Trivia Time!!

Mischka

Ms Snooby Pants
Joined
Mar 18, 2001
Posts
15,820
A Sixth Circuit Judge adminsters a trivia test to prospective legal clerks as part of their interview; he says it makes for a more interesting group of clerks. The following is last year's quiz. Without looking up the answers, see how many you can answer correctly.

1. What does the Herfindahl-Hirschman index measure?
2. Who sprang full grown from the head of Jupiter? Who sprang from the sea foam off Cyprus?
3. Who wrote the Ode to Joy?
4. Name one work by Margaret Atwood.
5. For what was Willie Sutton noted?
6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?
7. Complete the line: "Once upon a midnight dreary ______."
8. How many U.S. states had new all-time high temperatures in the last twenty years?
9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"
10. What are the chances of ten straight of the same side coming up in ten consecutive tosses of a fair coin?
11. What country's capital is Kuala Lumpur?
12. Who wrote Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats?
13. Freetown is the capital of what country?
14. Name the most populous country in Africa; in South America.
15. What is measured by an anemometer? A sphygmomanometer? A hygrometer?
16. Who gave the famous speech "Ain't I a Woman?"
17. Give the decimal value of the number 212110, which is in base 3.
18. Distinguish Cabeza de Vaca from Vasco da Gama.
19. Name two works of Kipling.
20. Distinguish Roy M. Cohn from Roy G. Biv.
21. Distinguish Rimsky-Korsakov from Kolmogorov-Smirnov.
22. Within a factor of 2, what was the United States population at the time of the Civil War? The total number of military deaths in the Civil War?
23. Why is Eli Whitney famous?
24. What capital of a European country is the farthest north? The farthest south?
25. Name a poem that you can recite by memory.
26. Who killed: Duncan? McKinley? Cock Robin? Ron Goldman? Vaudeville?
27. Who wrote The Jew of Malta?
28. Where did Michael Jordan play college basketball?
29. Name three quarks.
30. What countries were headed by: Amin? Kaunda? Nkrumah? Kenyatta?
31. What country had a group of authors known as "The Generation of '98?"
32. Name three members of Washington's first cabinet.
33. How many members are in the U.S. House of Representatives? In what year did it first have this number?
34. Who was Thorstein Veblen?
35. Who was Cinque?
36. Name two Shakespeare plays beginning with "King."
37. Who was Matthew Brady?
38. What work of art has most profoundly affected you?
39. Who was Hector Bywater?
40. Complete the line: "Is this a dagger______?"
41. When was Liberia founded? What was the original name of its capital?
42. Locate: Lake Baikal; the Salton Sea; the Aral Sea; the Sea of Tranquility.
43. Name a work by H. L. Mencken.
44. Who wrote: "Sunset and evening star and one clear call for me?"
45. Who is Eudora Welty?
46. What is the capital of Chile?
47. What was the last city in Spain relinquished by the Moors?
48. In what work do Caliban and Prospero appear?
49. Who were the Burghers of Calais? Who sculpted them?
50. Who was the "Galloping Ghost?"
51. How long does it take for light from the surface of the sun to reach the earth?
52. Who pardoned Debs? Nixon? Mandela?
53. Who was Atahualpa?
54. How did Samson die?
55. When was King Phillip's War?
56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?
57. Who said "The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line?"
58. Name three famous Leopolds.
59. Distinguish chukkers from Chequers from Checkers.
60. Who dragged Hector around the Walls of Troy?
61. Who wrote "We are the hollow men. . ."?
62. Who, what, or where is Vaduz?
63. What is the sum of the interior angles of a pentagon?
64. Who had a famous "Last Theorem?" "Last Tape?" "Last Stand?"
65. Identify Rigoberta Menchú.
66. Whose name is the first line of the following complete poem: "______/slept under the dresser./When that began to pall,/he slept in the hall?"
67. What does the Constitution say about the number of members of the Supreme Court?
68. What state currently has the third most members of Congress?
69. Who wrote "The Ballad of the White Horse?"
70. If the moon were made of green cheese, and if green cheese floats in water, what is the most that the moon could weigh (within a factor of 10)?
71. Edit: Sam Stevens, et. ux, brought suit against their clother for selling defective suits. The suit was resolved by Stevens v. Jones, 71 F. 3d. 362. The district court had granted summery judgement against the Stevens', but on appeal, the Court decided that the plaintiff's claims deserved a trial.
 
