Sunday, November 30, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,983-2,988

Question 2,983: Entertainment & Food -- Will's World

What city does singer-actor Will Smith hail from?

a) Los Angeles
b) Miami
c) New York
d) Philadelphia

Question 2,984: History & Government -- Rim Reeds

How many grooves are on the rim of a dime?

a) 76
b) 97
c) 118
d) 139

Question 2,985: Math & Science -- Record RPMs

In 1948, Peter Goldmark introduced records that played at what speed?

a) 33 rpm
b) 45 rpm
c) 70 rpm
d) 78 rpm

Question 2,986: Geography & Nature -- Dam Nation

What country is home to the two tallest dams in the world?

a) China
b) Georgia
c) Switzerland
d) Tajikistan

Question 2,987: Literature & Arts -- Frankenstein's First

What was Frankenstein's first name?

a) Beldin
b) Frank
c) Hugo
d) Victor

Question 2,988: Sports & Games -- Torn by Tornado

Which NBA team's home arena did a tornado strike on August 11, 1999?

a) Charlotte Hornets
b) Chicago Bulls
c) Miami Heat
d) Utah Jazz

Catch 21 - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) A) Chignon. It's a roll of hair by the neck. A ganache is a type of icing, while an aperitif means an appetizer.
  • A2) B) Citizen Kane. Site and Sound concurs, ranking the movie #1 every decade from 1962 to 2002.
  • A3) B) Bob Dylan. The eleven-time Grammy winner earned a Special Citation for his "profound impact on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power" earlier this year.
  • A4) Tyra Banks. The Californian was also the first to grace the cover of GQ.
  • A5) C) Pees Outside. Kutcher and Moore, 15 years his senior, tied the knot on September 24, 2005.
  • A6) C) Dumped Water on Her Ex's Lawyer. She also shouted at Fiona Shackleton, "You're a traitor to your sex! How could you do this to another woman?" and other things that aren't repeatable here.
  • A7) A) Bob. In addition to being a singer, the Barbados native is also a model and fashion designer.
  • A8) C) Flying Fence Post. John Slattery's character lasted for most of the 2007 season before his unusual exit.
  • A9) A) Florentine. The second choice should have been the cooking term "julienne", not the female name.
  • A10) Samantha. PR agent Samantha Jones is a non-stop flirt who neither seeks nor offers commitment.
  • A11) B) Labrador Retriever. One contestant buzzed in before any choices were given, and just missed with "Golden Retriever".
  • A12) B) UFO. The Ohio representative joined other famous UFO sighters Jackie Gleason, Jimmy Carter, Muhammad Ali, and William Shatner.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Catch 21 - Random Trivia Questions

This week's quiz features an unbiased, random sample of questions from recent episodes of the new Catch 21 game show.

Catch 21 Questions

  • Q1) Which [of the following] is a hairstyle?
    A) ChignonB) GanacheC) Aperitif

  • Q2) In 2007, which movie ranked number on in the American Film Institute's Top 100 movies of all time list?
    A) The GodfatherB) Citizen KaneC) Finding Nemo

  • Q3) Who is the first rock musician to win a Pulitzer Prize?
    A) Neil YoungB) Bob DylanC) Sting

  • Q4) Who was the first African American to appear solo on the cover of a Sports Illustrated edition? [question cut off]

  • Q5) What does Hollywood heartthrob Ashton Kutcher say he does to feel like a caveman?
    A) Eats Raw MeatB) Throws Demi Moore over His ShoulderC) Pees Outside

  • Q6) What did Paul McCartney's ex, Heather Mills, do when she was awarded fifty million dollars during their divorce proceedings?
    A) Kissed Her Attorney on the LipsB) Sobbed UncontrollablyC) Dumped Water on Her Ex's Lawyer

  • Q7) Grammy-winning singer Rihanna is best known for what hair style?
    A) BobB) BeehiveC) Bouffant

  • Q8) On the show Desperate Housewives, Victor, Gabrielle's second husband, was killed by what?
    A) Runaway CarB) Food PoisoningC) Flying Fence Post

  • Q9) Which name refers to a dish made with spinach? [choices were read first]
    A) FlorentineB) Julianne [sic]C) Al Dente

  • Q10) What character on Sex and the City calls herself "trisexual" because she'll try anything? [question cut off]

  • Q11) According to the American Kennel Club, what has been the most popular breed of dog in the U.S. for the past ten years?
    A) Yorkshire TerrierB) Labrador RetrieverC) Shih Tzu

  • Q12) During a 2007 Democratic presidential debate, Dennis Kucinich admitted he had seen what?
    A) AngelB) UFOC) Hillary in a Skirt

Catch 21 Review

NameCatch 21
Original RunJuly 2008 to present
HostAlfonso Ribieiro
LengthHalf hour
Currently OnGSN (check your local listings)
IMDBMain entry

Description: Catch 21, like Card Sharks (1978-89 and 2001-02) alternates between trivia and card game play. Unlike the older show, however, Catch 21 asks its contestants trivia questions and features a much more interesting card game. Each correct answer allows the player to keep or pass the revealed playing card in an attempt to reach a total of 21 points, blackjack-style. When in control of the cards, a player can also freeze his or her total to avoid being busted by an opponent. If all but one contestant is frozen, that player continues to receive cards until reaching 21 or over.

Trivia Rounds: Play begins with three players. Each question has three multiple choices, with the options sometimes being read before the question and sometimes not at all if a contestant buzzes in early. Correct answers are worth 100 points, while winning a round with 21 or the highest score under 21 is worth 500 points. The two players with the highest scores after two rounds advance to the head-to-head round, which follows the same rules.

Bonus Round: The winner of the heads-up round earns $1,000 and a chance at $25,000 in a non-trivia round. The contestant simultaneously tries to complete three hands of 21, with one power chip, the option to pass on a card, for each early round won. Getting 21 once wins $1,000, twice wins $5,000, and thrice wins $25,000, but busting on any of the hands forfeits all bonus money.

Conclusion: Catch 21 adds a fairly strong strategic element missing from most trivia game shows. Although the prizes are small -- the odds of winning the maximum are very slim -- the trivia contains a mix of easy and medium-difficulty questions, and the game play is reasonably complicated (around the order of proper Final Jeopardy betting technique). The show asks questions about recent poll results from magazines and web sites occasionally, but if you're a Card Sharks or Family Feud fan, the break from real trivia won't bother you at all.

Counterfeit Chicken College -- Quiz Quilt 98 Solution

Category Answers:
History
&
Government
ALLENPaul Allen has been a recent fixture in the top ten of Forbes magazine's list of the richest people in the world, ranked #5 in 2004, 2006, and 2007 and #7 in 2005 with around $20 billion.
Sports
&
Games
SATURNThe 32-bit video game console debuted in the U.S. in May 1995 but did not have enough games available and was crushed by the Sony PlayStation and the Nintendo 64.
Math
&
Science
BIRDSThe magpie-sized, flying dinosaurs also had long fingers with claws and long tails.
Geography
&
Nature
FLORIDACape Sable has a latitude of 25.1° North. Key West is the southernmost city.
Literature
&
Arts
CLAUDIUSClaudius murdered his brother to gain the throne and then married Hamlet's mother Gertrude.
Entertainment
&
Food
ZAPPAAll four children are from Frank Zappa's second wife, Gail Sloatman.

Quiz Quilt Answer: PURDUE (Fourth letters going up)

Purdue University is spelled differently from Perdue Farms, the poultry company founded by Frank Perdue.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Counterfeit Chicken College -- Quiz Quilt 98 Puzzle

Category Questions:
History
&
Government
Who cofounded Microsoft with Bill Gates and owns the Seattle Seahawks and Portland Trail Blazers?
Sports
&
Games
What was Sega's disappointing successor to its Genesis game system?
Math
&
Science
What modern animals resemble Archaeopteryx but without teeth?
Geography
&
Nature
Which continental U.S. state has the southernmost point?
Literature
&
Arts
In Shakespeare's Hamlet, what is the first name of Hamlet's uncle and the current king of Denmark?
Entertainment
&
Food
What singer's children were named Dweezil, Ahmet Rodan, Diva, and Moon Unit?

General Trivia Answers #2,977-2,982

Answer 2,977: Entertainment & Food -- Deer, Depression, and Dozing

a) Elton John

Caribou was a #1 album in both the U.S. and U.K. in 1974. The Englishman has recorded over fifty albums since 1969.

Answer 2,978: History & Government -- Extended Education

a) China

Their school year is 251 days long: six days a week for nine and a half months.

Answer 2,979: Math & Science -- Connecting Cord

b) 25 inches

The tube connects the fetus to the nourishing placenta.

Answer 2,980: Geography & Nature -- Dunes and Dinosaurs

b) Colorado

The Great Sand Dunes were also just a National Monument until 2004. Dinosaur National Monument is on the Utah border.

Answer 2,981: Literature & Arts -- Teenage Tongue

d) Russian

The slang dialect's name comes from the Russian numbers 11 through 19, which all end in "-nadtsat".

