN? Category: Europe Facts A: In a bullfight, killing the bull is banned in this Iberian country Q: What is PORTUGAL? A: Scotland's capital, it's known as the Athens of the North" Q: What is EDINBURGH? A: Dieters should avoid entering one of these Austrian "konditoreien" Q: What are PASTRY SHOP? A: This country is 600 miles long, with an average width of only 90 miles Q: What is ITALY? A: In 1967, this tiny country closed its churches and became an Atheist state Q: What is ALBANIA? Category: Europe Trivia A: Louis the Stubborn and Louis the Do-Nothing ruled this country Q: What is FRANCE? A: The capital city that contains the Lenin Library Q: What is MOSCOW? A: Its capital was formerly called Koebnannehavn, meaning "Merchants' Harbor" Q: What is DENMARK? A: Its oldest university was founded in 1575 at Leiden Q: What is the NETHERLANDS? A: His affair with Magda Lupescu delayed King Carol's assuming this country's throne Q: What is RUMANIA? Category: Explorers A: Landing in Venezuela, Colombus thought he was near this biblical paradise Q: What is the GARDEN OF EDEN? A: Jim Bridger rode dangerous rapids to discover this Utah lake Q: What is the GREAT SALT LAKE? A: English explorer who told the story about Pocahontas saving his life Q: Who was JOHN SMITH? A: In 1792, Robert Gray named this northwest river for his ship Q: What is the COLUMBIA RIVER? A: In 1776, Captain Bligh was the main officer for this explorer Q: Who was CAPTAIN JAMES COOK? Category: Fabrics A: This cotton fabric is known for its country check Q: What is GINGHAM? A: The stout outer covering of a mattress or pillow, it sounds like it should keep you awake Q: What is TICKING? A: A velvet in which the pile is more than 1/8 inch high, it's also luxurious Q: What is PLUSH? A: A thin fabric of silk, cotton, or wool, having a crinkled surface, it's used in mourning bands Q: What is CREPE? A: Scottish wool spun, dyed, and handwoven in the Outer Hebrides Q: What is HARRIS TWEED? Category: Famous Firsts A: The Boston Somersets and the Pittsburgh Pirates played in this first Q: What was the FIRST WORLD SERIES? A: The "Lame Duck" made this type of flight first Q: What is FIRST TRANSATLANTIC? A: In the Bible, Lamech was the first to have two of these Q: What are WIVES? A: The winner of the first Academy Award for Best Picture Q: What was WINGS? A: First comic character to appear in a paper in color Q: What was the YELLOW KID? Category: Famous Lasts A: For American Catholics, this last was Friday, November 18, 1966 Q: What was the LAST MEATLESS FRIDAY? A: His last number 1 hit was "Suspicious Minds" in 1969 Q: Who was ELVIS PRESLEY? A: To date, Britain's last king Q: Who was GEORGE VI? A: Last completed film for Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe Q: What was THE MISFITS? A: The last of these birds died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1914 Q: What are PASSENGER PIGEONS? Category: Famous People A: The northern Cheyenne celebrate his 1876 defeat Q: Who was GENERAL GEORGE CUSTER? A: Senator Morris Sheppard authored this unpopular amendment Q: What was the 18TH AMENDMENT? A: President born February 6, 1911, above a shoe store in Tampico, Illinois Q: Who is RONALD W. REAGAN? A: Famous house guest of William and Emily Harris in 1975 Q: Who is PATTY HEARST? A: The only career soldier to win the Nobel Peace Prize, he was best known for his postwar plan Q: Who was GEORGE C. MARSHALL? Category: Famous Quotes A: "All for one and one for all" was their cry Q: Who were the THE THREE MUSKETEERS? A: Francis Edward Smedley said, "All's fair in..." these pursuits Q: What is LOVE AND WAR? A: The 1861 "Book of Household Management" calls for "A place for everything and..." this Q: What is EVERYTHING IN ITS PLACE? A: Benjamin Disraeli wrote in 1847, "Everything comes if a man will only..." do this Q: What is WAIT? A: Victor Cousin said, "We need religion for religion's sake, morality for morality's sake, and..." this Q: What is ART FOR ART'S SAKE? Category: Fashion A: The first skirts for this dance were made of whole green tea leaves Q: What is the HULA? A: Body part you'd wear an epaulet on Q: What is the SHOULDER? A: A cheap copy of a high-priced original Q: What is a KNOCK OFF? A: The original form of the word "pants" Q: What is PANTALOONS? A: In the 15th century, some men's "poulaines" extended 24 inches beyond this Q: What is the END OF THE FOOT? Category: Fashion People A: Designers Calvin and Anne Q: What is KLEIN? A: Playboy says only "nerds" wear both suspenders and this Q: What is a BELT? A: He dressed fake troops to fool the Nazis, but left off a "BB" logo Q: Who is BILL BLASS? A: Newsweek joked that this apparel's museum might consist of two domes and a pyramid Q: What is the BIKINI? A: Named for their length, 4 inches longer than ordinary knickerbockers Q: What are PLUS FOURS? Category: Feminine Firsts A: The first woman ran in this Mass. race in 1967 Q: What is the BOSTON MARATHON? A: In 1976, Sarah Caldwell became the first woman to conduct this opera company Q: What is the METROPOLITAN? A: Annie Edson Taylor was the first person to do this at Niagara Falls Q: What is GO OVER IN A BARREL? A: For service as a medical officer in 1865, Mary Walker became the only woman to win this Q: What is the CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR? A: She was the first woman governor of Washington Q: Who is DIXY LEE RAY? Category: Fiction A: George kills his slow-witted friend Lenny in this Steinbeck novel Q: What is OF MICE AND MEN? A: Tiny land in "Gulliver's Travels" Q: What is LILLIPUT? A: Tom Sawyer and this pal found money hidden in a cave Q: Who is HUCKLEBERRY FINN? A: The total of Hawthorne's house's "Gables" and Verne's "Leagues" Q: What is 20,007? A: John Dos Passos' "All-American" trilogy Q: What is USA? Category: Fictional Animals A: What Christopher Robin usually called Edward Bear Q: What is WINNIE THE POOH? A: Breed of "Cujo," Stephen King's devilish dog Q: What is a ST. BERNARD? A: In the 12th century epic, "Reynard the Fox," Noble the Lion held this position Q: What is KING? A: Born to humans, E.B. White's "Stuart Little" is this kind of animal Q: What is a MOUSE? A: Rat, Mole, and Toad are friends in this 1908 Kenneth Grahame classic Q: What is THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS? Category: First Ladies A: Martha's last name before George married her Q: What was CUSTIS? A: She christened the first nuclear submarine, "U.S.S. Nautilus" Q: Who was MAMIE EISENHOWER? A: Real first name of Lady Bird Johnson Q: What is CLAUDIA? A: "The Steel Magnolia" was her nickname Q: Who is ROSALYNN CARTER? A: Nickname of Lucy Hayes, who wouldn't serve alcohol at the White House Q: What was LEMONADE LUCY? Category: First Lines A: It begins, "In a village of La Mancha..." Q: What is DON QUIXOTE? A: This Melville novel begins, "Call me Ishmael" Q: What is MOBY DICK? A: Jefferson Airplane hit which begins, "One pill makes you larger" Q: What is WHITE RABBIT? A: "Mira was hiding in the ladies' room..." opens this Marilyn French novel Q: What is THE WOMENS ROOM? A: This Frost poem begins, "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood..." Q: What is THE ROAD NOT TAKEN? Category: Fishing A: Sport fishing varieties of these were once made from bamboo Q: What are FISHING RODS? A: Of dry flies, wet flies, or spinners, the one that floats on water Q: What is DRY FLIES? A: This caviar-laying fish hold the world's freshwater weight record Q: What is a STURGEON? A: To protect the line from underwater obstacles, piano wire can be used as this Q: What is LEADER? A: Type of fishing done by towing bait behind a moving boat Q: What is TROLLING? Category: Flowers A: Flowers named for botanist Anders Dahl Q: What are DAHLIAS? A: Lilies, hyacinths, and daffodils all grow from this type of bud Q: What is a BULB? A: In flowers, it's the male reproductive organ Q: What is the STAMEN? A: "F.T.D." means a florist who will help you make this "T.D." Q: What is TRANSWORLD DELIVERY? A: The petals collectively, or a model of Toyota Q: What is COROLLA? Category: Folk Music A: Yarrow, Stookey, and Travers Q: Who are PETER PAUL & MARY? A: Stephen Foster song, first called, "Gwine to Run All Night" Q: What is DE CAMPTOWN RACES? A: His "Funny Way of Laughin'" got him a Grammy in 1962 Q: Who is BURL IVES? A: In 1974, she was "A Free Man in Paris" Q: Who is JONI MITCHELL? A: River mentioned in folk song, "Shenandoah" Q: What is the MISSOURI? Category: Food A: Steak named for the shape of its bone Q: What is T BONE? A: You can pick the pockets of this Mideastern bread Q: What is PITA BREAD? A: Pennsylvania Dutch molasses pie Q: What is SHOOFLY PIE? A: First smoked with juniper brush in the German town of Westphalia Q: What is HAM? A: French for "stewed fruit" or the bowl it's served in Q: What is a COMPOTE? Category: Food and Drink A: It can be raw, powdered, whole, evaporated, condensed, or skim Q: What is MILK? A: They know "soup is good food" Q: Who is CAMPBELLS? A: A 1984 survey found it the type of pasta eaten most often Q: What is SPAGHETTI? A: Authentic bottles of this Mexican drink must have "DGN" on their labels Q: What is TEQUILA? A: The boneless short loin steak named for a N.Y.C. restaurant Q: What is a DELMONICO STEAK? Category: Food Trivia A: A southern pancake grain or a "Little Rascal" Q: What is BUCKWHEAT? A: WW II prejudice caused this "German" toast to be renamed this Q: What is FRENCH TOAST? A: The first was Maxim, introduced by General Foods in 1964 Q: What is FREEZE DRIED COFFEE? A: This sturgeon treat was once given away with nickel beer Q: What is CAVIAR? A: Blue-veined cheese that must ripen in caves near its namesake French town Q: What is ROQUEFORT? Category: Foreign Phrases A: Spanish for "bravo" Q: What is OLE? A: An Argentinian cowpoke Q: What is a GAUCHO? A: To polite Swedes, it's "tack" Q: What is THANKS? A: French term for the south of France, it's also a calf-length skirt Q: What is a MIDI? A: German for a person's ghostly double who often brings trouble Q: What is a DOPPELGANGER? Category: Forms of Address A: In French, it's abbreviated "MLLE." Q: What is MADEMOISELLE? A: Relatively speaking, it's the form of address for a nun Q: What is SISTER? A: Swahili for "master," or "boss," it's what native bearers called safari leaders in old movies Q: What is BWANA? A: Hebrew for "my master," even Jesus was called this Q: What is RABBI? A: Ecclesiastical title of a 1982 Christopher Reeve film Q: What is MONSIGNOR? Category: French Phrases A: It means comradeship, comrade Q: What is CAMARADERIE? A: Cooked in a covering of bread crumbs or cheese or both Q: What is AU GRATIN? A: A railroad or a gambling game you could be railroaded in Q: What is CHEMIN DE FER? A: "The final blow" in boxing, or "the finishing stroke" in tennis Q: What is the COUP DE GRACE? A: Strictly required according to etiquette or usage Q: What is DE RIGUEUR? Category: Fruit A: Casabas are this kind of fruit Q: What are MELONS? A: First fruit "gobbled" by original Pac-Man Q: What are CHERRIES? A: Fruit that sounds like it got up on the wrong side of the tree Q: What is a CRAB APPLE? A: An Indio, CA. festival honors this desert fruit, so mark it on your calendar Q: What is a DATE? A: Pumpkins and canteloupes are "pepos" because this is hard Q: What is the RIND? Category: Game Shows A: The announcer of this show asked, "Number 1, what is your name, please" Q: What was TO TELL THE TRUTH? A: Of "Blank Check," "Point Blank," and "Blankety Blanks," the one that was not a game show Q: What was POINT BLANK? A: The first name shared by hosts Peck, Lange, and McKrell Q: What is JIM? A: Jim Perry "dealt" with this show Q: What is CARD SHARKS? A: She interviewed "real people" Q: Who is SARAH PURCELL? Category: Games A: Game in which you give skippers "hot pepper" Q: What is JUMP ROPE? A: When a player has none of a requested card, he's told to do this Q: What is GO FISH? A: American Indians made them by dipping gourds into latex and curing them with smoke Q: What are BALLS? A: A common card game named for two kinds of alcohol Q: What is GIN RUMMY? A: Some ancient Chinese battles were halted and played out with this complex board game Q: What is GO? Category: Generals A: In 1951, he told Congress, "I now close my military career and just fade away" Q: Who was DOUGLAS MACARTHUR? A: The first general to lead a division ashore on D-Day, he was the son and namesake of a president Q: Who was THEODORE ROOSEVELT JR.? A: The West Virginian who was the second highest general of the Confederacy Q: Who was THOMAS STONEWALL JACKSON? A: In 1968, he took over the U.S. Vietnam command Q: Who was CREIGHTON ABRAMS? A: The WW I French general who predicted another war within 20 years Q: Who was FERDINAND FOCH? Category: Geography A: Mexican city named for Spain's valley of stones, "Wad Al Hejarra" Q: What is GUADALAJARA? A: This French city, captured by Joan of Arc, became part of her nickname Q: What was ORLEANS? A: The world's largest active volcano is in this U.S. state Q: What is HAWAII? A: The city on the Trinity River with "Southfork" residents Q: What is DALLAS? A: Founded in 1749 as a British naval base, it is the capital of Nova Scotia Q: What is HALIFAX? Category: Geology A: Loiki, a volcanic seamount, will be a new island in this state someday Q: What is HAWAII? A: This scale is used to measure earthquake magnitude Q: What is the RICHTER SCALE? A: The wearing away of the earth's surface by wind, water, glaciers, etc... Q: What is EROSION? A: This style of map shows the earth's surface in color gradience or in 3-D Q: What is a RELIEF MAP? A: A sedimentary rock composed of rounded or subrounded