Last edited:
You're kidding right? :confused:

HHI - Measures market concentration (I thought I didn't learn anything in Economics) :D

My brain is hurting . . .
 
Interesting. I can answer quite a few of them, but only about a third of the non-opinionated ones I can answer off the top of my head.
 
I had no idea that we were going to be tested today.

I didn't bring a #2 pencil. Sorry. I can't take the test.

Maybe tomorrow. ;)
 
my brain hurts :D

i could get some.... not alot though.

I must admitt though that since my US history is only the basics, that hurt my total a little.... i also sucked and ancient history in school :)
 
18. Cabeza de vaca is means cowhead..LoL & Vasco Da Gama wasn't he some kinda religious saint???

(You said we can't look them up but i think i read that somewhere)..LoL

23. He invented the cotton gin (i think)

53. Atahualpa..LoL I'm sure this is wrong..but according to this cd i have, Atahualpa is a music group from South america..LoL

Damn, i suck at trivia!!!
:eek:
 
I bolded the subjective questions. They've provided some of the more interesting answers.
 
Decided to give this another try. :nana:

Originaly posted by Mischka
1. What does the Herfindahl-Hirschman index measure?
Market Concentration

3. Who wrote the Ode to Joy?
A Friedrich von Schiller's poem

4. Name one work by Margaret Atwood.
The Handmaid's Tale

5. For what was Willie Sutton noted?
Robbed banks

6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?
Martin Luther King

9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"
Atomic Bombs

11. What country's capital is Kuala Lumpur?
Malaysia

13. Freetown is the capital of what country?
Sierra Leone

19. Name two works of Kipling.
How the Leopard got his spots and the Jungle Book.

20. Distinguish Roy M. Cohn from Roy G. Biv.
Roy G. Biv - Light Spectrum abbreviated

27. Who wrote The Jew of Malta?
Christopher Marlowe

45. Who is Eudora Welty?
Author

46. What is the capital of Chile?
Santiago

54. How did Samson die?
The Temple fell on him after he pushed away the supporting pillars. Sucks huh?

56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?

Danielle Steele - Message from Nam (I'm sappy)

65. Identify Rigoberta Menchú.
Guatemalan who won the Nobel Peace prize in 1992.


Brain Overload. :mad:
 
I want to answer all these Mischka but it will take up too much time.

but seriously i'm not saying that just to not answer.

I've created many threads in the past where people ask me outragious questions...... i've never missed yet

well unless the question was just stupid.

maybe if I get more time I"ll answer them for you.
 
Jaysis, Mischka, that's a mouthful. okay, here goes:


1. What does the Herfindahl-Hirschman index measure?
don't know

2. Who sprang full grown from the head of Jupiter? Who sprang from the sea foam off Cyprus?
Pegasus & Venus

3. Who wrote the Ode to Joy?
Ludwig van B.

4. Name one work by Margaret Atwood.
The Handmaid's Tale

5. For what was Willie Sutton noted?
Robbing banks (that's where the money was)

6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?
Michael Collins (Liam Neeson played him in the movie)

7. Complete the line: "Once upon a midnight dreary ______."
while i pondered weak and weary over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore...

8. How many U.S. states had new all-time high temperatures in the last twenty years?
All of them

9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"
first atomic bombs.