Answer 2,982: Sports & Games -- Bare Bar

b) 33 pounds

The men's bar weighs 44 pounds.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,977-2,982

Question 2,977: Entertainment & Food -- Deer, Depression, and Dozing

What singer released the albums Caribou, Blue Moves, and Sleeping With the Past?

a) Elton John
b) Paul McCartney
c) Rod Stewart
d) Sting

Question 2,978: History & Government -- Extended Education

In what country do children go to school the most days out of the year?

a) China
b) Israel
c) Japan
d) Korea

Question 2,979: Math & Science -- Connecting Cord

What is the average length of a human baby's umbilical cord?

a) 17 inches
b) 25 inches
c) 33 inches
d) 41 inches

Question 2,980: Geography & Nature -- Dunes and Dinosaurs

In which state are the Great Sand Dunes National Park and Dinosaur National Monument located?

a) Arizona
b) Colorado
c) Nevada
d) New Mexico

Question 2,981: Literature & Arts -- Teenage Tongue

In A Clockwork Orange, the Nadsat language spoken by teenagers was a mixture of English and what other language?

a) French
b) German
c) Japanese
d) Russian

Question 2,982: Sports & Games -- Bare Bar

How heavy is the bar that female Olympic weightlifters use?

a) 22 pounds
b) 33 pounds
c) 44 pounds
d) 55 pounds

General Trivia Answers #2,971-2,976

Answer 2,971: Entertainment & Food -- Waltz Wizard

b) Johann Strauss

Fernand Gravey played the Waltz King, who composed over 400 waltzes, including "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" and "Tales From the Vienna Woods".

Answer 2,972: History & Government -- Security Service

a) CIA

The Central Intelligence Agency was a successor to the Office of Strategic Services created in June 1942 for World War II information collection and analysis.

Answer 2,973: Math & Science -- Tide Trio

a) At right angles to the Earth

Tides are the lowest then. The highest tides are called spring tides.

Answer 2,974: Geography & Nature -- Where in West Virginia?

a) Charleston

The city is home to Yeager Airport, the West Virginia Power Class A baseball team, and about 53,000 people.

Answer 2,975: Literature & Arts -- Montgomery's Masterpiece

a) Anne of Green Gables

The story about the orphan Anne Shirley was the Canadian's first in 1908.

Answer 2,976: Sports & Games -- Punting Season

d) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The expansion team set the record for futility in their debut season.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,971-2,976

Question 2,971: Entertainment & Food -- Waltz Wizard

What composer is the 1938 movie The Great Waltz about?

a) Frederic Chopin
b) Johann Strauss
c) Peter Strauss
d) Richard Strauss

Question 2,972: History & Government -- Security Service

What U.S. agency did the National Security Act establish in 1947?

a) CIA
b) FBI
c) INS
d) Secret Service

Question 2,973: Math & Science -- Tide Trio

When neap tides occur, where are the Sun and moon?

a) At right angles to the Earth
b) On opposite sides of the Earth only
c) On same side of the Earth only
d) On same or opposite sides of Earth

Question 2,974: Geography & Nature -- Where in West Virginia?

What is the capital of West Virginia?

a) Charleston
b) Fairmont
c) Parkersburg
d) Wheeling

Question 2,975: Literature & Arts -- Montgomery's Masterpiece

Which novel below did Lucy Maud Montgomery write?

a) Anne of Green Gables
b) Green Mansions
c) The Green Pastures
d) How Green Was My Valley

Question 2,976: Sports & Games -- Punting Season

Which NFL team lost all fourteen of its games in 1976?

a) Baltimore Colts
b) Cincinnati Bengals
c) Los Angeles Rams
d) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

General Trivia Answers #2,965-2,970

Answer 2,965: Entertainment & Food -- Notable Number

d) 714

Jack Webb chose the L.A. policeman's badge number in honor of Babe Ruth's career home run total.

Answer 2,966: History & Government -- Got Wheels

c) Mesopotamian

The first use of the wheel was not for transportation but for making pottery.

Answer 2,967: Math & Science -- Bright Strite

c) Pop-up toaster

Six years passed before a Toastmaster model was introduced that could brown the bread on both sides simultaneously.

Answer 2,968: Geography & Nature -- Second City

b) Marseille

The 826,300 people living there by 2004 estimates leave the city well under half as populous as Paris.

Answer 2,969: Literature & Arts -- Biblical Brother

a) Aaron

Moses's older sibling helped him handle the Ten Plagues and lead the Israelites out of Egypt.

Answer 2,970: Sports & Games -- Minor Minority

c) 10.6%

Once they reach AAA, however, players have a 73% chance of getting at least a September call-up.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,965-2,970

Question 2,965: Entertainment & Food -- Notable Number

What was Sergeant Joe Friday's Dragnet badge number?

a) 411
b) 512
c) 613
d) 714

Question 2,966: History & Government -- Got Wheels

What ancient civilization is credited with inventing the wheel sometime between 3500 and 3250 B.C.?

a) Chinese
b) Egyptian
c) Mesopotamian
d) Sumerian

Question 2,967: Math & Science -- Bright Strite

What kitchen appliance did Charles Strite evolve in 1919?

a) Electric can opener
b) Microwave oven
c) Pop-up toaster
d) Side-by-side refrigerator/freezer

Question 2,968: Geography & Nature -- Second City

What is the second most populous city in France?

a) Lyon
b) Marseille
c) Nice
d) Toulouse

Question 2,969: Literature & Arts -- Biblical Brother

In the Bible, who was the first high priest and the brother and spokesman of Moses?

a) Aaron
b) Abraham
c) Absalom
d) Amnon

Question 2,970: Sports & Games -- Minor Minority

According to Baseball America, what percent of minor league players eventually make it to the majors?

a) 4.2%
b) 7.4%
c) 10.6%
d) 13.8%

General Trivia Answers #2,959-2,964

Answer 2,959: Entertainment & Food -- From Francis to the Final Frontier

c) Leonard Nimoy

His acting debut had occurred a year earlier with a bit part in Queen For a Day.

Answer 2,960: History & Government -- Begin's Beginnings

c) Poland

The Nobel Peace Prize winner was born in Brest-Litovsk on August 16, 1913.

Answer 2,961: Math & Science -- Gilbert Gauging

d) Magnetism

William Gilbert was an English physicist born in 1544 who determined that the Earth's magnetism deflected compass needles toward the North Pole.

Answer 2,962: Geography & Nature -- Torrid Times

d) March and September

Because of the tilt of the Earth's axis, the hottest times are around the two equinoxes.

Answer 2,963: Literature & Arts -- Robin's 'Rents

a) Circus performers

They were the Flying Graysons highwire act.

Answer 2,964: Sports & Games -- Winning With Wilkens

d) Seattle Supersonics

They took the 1979 finals in five games over the Washington Bullets.

Monday, November 24, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,959-2,964

Question 2,959: Entertainment & Food -- From Francis to the Final Frontier

What Star Trek actor had a small role as a football player while a mule starred in Francis Goes to West Point in 1952?

a) DeForest Kelley
b) George Takei
c) Leonard Nimoy
d) William Shatner

Question 2,960: History & Government -- Begin's Beginnings

In what country was Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin born?

a) Egypt
b) India
c) Poland
d) Sweden

Question 2,961: Math & Science -- Gilbert Gauging

What is the Gilbert a unit of measurement of?

a) Brightness
b) Electric current
c) Force
d) Magnetism

Question 2,962: Geography & Nature -- Torrid Times

What are the hottest months of the year at the equator?

a) January and February
b) January and July
c) July and August
d) March and September

Question 2,963: Literature & Arts -- Robin's 'Rents

In the Batman comic strip and TV show, what was the profession of Robin's parents?

a) Circus performers
b) Judges
c) Newspaper reporters
d) Store owners

Question 2,964: Sports & Games -- Winning With Wilkens

What was the only team that Lenny Wilkens coached to an NBA championship?

a) Atlanta Hawks
b) Cleveland Cavaliers
c) Portland Trail Blazers
d) Seattle Supersonics

General Trivia Answers #2,953-2,958

Answer 2,953: Entertainment & Food -- What's Goin' Down in Chinatown

b) Los Angeles

The murder mystery is set in the city in 1937.

Answer 2,954: History & Government -- D-marcated

b) Denver, Colorado

An 'S' signifies San Francisco, while the absence of a letter indicates Philadelphia.

Answer 2,955: Math & Science -- Mohs Maximum

b) Diamond

German mineralogist Friedrich Mohs created the ten-point scale in the early 19th century, and it was later expanded to a fifteen-point scale to fix some uneven gaps.

Answer 2,956: Geography & Nature -- Senior City

c) Mexico City, Mexico

Spain founded it in 1525.

Answer 2,957: Literature & Arts -- Question Question

d) Interrogative

Interrogative sentences usually begin with "who", "what", "where", "when", "why", or "how".

Answer 2,958: Sports & Games -- Roulette Regions

d) 38

There is a slot for each number from 1 to 36, a 0 and a double-0. European roulette does not include the double-0 slot.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,953-2,958

Question 2,953: Entertainment & Food -- What's Goin' Down in Chinatown

In what city does the 1974 movie Chinatown take place?

a) Boston
b) Los Angeles
c) New York
d) San Francisco

Question 2,954: History & Government -- D-marcated

In what city was a U.S. penny minted if the letter 'D' is stamped under the year?

a) Dallas, Texas
b) Denver, Colorado
c) Detroit, Michigan
d) Dover, Delaware

Question 2,955: Math & Science -- Mohs Maximum

What is the hardest mineral on the Mohs scale?

a) Corundum
b) Diamond
c) Quartz
d) Topaz

Question 2,956: Geography & Nature -- Senior City

What is the oldest capital city in North or South America?

a) Buenos Aires, Argentina
b) Havana, Cuba
c) Mexico City, Mexico
d) Washington, D.C.