fragments Q: What is a CONGLOMERATE? Category: Georgia A: While in Georgia, this Yankee invented the cotton gin Q: Who was ELI WHITNEY? A: The Ogeechee, Canoochee, and Chattahoochee Q: What are RIVERS? A: The first steamship to cross the Atlantic was named for this city Q: What is SAVANNAH? A: After meeting Sir Robert Baden-Powell, Georgian Juliette Low founded this youth organization Q: What are the GIRL SCOUTS? A: Will Rogers called it "A pebble California threw at Florida and missed" Q: What is STONE MOUNTAIN? Category: Gimme a "Hand" A: Police "bracelets" Q: What are HANDCUFFS? A: Rip Taylor's trademark moustache Q: What is a HANDLEBAR MOUSTACHE? A: One who predicts winners in a horse race Q: What is a HANDICAPPER? A: In 1981, the Pointer Sisters wanted this Q: What is a SLOW HAND? A: "Father of the Blues," he wrote "St. Louis Blues" Q: Who was W.C. HANDY? Category: Girls in Song A: The Weavers sang "Good-Night" to her Q: Who was IRENE? A: The girl to whom you'd sing, "Ay, ay, ay, ay, canta y no llores" Q: Who is CIELITO LINDO? A: The Everly Brothers asked her, "What are we gonna tell your mama" Q: Who was LITTLE SUZIE? A: "Oh" what a big hit this was for Ritchie Valens in 1958 Q: What is DONNA? A: According to John Anderson, she's "As prety as the angels when they sing" Q: Who is LITTLE CHARLOTTE JOHNSON? Category: Glass A: Most of this ingredient in glass comes not from the shore or desert, but from eastern inland states Q: What is SAND? A: The Surrey's curtains in "Oklahoma" were made of this transparent fish- bladder Q: What is ISINGLASS? A: A person who sets glass in window frames Q: What is a GLAZIER? A: Shatterproof glass used in windshields is a glass "sandwich" with a layer of this in between Q: What is PLASTIC? A: The most famous American art glass made today Q: What is STEUBEN GLASS? Category: Going in Style A: Juan Peron often ate dinner with her body at his table Q: Who was EVITA PERON? A: The author of "Frisbee" wants his ashes mixed with polyethylene and made into these Q: What are FRISBEES? A: This "Divine" 19th century star slept in a satin-lined casket Q: Who was SARAH BERNHARDT? A: Napoleon's sister, Pauline, wanted a nude statue of this person at her funeral Q: Who was HERSELF? A: This part of Peter Stuyvesant's body was buried with military honors years before his death Q: What was HIS LEG? Category: Golden Hits A: He had a number 1 hit with "Fingertips, Part 2" Q: Who is STEVIE WONDER? A: The reason "He Ain't Heavy" Q: What is HE's MY BROTHER? A: Duo whose biggest hit was "Hey, Paula" Q: What are PAUL & PAULA? A: Paul Anka told her, "I'm So Young and You're So Old" Q: Who was DIANA? A: "London's answer to the Mersey Sound" was led by this drummer Q: Who is DAVE CLARK? Category: Golden Oldies A: This title came before "Oh baby, that's what I like" Q: What is CHANTILLY LACE? A: According to Connie Francis, "Everybody's somebody's..." this Q: What is a FOOL? A: Dion and the Belmonts asked "The stars up above, why must I be..." this Q: What is A TEENAGER IN LOVE? A: The man who "Put the bomp in the bomp sha bomp" made my baby do this Q: What is FALL IN LOVE WITH ME? A: While someone was after their girl, the Cadets were stranded there Q: What was the JUNGLE? Category: Government A: He was the first Sec'y. of State before he became our third president Q: Who was THOMAS JEFFERSON? A: This term for trying to influence Congress comes from Anteroom negotiations Q: What is LOBBYING? A: The Latin phrase appearing on the great seal of the U.S. Q: What is E PLURIBUS UNUM? A: The vice president's constitutional duty Q: What is PRESIDING OVER THE SENATE? A: Procedure enabling the Supreme Court to decide if a law conforms with the Constitution Q: What is JUDICIAL REVIEW? Category: Government and Politics A: The initials G.O.P. stand for this Q: What is GRAND OLD PARTY? A: "Solid South" refers to the South's past tendency to do this Q: What is VOTE SOLIDLY DEMOCRATIC? A: Gov't.-printed secret ballots are named for this country Q: What is AUSTRALIA? A: In 1986, he won Tip O'Neill's seat Q: Who is JOSEPH KENNEDY II? A: The "Citizens' Lobby," founded by former H.E.W. Sec'y. John Gardner Q: What is COMMON CAUSE? Category: Grammar A: Because usage favors "who," this related word may someday disappear Q: What is WHOM? A: Every complete sentence must have a subject and this part containing the verb Q: What is the PREDICATE? A: Indirect object in "Julie gave Jules a jab in the jaw" Q: What is JULES? A: The past participle of the verb "to go" Q: What is GONE? A: "I want to badly win Jeopardy" is an example of this grammatical no-no Q: What is a SPLIT INFINITIVE? Category: Hats A: This kind of hat sometimes has a propeller Q: What is a BEANIE? A: It was the Tin Man's hat in "The Wizard of Oz" Q: What is a FUNNEL? A: Mark Roth or an Englishman's hat Q: What is a BOWLER? A: The spongy tissue of plant stems used for making jungle helmets Q: What is PITH? A: Each May, about 1,000 dress white garrison caps are tossed in the air here Q: What is WEST POINT? Category: Headlines A: September 30, 1938 newspapers read, "Sudetenland Given to..." him Q: Who was ADOLF HITLER? A: On August 24, 1964, the L.A. Times read, "18,700 Shriek for..." them "at show in Bowl" Q: Who were the BEATLES? A: October 1, 1955 headline read, "Film Star Dies in Auto Crash," referring to him Q: Who was JAMES DEAN? A: Headlines of both Nov. 4, 1948 and Nov. 6, 1980 explained why these erred Q: Who were the POLLSTERS? A: In June, 1953, newspapers read, "Britons Conquer..." this "as Gift for Queen" Q: What is MT. EVEREST? Category: Heaven & Hell A: Hell's Kitchen is in this city Q: What is NEW YORK? A: A condition between Heaven and Hell, or a famous West Indies dance Q: What is LIMBO? A: The 1978 remake of 1941's "Here Comes Mr. Jordan" Q: What is HEAVEN CAN WAIT? A: In Hinduism and this religion, a stay in Hell lasts only until evil karma is removed Q: What is BUDDHISM? A: In 1979, she told her lover, "Heaven must have sent you" Q: Who was BONNIE POINTER? Category: Historical Events A: This Catholic order had its own South American country from 1608 to 1767 Q: Who were the JESUITS? A: 16th century England's "Star Chamber" was this Q: Who was a COURT? A: Spain's 15th century unification occurred as a result of their marriage Q: Who were FERDINAND AND ISABELLA? A: Cuba's ruler from 1940-44 and 1952-59 Q: Who was FULGENCIO BATISTA? A: The League of Nations expelled this country in 1939 for invading Finland Q: What is SOVIET UNION? Category: Historical People A: President of Egypt during the 1973 Yom Kippur War Q: Who was ANWAR SADAT? A: This father and two sons ruled Nicaragua between 1937 and 1979 Q: Who was SOMOZA? A: At 15, Lady Jane Grey was this for 9 days in 1553 Q: What is QUEEN OF ENGLAND? A: Chiang Kai-Shek and this other leader were married to the Soong sisters Q: Who was SUN YAT SEN? A: In 1962, Ne Win overthrew U Nu to become this country's prime minister once more Q: What is BURMA? Category: Historical Trivia A: The year the first Pulitzer prizes were awarded and the U.S. entered WW I Q: What is 1917? A: Before he died in 1547, this Tudor king weighed over 400 pounds Q: Who was HENRY VIII? A: The first day of the Christian era was once this holiday Q: What is CHRISTMAS? A: Term first applied only to manners and conduct at royal courts Q: What is ETIQUETTE? A: Wrongly thinking he had been betrayed, this Carthaginian leader poisoned himself Q: Who was HANNIBAL? Category: Hodgepodge A: The process for treating crude rubber is named for this Roman god of fire Q: Who was VULCAN? A: The desexed, more edible version of a rooster Q: What is a CAPON? A: Ten times the needed soldiers offering to serve in the Mexican War gave Tennessee this nickname Q: What is the VOLUNTEER STATE? A: The ruling sovereign of a Muslim state, especially of the Ottoman Empire Q: What is a SULTAN? A: A church's main or central hall Q: What is the NAVE? Category: Holidays A: This state observes March 2 as its Independence Day and as Sam Houston's birthday Q: What is TEXAS? A: The first U.S. federal holiday of the year Q: What is NEW YEAR'S DAY? A: Memorial Day's symbolic flower Q: What is the POPPY? A: The 8-day Jewish holiday celebrating the Rededication of the Temple Q: What is HANUKKAH? A: Flag Day is a legal holiday only in this state, where Betsy Ross lived Q: What is PENNSYLVANIA? Category: Horse Racing A: Briton Gordon Richards was knighted in 1953 for his ability as this Q: What is a JOCKEY? A: The length in furlongs of a race that's 3/4 of a mile long Q: What is 6 FURLONGS? A: Of 1,000, 5,000 or 40,000, the number of thoroughbreds born each spring Q: What is 40,000? A: A race track's scoreboard Q: What is the TOTE BOARD? A: This great 1973 Triple-Crown winner won the Belmont Stakes by 31 lengths Q: Who is SECRETARIAT? Category: Idaho A: License plates boast that Idaho is famous for these Q: What are POTATOES? A: Though the University of Idaho is here, the students don't read "Pravda" Q: What is MOSCOW? A: Idaho is the number 1 mining state of this Q: What is SILVER? A: After leaving Cuba, this U.S. writer settled in Ketchum Q: Who was ERNEST HEMINGWAY? A: The largest religious group in Idaho Q: Who are MORMONS? Category: In the Bible A: Jesus said looking at a woman lustfully is committing this Q: What is ADULTERY? A: Disputed strip of land where Samson once "brought down the house" Q: What is GAZA? A: Salome performed this, not in the Bible, but in a Strauss opera Q: What is the DANCE OF THE 7 VEILS? A: Following the Gospels, it's 5th book of New Testament Q: What is ACTS? A: Moses' sister and brother Q: Who were MIRIAM AND AARON? Category: Indian Trivia A: It consists of a head, shaft, feathering, and nock Q: What is an ARROW? A: Hoped-for result of the Hopi Snake Dance Q: What is RAIN? A: Practice carried out mainly by the Iroquois and sold-out concert ticket- sellers Q: What is SCALPING? A: In colonial times, this college had only one Indian graduate Q: What is HARVARD? A: A type of large trunk was named for this N.Y. village, home of the Mohawks Q: What was SARATOGA? Category: Indians A: Osceola was a leader of this Everglades tribe Q: What are the SEMINOLES? A: The Osage's early wealth came from this Q: What is OIL? A: This plains tribe, named for a bird, were the Sioux's enemies Q: Who were the CROW? A: Settlers survived Pequot attacks thanks to this Mohegan chief made famous by J.F. Cooper Q: Who was UNCAS? A: The French called the Hidatsa "gros ventres," after this anatomical feature Q: What are BIG BELLIES? Category: Initials A: It's what the "D" in "D.A.R." stands for Q: What is DAUGHTERS? A: In 1962, producer Jerry Moss and this "A" trumpeter founded "A & M" Records Q: Who is HERB ALPERT? A: An alcoholic climbing back on the wagon might suffer these "D.T."s Q: What are DELIRIUM TREMENS? A: These names were the "P" and "T" in "P.T. Barnum" Q: What are PHINEAS TAYLOR? A: "M.G." stands for this on the British sports car Q: What is MORRIS GARAGE? Category: International Cities A: Karl-Marx-Stadt and Leipzig are two of this country's largest cities Q: What is EAST GERMANY? A: The "Titanic" was built in 1912 in this north Irish city Q: What is BELFAST? A: The largest African city west of Egypt, this port has a Spanish name Q: What is CASABLANCA? A: Agra, India, tourist stop Q: What is the TAJ MAHAL? A: 60 canals divide this crescent-shaped European city Q: What is AMSTERDAM? Category: Inventions A: This company turned from sunglasses and filters to instant photography in 1948 Q: What is POLAROID? A: This butter substitute was invented in a contest launched by Napoleon III Q: What is MARGARINE? A: Porcelain replaced hippopotamus bone for these "falsies" in the 19th century Q: What are FALSE TEETH? A: This company's first electronic pocket calculator is in the Smithsonian Q: What is TEXAS INSTRUMENTS? A: 1874's "Literary Piano" developed into this Q: What is the TYPEWRITER? Category: Inventors A: John Fitch built one 20 years before Fulton Q: What is a STEAMBOAT? A: It took John L. Mason 7 years to develop his jar used for this Q: What is PRESERVING FOOD? A: In 1800, Alessandro Volta used zinc and copper to make the first of these Q: What are BATTERIES? A: In 1896, Charles and James Duryea built the first commercially successful ones Q: What are CARS? A: Inventor of the steel plow Q: Who was JOHN DEERE? Category: It Takes a Thief A: Jean Valjean was sentenced to prison for stealing a loaf of bread in this Victor Hugo novel Q: What is LES MISERABLES? A: Fagin hated this other thief in the gang Q: Who is BILL SIKES? A: O. Henry crook, perhaps created on February 14th Q: Who was JIMMY VALENTINE? A: Ernest Hornung's "Gentleman Cracksman" Q: Who is RAFFLES? A: Professional thief Nick Velvet only steals objects of this value Q: What is NO VALUE? Category: Journalism A: "Father of the yellow press" and of journalism prizes Q: Who was JOSEPH PULITZER? A: Many define "news" as when a man bites one of these Q: What is a DOG? A: This racy monthly, which promoted the 1892 Corbett-Sullivan fight, was a barbershop favorite Q: What is the POLICE GAZETTE? A: Barbara Bain's dog was killed by a copy of this L.A. paper Q: What is the LOS ANGELES TIMES? A: She took her pen name from a Stephen Foster song Q: Who was NELLIE BLY? Category: Kansas A: Kansas leads the nation in this important grain Q: What is WHEAT? A: Dodge City's chamber of commerce stands on this notorious landmark Q: What is BOOT HILL? A: Kansas' highest peak and state flower Q: What is the SUNFLOWER? A: Walter Beecher and Clyde Cessna made Wichita the world's top manufacturer of these Q: What are AIRPLANES? A: Last name of brothers William