10. What are the chances of ten straight of the same side coming up in ten consecutive tosses of a fair coin?
don't know

11. What country's capital is Kuala Lumpur?
Malaysia

12. Who wrote Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats?
T.S. Elliot

13. Freetown is the capital of what country?
Liberia

14. Name the most populous country in Africa; in South America.
Nigeria; Brazil

15. What is measured by an anemometer? A sphygmomanometer? A hygrometer?
windspeed; blood pressure; don't know

16. Who gave the famous speech "Ain't I a Woman?"
Sojourner Truth

17. Give the decimal value of the number 212110, which is in base 3.
ugh, math

18. Distinguish Cabeza de Vaca from Vasco da Gama.
don't know and Portuguese navigator c.1400s

19. Name two works of Kipling.
Kim. The Jungle Book. gunga din

20. Distinguish Roy M. Cohn from Roy G. Biv.
McCarthy aid, color spectrum mnenomic device

21. Distinguish Rimsky-Korsakov from Kolmogorov-Smirnov.
don't know.

22. Within a factor of 2, what was the United States population at the time of the Civil War? The total number of military deaths in the Civil War?
45 million. 500k

23. Why is Eli Whitney famous?
cotton gin

24. What capital of a European country is the farthest north? The farthest south?
Rekyavic, Iceland; Athens, Greece (or do you count Valetta, Malta?)

25. Name a poem that you can recite by memory.
"When I was one and Twenty", by A.E. Houseman

26. Who killed: Duncan? McKinley? Cock Robin? Ron Goldman? Vaudeville?
Macbeth; an anarchist; the sparrow; don't know; Dixon Carter Lee

27. Who wrote The Jew of Malta?
Bacon

28. Where did Michael Jordan play college basketball?
NC

29. Name three quarks.
don't know

30. What countries were headed by: Amin? Kaunda? Nkrumah? Kenyatta?
Uganda; don't know, don't know, Kenya

31. What country had a group of authors known as "The Generation of '98?"
don't know

32. Name three members of Washington's first cabinet.
Knox, Hamilton, Jefferson

33. How many members are in the U.S. House of Representatives? In what year did it first have this number?
435 1960

34. Who was Thorstein Veblen?
Noble winning economist (i have a friend who named this dog that)

35. Who was Cinque?
don't know

36. Name two Shakespeare plays beginning with "King."
Lear & Henry V

37. Who was Matthew Brady?
Civil war era photographer

38. What work of art has most profoundly affected you?
Picasso's Guernica

39. Who was Hector Bywater?
don't know

40. Complete the line: "Is this a dagger______?"
I see before me

41. When was Liberia founded? What was the original name of its capital?
1848; don't know

42. Locate: Lake Baikal; the Salton Sea; the Aral Sea; the Sea of Tranquility.
Siberia; don't know; Siberia; the moon

43. Name a work by H. L. Mencken.
Baltimore Sun

44. Who wrote: "Sunset and evening star and one clear call for me?"
don't know

45. Who is Eudora Welty?
recently deceased southern writer

46. What is the capital of Chile?
Santiago

47. What was the last city in Spain relinquished by the Moors? Sevilla

48. In what work do Caliban and Prospero appear?
The Tempest

49. Who were the Burghers of Calais? Who sculpted them?
Rodin; gave themselves up to the English to save the town

50. Who was the "Galloping Ghost?"
Red Grange

51. How long does it take for light from the surface of the sun to reach the earth?
3 minutes

52. Who pardoned Debs? Nixon? Mandela?
Harding; Ford; DeClerque

53. Who was Atahualpa?
don't know

54. How did Samson die?
pulled the temple down on himself

55. When was King Phillip's War?
1690's, Mass/VT

56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?
William Trevor, "The Ballroom of Romance"

57. Who said "The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line?"
don't know

58. Name three famous Leopolds.
King of the Belgian; Bloom; and Loeb

59. Distinguish chukkers from Chequers from Checkers.
don't know; Churchill's country home; Nixon's dog

60. Who dragged Hector around the Walls of Troy?
Achilles?

61. Who wrote "We are the hollow men. . ."?
don't know

62. Who, what, or where is Vaduz?
capital city of Lichtenstein

63. What is the sum of the interior angles of a pentagon?
720º

64. Who had a famous "Last Theorem?" "Last Tape?" "Last Stand?"
don't know; Beckett (Krapp's); Custer

65. Identify Rigoberta Menchú.
Guatemalan women peace activist & Noble prize winner

66. Whose name is the first line of the following complete poem: "______/slept under the dresser./When that began to pall,/he slept in the hall?"
don't know