Question 2,957: Literature & Arts -- Question Question

Which adjective below refers to a sentence that is a question?

a) Declarative
b) Exclamatory
c) Imperative
d) Interrogative

Question 2,958: Sports & Games -- Roulette Regions

How many slots does an American roulette wheel have?

a) 32
b) 34
c) 36
d) 38

Football, You Bet - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) Cal (University of California-Berkeley). Stanford's band and fans prematurely celebrated by spilling onto the field, requiring the final two Golden Bears with the ball to run through the crowd. Kevin Moen not only fielded the initial kick but scored the touchdown, knocking down trombone player Gary Tyrrell after crossing the goal line. The only penalty flags thrown were for Stanford having "too many men on the field", while ironically Cal only had ten. Final score: Cal 25, Stanford 19 (no extra point was attempted).
  • A2) Tennessee Titans. Lorenzo Neal fielded the kickoff and handed off to Frank Wycheck, who threw a long, cross-field lateral to Kevin Dyson, who ran all the way down the left sideline to complete the Music City Miracle. The Home Run Throwback play allowed the Titans to continue a postseason that would not end until a Super Bowl loss to the Rams. Final score: Titans 22, Bills 16.
  • A3) New Orleans Saints. Trailing by seven, the Saints needed a 75-yard play with the final seconds ticking off. Aaron Brooks completed a pass to Donte Stallworth near midfield, who lateraled to Michael Lewis, who lateraled to Deuce McAllister, who lateraled to Jerome Pathon, who covered the final 24 yards for the touchdown. And then John Carney missed the usually automatic extra point wide right. Oops. Final score: Jacksonville 20, New Orleans 19.
  • A4) Trinity College. Technically, there were 14 laterals and one fumble (when the ball hit the ground), but the completely legal play earned Trinity a measure of revenge over the Millsaps Majors, who had ended the Tigers' run of 13 consecutive conference titles the previous year. Final score: Trinity 28, Millsaps 24.
  • A5) Cornell. With an eighteen-game winning streak on the line, the Big Red trailed the Dartmouth Indians 3-0 and had fourth and goal from the 5-yard line with nine seconds to go. An incomplete pass should have ended the drive, but after the referees inexplicably gave Cornell the ball again, a touchdown pass snatched the victory out of nowhere. When a review of the game film later revealed the error, Cornell honorably forfeited the game via telegram. Final score: Dartmouth 3, Cornell 0.
  • A6) Colorado. Trailing the Missouri Tigers 31-27, the Buffaloes reached first and goal with seconds to go. They spiked the ball to stop the clock, unsuccessfully rushed up the middle, and called timeout. The officials forgot to advance the down marker, so when play resumed it still said second down. Another run up the middle failed to reach paydirt, and another spike killed the clock with two seconds left. A fifth down sneak by quarterback Charles Johnson then barely reached the endzone for the victory. While the touchdown was being reviewed, the extra play was discovered, but the officials refused to change the ruling. Unlike Cornell, Colorado refused to give the touchdown back and went on to win a share of the national championship. Final score: Colorado 33, Missouri 31 (the Buffaloes took a knee instead of attempting an extra point).
  • A7) "Wrong Way" Roy Riegels. The Cal offensive lineman avoided immediate disaster, but on the very next play Georgia Tech blocked the attempted punt for a safety, which would ultimately decide the game. Final score: Georgia Tech 8, Cal 7.
  • A8) "Wrong Way" Jim Marshall. The Minnesota Viking atoned for his mistake with a sack and forced fumble to help his team defeat the San Francisco 49ers. Final score: Minnesota 27, San Francisco 22.
  • A9) Garo Yepremian. The Miami Dolphins held on to defeat the Washington Redskins despite their kicker's goof following a blocked field goal attempt. Final score: Miami 14, Washington 7.
  • A10) Leon Lett. Lett's error had no impact on the result of the game, but his turnover kept the Cowboys from scoring the most points in a Super Bowl. Final score: Dallas 52, Buffalo 17.
  • A11) Leon Lett. Yes, the defensive tackle was at it again less than a year later, but this time his brain freeze cost his team the game. Final score: Miami 16, Dallas 14.
  • A12) San Pedros Beach Bums. In the short-lived 1977 series, a foreign-born jock responds, "football, you bet!" to every question because it's the only English he knows.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Football, You Bet - Random Trivia Questions

Sunday's Pittsburgh Steelers 11-10 win over the San Diego Chargers was the first 11-10 game in NFL history. An additional fact that won't be forgotten by bettors anytime soon, was that the final score should have been 18-10. A crazy, last-second, lateral-filled, kickoff return by the Chargers ended with a fumble that was returned for a touchdown. The referees incorrectly ruled that an illegal forward lateral negated the play, but of course the Steelers would have declined the penalty and accepted their TD and likely extra point if they were allowed to.

How many of these other crazy football plays from college and the pros are you familiar with?

Football, You Bet Questions

  • Q1) On November 20, 1982, what college football team used "The Play" to defeat its biggest rival with a last-second, five-lateral, kickoff return?
  • Q2) On January 8, 2000, what NFL team stunned the Buffalo Bills with a game-ending kickoff return for a touchdown to capture their AFC Wild Card game?
  • Q3) On December 21, 2003, what NFL team lost its chance at the postseason despite pulling a successful River City Relay?
  • Q4) On October 28, 2007, what Division III team won the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference championship and a playoff bid with a time-expiring, 60-yard, pass-catch-and-15-lateral play?
  • Q5) On November 16, 1940, what college team originally won the "Fifth Down" game, in which referees allowed their offense an extra down to score?
  • Q6) On October 6, 1990, almost exactly half a century later, what college team won the second famous "Fifth Down" game?
  • Q7) On January 1, 1929 during the Rose Bowl, what college football center advanced a fumble 65 yards the wrong way before being stopped by his teammates on the 1-yard line?
  • Q8) On October 25, 1964, what NFL defensive end recovered a fumble but managed to run 66 yards the wrong way, then tossed the ball away for a safety?
  • Q9) On January 14, 1973, whose ill-advised pass attempt was picked off and returned for a touchdown, preventing the only Super Bowl shutout ever?
  • Q10) On January 31, 1993 during Super Bowl XXVII, what Dallas Cowboy recovered a fumble and was heading for an easy touchdown when his showboating allowed Don Beebe to knock the ball away for a touchback?
  • Q11) On November 25, 1993, Thanksgiving Day, what NFL player unnecessarily tried to recover a blocked field goal, muffed it, gave the ball back to the Miami Dolphins, and watched them kick again for a game-winning three-pointer?
  • Q12) What television show provided the quote for the title of this quiz?

Bad Grammar Tariff -- Quiz Quilt 97 Solution

Category Answers:
Math
&
Science
REFLEXIn Single Lens Reflex cameras, a mirror allows the photographer to preview the image through the same lens that focuses and captures the picture.
Literature
&
Arts
NARNIAThe children stumble upon the magical land during a game of hide-and-seek.
Geography
&
Nature
PAKISTANMuslim nationalist Choudhary Rahmat Ali coined the name, which is also an acronym for Punjab, Afghan, Kashmir, Sind, and Baluchistan.
History
&
Government
REAGANTau Kappa Epsilon fraternity brother Ronald Reagan was married to actress Jane Wyman from January 26, 1940 to June 6, 1948.
Entertainment
&
Food
FRENZYThe movie, starring Jon Finch as Richard Ian Blaney, was set and filmed in London.
Sports
&
Games
THOMPSONThe senior John Thompson led the Hoyas to a 596-239 record and a national title between 1972 and 1999. His son became coach in April 2004.

Quiz Quilt Answer: SYNTAX (Sixth letters going up)

"Syntax" is a pun on "sin tax".

Friday, November 21, 2008

Bad Grammar Tariff -- Quiz Quilt 97 Puzzle

Category Questions:
Math
&
Science
What does the 'R' in SLR cameras stand for?
Literature
&
Arts
What is the fictitious locale of C.S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?
Geography
&
Nature
What country's name means "pure country" in Urdu?
History
&
Government
Who was the first divorced person to become U.S. President?
Entertainment
&
Food
What was the 1972 Alfred Hitchcock movie about a necktie strangler?
Sports
&
Games
Who was the coach of the Georgetown University basketball team when it joined the Big East for the 1979-80 season?

General Trivia Answers #2,947-2,952

Answer 2,947: Entertainment & Food -- First and Foremost

a) Emil Jannings

In 1928, he won for his performances in The Last Command and The Way of All Flesh. It was the only time that Oscars were given for the year's work instead of just one movie.

Answer 2,948: History & Government -- High Alumni

c) William and Mary

Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and John Tyler all graduated from the Virginia university.

Answer 2,949: Math & Science -- Double Nobel

b) Linus Pauling

The 1954 Chemistry award rewarded his work investigating chemical bonds, and the 1962 Peace award recognized his opposition to nuclear testing.

Answer 2,950: Geography & Nature -- Mis-State-d

b) Colorado

The stamps, which were supposed to say "Colorado River" were destroyed. The gorge is in northern Arizona.