and Karl, who founded a Topeka psychiatric clinic Q: Who are the MENNINGERS? Category: Kids TV A: This woodpecker's trademark is "ha-ha-ha-ha-ha" Q: Who is WOODY WOODPECKER? A: Snidely Whiplash was his dastardly nemesis Q: Who is DUDLEY DO RIGHT? A: Type of animal Hoppity Hooper was Q: What is a FROG? A: "Schoolbreak Specials" are CBS' answer to these ABC kid shows Q: What are the ABC AFTERSCHOOL SPECIALS? A: He sailed with Captain Huffenpuff on the "Leakin' Lena" Q: Who is BEANY? Category: Law A: In 1899, a N.Y. cabbie became the first person arrested for breaking this law Q: What is the SPEED LIMIT? A: When accused of this, attorney Melvin Belli replied, "I get there before the ambulance" Q: What is CHASING AMBULANCES? A: The 3-word Latin term for a law that's passed and then enforced retroactively Q: What is EX POST FACTO? A: This state's civil laws are based on the "Code Napoleon" Q: What is LOUISIANA? A: An anti-segregation lawyer, he became the first black Supreme Court justice Q: Who is THURGOOD MARSHALL? Category: Legal Lingo A: A court decree declaring that a marriage never existed Q: What is an ANNULMENT? A: Paired with "aid," it means to incite someone to commit a crime Q: What is ABET? A: The surrender of an accused criminal by one country or state to another Q: What is EXTRADITION? A: The term for international waters Q: What are the HIGH SEAS? A: Some are released from jail on bail, but lucky ones can be released on this Q: What is THEIR OWN RECOGNIZANCE? Category: Lesser-known Names A: Babe Ruth's appropriate first name, since the Yankees "let" him "do it" Q: What was GEORGE? A: Galileo's last name, it sounds like his first Q: What is GALILEI? A: Gandhi was often called Mahatma, though his actual first name was this Q: What is MOHANDAS? A: Author Dante's last name Q: What is ALIGHIERI? A: The last name of Dion, who sang with the Belmonts Q: What is DIMUCCI? Category: Let's Eat A: Though the Tartars are said to have eaten it raw, citizens of Hamburg made it popular Q: What is GROUND BEEF? A: Wage earners all "win it," but Egyptian workers were actually paid with it Q: What is BREAD? A: Though French for "sour wine," it's also made from apple, pear, and pineapple juice Q: What is VINEGAR? A: Talleyrand described a perfect one as "Black as the Devil, hot as Hell, and sweet as love" Q: What is a CUP OF COFFEE? A: Discovered in South America, these two rhyming foods were popular in Europe before first grown in U.S. Q: What is the TOMATO AND POTATO? Category: Letter Perfect A: You could "string" along this letter Q: What is G? A: How Mr. Rogers' sweaters "suit him" Q: What is TO A T? A: This letter links "The Wisp" and "Will" Q: What is O? A: The letter strung together for snoring sleepers Q: What is Z? A: Double letter shot from a gun Q: What is B? Category: Links & Ties A: "Give a Man Enough" of this, "and He'll Hang Himself" Q: What is ROPE? A: Violins and cellos belong to this orchestral section Q: What are the STRINGS? A: A good raconteur can spin this well Q: What is a YARN? A: The one in Achilles' heel was vulnerable Q: What is a TENDON? A: This company produced the first U.S. car with a supercharger Q: What was the CORD? Category: Literary Lingo A: A biting satire, Harvard's went "National" Q: What is a LAMPOON? A: One writer's deliberate theft of another's literary material Q: What is PLAGIARISM? A: Not a spectral, but a surrogate author Q: What is a GHOST WRITER? A: This type of poem has 14 lines Q: What is a SONNET? A: Most similes begin with either of these two words Q: What are LIKE & AS? Category: Literary Lions & Tigers A: Dorothy rapped his nose for threatening Toto Q: Who is the COWARDLY LION? A: Shaw's timid tailor who had a thorny encounter with a lion Q: Who ANDROCLES? A: In "The House at Pooh Corner," Rabbit said, "There's too much of him" Q: Who was TIGGER? A: Shere Khan is the lame tiger in this classic Q: What is THE JUNGLE BOOK? A: Aslan is the wondrous lion in his 7 Chronicles of Narnia Q: Who was C.S. LEWIS? Category: Literary Quotes A: "Out of sight, out of mind" is from his "Odyssey" Q: Who was HOMER? A: Edgar Guest wrote, "It takes a heap o' livin' in a house t' make it..." this Q: What is HOME? A: In the poem's title, George Pope Morris told the "Woodman" this Q: What is SPARE THAT TREE? A: Arthur Miller wrote of him, "He's not to be allowed to fall into his grave like an old dog" Q: What is a SALESMAN? A: Lovelace wrote, "I could not love thee, dear, so much, loved I not..." this "more" Q: What is HONOR? Category: Literature A: The color of Hudson's "Mansions" and Connelly's "Pastures" Q: What is GREEN? A: The collective name for Galsworthy's trilogy Q: What is THE FORSYTE SAGA? A: 1967 movie based on the 1874 Thomas Hardy novel, "Far from..." this Q: What is THE MADDING CROWD? A: Rock group Steppenwolf is named after a 1927 book by this German Q: Who was HERMANN HESSE? A: Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize novel about 18th century Peru Q: What is THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUIS REY? Category: Logical Conclusions A: Mole Hill, W.VA. was aptly renamed this Q: What is MOUNTAIN? A: Drummer Cozy Cole followed his hit, "Topsy," with this Q: What is TURVY? A: The powerful king of ancient Persia who was succeeded by Artaxerxes I Q: Who was XERXES? A: The middle name of the Audubon Society's founder, George Grinnell Q: What is BIRD? A: Emperor Bokassa I changed the name of the Central African Republic to this Q: What is the CENTRAL AFRICAN EMPIRE? Category: Lyrics A: He "can take a sunrise, sprinkle it with dew, cover it in choc'late" Q: Who is the CANDY MAN? A: "They've got some crazy little women there" Q: What is KANSAS CITY? A: "He rocks in the tree-top all day long" Q: Who is ROCKING ROBIN? A: It's "wider than a mile" Q: What is MOON RIVER? A: "Doesn't have a point of view, knows not where he's going to" Q: Who is A NOWHERE MAN? Category: Medical Facts A: A "D.M.D." is equivalent to this dental degree Q: What is a D.D.S.? A: Number 1 drug problem in the U.S. and U.S.S.R. Q: What is alcoholism? A: Many of these biblical outcasts may simply have had skin allergies Q: What are LEPERS? A: Used to voluntarily control functions like blood pressue, its most common form is electromyographic Q: What is BIOFEEDBACK? A: It's caused by a Chicken Pox virus, not by mending roofs Q: What is SHINGLES? Category: Medical Terms A: A brain bruise Q: What is a CONCUSSION? A: Health insurance financed by Social Security trust funds Q: What is MEDICARE? A: The common name for the chronic disease involving a lack of insulin Q: What is DIABETES? A: Discovery of a mold on canteloupe led to mass production of this drug Q: What is PENICILLIN? A: High blood pressure medication, Minoxidil, is now preventing or reversing this Q: What is BALDNESS? Category: Medicine A: Bacterium Responsible for this outbreak was coined "Legionella Pneumophila" Q: What is LEGIONNAIRES DISEASE? A: George Washington's death is attributed to "bleeding" by these insects Q: What are LEECHES? A: This most popular U.S. aspirin was originally acquired from a German company as spoils of WW I Q: What is BAYER? A: L-DOPA has provided relief for sufferers of this "shaking palsy" Q: What is PARKINSONS DISEASE? A: Anti-allergy drug helpful for motion sickness Q: What is DRAMAMINE? Category: Medicines A: Carter's little pills once had this word in its name Q: What is LIVER? A: In 1920, Abe Plough bought this aspirin company, then invented children's aspirin Q: What is ST. JOSEPH? A: Overuse of this laxative bean oil can cause the opposite effect Q: What is CASTOR OIL? A: Robert Chesebrough ate this waxy substance and used it as a salve Q: What is vaseline? A: Miles Laboratories makes this headache remedy Q: What is ALKA SELTZER? Category: Miscellaneous A: When saying it, stand at attention, or put your right hand over your heart Q: What is the PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE? A: The Polonaise is the national dance of this country Q: What is POLAND? A: The L.A. Times apologized for its slur against this movie alien Q: Who is E.T.? A: Playgirl Magazine picked this N.Y. governor as one of the country's sexiest men Q: Who is MARIO CUOMO? A: King Darius used this for message delivery long before the American West did Q: What is the PONY EXPRESS? Category: Money A: Country which mints 1-ounce gold maple leaf coins Q: What is CANADA? A: The last year in which U.S. dimes and quarters were 90 percent silver Q: What is 1964? A: He and Alexander Hamilton are the only non-presidents on today's paper currency Q: Who is BEN FRANKLIN? A: Brazil's cruzeiro is named for this southern hemisphere constellation Q: What is the SOUTHERN CROSS? A: Victor D. Brenner's initials are found on this coin Q: What is a PENNY? Category: Motorcycles A: Slang for a helicopter, or a customized motorcycle Q: What is a CHOPPER? A: Popularized in Europe, it's a hybrid motorbike with pedals Q: What is a MOPED? A: A sure-footed method for starting all Triumph motorcycles Q: What is KICK STARTING? A: The first motorcycle was built in 1885 by an engineer in this European country Q: What is GERMANY? A: A 1974 Robert Pirsig book dealt with this "...and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" Q: What is ZEN? Category: Mountains A: A flat-topped mountain with steep sides, it's Spanish for "table" Q: What is a MESA? A: He tried to climb the Colorado Peak named for him, but took the wrong path Q: Who was ZEBULON PIKE? A: The Hudson River's source is in this N.Y. mountain group Q: What are the ADIRONDACKS? A: The highest active volcano in Europe, it's in Italy Q: What is ETNA? A: Elijah took on the prophets of Baal on this mountain above Haifa Q: What is MOUNT CARMEL? Category: Movie Anatomy A: Gert Frobe used his "Midas Touch" on Shirley Eaton in this 007 film Q: What is GOLDFINGER? A: In 1935's "Hands Across the Table," Carole Lombard had this appropriate job Q: What is a MANICURIST? A: 1955 film with Fred Astaire and Leslie Caron Q: What is DADDY LONG LEGS? A: Falling in love with Cybil Shepherd made Charles Grodin this in a 1972 film Q: What is THE HEARTBREAK KID? A: After 1957's "A Face in the Crowd," he became TV's favorite small-town sheriff Q: Who is ANDY GRIFFITH? Category: Movie First Lines A: The 1970 tear-jerker that opens, "What can you say about a 25-year-old girl who died" Q: What is LOVE STORY? A: "Chapter one. He adored New York City," Woody Allen says at the start of this film Q: What is MANHATTAN? A: Faye Dunaway's first line to this actor was, "Hey, boy, what you doin' with my momma's car" Q: Who is WARREN BEATTY? A: A member of this bloody title gang opens Sam Peckinpah's film with "If anyone moves, shoot 'em" Q: What is THE WILD BUNCH? A: This Stanley Kubrick film opens, "There was me, that is Alex, and my 3 droogs" Q: What is A CLOCKWORK ORANGE? Category: Movie Pairs A: Until the movie ended, they didn't share a "Pillow," only "Talk" Q: Who are DORIS DAY & ROCK HUDSON? A: Bozo the Clown led drive to get this classic comedy team on a U.S. stamp Q: Who were LAUREL & HARDY? A: Before searching for "The Jewel of the Nile" Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner were doing this on screen Q: What is ROMANCING THE STONE? A: He was "Tapped" to star in "White Nights" with Gregory Hines Q: Who is MIKHAIL BARISHNIKOV? A: He was "McCabe" to Julie Christie's "Mrs. Miller" Q: Who is WARREN BEATTY? Category: Movie Trivia A: The Beatle who became a "Caveman" in 1981 Q: Who is RINGO STARR? A: For its help with "Jaws," Universal Studios redesigned this service branch's female uniforms Q: What is the COAST GUARD? A: Robert De Niro gained 50 pounds to play Jake Lamotta in this film Q: What is RAGING BULL? A: Of "Julia," "Manhattan," or "The Deer Hunter," Meryl Streep's debut Q: What is JULIA? A: The 1969 Oscar for best supporting actress went to her for "Cactus Flower" Q: Who is GOLDIE HAWN? Category: Movies A: The number of "steps" in Hitchcock spy classic Q: What are 39? A: Ron Howard directed this 1984 Disney-backed film that featured a bare backside. Q: What is SPLASH? A: For this 1955 film, William Holden's chest was shaved to conform with the motion picture code Q: What is PICNIC? A: John Wayne won his only Oscar for this film Q: What is TRUE GRIT? A: The 1969 film that marked the starring debut of Ali Macgraw and the big- screen comeback of Richard Benjamin Q: What is GOODBYE COLUMBUS? Category: Movies & Stars A: Singer-actress in "Follow the Boys" and "Where the Boys Are" Q: Who is CONNIE FRANCIS? A: Beatles movie dedicated to Elias Howe, inventor of the sewing machine Q: What is HELP? A: Debra Winger contributed to the voice of this alien hero Q: Who is E.T.? A: Their movie and their daughter were both named "Chastity" Q: Who are SONNY AND CHER? A: In his last film, he played himself, not Robin Hood, as an ally of Castro's rebels Q: Who was ERROL FLYNN? Category: Movies From Books A: The 1968 film based on the novel, "Monkey Planet" Q: What is PLANET OF THE APES? A: The film musical of "Anna and the King of Siam" was called this Q: What is THE KING AND I? A: "Apocalypse Now" was based on this 1902 Joseph Conrad story Q: What is HEART OF DARKNESS? A: T.H. White's "The Once and Future King" was the basis for this 1967 musical Q: What is CAMELOT? A: "Mama's Bank Account" became a play and film titled this Q: What is I REMEMBER MAMA? Category: Mythology A: Daedalus and Icarus used this means of fleeing King Minos Q: What was FLYING? A: Ancient puzzle spliced by the father of Midas and sliced by Alexander Q: What was the GORDIAN KNOT? A: Hercules, Orpheus, Castor, Pollux and others searched for this Q: What