67. What does the Constitution say about the number of members of the Supreme Court?
nothing

68. What state currently has the third most members of Congress?
New York

69. Who wrote "The Ballad of the White Horse?"
Brendan Behan

70. If the moon were made of green cheese, and if green cheese floats in water, what is the most that the moon could weigh (within a factor of 10)?
don't know

71. Edit: Sam Stevens, et. ux, brought suit against their clother for selling defective suits. The suit was resolved by Stevens v. Jones, 71 F. 3d. 362. The district court had granted summery judgement against the Stevens', but on appeal, the Court decided that the plaintiff's claims deserved a trial.
You're kidding, right?
 
Mischka said:
A Sixth Circuit Judge adminsters a trivia test to prospective legal clerks as part of their interview; he says it makes for a more interesting group of clerks. The following is last year's quiz. Without looking up the answers, see how many you can answer correctly.

1. What does the Herfindahl-Hirschman index measure?
dunno

2. Who sprang full grown from the head of Jupiter? Who sprang from the sea foam off Cyprus?
Umm... I know it was Athena that sprang from Zeus's head in Greek mythology, but I can't remember the Roman equivalent... Oh, and Venus/Aphrodite for the second part.

3. Who wrote the Ode to Joy?
Ludwig Van

4. Name one work by Margaret Atwood.
The Handmaid's Tale

5. For what was Willie Sutton noted?
Uh... Steamship inventor?

6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?
John Dee, Astrologer to the Court of Queen Elizabeth I.

7. Complete the line: "Once upon a midnight dreary ______."
While I pondered weak and weary over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore... while I nodded...;)

8. How many U.S. states had new all-time high temperatures in the last twenty years?
50

9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"
The atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively.

10. What are the chances of ten straight of the same side coming up in ten consecutive tosses of a fair coin?
I suck at probabilities... but... um... 1%?

11. What country's capital is Kuala Lumpur?
Malaysia

12. Who wrote Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats?
T.S. Eliot

13. Freetown is the capital of what country?
Dunno.

14. Name the most populous country in Africa; in South America.
Egypt, Brazil

15. What is measured by an anemometer? A sphygmomanometer? A hygrometer?
airspeed, dunno, water saturation

16. Who gave the famous speech "Ain't I a Woman?"
Dunno.

17. Give the decimal value of the number 212110, which is in base 3.
No!

18. Distinguish Cabeza de Vaca from Vasco da Gama.
Vasco de Gama was a Conquistador, and he did NOT have an empty head.

19. Name two works of Kipling.
Kim, Gunga Din

20. Distinguish Roy M. Cohn from Roy G. Biv.
Cohn was a historical figure whose history escapes me, but I think he was a New Yorker. Roy G. Biv is an acronym for the colors of the rainbow.

21. Distinguish Rimsky-Korsakov from Kolmogorov-Smirnov.
the forrmer was a composer, the latter sounds like a damn fine vodka

22. Within a factor of 2, what was the United States population at the time of the Civil War? The total number of military deaths in the Civil War?
Uh, 10 million, 450,000..? God I suck....


23. Why is Eli Whitney famous?
He invented the cotton gin.

24. What capital of a European country is the farthest north? The farthest south?
Oslo, Madrid

25. Name a poem that you can recite by memory.
The Raven... heh.

26. Who killed: Duncan? McKinley? Cock Robin? Ron Goldman? Vaudeville?
Dunno, dunno, dunno, OJ Simpson, Al Jolson

27. Who wrote The Jew of Malta?
Shakespeare?

28. Where did Michael Jordan play college basketball?
University of North Carolina

29. Name three quarks.
No!

30. What countries were headed by: Amin? Kaunda? Nkrumah? Kenyatta?
Ethiopia, dunno the rest

31. What country had a group of authors known as "The Generation of '98?"
France?

32. Name three members of Washington's first cabinet.
Jesus I suck... ummm... Clay, Hamilton, Jefferson

33. How many members are in the U.S. House of Representatives? In what year did it first have this number?
264...? Dunno...