Answer 2,951: Literature & Arts -- Eat to the Beat, My Sweet

d) Twelfth Night

Duke Orsino, ruler of the kingdom of Illyria, opens the play with the words, professing his unrequited love for Countess Olivia.

Answer 2,952: Sports & Games -- Home (to First) Run

c) 90 feet

The distance was standardized in 1857 at the same meeting that decided on nine-inning games.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,947-2,952

Question 2,947: Entertainment & Food -- First and Foremost

Who won the very first Best Actor Oscar award?

a) Emil Jannings
b) George Arliss
c) Lionel Barrymore
d) Warner Baxter

Question 2,948: History & Government -- High Alumni

What was the first college to have three alumni become U.S. presidents?

a) Harvard
b) Virginia
c) William and Mary
d) Yale

Question 2,949: Math & Science -- Double Nobel

What American chemist is the only person to win Nobel Prizes in two fields?

a) Glenn Seaborg
b) Linus Pauling
c) Robert Woodward
d) Willard Libby

Question 2,950: Geography & Nature -- Mis-State-d

In which state did the United Postal Service claim the Grand Canyon was located on misprinted stamps in May 1999?

a) California
b) Colorado
c) Nevada
d) New Mexico

Question 2,951: Literature & Arts -- Eat to the Beat, My Sweet

Which Shakespeare work suggests, "If music be the food of love, play on"?

a) Love's Labour's Lost
b) A Midsummer Night's Dream
c) Romeo and Juliet
d) Twelfth Night

Question 2,952: Sports & Games -- Home (to First) Run

How far is it from home plate to first base on Major League Baseball fields?

a) 60 feet
b) 75 feet
c) 90 feet
d) 100 feet

General Trivia Answers #2,941-2,946

Answer 2,941: Entertainment & Food -- Home Malone

b) Pitcher

The bartender played for the Boston Red Sox until alcoholism derailed his career.

Answer 2,942: History & Government -- Fryin' Bryan

d) William Taft

The Republican won nearly two-thirds of the electoral vote, taking almost everything outside the South.

Answer 2,943: Math & Science -- Keen on Tetracycline

b) An antibiotic

The compound is used for treating everything from acne to gonorrhea.

Answer 2,944: Geography & Nature -- Gatwick's Gates

c) London, England

The city is also home to Heathrow International Airport.

Answer 2,945: Literature & Arts -- Garp-gantuan

b) John Irving

Four years later, the novel was turned into a movie starring Robin Williams as T.S. Garp.

Answer 2,946: Sports & Games -- First Fruit

b) Cherry

Strawberry is the second level.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,941-2,946

Question 2,941: Entertainment & Food -- Home Malone

What position did Sam Malone of Cheers play in the Major Leagues?

a) First base
b) Pitcher
c) Shortstop
d) Third base

Question 2,942: History & Government -- Fryin' Bryan

Who became the 27th U.S. President by defeating William Jennings Bryan in the 1908 election?

a) Grover Cleveland
b) Theodore Roosevelt
c) William McKinley
d) William Taft

Question 2,943: Math & Science -- Keen on Tetracycline

Discovered in 1947, what is tetracycline?

a) An amino acid
b) An antibiotic
c) A bacteria
d) A protein

Question 2,944: Geography & Nature -- Gatwick's Gates

What major city does Gatwick Airport serve?

a) Brussels, Belgium
b) Dublin, Ireland
c) London, England
d) Melbourne, Australia

Question 2,945: Literature & Arts -- Garp-gantuan

What author's The World According to Garp was a bestseller in 1978?

a) Don DeLillo
b) John Irving
c) Norman Mailer
d) Truman Capote

Question 2,946: Sports & Games -- First Fruit

What is the first fruit level in the Pac-Man video game?

a) Apple
b) Cherry
c) Orange
d) Strawberry

General Trivia Answers #2,935-2,940

Answer 2,935: Entertainment & Food -- Lion Sign

c) Leo

The sign traditionally includes anyone born between July 23 to August 22, although that is no longer astronomically accurate.

Answer 2,936: History & Government -- Major Mayor

d) New York

The World War II veteran was the mayor from 1990 to 1993.

Answer 2,937: Math & Science -- Solar System Sibling

d) Venus

The neighboring planet measures 7,521 miles in diameter, only five percent smaller than the Earth.

Answer 2,938: Geography & Nature -- Arachno-probe-ia

b) 8

The class includes spiders, scorpions, harvestmen, ticks, and mites.

Answer 2,939: Literature & Arts -- Yo Ho Ho

d) Treasure Island

Robert Louis Stevenson's classic was serialized in a children's magazine before appearing in book format in 1883.

Answer 2,940: Sports & Games -- Post-Retirement Records

b) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

The hook was his trademark shot.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,935-2,940

Question 2,935: Entertainment & Food -- Lion Sign

Which astrological sign is associated with the lion?

a) Aquarius
b) Cancer
c) Leo
d) Sagittarius

Question 2,936: History & Government -- Major Mayor

What city was David N. Dinkins the first African-American mayor of?

a) Atlanta
b) Chicago
c) Los Angeles
d) New York

Question 2,937: Math & Science -- Solar System Sibling

Which planet in the solar system is closest in size to the Earth?

a) Mars
b) Neptune
c) Uranus
d) Venus

Question 2,938: Geography & Nature -- Arachno-probe-ia

How many legs does an arachnid have?

a) 6
b) 8
c) 10
d) 12

Question 2,939: Literature & Arts -- Yo Ho Ho

What novel introduced the song "Fifteen men on the dead man's chest, Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum"?

a) Lord of the Flies
b) Peter Pan
c) Robinson Crusoe
d) Treasure Island

Question 2,940: Sports & Games -- Post-Retirement Records

What NBA player founded Skyhook Records?

a) Bill Russell
b) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
c) Magic Johnson
d) Wilt Chamberlain

General Trivia Answers #2,929-2,934

Answer 2,929: Entertainment & Food -- Fonzie's First

a) Arthur

Henry Winkler defined "cool" as Arthur Fonzarelli from 1974 to 1984.

Answer 2,930: History & Government -- Restrained by Charlemagne

c) Prostitution

The problem was so widespread that houses of ill repute were even found near the royal palace.

Answer 2,931: Math & Science -- 'W' Clue

a) Cassiopeia

Including all its fainter stars, the constellation is supposed to represent the Ethiopian queen sitting on a chair.

Answer 2,932: Geography & Nature -- Baylor Base

d) Waco

Three Baptist missionaries founded the coed university in Independence in 1845.

Answer 2,933: Literature & Arts -- Supreme Sadist

d) Thomas Paine

The radical jotted the line to a friend in a discussion of The Age of Reason in 1797.

Answer 2,934: Sports & Games -- Resilient Rivalry

b) Lafayette vs. Lehigh

In 2007, they met for the 143rd time since 1898.

Monday, November 17, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,929-2,934

Question 2,929: Entertainment & Food -- Fonzie's First

On Happy Days, what was Fonzie's given first name?

a) Arthur
b) Henry
c) Oliver
d) Thomas

Question 2,930: History & Government -- Restrained by Charlemagne

In A.D. 801, what did Charlemagne prohibit?

a) Drinking alcohol
b) Gambling
c) Prostitution
d) Usury

Question 2,931: Math & Science -- 'W' Clue

What is the 'W'-shaped constellation near the Milky Way in the sky?

a) Cassiopeia
b) Cepheus
c) Monoceros
d) Serpens

Question 2,932: Geography & Nature -- Baylor Base

In what Texas city is Baylor University located?

a) Corpus Christi
b) Lubbock
c) Plano
d) Waco

Question 2,933: Literature & Arts -- Supreme Sadist

What American author asserted, "Belief in a cruel God makes a cruel man"?

a) Isaac Asimov
b) Mark Twain
c) Pearl Buck
d) Thomas Paine

Question 2,934: Sports & Games -- Resilient Rivalry

What is the longest rivalry in college football?

a) Harvard vs. Yale
b) Lafayette vs. Lehigh
c) Princeton vs. Yale
d) Richmond vs. William and Mary

General Trivia Answers #2,923-2,928

Answer 2,923: Entertainment & Food -- Foremost Female

c) Patsy Cline

The former Virginia Patterson Hensley was enshrined in 1973, a dozen years after the museum opened.

Answer 2,924: History & Government -- Seneca Falls Sentiments

a) Elizabeth Cady Stanton

The women's rights activist proclaimed, "All men and women are created equal."

Answer 2,925: Math & Science -- Prime Cuts

a) 3

They are 2, 5, and 7.

Answer 2,926: Geography & Nature -- Parched Place

c) Nevada

The state's numerous deserts include the Great Basin Desert and the Mojave Desert.

Answer 2,927: Literature & Arts -- Anthropomorphosized Animals

b) Horses

Clover represents the common people of Russia, and Boxer stands for the country's hard workers.