was the GOLDEN FLEECE? A: Hermaphroditus' name came from his parents, these two gods Q: Who were HERMES AND APHRODITE? A: The god who gave his name to a "wandering" Asia Minor river Q: Who was MAEANDER? Category: National Airlines A: El Al Q: What is the AIRLINE OF ISRAEL? A: Aeroflot Q: What is the AIRLINE OF SOVIET UNION? A: Aer Lingus Q: What is the AIRLINE OF IRELAND? A: Middle East Airlines Q: What is the AIRLINE OF LEBANON? A: Varig Q: What is the AIRLINE OF BRAZIL? Category: Nature A: You can tell a fish's age by counting these on its scales Q: What are RINGS? A: These make birds different from all other animals Q: What are FEATHERS? A: Rapid expansion and contraction of air in the path of a lightning bolt makes this Q: What is THUNDER? A: It precedes cloud formation in the 4 steps of the water cycle Q: What is EVAPORATION? A: The colorful term that refers to the gradual heating of earth's atmosphere by carbon dioxide in the air Q: What is the GREENHOUSE EFFECT? Category: Nature Facts A: Holland's living symbol, it's grown on less than 1 percent of their land Q: What is the TULIP? A: Mycophagists eat this kind of fungus Q: What are MUSHROOMS? A: The viceroy mimics this poisonous "royal" butterfly's appearance to avoid predators Q: What is the MONARCH BUTTERFLY? A: The adult male of this duckbilled creature has a poison spur in his ankle Q: What is the PLATYPUS? A: From the Arabic "mawsim," this wind changes direction with the seasons Q: What is a MONSOON? Category: Nature Trivia A: These grow in marshes and on feline posteriors Q: What are CATTAILS? A: This tiny bird's bill can be up to 5 inches long Q: What is a HUMMINGBIRD? A: The longest-lived crustacean, it has quite a "tail" to tell Q: What is a LOBSTER? A: Hiding place for shooting wildlife with guns or cameras Q: What is a BLIND? A: This shrub is cultivated for a waxy oil very similar to that from a sperm whale Q: What is JOJOBA? Category: Nature's Defenses A: Variations in heat and light cause these lizards to change color Q: What are CHAMELEONS? A: Inbred response in humans, occurring when a cinder hits the cornea Q: What is a BLINK EYE? A: Defense weapon used by spineless jellyfish and wasps Q: What is a STING? A: In some species, the ink it squirts forms its shape and acts as a decoy Q: What is a SQUID? A: Its 10-foot-high leaps confuse this antelope's predators Q: What is the IMPALA? Category: Neighborhoods A: Spanish architecture characterizes this city's French quarter Q: What is NEW ORLEANS? A: The largest Chinese community outside Asia is in this city's Chinatown Q: What is SAN FRANCISCO? A: People of south Boston nicknamed their neighborhood this Q: What is SOUTHIE? A: "Foggy Bottom" is the D.C. neighborhood of this gov't. dep't. Q: What is the STATE DEPARTMENT? A: This city's financial district is called "The City" Q: What is LONDON? Category: Notorious A: John Dillinger complained this pair was "giving bank robbing a bad name" Q: Who were BONNIE AND CLYDE? A: "A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic," said this Soviet dictator Q: Who was JOSEF STALIN? A: He promised that those who died in human wave attacks against Iraqis would attain paradise Q: Who was AYATOLLAH KHOMEINI? A: At his 1961 trial, he said, "I was only following orders" Q: Who was ADOLF EICHMANN? A: "I acted to show my love for Jodie Foster," said this would-be assassin Q: Who is JOHN W. HINCKLEY JR.? Category: Number, Please A: The number of buttons on a touchtone phone Q: What is 12? A: "Route"tine total of Tennessee Ernie's "Tons" and Paul Simon's "Ways to Leave Your Lover" Q: What is 66? A: The difference in the number of sides between a quadrilateral and a pentagon Q: What is 1? A: The total number of tires and hubcaps you get with most new cars Q: What is 9? A: The approximate number of miles covered when taking a giant step in 7 league boots Q: What is 21? Category: Numbers A: Henry VIII had VI Q: What are WIVES? A: His license plate is A1-AN-A2 Q: Who is LAWRENCE WELK? A: "The Sign of 4" and "5 Orange Pips" are titles of these Q: What are SHERLOCK HOLMES CASES? A: The name of Red Nichols' band Q: Who were the FIVE PENNIES? A: When Ike refused to apologize for this, Khruschev "walked out" of the 1960 summit Q: What was the U 2 INCIDENT? Category: Odd Facts A: Since 1910, this color borders the covers of "National Geographic" Q: What is YELLOW? A: Appropriately, this evangelist's Oklahoma Univ. has a dental school Q: Who is ORAL ROBERTS? A: Demolay and Job's daughters are this group's youth auxiliaries Q: What are the MASONS? A: He rode on his dinosaur, Dinny Q: Who is ALLEY OOP? A: September 27, 1927 marked this event for Babe Ruth Q: What was his 60th home run? Category: Odds & Ends A: His arrival cautions why "You'd better watch out, you'd better not cry" Q: Who is SANTA CLAUS? A: Peter Dowdeswell ate a world record 144 of these dried fruits in 35 seconds Q: What are PRUNES? A: With north at 0 degrees, the degree to which west would correspond Q: What is 270? A: Projections of this fireside chair protect sitters from drafts Q: What is the WING CHAIR? A: This sash, worn with a kimono, sounds like an off-Broadway award Q: What is an OBI? Category: Opera A: Verdi's "Aida" was written for the opening of this waterway Q: What is the SUEZ CANAL? A: This Prokofiev opera is based on the Tolstoy novel Q: What is WAR AND PEACE? A: Mozart wrote operas in German and these two other languages Q: What are ITALIAN AND LATIN? A: There's some clowning around in this opera, meaning "the clowns" Q: What is I PAGLIACCI? A: "Rigoletto" aria "La Donna E Mobile" translates as "The lady is..." this Q: What is FICKLE? Category: Our Bodies A: Doing this to your hair every 6 weeks or so doesn't make it grow faster Q: What is CUT IT? A: Phrase used to describe a contortionist's knees and elbows Q: What is DOUBLE JOINTED? A: The funny bone is not a bone, but one of these, where it rests against the humerus Q: What is a NERVE? A: The roof of the mouth, the back of the throat, and the tongue contain these Q: What are TASTE BUDS? A: The hardest substance in the body Q: What is TOOTH ENAMEL? Category: Out in Space A: Saturn's stretch out to a distance of at least 170,000 miles Q: What are RINGS? A: The largest planet in our solar system Q: What is JUPITER? A: 80 percent of the mass of this small planet is iron and nickel Q: What is MERCURY? A: We may call the wind Maria, but on the Moon "Maria" are these Q: What are the LUNAR SEAS? A: The last of these in this century will occur on August 11, 1999 Q: What is a TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN? Category: Parks A: N.Y.C.'s Central Park is in this geometric shape Q: What is RECTANGULAR? A: A nat'l historic park in New Orleans is named for this pirate Q: Who was JEAN LAFITTE? A: The earliest parks were places where the wealthy could do this Q: What is HUNT? A: The only song named for a park to top the "Billboard" charts Q: What is MACARTHUR PARK? A: Hot Springs Nat'l. Park is in this state Q: What is ARKANSAS? Category: Patron Saints A: Patron Saint of the Boy Scouts who rescued a maiden from a dragon Q: Who was SAINT GEORGE? A: This Briton is patron saint of Ireland Q: Who is SAINT PATRICK? A: Though no longer a saint, his likeness still stands on many dashboards Q: Who is SAINT CHRISTOPHER? A: Patron saint of theologians, he's famed for his "confessions" Q: Who is SAINT AUGUSTINE? A: French wine growers often pray to this saint Q: Who is SAINT VINCENT? Category: Pennsylvania A: Pittsburgh-born composer of "My Old Kentucky Home" Q: Who was STEPHEN FOSTER? A: Most of America's coal of this variety is found in PA. Q: What is ANTHRACITE COAL? A: Opened in 1940, it was America's first trans-state superhighway Q: What is the PENNSYLVANIA TURNPIKE? A: Christmas Eve carols provided the name of this town Q: What is BETHLEHEM? A: PA. was the birthplace of this bachelor president Q: Who was JAMES BUCHANAN? Category: People of Myth A: "Mark," "Mario," and "Martin" all come from this Roman war god Q: Who was MARS? A: He held up the sky, not the earth Q: Who was ATLAS? A: Prometheus stole this for man Q: What is FIRE? A: "Janitor" is derived from this Roman god of doorways Q: Who was JANUS? A: Norse god of mischief and trickery Q: Who is LOKI? Category: Photography A: Shutter speed controls in part the amount of this let into a camera Q: What is LIGHT? A: It's usually plastic, covered with silver salts Q: What is FILM? A: This magazine raised the photo essay to an art form Q: What is LIFE MAGAZINE? A: Erich Salomon's spontaneous photographs inspired this term Q: What is CANDID CAMERA? A: The photographer who documented the Civil War Q: Who was MATHEW BRADY? Category: Physical Science A: The laser is based on principles this German genius first proposed in 1916 Q: Who was ALBERT EINSTEIN? A: The oxide of this common lightweight metal forms rubies and sapphires Q: What is ALUMINUM? A: Ptolemy wrote that eyes see objects by sending this out to them Q: What is LIGHT? A: An ion is an atom that has a charge due to a gain or loss of these Q: What are ELECTRONS? A: Earth science, including meteorology, oceanography, and seismology Q: What is GEOPHYSICS? Category: Physics A: The flow of electrons through wire, air, or even yourself Q: What is ELECTRICITY? A: Two colors are complementary if they produce this color when added together Q: What is WHITE? A: This force holds our planet together Q: What is GRAVITY? A: This science created a 3-D picture in 1947 Q: What is HOLOGRAPHY? A: Branch of physics dealing with motion Q: What is KINETICS? Category: Poems & Poets A: According to Keats, "Beauty is..." this, and this "...beauty" Q: What is TRUTH? A: Though San Francisco-born, he was the poet laureate of Vermont Q: Who was ROBERT FROST? A: John Alden proposed to her on behalf of Miles Standish Q: Who was PRISCILLA MULLINS? A: Carl Sandburg wrote, "Sometime they'll give a war and..." this will happen Q: What is NOBODY WILL COME? A: Tennyson wrote, "Man is the hunter," while this "is his game" Q: What is WOMAN? Category: Poetry A: The 3 chief types are syllabic, stress, and foot-verse Q: What is METER? A: Of haiku, limerick, or sonnet, poem with the most lines Q: What is a SONNET? A: For Byron, "She walks in beauty like ..." this Q: What is THE NIGHT? A: Hedda's actor husband, Dewolf Hopper, popularized this sports poem Q: What is CASEY AT THE BAT? A: This poet dropped capital letters in his name and poetry Q: Who was E.E. CUMMINGS? Category: Poland A: After WW II, less than 20 percent of the buildings in this capital were inhabitable Q: What is WARSAW? A: After fighting in this war, Thaddeus Kosciuszko tried to unite Poland Q: What is the AMERICAN REVOLUTION? A: Re-establishing a free Poland was 1 of his 14 points of 1918 Q: Who was WOODROW WILSON? A: Poland is among the world's largest producers of this fuel Q: What is COAL? A: After 1572, the Poles used this method to select a king Q: What is an ELECTION? Category: Political Quotes A: In 1832, Sen. Wm. Marcy said that these "belong to the victors" Q: What are THE SPOILS OF THE ENEMY? A: In 1884, Rev. S.D. Burchard cited this party for "rum, Romanism, and rebellion" Q: What is the DEMOCRATIC PARTY? A: Dr. Lawrence Peter says an election is "the only race in which most people..." do this Q: What is PICK THE WINNER? A: At his second inauguration, he said, "With firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right" Q: Who was ABRAHAM LINCOLN? A: The president who said, "A little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing" Q: Who was THOMAS JEFFERSON? Category: Politics A: In 1960, he was elected president by the narrowest margin since 1912 Q: Who was JOHN F. KENNEDY? A: He formed the Federalist Party, and was the first Treasury Sec'y. Q: Who was ALEXANDER HAMILTON? A: The first V.P. candidates to debate on TV Q: Who were MONDALE AND DOLE? A: This animal symbolized NYC's corrupt Tammany Hall Q: What is a TIGER? A: In 1903, this midwest state held the first direct primary Q: What is WISCONSIN? Category: Pop Singers A: His 1984 hit was "Some Guys have all the Luck" Q: Who is ROD STEWART? A: Her career reached "Fever" pitch in 1958 Q: Who is PEGGY LEE? A: Barbra Streisand had top-10 hits with Neil Diamond, Donna Summer, and him Q: Who is BARRY GIBB? A: His 1971 Grammy was for "When You're Hot, You're Hot" Q: Who is JERRY REED? A: This ballad king went from "Rags to Riches" Q: Who is TONY BENNETT? Category: Potent Potables A: The sweeter these are originally, the higher the alcoholic content of the wine will be Q: What are GRAPES? A: Kamchatka, Popov, or Mr. Boston, for example Q: What are BRANDS OF VODKAS? A: His name on brandy means it's over 5 years old Q: Who was NAPOLEON? A: Two products used in a "seven and seven" Q: What are SEAGRAMS 7 & 7 UP? A: The classic formula for this rum drink is "1 of sour, 2 of sweet, 3 of strong, and 4 of weak Q: What is a DAIQUIRI? Category: Potpourri A: Studies are still being done on this dead genius' brain Q: Who was ALBERT EINSTEIN? A: How to accept the challenge of a thrown-down glove Q: What is PICKING THE GLOVE UP? A: The color on the U.S. flag which stands for vigilance, perseverance, and justice Q: What is BLUE? A: The FBI began with 810,000 of these Q: What are SETS OF FINGERPRINTS? A: William Evarts defended this man against impeachment Q: Who was ANDREW JOHNSON? Category: Poultry A: A male turkey, he's not named Dick or Harry Q: What is TOM? A: Finest feather pillows contain about 3/4 down and 1/4 feathers from this bird Q: What is a GOOSE? A: Two kinds of chickens raised only for their meat Q: What are BROILERS AND FRYERS? A: This game bird might be found