34. Who was Thorstein Veblen?
dunno

35. Who was Cinque?
dunno

36. Name two Shakespeare plays beginning with "King."
King Lear, King Henry V

37. Who was Matthew Brady?
uh, the kid that caught a foul ball in that Oriole's game?

38. What work of art has most profoundly affected you?
Michelangelo's David

39. Who was Hector Bywater?
dunno

40. Complete the line: "Is this a dagger______?"
I see before me?

41. When was Liberia founded? What was the original name of its capital?
1865? Monrovia

42. Locate: Lake Baikal; the Salton Sea; the Aral Sea; the Sea of Tranquility.
Russia, California, dunno, the Moon

43. Name a work by H. L. Mencken.
uh... crap...

44. Who wrote: "Sunset and evening star and one clear call for me?"
dunno

45. Who is Eudora Welty?
American author

46. What is the capital of Chile?
Santiago

47. What was the last city in Spain relinquished by the Moors?
Seville

48. In what work do Caliban and Prospero appear?
The Tempest

49. Who were the Burghers of Calais? Who sculpted them?
Some city official types, Rodin

50. Who was the "Galloping Ghost?"
Red Grainge

51. How long does it take for light from the surface of the sun to reach the earth?
.001 seconds

52. Who pardoned Debs? Nixon? Mandela?
dunno, Ford, FW de Clerk

53. Who was Atahualpa?
Incan ruler?

54. How did Samson die?
He brought a building down on himself, cuz he was pissed that Delilah cut his purty hair.

55. When was King Phillip's War?
Uh, 16th century?

56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?
Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

57. Who said "The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line?"
Martin Luther King, Jr.

58. Name three famous Leopolds.
The conductor in that Bugs Bunny cartoon, the real conductor (Stokowski) he was modeled after, and King Leopold of Prussia

59. Distinguish chukkers from Chequers from Checkers.
No!

60. Who dragged Hector around the Walls of Troy?
Achilles

61. Who wrote "We are the hollow men. . ."?
Dunno

62. Who, what, or where is Vaduz?
dunno

63. What is the sum of the interior angles of a pentagon?
uh, 600 degrees?

64. Who had a famous "Last Theorem?" "Last Tape?" "Last Stand?"
Fermat, dunno, duster

65. Identify Rigoberta Menchú.
He's the one with the cool goatee.

66. Whose name is the first line of the following complete poem: "______/slept under the dresser./When that began to pall,/he slept in the hall?"
Jack Sprat

67. What does the Constitution say about the number of members of the Supreme Court?
Nothing?

68. What state currently has the third most members of Congress?
Texas

69. Who wrote "The Ballad of the White Horse?"
Uh, Washington Irving?

70. If the moon were made of green cheese, and if green cheese floats in water, what is the most that the moon could weigh (within a factor of 10)?
Pffft.

71. Edit: Sam Stevens, et. ux, brought suit against their clother for selling defective suits. The suit was resolved by Stevens v. Jones, 71 F. 3d. 362. The district court had granted summery judgement against the Stevens', but on appeal, the Court decided that the plaintiff's claims deserved a trial.
Pffft....

God, I suck.
 
22. There were around 31 million people in the US (north and south) at the time of the Civil War. 22 million lived in the north, 9 million (including three and a half million slaves) lived in the south.

70. Weight is a function of the gravitational force applied on a object. It has nothing to do with what the object is made out of.
 
Question 51

8 Minutes and 20/21 seconds it depends where in its orbit earth is.


I can not believe I remember that from school.
 
Very interesting. I knew quite a few, but I bet my husband would know more of them. I'll have to show it to him and see how he does

J
 
Without looking up the answers, see how many you can answer correctly.


6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?

