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1. The inspiration for having celebrities leave handprints and footprints in the sidewalk outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood was an accident that befell this celebrity.
When getting out of her car for a tour of the theatre, Ms. Talmadge placed her foot in wet cement. Her “official” prints were immortalized some time later, on 18 May 1927.
Buster Keaton
Douglas Fairbanks
Norma Talmadge
Gloria Swanson
2. In this country, women give chocolate to men on Valentine’s Day, but men do not typically give gifts.
But men give non-chocolate candy to women on White Day (14 March).
Sweden
Indonesia
South Korea
Taiwan
3. In the U.S., it is nearly always a federal crime to …
Lie about the results of an election
Share your Netflix password
Rob a convenience store
Try to log in to an online banking site during scheduled downtime
4. How many time zones does China have?
3
5
7
1
5. The U.S. government gave the University of Indiana $1 million to study …
Specifically, the genesis, spread, and decline of memes.
Internet addiction
Internet trolls
Internet disinformation
Internet memes
6. The first known evidence of human dentistry dates from around what year?
Indus Valley Civilization.
1110 AD
7000 BCE
650 BCE
425 BCE
7. In Switzerland, it is illegal to …
Guinea pigs (and certain other pets) are social creatures. It is considered cruel to deprive them of interaction with their own species.
Make chocolate in a home kitchen
Possess marijuana
Own just one guinea pig
Own a nuclear shelter
8. Certain of these creatures can hibernate for up to three years.
Hummingbirds
Alaskan brown bears
Snails
Honeybees
9. The witches in Shakespeare’s Macbeth add “eye of newt” to their cauldron. What are they referring to?
A newt’s eye, silly
Heather
Peppercorns
Mustard seed
10. Which is the only planet in our solar system that spins clockwise?
Earth
Uranus
Venus
Mercury
11. The mercury-in-glass thermometer was invented in 1714. What was used to fill thermometers before that?
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit invented the mercury thermometer in Amsterdam.
Goat’s milk
A nice, chewy Chianti
Isopropyl alcohol
Brandy
12. Which is NOT actually a berry, based on botanical classification?
But bananas ARE berries, botanically speaking. Who knew?
Redcurrant
Grape
Blueberry
Strawberry
13. The Statue of Liberty once functioned as a …
The statue was administered by the United States Lighthouse Board until 1901.
Processing center for immigrants
Lighthouse
World War II decryption center
Convenience store
14. What was this symbol (#) called at Bell Labs in the late 1960s and early 1970s?
“Octo” refers to the eight points created by the ends of the four lines. Nobody seems to have a clue where “thorpe” comes from, at least in the context of this word.
Hash sign
Number sign
Octothorpe
Pound sign
15. This crime family boss, nicknamed “The Oddfather” by the press, feigned insanity by walking around in public in his bathrobe and muttering to himself.
He might very well have convinced me. Gigante was the head of New York City’s Genovese crime family between 1981 and 2005.
Vincent Gigante
John Gotti
Charles “Lucky” Luciano
Al Capone
16. Which creature has three hearts?
One heart pumps blood around the body. The other two pump it past the gills.
Goldfinch
Cow
Whale
Octopus
17. The Anglo-Zanzibar War (1896) is the shortest in history. How long did it last?
All because Sultan Khalid bin Barghash took over without British permission after the previous sultan died. The British won, after bombarding the sultan’s palace.
5 1/2 hours
14 minutes
nearly 2 hours
38 minutes
18. For a brief period in 1934 and 1935, the U.S. printed $100,000 bills. Whose portrait appeared on the front of the bills?
The bills were issued solely to Federal Reserve Banks. Many Americans at the time were lucky to have two dimes to rub together.
William Henry Harrison
Betsy Ross
James Madison
Woodrow Wilson
19. Cows belonging to the late Queen Elizabeth II …
It is believed that waterbeds ease pressure points and improve milk quality.