in the wild under grass, not glass Q: What is a PHEASANT? A: Pea, rose, and cushion are types of this found only on chickens Q: What are COMBS? Category: Presidential Dogs A: His dog, "Pushinka," climbed to first daughter Caroline's tree house Q: Who was JOHN F. KENNEDY? A: His pet, "Pete," was a bull terrier, not a bull moose Q: Who was TEDDY ROOSEVELT? A: His dogs included "Major" and "Tiny," as well as "Fala" Q: Who was FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT? A: His Irish setter, "King Timahoe," was not quoted on the missing tapes Q: Who is RICHARD NIXON? A: D.C. dog tags numbers 1 and 2 went to his "Him" and "Her" Q: Who was LYNDON JOHNSON? Category: Presidential Trivia A: He chose not to run for re-election in 1952 Q: Who was HARRY TRUMAN? A: Presidents often stay there, part of a public park in Frederick County, MD. Q: What is CAMP DAVID? A: When told he had died, Dorothy Parker asked, "How could they tell" Q: Who was CALVIN COOLIDGE? A: He was the first to officially call the executive mansion "The White House" Q: Who was TEDDY ROOSEVELT? A: Both presidents associated with Tennessee had this same first name Q: What is ANDREW? Category: Presidents A: South Vietnam fell during this U.S. President's administration Q: Who is GERALD FORD? A: Of Grant, Garfield, or McKinley, the first president to use a telephone Q: Who was JAMES A. GARFIELD? A: The first president to speak on TV Q: Who is FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT? A: Even though he got more popular votes, he lost the 1888 election to Benjamin Harrison Q: Who was GROVER CLEVELAND? A: This first-ever Tennessee congressman later became president Q: Who was ANDREW JACKSON? Category: Presidents Middle Names A: Delano Q: Who was FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT? A: Earl Q: Who is JIMMY CARTER? A: Calvin Q: Who was JOHN COOLIDGE? A: Alan Q: Who was CHESTER ARTHUR? A: Of our first 8 presidents, only he had a middle name Q: Who was JOHN QUINCY ADAMS? Category: Produce A: 16 million pounds of this tropical fruit are imported weekly into Gulfport, Miss. Q: What are BANANAS? A: Green pasta is most often made by mixing this into the pasta dough Q: What is SPINACH? A: Cauliflower and these two vegetables are really flowers Q: What are BROCCOLI AND ARTICHOKE? A: These berries grew wild until first cultivated in N.J. in 1916 Q: What are BLUEBERRIES? A: Peas, beans and peanuts belong to this family of flowering plants Q: What are LEGUMES? Category: Proverbs A: They "speak louder than words" Q: What are ACTIONS? A: The Japanese say it's "only one layer," while we say it's "only skin deep" Q: What is BEAUTY? A: "If a job's worth doing, it's worth..." this Q: What is DOING WELL? A: Computer science proverb whose acronym is "GIGO" Q: What is GARBAGE IN GARBAGE OUT? A: These... "must come to an end" Q: What are ALL GOOD THINGS? Category: Rated "EX" A: Latin for "banishment", which is what it means Q: What is EXILE? A: One can be "My brother flushed my homework down the toilet" Q: What is an EXCUSE? A: A cold stethoscope on a warm body Q: What is an EXAMINATION? A: Disinter a body Q: What is EXHUME? A: Half of the breathing process Q: What is EXHALING? Category: Real Names A: Alois Schicklgruber's infamous son Q: Who was ADOLF HITLER? A: Malcolm Little Q: Who was MALCOLM X? A: Charles Eugene Boone's better-known first name Q: What is PAT? A: Rock and roller Ernest Evans' "Twisting" stage name Q: Who is CHUBBY CHECKER? A: Jed and Elly May were Clampetts, while Jethro was this Q: What is BODINE? Category: Religion A: "This is the place," he said at the Great Salt Lake Valley Q: Who was BRIGHAM YOUNG? A: Hindu pilgrims cleanse at this river Q: What is the GANGES? A: Buddhist and Hindu state of absorption into the universal spirit Q: What is NIRVANA? A: With Christianity and Judaism, the third major monotheistic religion Q: What is ISLAM? A: Jamaican sect that believes blacks should consider Africa home Q: Who are the RASTAFARIANS? Category: Rhode Island A: His brother published "The Rhode Island Almanack" in 1728 under the name "Poor Robin" Q: Who was BEN FRANKLIN? A: This "Yankee Doodle Dandy" was actually born on the 3rd of July in Providence Q: Who was GEORGE M. COHAN? A: R.I. did this two months early, on May 4, 1776 Q: What was DECLARE ITS INDEPENDENCE? A: Deer may be hunted in R.I. only with this weapon Q: What is a BOW AND ARROW? A: A 1652 R.I. law was the first in North America against this practice Q: What is SLAVERY? Category: Rhyming Mythology A: Not too bright but very, very strong, his 12 labors atoned for his doing wrong Q: Who was HERCULES? A: The riddle he solved, the sphinx is annoyed, his "complex" supports the sons of Doc Freud Q: Who was OEDIPUS? A: More swift was he than any god, two snakes curled round his winged rod Q: Who was MERCURY? A: Brothers of Helen, yet now from on high these twins twinkle brightly amid the night sky Q: What are CASTOR AND POLLUX? A: The witch who poisoned men with wine, she changed Ulysses' crew to swine Q: Who was CIRCE? Category: Rulers A: He said, "I have never loved anyone for love's sake, except perhaps, Josephine...a little" Q: Who was NAPOLEON? A: The first to rule all of Britain, he sponsored a Bible translation Q: Who was KING JAMES? A: The first Russian ruler to be called "czar," he annexed Siberia Q: Who was IVAN THE TERRIBLE? A: The longest reign ever, 94 years, was that of Pepi II, who ruled this country about 2300 B.C. Q: What is EGYPT? A: Constantine II, deposed in 1967, was the last king of this country Q: What is GREECE? Category: Russia A: In Russian, it's "CCCP," but in English, it's these 4 letters Q: What is USSR? A: After a peasant uprising, she decided against her proposed 1767 reforms for serfs Q: Who was CATHERINE THE GREAT? A: The world's largest herds of them are raised in the Russian Arctic Q: What are REINDEER? A: He married Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt after his accession in 1894 Q: Who was NICHOLAS II? A: It was only in 1918 that Russia adopted this calendar Q: What is the GREGORIAN CALENDAR? Category: Saintly Names A: "I was a woman at 6," said this actress, born Jill Oppenheim Q: Who is JILL ST. JOHN? A: The Cree Indian folksinger who won an Oscar for "Up Where We Belong" Q: Who is BUFFY SAINTE MARIE? A: The Indians called it "Fire Mountain." Others call it "Mt. Fuji of America" Q: What is MOUNT SAINT HELENS? A: St. Thomas and these two are the main U.S. Virgin Islands Q: What are ST. JOHN & ST. CROIX? A: She was called "The foremost woman poet of America" in the 1920s Q: Who is EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY? Category: Sayings A: When the cat's away, what the mice will do Q: What is PLAY? A: As you made your bed, so must you do this Q: What is LIE IN IT? A: "If the mountain will not come to Muhammed, Muhammed will..." do this Q: What is GO TO THE MOUNTAIN? A: "Man Proposes" but God does this Q: What is DISPOSES? A: "A bad workman quarrels with..." these Q: What are HIS TOOLS? Category: Scandinavia A: This word means "table of open-faced sandwiches" Q: What is SMORGASBORD? A: The major religion of Scandinavia Q: What is LUTHERAN? A: Par Fabian Lagerkvist and Selma Lagerlof have won Nobel Prizes in this field Q: What is LITERATURE? A: The only Scandinavian country not occupied by the Nazis Q: What is SWEDEN? A: The most sparsely populated country in Europe after Iceland Q: What is NORWAY? Category: Science A: This branch of biology is the study of animals Q: What is ZOOLOGY? A: This gas is the largest component of air Q: What is NITROGEN? A: A combination of 2 or more metals Q: What is an ALLOY? A: Any object carried aloft by a rocket, such as a satellite Q: What is the PAYLOAD? A: This rock contains kerogen, which yields petroleum when heated Q: What is OIL SHALE? Category: Science Facts A: Behaviorists and dogs drool over the work of this Russian physiologist Q: Who is IVAN PAVLOV? A: Though pleasant to kiss under, this plant is poisonous to eat Q: What is MISTLETOE? A: Cryobiologists do this to living matter to preserve it for future use Q: What is FREEZING? A: Developed in the 18th century, the Leyden Jar stores this Q: What is ELECTRICITY? A: This unit of light wavelength equals only one ten-billionth of a meter Q: What is an ANGSTROM? Category: Seasonal Songs A: David Loggins asked, "Please Come to Boston" in this season Q: What is SPRINGTIME? A: This hit made seals and crofts "Feel Fine" Q: What is SUMMER BREEZE? A: Cable sang this song to Liat in "South Pacific" Q: What is YOUNGER THAN SPRINGTIME? A: Kenny Rogers met "The Gambler" on this kind of evening Q: What is A WARM SUMMER EVENING? A: Roger Williams' song from the 1950s Q: What is AUTUMN LEAVES Category: Sewing A: Department you'd go to when you get "ideas" to buy buttons, zippers, and pins Q: What is NOTIONS? A: These scissors cut edges of fabrics in small scallop or zigzag patterns Q: What are PINKING SHEARS? A: This temporary machine stitch is usually 6 to the inch Q: What is a BASTING STITCH? A: The soft, short threads on the surface of pile fabrics are called this Q: What is NAP? A: This chemical process adds strength and luster to cotton thread Q: What is MERCERIZING? Category: Shakespeare A: Othello, MacBeth, Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet are all this at the end of their plays Q: What is DEAD? A: His big line is "Beware the Ides of March," not "forsooth" Q: Who is the SOOTHSAYER? A: He yells, "Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks... rage... blow." Q: Who is KING LEAR? A: After England, this country is the setting for the most Shakespeare plays Q: What is ITALY? A: "Henry VIII" ends with wife number 2 giving birth to her Q: Who is ELIZABETH? Category: Shaping Up A: The proof of a good workout is breaking into this before going into the steam room Q: What is SWEAT? A: You've run this many meters if you finish a 10K race Q: What are 10,000 METERS? A: Jane Fonda goes for this hot term for a catabolic tissue breakdown Q: What is the BURN? A: The "washboard" effect relates to these muscles Q: What are ABS MUSCLES? A: Exercising to the point of oxygen debt puts you in this condition, meaning "without oxygen" Q: What is ANAEROBIC? Category: Ships A: The fatal quest of the "Pequod" Q: What was MOBY DICK? A: He captained "The Golden Hind" Q: Who was SIR FRANCIS DRAKE? A: Voyagers on this ship "committed themselves to the will of God" Q: What was the MAYFLOWER? A: Of this "ship," Longfellow said, "Sail on, O Union, strong and great" Q: What is the SHIP OF STATE? A: Japan surrendered aboard this U.S. battleship Q: What was the U.S.S. MISSOURI? Category: Ships at Sea A: Few people barely lost their footing when this ship hit the iceberg Q: What is the TITANIC? A: A single-masted ship such as the "John B" Q: What is a SLOOP? A: Fighting in this war, Germany's "Seeadler" was the last important naval vessel to use sails Q: What is WORLD WAR I? A: California's gold rush spurred the construction of this speedy type of vessel Q: What is a CLIPPER SHIP? A: Line of the "QE2" Q: What is the CUNARD LINE? Category: Sickness & Health A: A commemorative wall hanging, or what the dentist scrapes off your teeth Q: What is PLAQUE? A: Rash found mostly in infants and obese persons Q: What is PRICKLY HEAT? A: Blinking and twitching are considered kinds of these Q: What are TICS? A: Under, over, or no activity, hypothyroidism is this thyroid problem Q: What is UNDERACTIVITY? A: T.S.S., which primarily affects women, stands for this Q: What is TOXIC SHOCK SYNDROME? Category: Slogans A: "Be all that you can be" in this branch of the service Q: What is the ARMY? A: "When you care enough to send the very best," send this Q: What is a HALLMARK CARD? A: Maxwell House Coffee's famous slogan Q: What is GOOD TO THE LAST DROP? A: In the '30s this movie studio claimed, "More stars than there are in Heaven" Q: What is MGM? A: Their motto is "A mind is a terrible thing to waste" Q: What is the UNITED NEGRO COLLEGE FUND? Category: Soap Operas A: CBS-TV's "The Bold & Beautiful" is a spin-off from this soap Q: What is THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS? A: Kathryn Leigh Scott published a scrapbook about her life on this '60s gothic soap Q: What was DARK SHADOWS? A: The first name of a Brady on "Days of our Lives" and a Buchanan on "One Life to Live" Q: What is BO? A: "As the World Turns" and this soap both have "world" in their titles Q: What is ANOTHER WORLD? A: Among his roles on soaps were Jeb Hampton, Mike Gallagher, and Scotty Baldwin Q: Who is KIN SHRINER? Category: South America A: The temperate and rainy months of April to October are this season in Venezuela Q: What is WINTER? A: This "cattle country" also produces much of the world's wool Q: What is ARGENTINA? A: Presidents of this narrow country can walk unescorted around its capital Q: What is CHILE? A: This mountainous coastal country is 3rd largest in area Q: What is PERU? A: Colombia's first president said, "Arms have given independence, laws will give..." this Q: What is LIBERTY? Category: South Dakota A: After the "Today" Show, this South Dakotan anchored NBC's "Evening News" Q: Who is TOM BROKAW? A: Semi-desert region described as "Hell with the fires put out" Q: What are THE BADLANDS? A: In 1979, American Indian militants occupied this S.D. battle site for 70 days Q: What is WOUNDED KNEE? A: It's how the United States acquired S.D. Q: What was LOUISIANA PURCHASE? A: This Democrat was the only major party presidential nominee from Republican S.D. Q: Who is GEORGE MC GOVERN? Category: Soviet Union A: It's the official "religion" of the Soviet Union Q: What is