Oliver Cromwell


9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"


The first two atomic bombs


13. Freetown is the capital of what country?


Sierra Leone


15. What is measured by an anemometer?
Wind speed
A hygrometer? Humidity


18. Distinguish Cabeza de Vaca from Vasco da Gama.


Head of cow vs. Spanish Explorer


19. Name two works of Kipling.


Jungle Book and Rikki Tikki Tavi


24. What capital of a European country is the farthest north?

Helsinki


28. Where did Michael Jordan play college basketball?


North Carolina

53. Who was Atahualpa?

An Aztec

56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?

Nicholas Monsarrat, The Cruel Sea


63. What is the sum of the interior angles of a pentagon?


360


There's a couple more I'm not real sure about and I could probably give the "balderdash" answer for the rest of them!
 
Mischka said:
A Sixth Circuit Judge adminsters a trivia test to prospective legal clerks as part of their interview; he says it makes for a more interesting group of clerks. The following is last year's quiz. Without looking up the answers, see how many you can answer correctly.
Holy shit.

1. What does the Herfindahl-Hirschman index measure?
Herfindahl's hirschman. ;)

3. Who wrote the Ode to Joy?
Ludvig von Beethoven

6. Who is your favorite historical figure (deceased)?
Abraham Lincoln

7. Complete the line: "Once upon a midnight dreary ______."
"while I pondered weak and weary" . . .

9. Who or what were "Fat Man" and "Little Boy?"
the atomic bombs dropped on Nagasaki and (Edit: I'm a stupid ass and I really did mean to say Hiroshima here instead of) Japan, respectively, in World War II.

10. What are the chances of ten straight of the same side coming up in ten consecutive tosses of a fair coin?
1 in 2^9, or 1 in 512. The first toss is irrelevant, but the next nine have to match it. The odds of that are 1/2 for the first toss, multiplied by itself for each subsequent flip.

11. What country's capital is Kuala Lumpur?
Malaysia

12. Who wrote Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats?
T.S. Eliot

13. Freetown is the capital of what country?
Sierra Leone

14. Name the most populous country in Africa; in South America.
Nigeria; Brazil

15. What is measured by an anemometer? A sphygmomanometer? A hygrometer?
Wind speed; blood pressure; humidity

16. Who gave the famous speech "Ain't I a Woman?"
Sojurner Truth

17. Give the decimal value of the number 212110, which is in base 3.
Our normal numbers are in base 10, which means 212110 = 0 ones + 1 tens + 1 hundreds + 2 thousands + 1 ten-thousands + 2 hundred-thousands. Base 3 would be 212110 = 0 ones + 1 threes + 1 nines + 2 twenty-sevens + 1 eighty-ones + 2 two hundred forty-threes = 0 + 3 + 9 + 54 + 81 + 486 = 633.

18. Distinguish Cabeza de Vaca from Vasco da Gama.
"Cabeza de vaca" is a cow's head. Vasco da Gama is a horse's ass. No, just kidding, he was a Portugese explorer who discovered Africa's Cape Of Good Hope.

19. Name two works of Kipling.
The poem "If" and The Jungle Book.

20. Distinguish Roy M. Cohn from Roy G. Biv.
Roy G. Biv is the mnemonic device for the color spectrum: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet. I don't know who the fuck Roy M. Cohn is, which is a shame because I was on a pretty good roll there.

21. Distinguish Rimsky-Korsakov from Kolmogorov-Smirnov.
Hey, Smirnov. Love that vodka. What a country!

22. Within a factor of 2, what was the United States population at the time of the Civil War? The total number of military deaths in the Civil War?
30 million officially, higher technically because only 3 out of every 5 slaves counted. About half a million people died.

23. Why is Eli Whitney famous?
invented the cotton gin

24. What capital of a European country is the farthest north? The farthest south?
Reykjavik; Athens

25. Name a poem that you can recite by memory.
I knew "Casey At The Bat" by heart in junior high, but I've forgotten exactly how it goes. I figure the quality of the prose means the Preamble of the U.S. Constitution counts.

26. Who killed: Duncan? McKinley? Cock Robin? Ron Goldman? Vaudeville?
Duncan MacLeod never dies! Oh, sorry, "Highlander" moment. Macbeth killed Duncan, and O.J. Simpson killed Ron Goldman.