Answer 2,928: Sports & Games -- 3K Ks

d) Walter Johnson

The Big Train reached the milestone on July 22, 1923 and finished his 21-year career with 3,509 strikeouts.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,923-2,928

Question 2,923: Entertainment & Food -- Foremost Female

Who was the first female solo performer inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame?

a) Dolly Parton
b) Loretta Lynn
c) Patsy Cline
d) Tammy Wynette

Question 2,924: History & Government -- Seneca Falls Sentiments

Who delivered the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments in 1848?

a) Elizabeth Cady Stanton
b) Rebecca Felton
c) Susan B. Anthony
d) Victoria Woodhull

Question 2,925: Math & Science -- Prime Cuts

How many prime factors does the number 70 have?

a) 3
b) 5
c) 7
d) 9

Question 2,926: Geography & Nature -- Parched Place

Which U.S. state averages the least precipitation annually?

a) Alaska
b) Arizona
c) Nevada
d) New Mexico

Question 2,927: Literature & Arts -- Anthropomorphosized Animals

In George Orwell's Animal Farm, what type of animal are Clover and Boxer?

a) Cows
b) Horses
c) Pigs
d) Sheep

Question 2,928: Sports & Games -- 3K Ks

Who was the first Major League Baseball pitcher to strike out 3,000 batters in his career?

a) Christy Mathewson
b) Cy Young
c) Nolan Ryan
d) Walter Johnson

St. Louis - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) King Louis IX of France. The city is named for the long-dead, thirteenth century king partly because he was the only French king to be canonized (declared to be a saint).
  • A2) Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The two longest U.S. rivers measure 2,540 and 2,340 miles respectively. When considered as a single waterway, the 3,902-mile length makes it the fourth longest river in the world.
  • A3) Albert Bond Lambert. The former Lambert Field, where Lindbergh took off from (see question 11) was named for the St. Louis police commissioner who was dubbed "Major" by the Aero Club of St. Louis.
  • A4) Thomas Jefferson. The arch in the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial serves as a symbolic gateway for the expansion of the United States westward following Jefferson's completion of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.
  • A5) Louisiana Purchase Exposition. The fair ran for a full seven months from the end of April to the beginning of December. The waffle-style ice cream cone was invented at the exposition, while Puffed Wheat cereal, peanut butter, iced tea, Dr Pepper, and cotton candy were all greatly popularized.
  • A6) Washington University in St. Louis. Francis Field and Gymnasium, renamed in honor of the local organizer, former mayor and governor David R. Francis, is marked with a plaque commemorating the first Olympics held in the western hemisphere. The Olympics were held as part of the Saint Louis World's Fair after Olympic organizers had originally awarded the games to Chicago but did not want to compete with a possible rival sporting event.
  • A7) Busch Stadium. The third incarnation of Busch Stadium opened in 2006. The Gateway Arch can be seen behind center field, and the playing field is visible from the top of the arch.
  • A8) Edward Jones Dome. The Ed was known as the Trans World Dome until TWA was bought out by American Airlines in 2001, then was called the Dome at America's Center for a year. The field itself is sponsored by Russell Athletic.
  • A9) Scottrade Center. The arena was called the Kiel Center from 1994 to 2000 and the Savvis Center from 2000 until 2006.
  • A10) William Christopher Handy. The Father of the Blues honored other cities with "Memphis Blues" and "Atlanta Blues".
  • A11) Paris, France. Lindbergh took off from Garden City, New York on May 20, 1927 and landed 33½ hours later. The plane is now displayed at the National Air and Space Museum.
  • A12) Judy Garland. The singer-actress portrayed the 17-year-old heroine five years after she played Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz when she herself was 17 years old.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

St. Louis - Random Trivia Questions

I recently attended a cousin's wedding (congratulations, K & T!) in St. Louis, Missouri and had a little time to play tourist between the ceremony and reception. How much do you know about the real and fictional Gateway City?

St. Louis Questions

  • Q1) What specific king was St. Louis named for?
  • Q2) What two rivers meet in St. Louis?
  • Q3) For what non-military Major is St. Louis International Airport named?
  • Q4) At what U.S. President's memorial is the Gateway Arch located?
  • Q5) What was the official name of the 1904 Saint Louis World's Fair?
  • Q6) At what university were the 1940 Summer Olympics held?
  • Q7) In what stadium do the St. Louis Cardinals play their home games?
  • Q8) In what stadium do the NFL's St. Louis Rams play their home games?
  • Q9) In what arena do the NHL's St. Louis Blues play their home games?
  • Q10) What African-American bandleader wrote the song "Saint Louis Blues"?
  • Q11) To what city did Charles Lindbergh fly the Spirit of St. Louis to win the $25,000 Orteig Prize?
  • Q12) What actress starred as Esther Smith in the original, 1945 movie Meet Me in St. Louis?

Book Before -- Quiz Quilt 96 Solution

Category Answers:
Geography
&
Nature
CHILEThe archipelago was split between the two nations in 1881.
Literature
&
Arts
CYBORGThe book came out in 1972, a year before the television pilot starring Lee Majors as former astronaut Steve Austin.
History
&
Government
PAINEBorn in England in 1737, Thomas Paine did not leave for the New World until he was 37 years old and Benjamin Franklin advised him to.
Math
&
Science
RADONThe noble gas's atomic number is 86, one more than the halogen astatine.
Sports
&
Games
SUEBoth ghosts were yellow.
Entertainment
&
Food
ZIMAThe flavored malt beverage was introduced in 1992 as a beer alternative.

Quiz Quilt Answer: IBIDEM (Third letters)

In footnotes, ibidem, usually abbreviated ibid. is shorthand for the previous book cited.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Book Before -- Quiz Quilt 96 Puzzle

Category Questions:
Geography
&
Nature
What country shares the island of Tierra del Fuego with Argentina?
Literature
&
Arts
What Martin Caidin sci-fi novel was The Six Million Dollar Man based on?
History
&
Government
What statesman came up with the name "The United States of America"?
Math
&
Science
What is the chemical element with the highest atomic number whose name does not end in "-ium"?
Sports
&
Games
What female Ms. Pac-Man character replaced Clyde from Pac-Man?
Entertainment
&
Food
What drink was advertised as "a few degrees cooler"?

General Trivia Answers #2,917-2,922

Answer 2,917: Entertainment & Food -- Band on the One

a) Eagles: Greatest Hits 1971-1975

Through 2004, the 1976 album had sold 28 million copies, five million more than The Wall.

Answer 2,918: History & Government -- Tax Attacks

d) Whiskey

An army of 13,000 troops was mobilized to restore order during the Whiskey Rebellion. Several people were arrested and charged, but George Washington pardoned them all.

Answer 2,919: Math & Science -- Lack of Black?

b) Orange

The FAA requires both flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders to survive at 2,000° Fahrenheit for half an hour and endure extreme pressures for 6½ milliseconds.

Answer 2,920: Geography & Nature -- Supreme City

b) London

About 4.5 million people lived there.

Answer 2,921: Literature & Arts -- Gender Generalizer

c) Gray

John Gray's 1992 runaway bestseller spawned over a dozen sequels, countless imitations, and numerous parodies.

Answer 2,922: Sports & Games -- Switch Swatter

c) Mickey Mantle

The New York Yankees center fielder hit 54 homers in 1961. The other three players are not switch hitters.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,917-2,922

Question 2,917: Entertainment & Food -- Band on the One

What is the top-selling album by a group?

a) Eagles: Greatest Hits 1971-1975
b) Fleetwood Mac's Rumours
c) Led Zeppelin IV
d) Pink Floyd's The Wall

Question 2,918: History & Government -- Tax Attacks

What item's U.S. tax caused rioting and attacks in Western Pennsylvania in 1794?

a) Firearms
b) Furniture
c) Tobacco
d) Whiskey

Question 2,919: Math & Science -- Lack of Black?

What is the usual color of the black box flight recorder used in airplanes?

a) Black
b) Orange
c) White
d) Yellow

Question 2,920: Geography & Nature -- Supreme City

What city had the largest population in 1900?

a) Berlin
b) London
c) New York
d) Paris

Question 2,921: Literature & Arts -- Gender Generalizer

What is the last name of the author of Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus?

a) Black
b) Brown
c) Gray
d) White

Question 2,922: Sports & Games -- Switch Swatter

What Major League Baseball hitter holds the record for most home runs in a season by a switch hitter?

a) Hank Greenberg
b) Jimmie Foxx
c) Mickey Mantle
d) Sammy Sosa

General Trivia Answers #2,911-2,916

Answer 2,911: Entertainment & Food -- Non Compos Mentis Composer

b) George Frideric Handel

The German's Messiah is traditionally played during Christmastime but was composed for Easter.

Answer 2,912: History & Government -- War Word

a) Tuesday

The name comes from either the Norse Tyr or the Teutonic Tiu.

Answer 2,913: Math & Science -- Greater Crater

d) Vredefort, South Africa

A meteorite produced the 186-mile-diameter depression two billion years ago.

Answer 2,914: Geography & Nature -- Seeing Eyes Dogs

c) Greyhound

They were raised for hunting centuries before they were used for racing.

Answer 2,915: Literature & Arts -- Crichton Writin'

d) Timequake

Kurt Vonnegut penned the work in 1997, while Crichton's 1999 novel was titled Timeline.