ATHEISM? A: Male life expectancy has moved in this direction in the last 20 years Q: What is DOWN? A: The drinking age has been raised from 18 to this Q: What is 21? A: "In the future, there will be fewer but better Russians," said this dictator Q: Who was JOSEF STALIN? A: Over half of all Soviet families have this many children Q: What is 1? Category: Space & Aviation A: In 1930, Sir Frank Whittle patented this type of airplane engine Q: What is a TURBO JET? A: The 307 Stratoliner was the first luxury plane from this maker of the 767 Q: What is BOEING? A: "S.A.C." stands for this Q: What is STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND? A: The power source of the 1977 "Gossamer Condor" Q: What was MAN POWER? A: The first space shuttle Q: What is the COLUMBIA? Category: Space Travel A: The number of original U.S. astronauts Q: What is 7? A: Of 6, 8, or 10, the number of Apollo flights that landed on the moon Q: What is 6? A: Russian for "union," Apollo linked up with one July 17, 1975 Q: What is SOYUZ? A: The year of John Glenn's orbital flight Q: What is 1962? A: While Armstrong and Aldrin were on the Moon, he orbited in the command module Q: Who is MICHAEL COLLINS? Category: Speak of the Dickens A: In his "Papers," he calls himself "An observer of human nature" Q: Who is MR.PICKWICK? A: "Hard," replied the Dodger, "as..." this, added Charlie Bates Q: What is AS NAILS? A: His ghost explained, "I wear the chain I forged in life" Q: Who was JACOB MARLEY? A: "Bleak House" line, "I only want to be free. The..." ends with this 1972 Goldie Hawn movie title Q: What is the BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE? A: "In case anything turned up" was his favorite expression in "David Copperfield" Q: Who is Mr.MICAWBER? Category: Sport of Kings A: They're considered apprentices until they've ridden 40 winners Q: What are JOCKEYS? A: The finish line is opposite this straightaway Q: What is the BACKSTRETCH? A: The most prestigious British steeplechase Q: What is the GRAND NATIONAL? A: A race where 2 horses finish in a tie for any position Q: What is a DEAD HEAT? A: Man O'War won his first race in 1919 at this N.Y. track Q: What is BELMONT PARK? Category: Sports A: Hawaiians' sport even before Columbus discovered America Q: What is SURFING? A: Falconry's leather glove to "throw down" or "run" Q: What is a GAUNTLET? A: The British soccer fans who rioted in Brussels were supporters of this city's team Q: What is LIVERPOOL? A: Nancy Lieberman was the first woman to have her name on one of these Q: What is a BASKETBALL? A: The sport in which you can legally indulge in jury-rigging Q: What is SAILING? Category: Sports Birds A: In golf, this bird in the hand is worth 2 under par Q: What is an EAGLE? A: The Pittsburgh Pirates' mascot dresses up as this Q: What is a PARROT? A: Every fall, these "predators" take wing in the AFC West Q: What are the SEATTLE SEAHAWKS? A: Appropriately, these birds play in the National Hockey League Q: What are the PITTSBURGH PENGUINS? A: The only NBA team that fits this category Q: What are the ATLANTA HAWKS? Category: Sports Events A: Winning Tennis' Grand Slam earned her a million-dollar bonus in 1984 Q: Who is MARTINA NAVRATILOVA? A: Last in 1968, Mario Andretti was first in this in 1969 Q: What is the INDIANAPOLIS 500? A: Current name of baseball's St. Louis Browns Q: Who are the BALTIMORE ORIOLES? A: Campbell and Wales Conference champs play for this trophy Q: What is the STANLEY CUP? A: 1918 Red Sox pitcher who hurled 29 2/3 scoreless World Series innings Q: Who was BABE RUTH? Category: Sports Facts A: The only team that can score points in volleyball Q: What is the SERVING TEAM? A: English boxer Jack Broughton, the inventor of the boxing glove, is commemorated in this regal resting place Q: What is WESTMINSTER ABBEY? A: Finishing her channel swim in 1926, Gertrude Ederle was met on the beach by an immigration officer demanding this Q: What is a PASSPORT? A: The year of the first World Series telecast, which featured Dodger rookie Jackie Robinson Q: What is 1947? A: Of all his achievements, this pediatrician is proudest of his 1924 Olympic Gold Medal for rowing Q: Who is DR. BENJAMIN SPOCK? Category: Sports People A: Clint Benedict of the 1929 Montreal Maroons was the first hockey goalie to wear this Q: What is a FACE MASK? A: The 1969 Redskins were the last team he coached Q: Who was VINCE LOMBARDI? A: His syndicated column and radio program were called "On the Line" Q: Who was BOB CONSIDINE? A: This West Virginian set a 36-hole golf tournament record at Greenbrier Q: Who is SLAMMIN' SAMMY SNEAD? A: Jack Dempsey's famous 4 words when asked how he lost a fight Q: What is I FORGOT TO DUCK? Category: Sports Trivia A: This offshoot of soccer is named for a school in England Q: What is RUGBY? A: The overarm "crawl" was introduced to English swimmers in 1902 by this country Q: What is AUSTRALIA? A: This sport's Hall of Fame is in Springfield, Mass. Q: What is BASKETBALL? A: Marks that distinguish college footballs from professional ones Q: What are WHITE STRIPES? A: He was the first boxer to regain a heavyweight championship Q: Who is FLOYD PATTERSON? Category: Sports World A: Number of pins across the back row in 10-pin bowling Q: What is FOUR? A: Game a kid would be playing if he hits a "spauldeen" 2 sewers Q: What is STICKBALL? A: He outran a racehorse in a 100-yard dash in 1936 Q: Who was JESSE OWENS? A: They hold the major-league record for most home runs hit by brothers Q: Who are HANK AND TOMMY AARON? A: In 1970, she became the first U.S. woman to win an int'l. gymnastics medal Q: Who is CATHY RIGBY MC COY? Category: Stage & Screen A: The "faculty sport" in Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" Q: What is MUSICAL BEDS? A: One-word title of an Anthony Shaffer mystery play Q: What is SLEUTH? A: They ruled "Cloud-Cuckooland" long before they tormented TIPPI Q: Who are THE BIRDS? A: First Broadway play written by a black woman Q: What is A RAISIN IN THE SUN? A: In Shaw's play, it is "Mrs. Warren's profession" Q: What is PROSTITUTION? Category: Starry Songs A: Perry Como sang, "Catch a falling star and put it..." there Q: What is IN YOUR POCKET? A: "Are the stars out tonight, I can't tell if it's cloudy or..." this Q: What is BRIGHT? A: It's when "peace will guide the planets and love will steer the stars" Q: What is THE AGE OF AQUARIUS? A: "At night the stars put on a show for free" there Q: What is UP ON THE ROOF? A: The Everly Brothers were "through with counting the stars above" in this song Q: What is BYE BYE LOVE? Category: Starts With "D" A: A tough choice might place you on the horns of one Q: What is a DILEMMA? A: Unless playing for Cleveland, an Indian shouldn't stand up in this kind of canoe Q: What is a DUGOUT? A: Push a button, or lower someone's spirit Q: What is DEPRESS? A: Southern belles might do it at customs Q: What is DECLARE? A: Once it's cast, change is impossible Q: What is the DIE? Category: Starts With "G" A: Mitch Gaylord and Mary Lou Retton, for example Q: What are GYMNASTS? A: Latin for "to swallow," it's one of the Seven Deadly Sins Q: What is GLUTTONY? A: A gadget or a gremlin Q: What is GISMO? A: Georgia Engel on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" Q: What was GEORGETTE? A: Therapy method emphasizing the whole of experience as greater than its parts Q: What is GESTALT? Category: Starts With "L" A: Choirs and hay are kept in them Q: What are LOFTS? A: The archangel who led the angels in revolt Q: Who is LUCIFER? A: Type of beer stored for sedimentation before use Q: What is LAGER? A: Flaxseed oil and cork pressed on canvas make this floor covering Q: What is LINOLEUM? A: "Bartlett's Quotations" has the most citings under this "L" word Q: What is LOVE? Category: Starts With "OK" A: Virgil, Morgan, and Doc were wounded here, on Oct. 26, 1881 Q: What is the O.K. CORRAL? A: In the 1940's, its first Broadway run tallied 2,212 performances Q: What is OKLAHOMA? A: Also called "gumbo," it's a garden annual with an edible pod Q: What is OKRA? A: Last name of American artist Georgia, or Tarzan actor Michael Q: What is O'KEEFE? A: 5-letter antelope-sized member of giraffe family Q: What is an OKAPI? Category: Sticky Stuff A: The U.S. once accused this country of coating embassy officials with spy dust Q: What is the SOVIET UNION? A: Vermont leads the U.S. in producing this sticky pancake topping Q: What is MAPLE SYRUP? A: This piece of cricket equipment can be "sticky," Q: What is a WICKET? A: The letter-closing sticky stuff Jackie Paper gave to Puff Q: What is SEALING WAX? A: One of these might say, "I brake for no reason" Q: What is a BUMPER STICKER? Category: Street Songs A: "All at once am I several stories high, knowing I'm on..." this street Q: What is WHERE YOU LIVE? A: In 1956, the Four Lads were "Standing on the Corner" doing this Q: What is WATCHING ALL THE GIRLS GO BY? A: Avenue on which "You'll be the Grandest Lady in the Easter Parade" Q: What is FIFTH AVENUE? A: When the Orlons asked, "Where do all the Hippies Meet" this was the answer Q: What is SOUTH STREET? A: The cop on this corner "Broke My Little Bottle of Love Potion Number Nine" Q: What is 34TH AND VINE? Category: Supporting Characters A: Jack Benny's Valet, Rochester Q: Who was EDDIE ANDERSON? A: Walter Denton usually drove her to school Q: Who was OUR MISS BROOKS? A: Sitcom on which janitor, Mr. Bookman, was called "Buffalo Butt" Q: What was GOOD TIMES? A: He portrayed Abraham Lincoln briefly in "How the West Was Won" Q: Who was RAYMOND MASSEY? A: Herb Woodley is their neighbor Q: Who are BLONDIE AND DAGWOOD? Category: Technology A: Company that gave us the "Walkman" and "Watchman" Q: What is SONY? A: Because he bought the rights to the invention, you vacuum with this, not a "Spangler" Q: Who was WILLIAM HOOVER? A: It was first introduced in 1904, so now you can give your question at the beep Q: What is the TELEPHONE ANSWERING MACHINE? A: Bakers' innovation, introduced in the 1930s, it's claimed to be the greatest invention since itself Q: What is SLICED BREAD A: Invention that detects icebergs and subs, known by its acronym Q: What is SONAR? Category: Textiles A: The plant which accounts for about 95 percent of the natural fiber used in the U.S. Q: What is COTTON? A: The Chinese began cultivating these "textile insects" about 2700 B.C. Q: What are SILKWORMS? A: Much to the regret of Sleeping Beauty, this came into use in Europe by the 13th century Q: What is a SPINNING WHEEL? A: N.C. and these two other southern states are the leading textile producers Q: What are SOUTH CAROLINA & GEORGIA? A: A 1733 invention that led to mechanizing looms, or the "Columbia," when airborne Q: What is a FLYING SHUTTLE? Category: The 1870's A: The first U.S. post cards, issued in 1873, cost this much Q: What was 1 CENT? A: From 1872-1874, 12 million of these animals were systematically killed Q: What are BUFFALO? A: This "Boss" defrauded N.Y.C. of 200 million dollars Q: Who was WILLIAM BOSS TWEED? A: In 1870, the 15th Amendment guaranteed the right to vote regardless of this Q: What is RACE? A: In 1877, in Montana, this Indian chief was finally defeated in the Nez Perce War Q: Who was CHIEF JOSEPH? Category: The 1950's A: This comedy duo's split-up was big news in 1956 Q: Who are DEAN MARTIN & JERRY LEWIS? A: The '50s "Beat Generation" supposedly began in the "City Lights" bookshop in this city Q: What is SAN FRANCISCO? A: The full text of this 1928 D.H. Lawrence novel was published in the U.S. in 1959 Q: What is LADY CHATTERLEYS LOVER? A: President of Indonesia all through the '50s Q: Who was SUKARNO? A: Ezra Taft Benson held this Cabinet post in the '50s Q: What is SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE? Category: The '50s A: Norman Vincent Peale promoted the power of this Q: What is POSITIVE THINKING? A: He said his voice was "flat as a table," but he sure could "cry" Q: Who is JOHNNY RAY? A: This teamster leader succeeded Dave Beck Q: Who was JIMMY HOFFA? A: "The Ten Commandments" and this other Biblical epic were the '50s highest-grossing films Q: What is BEN HUR? A: He was asked, "Senator, have you no decency" Q: Who was JOSEPH MC CARTHY? Category: The Beatles A: He was their guru Q: Who is the MAHARISHI? A: He organized 2 concerts for Bangladesh in 1971 in N.Y. Q: Who is GEORGE HARRISON? A: Their first song to top U.S. charts Q: What is I WANT TO HOLD YOUR HAND? A: The only Beatle never to have been divorced Q: Who is PAUL MCCARTNEY? A: The Beatles' drummer before Ringo Q: Who is PETER BEST? Category: The Bible A: Completes the phrase, "The Lord is my shepherd" Q: What is I SHALL NOT WANT? A: Immanuel Velikovsky claimed to have found evidence in Egypt of these 10 biblical events Q: What are the 10 PLAGUES? A: Mount Megiddo is the prophesied site of this last earthly battle Q: What is ARMAGEDDON? A: Saul of Tarsus was struck blind while on the road to this city Q: What is DAMASCUS? A: At two words, the Bible's shortest verse Q: What is JESUS WEPT? Category: The Body in Question A: The two main gases exchanged in the alveoli of the lungs Q: What are OXYGEN AND CARBON DIOXIDE? A: He was host of a PBS series, this category's namesake Q: Who is JONATHAN MILLER? A: You have the most taste buds at this time of life Q: What is AS A BABY? A: Each one has about 1 million separate filter units, called nephrons Q: What are the KIDNEYS? A: The zygomaticus and risorius muscles pull up and back when you do this Q: What is SMILING? Category: The Calendar A: Copernicus used this civilization's calendar from 4000 B.C. Q: Who were the EGYPTIANS? A: The Romans added a second February 24th