28. Where did Michael Jordan play college basketball?
University of North Carolina

29. Name three quarks.
OK, I name them Bob, Walter, and Mika-likee-al-puwa'a.

30. What countries were headed by: Amin? Kaunda? Nkrumah? Kenyatta?
Uganda and forget the rest.

32. Name three members of Washington's first cabinet.
Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, Henry Knox

33. How many members are in the U.S. House of Representatives? In what year did it first have this number?
435. Fixed shortly after the addition of Arizona and New Mexico to the Union, which was in 1912.

36. Name two Shakespeare plays beginning with "King."
King Lear, King Richard III

37. Who was Matthew Brady?
the one younger than Greg

38. What work of art has most profoundly affected you?
Reality affects me more than art; the tombs and memorials in and around Washington, D.C. were probably the most poignant I've ever personally witnessed.

40. Complete the line: "Is this a dagger______?"
"I see before me?" . . .

41. When was Liberia founded? What was the original name of its capital?
1840-ish; Monrovia, after President James Monroe

42. Locate: Lake Baikal; the Salton Sea; the Aral Sea; the Sea of Tranquility.
Siberia; a movie with Val Kilmer; Siberia again; the moon

43. Name a work by H. L. Mencken.
"In Defense Of Women"

45. Who is Eudora Welty?
20th Century Southern American writer; namesake of Eudora e-mail program

46. What is the capital of Chile?
Santiago

48. In what work do Caliban and Prospero appear?
The Tempest


50. Who was the "Galloping Ghost?"
Red Grange

51. How long does it take for light from the surface of the sun to reach the earth?
8 minutes

52. Who pardoned Debs? Nixon? Mandela?
Warren Harding; Gerald Ford; F.W. DeClerk

54. How did Samson die?
sacrificed himself by destroying the pillars he was chained to, bringing down the temple on the Philistines and himself

56. Who is your favorite author? What is your favorite work by that author?
Shel Silverstein; "The Devil & Billy Markham"

61. Who wrote "We are the hollow men. . ."?
Gavin Rossdale of Bush, "The Chemicals Between Us"

63. What is the sum of the interior angles of a pentagon?
540º

64. Who had a famous "Last Theorem?" "Last Tape?" "Last Stand?"
The last one is Custer.

67. What does the Constitution say about the number of members of the Supreme Court?
Nothing.

68. What state currently has the third most members of Congress?
Texas (California and New York are #1 and #2)

70. If the moon were made of green cheese, and if green cheese floats in water, what is the most that the moon could weigh (within a factor of 10)?
Doesn't matter. Density in water and mass/weight are completely unrelated. If something will float, it could weigh more than everything and if there were enough water to hold it, it would float.


I peeked at the answers. I'm not buying some of them.

TB4p
 
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Has anyone asked what the prize is? I think I've got all the objective answers, I'm afraid my subjectives might be tiresome.

This is one party I wish I'd been early to. Thanks for a super quiz.
 
I just looked at the previous replies. Holy Crap! Lit people are smart MoFo's.

Ignore me, I'm middle of the pack at best.
 
I love how so many people are saying that Cabeza de Vaca is a cow's head. :D True, but he's also a Spanish explorer that landed in (present day) Florida in the early 1500s.

As far as the subjective questions, I still cannot answer the favorite author and book. I think I might settle on Twain, but I can't pick the book. Huck? Connecticut Yankee?

As far as art, I adore Frank Llyod Wright's Falling Waters. It captivated my imagination and inspried my love of architecture. The house is perfectly nestled in that landscape. Simply breathtaking.
 
I'm just pissed that I missed Marlowe, especially since I just watched Shakespeare in Love less than 2 weeks ago. My brain is a sieve, I swear.
 
You guys are getting a little too cute with #70. Weight and mass are the same thing. You are probably confusing force with mass. And mass and density are related, if you have a volume (which we do in this case).

The reason that they throw water into the equation is to give you a minimum value for density. Green cheese is imaginary, so they are telling you it is at least as dense at water (1gram/CC). Since you know that all you need is a volume, which is easily available on the net.
 
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