Answer 2,916: Sports & Games -- A Second Before Delivery

c) Phil Mickelson

The Arizona State graduate finally bettered that major result by winning the 2004 Masters.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,911-2,916

Question 2,911: Entertainment & Food -- Non Compos Mentis Composer

What composer once dangled opera singer Francesca Cuzzoni out of a window during an argument?

a) Franz Joseph Haydn
b) George Frideric Handel
c) Giacomo Puccini
d) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Question 2,912: History & Government -- War Word

Which day of the week was named after a god of war?

a) Tuesday
b) Wednesday
c) Thursday
d) Friday

Question 2,913: Math & Science -- Greater Crater

Where is the site of the largest existing impact crater in the world?

a) Acraman, Australia
b) Chicxulub, Mexico
c) Sudbury, Ontario
d) Vredefort, South Africa

Question 2,914: Geography & Nature -- Seeing Eyes Dogs

What breed of dog has the best eyesight?

a) Dalmatian
b) German shepherd
c) Greyhound
d) St. Bernard

Question 2,915: Literature & Arts -- Crichton Writin'

Which of the following novels did Michael Crichton not write?

a) Airframe
b) Disclosure
c) Sphere
d) Timequake

Question 2,916: Sports & Games -- A Second Before Delivery

What golfer finished in second place at the 1999 U.S. Open, a day before his wife gave birth?

a) Davis Love III
b) Justin Leonard
c) Phil Mickelson
d) Tom Lehman

General Trivia Answers #2,905-2,910

Answer 2,905: Entertainment & Food -- Sentinel Superhero

a) Green Hornet

George W. Trendle's radio crime-fighter is the paper's owner and publisher.

Answer 2,906: History & Government -- Senator Seniority

c) 30 years old

Candidates also need to be residents of the United States for nine years.

Answer 2,907: Math & Science -- Thiamine Vitamin

a) Vitamin B1

The colorless compound was originally called orizanin in 1910.

Answer 2,908: Geography & Nature -- Population Accumulation

d) 1950

The count passed 200 million two decades later and was just short of 250 million by 1990.

Answer 2,909: Literature & Arts -- Railroad Reading

a) Arrive

The magazine is issued bimonthly.

Answer 2,910: Sports & Games -- Phatter Batter

c) Ichiro Suzuki

The Seattle Mariners outfielder, who wears just his first name on his uniform, scattered 262 hits in 2004, upping Sisler's 84-year-old record by five.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,905-2,910

Question 2,905: Entertainment & Food -- Sentinel Superhero

Which superhero's day job is at the Daily Sentinel?

a) Green Hornet
b) Spiderman
c) Superman
d) Underdog

Question 2,906: History & Government -- Senator Seniority

What is the minimum age requirement for becoming a U.S. senator?

a) 21 years old
b) 25 years old
c) 30 years old
d) 35 years old

Question 2,907: Math & Science -- Thiamine Vitamin

Which B-vitamin is more commonly known as thiamine?

a) Vitamin B1
b) Vitamin B2
c) Vitamin B6
d) Vitamin B12

Question 2,908: Geography & Nature -- Population Accumulation

In what U.S. Census did the country's population first break 150 million?

a) 1860
b) 1890
c) 1920
d) 1950

Question 2,909: Literature & Arts -- Railroad Reading

What Amtrak magazine debuted on trains in September 2000?

a) Arrive
b) Comfort
c) Destination
d) Journey

Question 2,910: Sports & Games -- Phatter Batter

Who holds the Major League Baseball record for hits in a season?

a) Bill Terry
b) George Sisler
c) Ichiro Suzuki
d) Lefty O'Doul

General Trivia Answers #2,899-2,904

Answer 2,899: Entertainment & Food -- Chocolate Choice

c) Halloween

The floral industry deserves some credit for Valentine's Day ranking last of the four.

Answer 2,900: History & Government -- Struck by a Stroke

a) Gerald Ford

The 38th President completely recovered from the stroke that hospitalized him during the Republican National Convention.

Answer 2,901: Math & Science -- Not-so-Near Neighbor

a) Jupiter

The Titius-Bode law of regular spacing predicts a missing planet whose destruction probably created the asteroid belt.

Answer 2,902: Geography & Nature -- For Fur

a) Mink

An average-length fur coat requires fifty minks, leading to the killing of thirty million of the mustelids each year.

Answer 2,903: Literature & Arts -- Barbiturate Dolls?

c) Drugs

The novel's three pill-popping main characters were supposedly modeled after Judy Garland, Grace Kelly, and Marilyn Monroe.

Answer 2,904: Sports & Games -- Wilt Power

d) 50.4 points

The 7'1" center's final tally of 4,029 points was almost 1,000 more than any other player has ever scored in a season.

Monday, November 10, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,899-2,904

Question 2,899: Entertainment & Food -- Chocolate Choice

For what U.S. holiday is the most chocolate purchased?

a) Christmas/Hanukkah
b) Easter
c) Halloween
d) Valentine's Day

Question 2,900: History & Government -- Struck by a Stroke

Which former U.S. President suffered a stroke on August 2, 2000?

a) Gerald Ford
b) Jimmy Carter
c) Richard Nixon
d) Ronald Reagan

Question 2,901: Math & Science -- Not-so-Near Neighbor

Which is the only planet that is over three times as far away from the Sun as its inner neighbor?

a) Jupiter
b) Mars
c) Neptune
d) Venus

Question 2,902: Geography & Nature -- For Fur

What semiaquatic carnivorous mammal is related to the weasel and prized for its fur?

a) Mink
b) Otter
c) Sea lion
d) Seal

Question 2,903: Literature & Arts -- Barbiturate Dolls?

What were the dolls in Jacqueline Susann's 1966 bestseller Valley of the Dolls?

a) Actresses
b) Alcoholic beverages
c) Drugs
d) Prostitutes

Question 2,904: Sports & Games -- Wilt Power

What was Wilt Chamberlain's record average during the 1961-62 NBA season?

a) 38.1 points
b) 42.2 points
c) 46.3 points
d) 50.4 points

General Trivia Answers #2,893-2,898

Answer 2,893: Entertainment & Food -- California Citrus

b) Fred Allen

Jack Benny's foil also quipped, "You can take all the sincerity in Hollywood, place it in the navel of a firefly and still have room enough for three caraway seeds and a producer's heart."

Answer 2,894: History & Government -- Copyright Might

b) 50 years

The duration was agreed to in 1886 as part of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.

Answer 2,895: Math & Science -- Buckyball Building

d) 60

Buckyballs were named for the architect who crafted the similar looking geodesic dome.

Answer 2,896: Geography & Nature -- Folk on the Water

c) Provo

In June 2004, Farmer's Insurance Group named the city of 110,000 people the safest place to live in the U.S.

Answer 2,897: Literature & Arts -- Resurgence of Venice

b) Giovanni Bellini

The Venetian artist lived from around 1430 to 1516.

Answer 2,898: Sports & Games -- World Cup Wizard

a) Gerd Muller

The West German forward found the net 14 times during the 1970 and 1974 tournaments. Frenchman Just Fontaine scored a record 13 goals in a single tournament in 1958.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,893-2,898

Question 2,893: Entertainment & Food -- California Citrus

What comedian joked on his radio show, "California is a fine place to live in - if you happen to be an orange"?

a) Bob Hope
b) Fred Allen
c) Jack Benny
d) Milton Berle

Question 2,894: History & Government -- Copyright Might

How many years after the creator's death does a British copyright remain in effect?

a) 25 years
b) 50 years
c) 75 years
d) 100 years

Question 2,895: Math & Science -- Buckyball Building

How many carbon atoms are in a buckminsterfullerene molecule?

a) 24
b) 36
c) 48
d) 60

Question 2,896: Geography & Nature -- Folk on the Water

What is the most populous city on the shores of the Utah Lake?

a) Ogden
b) Orem
c) Provo
d) Salt Lake City

Question 2,897: Literature & Arts -- Resurgence of Venice

What Italian painter is credited with single-handedly transforming Venice into a center of the Renaissance?

a) Bartolommeo Bellano
b) Giovanni Bellini
c) Girolamo Bedoli
d) Pietro Bernini

Question 2,898: Sports & Games -- World Cup Wizard

What male soccer player scored the most career goals in World Cup competition before 2006?

a) Gerd Muller
b) Helmut Rahn
c) Just Fontaine
d) Pele

Lame Duck Soup - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) London Stock Exchange. The term originally referred to a broker who did not pay his debts and has been documented as far back as a 1761 letter from Horace Walpole to Sir Horace Mann.
  • A2) 20th Amendment. Before 1935 for congressmen and 1937 for presidents and vice presidents, terms ended on March 4. This was pushed back to January 20 by the amendment ratified on January 23, 1933.
  • A3) February 6. The 20th Amendment was ratified two weeks earlier but was not officially in effect until this date in 1933.
  • A4) John Adams. In 1801, John Jay had declined the nomination, so Secretary of State John Marshall got the job, taking over from Oliver Ellsworth.
  • A5) Bill Clinton. Perhaps even more infamously, he pardoned Marc Rich, who had filed a blank 1040 despite owing $50 million in taxes and whose ex-wife donated to the presidential library.
  • A6) Jimmy Carter. The following day, Ronald Reagan was able to celebrate the release of the 52 hostages in Iran.
  • A7) William Taft. The Bureau of Labor was created by Congress in 1888, was briefly a lower level Department of Labor, then became part of the Department of Commerce and Labor in 1903.
  • A8) Dwight Eisenhower. The 34th U.S. President let his successor, John F. Kennedy, suffer the fallout from the fiasco.
  • A9) Bill Clinton. Because his successor was George W. Bush, the possibly apocryphal story says that all the W's were eviscerated.
  • A10) John Tyler. Texas became the 27th state half a year later, on December 29, 1845.
  • A11) Gerald Ford. Iva Toguri D'Aquino had been found guilty of treason on fairly weak and even manufactured evidence.
  • A12) James Polk. His successor Zachary Taylor then got to actually fill it out.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Lame Duck Soup - Random Trivia Questions

Technically, George W. Bush has been a lame duck president for his entire second term because the 22nd Amendment prohibits him from seeking office again. But colloquially, his real tenure as a fettered fowl began this week when Barack Obama was elected as the 44th President of the U.S.