to handle this Q: What is a LEAP YEAR? A: Their religious month starts when the crescent of the new moon appears Q: Who are the MUSLIMS? A: In most languages, they refer to the Sun, the Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn Q: What are the DAYS OF THE WEEK? A: Astronomers include a year numbered this way in their calculations Q: What is 0? Category: The Circus A: First president to attend a circus Q: Who was GEORGE WASHINGTON? A: A place to buy tickets, named for the railroad car where originally sold Q: What is the BOX OFFICE? A: Animals called "bulls" by circus workers Q: What are ELEPHANTS? A: The two showmen who joined with the Ringling Brothers' Circus Company Q: Who were BARNUM AND BAILEY? A: If they're sent into the arena all at once, it's called a "bust out" Q: Who are the CLOWNS? Category: The Civil War A: The first battle Q: What is FORT SUMTER? A: The side whose songs included "Lula, Lula, Lula is Gone" and "3 Times Around She Went" Q: What was the SOUTH? A: Admiral Farragut's defiant mobile bay battle cry preceeding "Full Speed Ahead" Q: What is DAMN THE TORPEDOS? A: Lincoln's Sec'y. of State Q: Who was WILLIAM SEWARD? A: The crunchy flour and water biscuit ration that was a soldier's staple diet Q: What is HARDTACK? Category: The Human Body A: 100 quadrillion synapses are in this organ Q: What is the BRAIN? A: The rectus abdominis, pectoralis major, and the heart are these Q: What are MUSCLES? A: The eye's projection screen Q: What is the RETINA? A: Substance that gives erythrocytes their red color Q: What is HEMOGLOBIN? A: The thyroid, pituitary, and adrenal are this type of gland Q: What are ENDOCRINE GLANDS? Category: The Library A: The record for this is one checked out in 1823 and returned in 1968 Q: What is an OVERDUE BOOK? A: The first was in Athens in the 6th century B.C. Q: What is a PUBLIC LIBRARY? A: The world's largest municipal library is in this city Q: What is NEW YORK? A: This steel tycoon used part of his wealth to help build over 1,700 U.S. libraries Q: Who was ANDREW CARNEGIE? A: Most U.S. libraries use the Dewey Decimal System or this classification system Q: What is the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SYSTEM? Category: The Movies A: John Travolta film with "Hard Hat Days and Honky Tonk Nights" Q: What is URBAN COWBOY? A: 1966's "One Million Years B.C." featured her in a prehistoric fur bikini Q: Who is RAQUEL WELCH? A: This Steve Martin movie told what "Dead Men Don't Wear" Q: What is PLAID? A: James Coburn struck sparks as a secret agent in this 1966 spy spoof Q: What is OUR MAN FLINT? A: This E.M. Forster 1924 novel won two Oscars as a 1984 film Q: What is A PASSAGE TO INDIA? Category: The Old Testament A: After smiting him, David carried his head around Q: Who was GOLIATH? A: The wise king Q: Who was SOLOMON? A: God made man a little lower than them Q: Who are the ANGELS? A: "Antediluvian" refers to events before this Q: What was the FLOOD? A: The most mentioned Pagan god in the Old Testament Q: Who was BAAL? Category: The Old West A: Lawman William Barclay Masterson's nickname Q: What was BAT? A: Its ad read, "Young, skinny fellows not over 18, must be expert riders and willing to risk death daily..." Q: What was the PONY EXPRESS? A: Doc Holliday's mistress, she had Dean Martin and John Wayne among her movie sons Q: Who was KATIE ELDER? A: Famous fighting keelboater and marksman of the early 1800's Q: Who was MIKE FINK? A: The Great Plains were opened up by this 1862 act Q: What was the HOMESTEAD ACT? Category: The Solar System A: A day on this largest planet is less than 10 Earth hours Q: What is JUPITER? A: Mercury, Venus, and these 2 make up the 4 inner planets Q: What are EARTH AND MARS? A: Though almost 10 times bigger, this planet is only about 1/8 as dense as Earth Q: What is SATURN? A: At this planet's farthest point, it's over 4.5 billion miles from the Sun Q: What is PLUTO? A: Though all others rotate on a vertical axis, this outer planet spins on a horizontal one Q: What is URANUS? Category: The U.N. A: Its Int'l. Court of Justice is commonly known as this Q: What is the WORLD COURT? A: U.N. peacekeeping forces do not come from the U.S.S.R. or this other superpower Q: What is the U.S.? A: This ex-first lady chaired a 1947 commission to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Q: Who was ELEANOR ROOSEVELT? A: Of 2, 4, or 5 years, the length of the Secretary-General's renewable term Q: What is 5 YEARS? A: The General Assembly's annual sessions begin on the 3rd Tuesday of this month Q: What is SEPTEMBER? Category: This & That A: When details are to follow, so do these initials Q: What is T.B.A.? A: Though Asia has more people, this continent is equal in density Q: What is EUROPE? A: This flag's 5 rings represent at least 1 color in the flag of each competing nation Q: What is the OLYMPIC FLAG? A: In the Old West, "Hemp Fever" meant killing someone this way Q: What was HANGING? A: To reinforce, or a long, cylindrical pillow Q: What is a BOLSTER? Category: Tough TV Trivia A: Knob you adjust if your picture rolls Q: What is the VERTICAL HOLD? A: Regis Philbin was "his" Ed McMahon Q: Who is JOEY BISHOP? A: The role Hans Conreid played "relatively" well on "Make Room for Daddy" Q: What is UNCLE TONOOSE? A: Of a Sunbeam, Triumph, or Austin-Healey, Maxwell Smart's car Q: What is a SUNBEAM? A: Miss Landers taught this title character his ABC's Q: Who was BEAVER CLEAVER? Category: Toys & Games A: The letter tiles with the highest point value in "Scrabble" Q: What are Q AND Z? A: Johann Maelzel patented a mechanism to make a doll say these 2 words Q: What are MAMA & PAPA? A: The game where you try to get rid of all your bones by matching spots Q: What is DOMINOES? A: The nickname of the point 4 in Craps, or Michael Landon on TV Q: What is LITTLE JOE? A: A white plastic sphere with air holes Q: What is a WIFFLE BALL? Category: Trade Centers A: R.J. Reynolds' top two cigarette brands are named for this, its home city Q: What is WINSTON SALEM? A: During WW II, this city produced more steel than Germany and Japan combined Q: What is PITTSBURGH? A: This Alabama city is noted for iron and steel Q: What is BIRMINGHAM? A: This Florida city produces more "Havana" cigars than any city in the world Q: What is TAMPA? A: Middle Atlantic city called "The chemical capital of the world" Q: What is WILMINGTON DELAWARE? Category: Transportation A: Elevated tracks circling downtown Chicago give the area this name Q: What is the LOOP? A: Fiction's Hercule Poirot solves a murder on this train Q: What is the ORIENT EXPRESS? A: Montreal's subway runs smoother and quieter because of these Q: What are RUBBER TIRES? A: For many years, this major U.S. airline was restricted to int'l. flights Q: What is PAN AMERICAN? A: Auto company owned by the French gov't. Q: What is RENAULT? Category: Travel and Tourism A: They say, "Leave the driving to us" Q: What is GREYHOUND BUS LINES? A: The "Delta Queen" is one Q: What is a STEAMBOAT? A: A "Y" on your airline ticket designates this class of travel Q: What is COACH? A: Bhutan is on this continent Q: What is ASIA? A: This country's most popular beach resort is Punta Del Este Q: What is URUGUAY? Category: Trivia A: This anti-Israel, former Ugandan dictator received his military training in Israel Q: Who is IDI AMIN? A: Despite flunking a screen test for "Our Gang," she later became a millionaire by age 10 Q: Who is SHIRLEY TEMPLE? A: Name of the "Toys R Us" giraffe Q: What is GEOFFREY? A: An old weapon with a bladed head or slang for an overbearing woman Q: What is a BATTLE AX? A: The Comoros, Sao Tome E Principe, and the Ukraine are all members of this Q: What is the UNITED NATIONS? Category: Trivia Quiz A: Cher's first reaction to him was "That's the weirdest-looking man I've ever seen" Q: Who is SONNY BONO? A: Alexander Graham Bell, Andrew Carnegie, and Robert Louis Stevenson were born in this country Q: What is SCOTLAND? A: 28 percent of women carry this electronic item in their purse Q: What is a CALCULATOR? A: A man wearing dark clothes and aftershave at dusk in June is most likely to be bitten by them Q: What are MOSQUITOES? A: The job of the "Oshiya" in Japanese subways Q: What is PUSH PEOPLE INTO CARS? Category: TV Gals A: Bea Arthur and Rue McClanahan were re-paired in this post-"Maude" sitcom Q: What is THE GOLDEN GIRLS? A: Amanda Tucker and Samantha Stevens were these Q: What are WITCHES? A: Character played by Loretta Swit, then Meg Foster, then Sharon Gless Q: Who is DETECTIVE CHRIS CAGNEY? A: Children under 12 "wrote" one episode of this show starring Soleil Moon Frye Q: What is PUNKY BREWSTER? A: She was Rhoda's mom and Rosie with the "quicker picker-upper" Q: Who is NANCY WALKER? Category: TV Game People A: At one time, he was host in common to "Wheel of Fortune," "The Love Connection," and "Scrabble" Q: Who is CHUCK WOOLERY? A: Euphemism for "sex" in "Newlywed Game" questions Q: What is WHOOPIE? A: This Goodson-Todman show has been "Allstars," "Plus," and "Super" Q: What is PASSWORD? A: "Night at the Opera" star who was a regular panelist on "To Tell The Truth" Q: Who is KITTY CARLISLE? A: He began each show with "Thank you, friends. Thank you, Don Pardo..." Q: Who is ART FLEMING? Category: TV Themes A: "Making Our Dreams Come True" was the theme of this sitcom Q: What was LAVERNE & SHIRLEY? A: "Out of the night, when the full moon is bright, comes a horseman known as..." this Q: Who is ZORRO? A: "Near You" is his theme song Q: Who is MILTON BERLE? A: "Three Stars Will Shine Tonight" was this show's theme Q: What was DR. KILDARE? A: His theme is "Gentle on my Mind" Q: Who is GLEN CAMPBELL? Category: U.S. Cities A: If a show is playing in Peoria, it's in this state Q: What is ILLINOIS? A: Winter Park, Winter Garden, and Winter Haven are all in this state Q: What is FLORIDA? A: Washington has hosted two World's Fairs, Seattle in 1962 and here in 1974, Q: What is SPOKANE? A: This city's 17th Street has been called "The Wall Street of the West" Q: What is DENVER? A: Two presidents, both Adamses, were born here Q: What is QUINCY? Category: U.S. Geography A: Vermont sits halfway between the North Pole and this line Q: What is the EQUATOR? A: Marydel and Delmar straddle these two states Q: What are MARYLAND & DELAWARE? A: Captain Henry Shreve, who broke Fulton's steamboat monopoly has a city named for him in this state Q: What is LOUISIANA? A: A spot in this state is the geographic center of the 50 states Q: What is SOUTH DAKOTA? A: Only city to span the entire width of a state is Weirton, in this state Q: What is WEST VIRGINIA? Category: U.S. History A: Gold was discovered in this state in 1848 Q: What is CALIFORNIA? A: This federal commission replaced the Federal Radio Commission in June, 1934 Q: What is the COMMUNICATIONS? A: America's first billion-dollar corporation Q: What is U.S. STEEL? A: A 1799 report said a throat infection "put a period to his mortal existence" Q: Who was GEORGE WASHINGTON? A: The president who appointed the first two women generals Q: Who is RICHARD NIXON? Category: U.S. Money A: In 1984, the Secret Service seized almost 90 million dollars worth of it Q: What is COUNTERFEIT MONEY? A: FDR and this other president appeared on coins the year after they died Q: Who is JOHN F. KENNEDY? A: When businessmen take risks with "OPM," it means this Q: What is OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY? A: This currency nickname came from the use of deerskin as frontier "money" Q: What is a BUCK? A: The U.S. Treasury and this agency can legally issue U.S. currency Q: What is the FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM? Category: U.S. States A: "America's Dairyland" Q: What is WISCONSIN? A: Rhode Island has 5 counties, but Delaware has only this many Q: What is 3? A: Cape May, in this state, is as far south as Washington, D.C. Q: What is NEW JERSEY? A: State where "Brown vs. Board of Education" began Q: What is KANSAS? A: "Music Man" Meredith Willson's home town of Mason City is in this state Q: What is IOWA? Category: Universities A: Bear Bryant coached this university's football team for over 20 years Q: What is the UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA? A: Its main campus in Columbus includes an airport and two 18-hole golf courses Q: What is OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY? A: The first modern parapsychology lab was set up at this N.C. univ. in Durham Q: What is DUKE UNIVERSITY? A: Students here elected their buffalo mascot as "Homecoming Queen" Q: What is the UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO? A: This mid-Atlantic univ. is in Newark, but not N.J. Q: What is the UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE? Category: Utah A: The governor's mansion is in this city Q: What is SALT LAKE CITY? A: They called the land "Deseret," meaning honeybee Q: Who are the MORMONS? A: Utah was denied statehood while this was practiced Q: What was POLYGAMY? A: Feature shared by the Capitol building and a Duracell battery Q: What is a COPPER TOP? A: 100-square-mile region where speed records are set Q: What is the BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS? Category: War Between States A: The side which had more men killed and wounded Q: What was the UNION? A: Nickname of James Ewell Brown Stuart Q: What was JEB? A: This first state to secede had threatened to as far back as 1832 Q: What is SOUTH CAROLINA? A: "A cheese box on a raft" was how this Union battleship was described Q: What was the MONITOR? A: The last Southern stronghold to surrender, it's Alabama's only port city Q: What is MOBILE? Category: War in Fiction A: A popular book, movie and TV series about Korean War medics Q: What is M.A.S.H.? A: Herman Wouk's sequel to "Winds of War" Q: What is WAR AND REMEMBRANCE? A: Norman Mailer's "The Naked and the Dead" is set in this theater of WW II Q: What is the SOUTH PACIFIC? A: It's "The Red Badge of Courage" in Stephen Crane's novel Q: What is a WOUND? A: Hemingway's WW I novel based partly on his own experiences Q: What is A FAREWELL TO ARMS? Category: War Stories A: "Johnny Tremain" is set during this war Q: What is the AMERICAN REVOLUTION? A: "The Road Back" is the sequel to this author's "All Quiet on the Western Front" Q: Who is ERICH REMARQUE? A: Kurt Vonnegut's novel about the bombing of Dresden Q: What is SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE? A: "The Pathfinder" is 1 of 5 novels in this J.F. Cooper series Q: What are the LEATHERSTOCKING TALES? A: Stephen Vincent Benet won the Pulitzer Prize for this Civil War poem Q: What is JOHN BROWNS BODY? Category: Warlike Words A: The general who broadcast on June 6, 1944, "People of Western Europe, a landing was made this morning" Q: Who was EISENHOWER? A: She told her troops as the armada approached, "I have the heart and stomach of a king" Q: Who was QUEEN ELIZABETH I? A: He wrote that the word impossible "is not French" Q: Who was NAPOLEON? A: He ordered, "You may fire when ready, Gridley" Q: Who was ADMIRAL GEORGE DEWEY? A: Words of this first black recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize stopped a war in Palestine Q: Who was RALPH BUNCHE? Category: Wars A: In September, 1942, an Oregon forest was bombed by a plane from this country Q: What is JAPAN? A: Because of the Opium Wars, China was forced to do this to the opium trade Q: What is LEGALIZE IT? A: His army discovered the Rosetta Stone in Egypt Q: Who was NAPOLEON BONAPARTE? A: This Cambodian prince fought the Vietnamese occupation Q: Who is SIHANOUK? A: Though born to a Quaker, Nathanael Greene was second in command in this war Q: What was the REVOLUTIONARY WAR? Category: Ways to Travel A: Very large ships are steered by using this Q: What is a RUDDER? A: The world's number 3 auto maker, after the U.S. and Japan Q: What is WEST GERMANY? A: They allow horses to travel faster and farther Q: What are IRON HORSESHOES? A: The cheapest way to transport petroleum and natural gas Q: What is a PIPELINE? A: New levitation trains use this force to travel 4 inches above the rail Q: What is MAGNETISM? Category: Weapons A: The "weapon" Dorothy used to kill the Wicked Witch of the West Q: What is A BUCKET OF WATER? A: "21," or a thug's bludgeon Q: What is BLACKJACK? A: Curare is added to this projectile to give it that little extra shot Q: What is a BLOWGUN DART? A: History's "first murder victim" Q: Who was ABEL? A: A long, straight, 2-edged sword with a large cup hilt Q: What is a RAPIER? Category: Wheels & Wings A: Number 1 company in bus transportation Q: What is GREYHOUND? A: Mack Trucks' trademark Q: What is a BULLDOG? A: This form of transport still carries the most freight in the U.S. Q: What are RAILROADS? A: For about 60 million dollars, you can buy one of their 767 jetliners Q: What is THE BOEING COMPANY? A: In trucking, companies that serve the general public are called this Q: What is a COMMON CARRIER? Category: White House Middle Names A: Baines Q: Who was LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON? A: Henry Q: Who was WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON? A: Howard Q: Who was WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT? A: Wilson Q: Who is RONALD WILSON REAGAN? A: Knox Q: Who was JAMES KNOX POLK? Category: Wild Cats A: Junior cub scouts are named for this small U.S. wild cat Q: What is a BOBCAT? A: Only 2,000 of these largest cats still survive in India Q: What are TIGERS? A: This name for black leopards is the scientific name for all leopards Q: What is PANTHER? A: In Latin America, this carnivore is called "Tigre" Q: What is a JAGUAR? A: This "leopard cat," though tamed as a kitten, can't be trusted as an adult Q: What is an OCELOT? Category: Winter Sports A: "Mush" is not a command in these races Q: What are DOG SLED RACES? A: In 6 of the first 7 Winter Olympics, Canadian teams took the gold in this sport Q: What is ICE HOCKEY? A: Participants can "sail" through this sport at speeds over 100 mph Q: What is ICEBOATING? A: The first artificial bobsled run was built in 1904 at this Swiss resort town Q: What is ST. MORITZ? A: A "rink" of players, it's the number of persons on a curling team Q: What is 4? Category: Women A: This French martyr's autograph is the most valuable by a woman Q: Who was JOAN OF ARC? A: In 1918, she and Robert Benchley started a famous literary circle at N.Y.'s Algonquin Hotel Q: Who was DOROTHY PARKER? A: Author Susan Brownmiller said that when Hugh Hefner wears this "On his rear end, then we'll have equality" Q: What is a COTTON TAIL? A: Polish keyboardist Wanda Landowska was credited with the modern revival of this instrument Q: What is the HARPSICHORD? A: This black activist was 1 of only 6 women to ever make the FBI's "Most Wanted" list Q: Who is ANGELA DAVIS? Category: Wood A: Wood in first line of Clock-Running Rodent's nursery rhyme Q: What is HICKORY? A: To baffle, make political speeches, or what's left standing of a felled tree Q: What is STUMP? A: State tree of Mass. and Nightmare Street in films Q: What is ELM? A: Wood in the carpenters' song preceding "4,5,6,7,8,9" Q: What is BEECHWOOD? A: A black gum, this tree shares its name with Elvis' birthplace Q: What is TUPELO? Category: Word Histories A: It is named for Leopold Von Sacher-Masoch, who enjoyed feeling pain Q: What is MASOCHISM? A: The canter was supposedly favored by pilgrims riding on horses to the shrine here Q: What is CANTERBURY? A: The ancient Greeks worked out naked here, hence their name Q: What are GYMNASIUMS? A: "Goon" comes from "Alice the Goon," who appeared in this comic strip Q: What is POPEYE? A: A short fly ball which drops for a safe hit, named for a minor league Q: What is a TEXAS LEAGUER? Category: Word Origins A: The word "bus" is a shortened form of this Q: What is OMNIBUS? A: From "Joachimsthaler," a village in Bohemia, comes the name of this money standard Q: What is DOLLAR? A: Modern office job which began as a "secret" confidential officer Q: What is SECRETARY? A: East Belgium town known for its baths and mineral springs Q: What is SPA? A: Fragmentation shell named for its inventor in 1784 Q: What is SHRAPNEL? Category: Word Sources A: Chess term from the persian "shah mat," meaning "the king is dead" Q: What is CHECKMATE? A: The Japanese used this word, meaning "may you live 10,000 years" to launch suicide attacks Q: What is BANZAI? A: Comes from the Arabic "qahwah," meaning "a drink made from berries" Q: What is COFFEE? A: The early illustrator known for his "girls" and namesake gin drink Q: Who was CHARLES DANA GIBSON? A: This title means "more than gentleman, less than knight" Q: What is ESQUIRE? Category: World Cities A: France's oldest city and chief seaport Q: What is MARSEILLES? A: Not the duke or duchess but Canada's southernmost city Q: What is WINDSOR? A: Former capital of South Vietnam, renamed Ho Chi Minh City Q: What is SAIGON? A: This South American country's capital is Asuncion Q: What is PARAGUAY? A: Tanzania's largest city and functioning capital, its name means "Haven of Peace" Q: What is DAR ES SALAAM? Category: World History A: Bushmen and Hottentots were first to live in this troubled country Q: What is SOUTH AFRICA? A: Born Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov in 1870, his much-visited tomb bears this name Q: Who was NIKOLAI LENIN? A: Country which once had the largest land empire Q: What is MONGOLIA? A: U.N. Sec'y-General killed in a 1961 plane crash while dealing with the Congo crisis Q: Who was DAG HAMMARSKJOLD? A: Tennessean William Walker became president of this strife-torn Latin country in 1856 Q: What is NICARAGUA? Category: World War II A: Germany's "Desert Fox" Q: Who was ERWIN ROMMEL? A: He became Premier of Japan two months before Pearl Harbor Q: Who was TOJO? A: Pvt. Eddie Slovik was the only American since the Civil War shot for this reason Q: What is DESERTION? A: When this Nazi flew to Scotland, Hitler said, "If he comes back, shoot him on sight" Q: Who was RUDOLF HESS? A: It is said this Soviet officer never lost a battle Q: Who was MARSHAL GEORGI ZHUKOV? Category: Wyoming A: City, county, and river named after trapper Jacques La Ramie Q: What is LARAMIE? A: Owner of almost half the land in Wyoming Q: What is the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT? A: Wyoming's Jackson Pollock helped develop this art movement Q: What is ABSTRACT? A: National park located just 7 miles south of Yellowstone Q: What is GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK? A: Two-word Wyoming motto, or failed controversial amendment Q: What is EQUAL RIGHTS? Final Jeopardy Questions ======================== Category: '80s News A: 1980 strike in the Lenin Shipyard led to its formation Q: What is SOLIDARITY? Category: Awards A: Polish-born scientist and the first person to win 2 Nobel Prizes Q: Who was MARIE CURIE? Category: Cartoons A: This cartoon star debuted in the opening credits of a 1963 film Q: Who is the PINK PANTHER? Category: Early America A: From 1752 to 1799, the state house for the colony and state of Penna. Q: What is INDEPENDENCE HALL? Category: Explorers A: This president sent Lewis and Clark to find a route to the Pacific Q: Who was THOMAS JEFFERSON? Category: Famous Americans A: B.F. Goodrich was named after him Q: Who was BENJAMIN FRANKLIN? Category: Famous Americans A: Though he loved his "Life in the Woods," he once caused a 300-acre forest fire Q: Who was HENRY DAVID THOREAU? Category: Flags A: The 3 objects on the Russian Flag Q: What is a HAMMER SICKLE AND STAR? Category: Gambling A: Next to Slots, Nevada casinos earn more from this game than any other Q: What is BLACKJACK? Category: Great Britain A: The number of children born to Queen Elizabeth II Q: What is 4? Category: Historic Names A: This slave trader, land swindler, and notorious brawler became a hero of the Alamo Q: Who was JIM BOWIE? Category: Holidays A: Memorial Day was first observed after this war Q: What is the CIVIL WAR? Category: Kings & Queens A: The two most popular names for English kings Q: What are HENRY & EDWARD? Category: Languages A: The largest Spanish-speaking country in the world Q: What is MEXICO? Category: Lifestyle USA A: This state has consistently had the highest divorce rate Q: What is NEVADA? Category: Mark Twain A: State capital where Twain lived 20 years and wrote "Tom Sawyer," "Huck Finn," and "Life on the Mississippi" Q: What is HARTFORD CONNECTICUT? Category: September Happenings A: Only these two presidents died in September, both by assassination Q: Who was GARFIELD AND MCKINLEY? Category: Sporting Events A: This yearly event has the largest single day attendance in sports Q: What is the INDIANAPOLIS 500? Category: The Bible A: Book in which Deborah and Samson appear Q: Who were JUDGES? Category: The Calendar A: The latest date on which Labor Day can occur Q: What is SEPTEMBER 7 Category: The Continents A: Continent with the greatest number of independent countries Q: What is AFRICA? Category: The Middle Ages A: A craftsman presented this to the guild to raise his rank Q: What is a MASTERPIECE? Category: The Movies A: Of Disney's Seven Dwarfs, the two whose names do not end in "Y" Q: Who are DOC AND BASHFUL? Category: The Nobel Prize A: 1969 Nobel Prize category, only one added since awards began in 1901 Q: What is ECONOMICS? Category: The Old West A: He made the longest single ride, 322 miles, for the Pony Express Q: Who was BUFFALO BILL? Category: The Olympics A: Only city in the southern hemisphere to host the Games Q: What is MELBOURNE AUSTRALIA? Category: The Supreme Court A: This president appointed more Supreme Court justices than any other Q: Who was GEORGE WASHINGTON? Category: U.S. States A: Alaska is no longer the smallest in population, having passed this state Q: What is WYOMING? Category: World Leaders A: His daughter and grandson have also served as India's Prime Ministers Q: Who was JAWAHARLAL NEHRU? ============================================================================= VII. CREDITS ============================================================================= Daniel Engel for providing other great FAQs for Jeopardy and Jeopardy Jr. which is partly responsible for my writing this FAQ. I used his format as a reference model for my question layout. The NES Files Game manual information. ============================================================================= VIII. DISCLAIMER ============================================================================= This FAQ is neither affiliated nor endorsed by I.J.E. Inc., Jeopardy Productions, Inc., or GameTek. It may be distributed FREELY so long as it remains unaltered AND is the latest version (see above for where to obtain the latest version). It is intended for PRIVATE USE and may NOT be reproduced for commercial or non-commercial purposes by mechanical, electronic, or any other means. Do not try to sell it even if no profit is made off this work. In addition, this FAQ may not be used for personal gain by submission to game magazines, web sites, etc. It may not be used as part of any archive, compilation, or anything similar without prior consent by me. Email any changes, typos, etc. to me at darktoshi@yahoo.com. Make sure that you are reading the latest version BEFORE you email me. Copyright © 2002 Wilson Lau.