How well can you play the lame game?

Lame Duck Soup Questions

  • Q1) For what stock exchange was the phrase "lame duck" coined?
  • Q2) What amendment to the U.S. Constitution is known as the "Lame Duck Amendment"?
  • Q3) What day of the year is known as Lame Duck Day?
  • Q4) One month before leaving office, what lame duck President appointed John Marshall as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court?
  • Q5) What President issued 140 pardons, including his half-brother Roger and Patty Hearst, shortly before leaving office?
  • Q6) What President spent his last hours in office trying to negotiate the release of hostages?
  • Q7) What President reluctantly created the U.S. Department of Labor only because he knew Woodrow Wilson was going to do it anyway?
  • Q8) In his final months, what President planned the Bay of Pigs invasion?
  • Q9) What President was accused of having had the same letter removed from every keyboard in the White House?
  • Q10) On his last day in office, what President annexed Texas from Mexico?
  • Q11) What President pardoned Tokyo Rose as one of his final acts?
  • Q12) What President created the United States Department of the Interior on his final day?

Leads to Lead -- Quiz Quilt 95 Solution

Category Answers:
Literature
&
Arts
BRADBURYRock Hudson starred as Colonel John Wilder in the series, whose plot begins in 1999, almost half a century after Ray Bradbury wrote the story.
Sports
&
Games
CONNORSAgeless lefty Jimmy Connors accumulated 109 singles titles in his career.
Geography
&
Nature
FRESNOThe city, whose name is Spanish for "ash tree", suffers from smog and a high crime rate.
Entertainment
&
Food
TELLLegend says that crossbow expert William Tell was once arrested and given a choice between dying and attempting to shoot an apple off his son's head.
Math
&
Science
MEASLESRubella, also known as German measles, is caused by a completely unrelated virus, but the two diseases share many symptoms. The Latin germanus means "similar".
History
&
Government
NAGASAKINagasaki, Japan's shipbuilding hub, was selected because the primary target Kokura was covered with clouds.

Quiz Quilt Answer: GALENA (Third letters going up)

Galena, a mineral form of lead sulfide, is the main source of lead.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Leads to Lead -- Quiz Quilt 95 Puzzle

Category Questions:
Literature
&
Arts
What author's 1950 book The Martian Chronicles was made into a miniseries three decades later?
Sports
&
Games
What American tennis player won more professional tournaments than any other man?
Geography
&
Nature
What California city is nicknamed the No?
Entertainment
&
Food
What legendary Swiss hero led his country to freedom from Austrian domination and is the subject of a Rossini opera?
Math
&
Science
What is the common name for the disease rubeola?
History
&
Government
On August 9, 1945, what became the second city destroyed by an atomic bomb?

General Trivia Answers #2,887-2,892

Answer 2,887: Entertainment & Food -- Second to Soda

d) Microsoft

IBM, GE, Intel, Disney, McDonald's, Nokia, Toyota, and Marlboro filled out the top ten.

Answer 2,888: History & Government -- The Bore War

c) 116 years

The extended conflict began in 1337 and finally ended with the Battle of Castillon in 1453.

Answer 2,889: Math & Science -- Moon Boon

a) Jupiter

63 satellites had been discovered through January 2007, six more than Saturn.

Answer 2,890: Geography & Nature -- Country Connector

a) Brenner Pass

At an altitude of just under 4,500 feet, it is the lowest pass through the Alps.

Answer 2,891: Literature & Arts -- Gigi Man

b) Colette

Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette's Gigi also became a French film in 1948 and a Broadway play in 1951.

Answer 2,892: Sports & Games -- Patrick's Position

c) Goalie

The three-time playoff MVP is the all-time leader in regular season wins with 551 and in playoff wins with 151.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,887-2,892

Question 2,887: Entertainment & Food -- Second to Soda

In 2004, what brand name did Business Week and InterBrand rate #2 in value in the world behind Coca-Cola?

a) Marlboro
b) McDonald's
c) Mercedes
d) Microsoft

Question 2,888: History & Government -- The Bore War

How long did the Hundred Years War last?

a) 98 years
b) 107 years
c) 116 years
d) 125 years

Question 2,889: Math & Science -- Moon Boon

Which planet has the most known moons?

a) Jupiter
b) Neptune
c) Saturn
d) Uranus

Question 2,890: Geography & Nature -- Country Connector

What passageway connects Italy and Austria?

a) Brenner Pass
b) Mont Cenis Tunnel
c) Simplon Tunnel
d) St. Gotthard Tunnel

Question 2,891: Literature & Arts -- Gigi Man

What French author wrote Cheri, Sido, and Gigi, the third of which was made into a musical movie in 1958?

a) Alexandre Dumas
b) Colette
c) Gustave Flaubert
d) Stendhal

Question 2,892: Sports & Games -- Patrick's Position

Which position does Patrick Roy play in the NHL?

a) Center
b) Defenseman
c) Goalie
d) Right wing

General Trivia Answers #2,881-2,886

Answer 2,881: Entertainment & Food -- Alec's Academy Award

a) The Bridge on the River Kwai

William Holden became the first actor to be paid $1 million for the 1957 film, signing a contract for $50,000 per year for the rest of his life and living 24 more years.

Answer 2,882: History & Government -- 2nd Century Strife

d) Punic Wars

Hannibal crossed the Alps on elephants during the Second Punic War.

Answer 2,883: Math & Science -- Principia Principal

b) Isaac Newton

The Englishman set down the historic 1687 three-volume scientific work in which he introduced the Latin word gravitas ("weight") to refer to gravity.

Answer 2,884: Geography & Nature -- Korean Capital

d) Seoul

The city is also known as Kyongsong.

Answer 2,885: Literature & Arts -- Peanuts Envy

c) Ludwig van Beethoven

The musical prodigy celebrates the classical composer's birthday and sometimes adorns his piano with the German's bust.

Answer 2,886: Sports & Games -- Doubles Double

b) Gigi Fernandez and Mary Joe Fernandez

Gigi and Mary Joe share a last name, but the Americans are not related.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,881-2,886

Question 2,881: Entertainment & Food -- Alec's Academy Award

For what movie did Sir Alec Guinness win an Oscar?

a) The Bridge on the River Kwai
b) Kind Hearts and Coronets
c) The Ladykillers
d) The Man in the White Suit

Question 2,882: History & Government -- 2nd Century Strife

What collective name refers to the wars between Rome and Carthage in the 3rd and 2nd century B.C.?

a) Messenian Wars
b) Peloponnesian Wars
c) Persian Wars
d) Punic Wars

Question 2,883: Math & Science -- Principia Principal

Who was the author of Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica?

a) Euclid
b) Isaac Newton
c) John Napier
d) Pythagoras

Question 2,884: Geography & Nature -- Korean Capital

What is the capital of South Korea?

a) Inchon
b) Pusan
c) Pyongyang
d) Seoul

Question 2,885: Literature & Arts -- Peanuts Envy

What musician does Schroeder idolize in the Peanuts comic strip?

a) George Gershwin
b) Johann Sebastian Bach
c) Ludwig van Beethoven
d) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Question 2,886: Sports & Games -- Doubles Double

Who won the 1992 and 1996 Olympic women's doubles tennis gold medals?

a) Conchita Martinez and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
b) Gigi Fernandez and Mary Joe Fernandez
c) Jana Novotna and Helena Sukova
d) Pam Shriver and Zina Garrison

General Trivia Answers #2,875-2,880

Answer 2,875: Entertainment & Food -- Leaving Lovers

d) Tim

"You just slip out the back, Jack", "You don't need to be coy, Roy", and "Just drop off the key, Lee."

Answer 2,876: History & Government -- Added Tax

b) 16th Amendment

Although the Revenue Act of 1861 had created the first personal income tax, the Supreme Court had limited what it could be collected on.

Answer 2,877: Math & Science -- Goldfish Genes

d) 94

With 1,260 chromosomes, the Indian fern Ophioglossum reticulatum has the most of any known species.

Answer 2,878: Geography & Nature -- South Shore City

c) New Orleans

The 630-square-mile lake is the second largest saltwater lake in the U.S. although the Great Salt Lake dwarfs it.

Answer 2,879: Literature & Arts -- Angels Author

a) E.M. Forster

The English secular humanist's initials stand for Edward Morgan.

Answer 2,880: Sports & Games -- 80's Ace

d) Tom Watson

The Stanford alumnus took home the PGA top player award again in 1982 and 1984.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,875-2,880

Question 2,875: Entertainment & Food -- Leaving Lovers

Which of the following is not one of the men that Paul Simon gives advice to in his song "Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover"?

a) Jack
b) Lee
c) Roy
d) Tim

Question 2,876: History & Government -- Added Tax

Which U.S. Constitutional amendment created the current income tax in 1913?

a) 14th Amendment
b) 16th Amendment
c) 18th Amendment
d) 20th Amendment

Question 2,877: Math & Science -- Goldfish Genes

How many chromosomes does a goldfish have?

a) 10
b) 38
c) 66
d) 94

Question 2,878: Geography & Nature -- South Shore City

What city is on the south shore of Lake Pontchartrain?

a) Baton Rouge
b) Lafayette
c) New Orleans
d) Shreveport

Question 2,879: Literature & Arts -- Angels Author

What author's first novel was Where Angels Fear to Tread in 1905?

a) E.M. Forster
b) Sinclair Lewis
c) Somerset Maugham
d) Zane Grey

Question 2,880: Sports & Games -- 80's Ace

In 1980, what golfer won a season-high six PGA tournaments, including the British Open, and was named PGA Player of the Year for the fourth straight time?

a) Curtis Strange
b) Greg Norman
c) Nick Price
d) Tom Watson

General Trivia Answers #2,869-2,874

Answer 2,869: Entertainment & Food -- Shaking With Shakespeare

b) Franz Schubert

The Romantic composer died when he was only 31 years old, possibly of mercury poisoning from syphilis treatment, and was buried next to Ludwig van Beethoven.

Answer 2,870: History & Government -- Union Pack

d) 23

They outnumbered the eleven Confederate states by more than a two to one ratio.

Answer 2,871: Math & Science -- O You Weight One Too

d) 16

Because they equal the weighted average of different isotopes, none of the atomic weights are whole numbers.

Answer 2,872: Geography & Nature -- Severe Storm

d) Mitch

The storm caused an estimated five billion dollars in damage.

Answer 2,873: Literature & Arts -- The Type of the Screw

c) Horror

The 1898 ghost story is about a governess left in charge of a man's orphaned niece and nephew in their haunted house.

Answer 2,874: Sports & Games -- Canadian Contest

d) Lacrosse

Official recognition was granted in 1994.

Monday, November 3, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,869-2,874

Question 2,869: Entertainment & Food -- Shaking With Shakespeare

What Austrian composed the Great Symphony and put Goethe, Schiller, and Shakespeare to music?

a) Franz Joseph Haydn
b) Franz Schubert
c) Johann Strauss
d) Richard Strauss

Question 2,870: History & Government -- Union Pack

How many Union states were there during the U.S. Civil War?

a) 11
b) 15
c) 19
d) 23

Question 2,871: Math & Science -- O You Weight One Too

What is the approximate atomic weight of oxygen?

a) 4
b) 8
c) 12
d) 16

Question 2,872: Geography & Nature -- Severe Storm

What hurricane devastated Central America in the autumn of 1998?

a) Allen
b) Andrew
c) Hugo
d) Mitch

Question 2,873: Literature & Arts -- The Type of the Screw

In which literary category does Henry James's The Turn of the Screw fall?

a) Historical fiction
b) Historical romance
c) Horror
d) Humor

Question 2,874: Sports & Games -- Canadian Contest

What is the official national sport of Canada?

a) Curling
b) Football
c) Hockey
d) Lacrosse

General Trivia Answers #2,863-2,868

Answer 2,863: Entertainment & Food -- Book Benefactor

b) Oprah Winfrey

Appearing on the show was once almost a bestseller guarantee, but after a hiatus the book club returned in 2003 focused on the classics.

Answer 2,864: History & Government -- Civil Split

d) Virginia

West Virginia was created because many citizens wanted to rejoin the Union after Virginia seceded.

Answer 2,865: Math & Science -- Brick Layer

c) Iron

The main material in bricks is usually clay or ground shale.

Answer 2,866: Geography & Nature -- Hoover Hindrance

b) Lake Mead

The concrete dam was called the Boulder Dam when construction began on July 7, 1930 but was later renamed for the President.

Answer 2,867: Literature & Arts -- Charming Compositions

b) Edgar Degas

The prolific artist created over 2,000 oil paintings and pastels and more than 150 sculptures before passing away in 1917.

Answer 2,868: Sports & Games -- Life Limit

c) 10

The rainbow-colored, plastic spinner is numbered from one to ten. The base of the spinner recommends lubricating it with mineral oil.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

General Trivia Questions #2,863-2,868

Question 2,863: Entertainment & Food -- Book Benefactor

What talk show hostess has her own book club?

a) Jenny Jones
b) Oprah Winfrey
c) Roseanne Barr
d) Sally Jessy Raphael

Question 2,864: History & Government -- Civil Split

Which U.S. state split in two during the Civil War?

a) Kentucky
b) Tennessee
c) Texas
d) Virginia

Question 2,865: Math & Science -- Brick Layer

What substance causes bricks to be red?

a) Chromium
b) Copper
c) Iron
d) Manganese

Question 2,866: Geography & Nature -- Hoover Hindrance

On what lake on the Colorado River is the Hoover Dam located?

a) Great Salt Lake
b) Lake Mead
c) Lake Powell
d) Lake Tahoe

Question 2,867: Literature & Arts -- Charming Compositions

What French Impressionist, born in 1834, called The Dancing Class, Musicians A L'Orchestra, and his other paintings "the bewitching of the truth"?

a) Claude Monet
b) Edgar Degas
c) Paul Cezanne
d) Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Question 2,868: Sports & Games -- Life Limit

What is the highest number you can spin in Milton Bradley's game of Life?

a) 6
b) 8
c) 10
d) 12

NOVember NOVelty - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) LiFEBuoy. Although no longer manufactured for sale in the U.S., the soap remains popular in India.
  • A2) JULienne. Of course, the most popular deep-fried Julienned items are French Fries.
  • A3) Jennifer CAPRiati. The former prodigy went on to win the tournament, capping a remarkable comeback from drug problems, overeating, and a shoplifting arrest.
  • A4) OCTopussy. The 1983 film was Roger Moore's second to last in the role. He made one final appearance at age 58 in A View to a Kill before moving on.
  • A5) William MAYo. The practice has been informally known as the Mayo Clinic since 1905.
  • A6) HaNOVer, New Hampshire. A Connecticut Puritan minister founded the university in 1769 to train Native Americans as ministers.
  • A7) Stevie Ray VAUGhan. The Texan was honored with top ten appearances on both Rolling Stone magazine's "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" (#7 in 2003) and Classic Rock magazine's "100 Wildest Guitar Heroes" (#3 in 2007).
  • A8) Elizabeth SMARt. Her abductees, Brian Mitchell and Wanda Barzee, had unsuccessfully attempted to disguise the teenager with a red wig, sunglasses, and a veil.
  • A9) HorSEPower. Electrical horsepower (746 watts), mechanical horsepower (745.7 watts), and metric horsepower (735.5 watts) all work out to nearly the same value, but boiler horsepower (9,809.5 watts) is very different and hydraulic horsepower is measured in entirely different units.
  • A10) Sebastian JUNger. The Belmont, Massachusetts native won a National Magazine Award for his 1999 Vanity Fair article "The Forensics of War".
  • A11) UnDEClared. Despite guest appearances by Adam Sandler, Will Farrell, and Ben Stiller and a high rating at IMDB, the series was canned after only sixteen episodes.
  • A12) LjublJANa. The country's most populous city holds 270,000 residents in 106 square miles.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

NOVember NOVelty - Random Trivia Questions

NOVember and the other eleven months of the year are this week's theme. Each answer will include one of their three-letter abbreviations. Don't disMAY if you can't figure them all out.

NOVember NOVelty Questions

  • Q1) What soap's ads introduced the term B.O. for body odor in 1928?
  • Q2) What cooking term describes carrots cut into long, thin rectangles?
  • Q3) In 2001, what tennis player returned to the French Open semifinals, eleven years after last reaching that far?
  • Q4) In what James Bond movie does he try to stop a Russian general from launching a nuclear attack on NATO in Europe?
  • Q5) What doctor founded the St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota in 1889 with his two sons?
  • Q6) In what town is Dartmouth College located?
  • Q7) What singer's albums include Texas Flood, The Sky Is Crying, In Step, and Couldn't Stand the Weather?
  • Q8) What 14-year-old was kidnapped at knife-point on June 5, 2002 and finally freed over nine months later?
  • Q9) What unit of measure is equal to about 746 watts?
  • Q10) What author's book The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea was turned into a movie in 2000?
  • Q11) What 2001 Fox comedy starred Timm Sharp and Jay Baruchel as college freshmen?
  • Q12) What is the capital of Slovenia?

Shaky Storage -- Quiz Quilt 94 Solution

Category Answers:
Entertainment
&
Food
QUINNMartha Quinn, the stepdaughter of financial guru Jane Bryant Quinn was a 22-year-old VJ in 1981. The other VJs were Alan Hunter, J.J. Jackson, Mark Goodman, and Nina Blackwood.
Sports
&
Games
UNITASLouisville graduate and future Hall of Famer Johnny Unitas threw a touchdown pass in the 1971 contest before getting injured.
Math
&
Science
IRONThe main material in bricks is usually clay or ground shale.
Literature
&
Arts
VERSACECunanan committed suicide eight days after ending Gianni Versace's life.
History
&
Government
EUROOn January 1, its initial value was set to $1.18.
Geography
&
Nature
RIVIERAThe resort area is on France's southeast coast.

Quiz Quilt Answer: QUIVER (First letters)

A quiver is used to hold arrows, and "to quiver" means "to shake".