1
Q

THEY WERE EXPELLED: Once publisher of the USA’s largest newspaper chain, he was expelled from Harvard in 1885 for insulting his professors

A

William Randolph Hearst

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2
Q

BIG FARMER : This tall Army sergeant who became a WWI hero was presented with a farm by the state of Tennessee

A

Alvin York

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3
Q

SERGEANT YORK : WWI’s famous Sgt. Alvin York was born on Dec. 13, 1887 in Pall Mall in this “Volunteer State”

A

Tennessee

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4
Q

LEFTOVERS : In 1872 this American brig with a feminine name was found at sea–just the ship; the crew was missing

A

Mary Celeste

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5
Q

HORSE and WRITER: Robert Louis Stevenson rode his horse Jack to Apia, now capital of this Pacific island nation

A

Samoa

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6
Q

CITY OF BIRTH : Robert Louis Stevenson

A

Edinburgh

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7
Q

OBSERVATIONS and CELEBRATIONS : Chinese New Year for kids is a red envelope day; they get ‘em stuffed with this

A

cash

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8
Q

MELLOW FELLOWS: This Chinese philosopher of the 500s B.C.: “When anger rises, think of the consequences”

A

Confucius

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9
Q

BODIES OF WATER: This most sacred river of India was named for a Hindu goddess

A

the Ganges

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10
Q

4-WORD EXCHANGE: The Declaration of Independence mentions the unalienable rights of “life, liberty and” this

A

The pursuit of happiness

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11
Q

OUR FOUNDING FATHERS: He signed the Declaration of Independence twice: on July 4, 1776 and in large letters the following month

A

John Hancock

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12
Q

THICKER THAN WATER: Nearly 80 years later, this sunken battleship is still leaking oil in Pearl Harbor

A

The USS Arizona

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13
Q

HOLIDAYS and OBSERVANCES: Pearl Harbor Day is observed on this date, one “which will live in infamy’

A

December 7th

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14
Q

PARTS OF SPEECH : Here’s a very, very, very good clue from our non-lazy, teacher: very

A

an adverb

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15
Q

“C” FLAT: Divided into 64 squares, it’s usually found with royalty on it

A

a chessboard

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16
Q

COTTON: In 1794 he was granted a patent for his cotton gin

A

Eli Whitney

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17
Q

NAME THE CENTURY : Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin

A

18th Century (1793)

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18
Q

TELL ME “Y”: In China it’s also known as the Chang Jiang or “long river”

A

Yangtze

19
Q

IN WHICH MONTH: Kwanzaa begins

A

December

20
Q

CELLO: When you think of a cello solo, you’re probably thinking of this Baroque composer’s cello prelude from around 1720

A

Bach

21
Q

BYE, GEORGE!: After this composer met his “Messiah” in 1759, he was buried in Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey

A

George Handel

22
Q

I WANT CANDY: This word, a synonym for chewy, is found before “worms” & “bears” in the names of candy

A

gummy

23
Q

SCIENCE GUYS: Born in Germany in 1879, he fled to America in 1932 & became a U.S. citizen in 1940

A

Einstein

24
Q

THE FIRST MODERN OLYMPICS: As in ancient times, the first Modern Olympics, held in this country in 1896, had only male participants

A

Greece

25
Q

WORD ORIGINS: The name of this head covering for Muslim women comes from the Arabic for “to cover”

A

hijab

26
Q

FAMOUS FIRSTS: He was not only the first president to die in office but also served the shortest term, a mere month

A

William Henry Harrison

27
Q

THE SMITHSONIAN FROM A TO Z: A: At the American Art Museum, 34 of his photos, including several of Yosemite

A

Ansel Adams

28
Q

PHOTOGRAPHY: In digital photography, it’s the opposite of portrait mode

A

landscape

29
Q

PHOTOGRAPHY: The button you press on most cameras to take the picture is called this “release”

A

shutter

30
Q

GO FOR BAROQUE: His parents wanted him to be a lawyer, but he ended up composing the “Messiah”

A

Handel

31
Q

PRESIDENTS’ MIDDLE NAMES: Howard

A

William Taft

32
Q

LONDON: Street that’s home to London’s oldest theater and the Muffin Man

A

Drury Lane

33
Q

COMPOSERS: He published “The Four Seasons” with poems that expressed what the music was intended to evoke about each season

A

Vivaldi

34
Q

TENNIS: Long before losing to Billie Jean King, he won at Wimbledon in 1939

A

Bobby Riggs

35
Q

ON A “WIM”: Site of the All-England Lawn Tennis Club

A

Wimbledon

36
Q

ARTISTS: This “Fog Warning” artist’s 1st assignment for “Harper’s Weekly” was to sketch Lincoln’s inauguration

A

Winslow Homer

37
Q

U.S. STAMPS: As a tribute to WWII Marines, the Post Office issued a 1945 stamp depicting this event

A

the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima

38
Q

PRESIDENTS: The only president who fought in the French & Indian War

A

George Washington

39
Q

AMERICAN QUOTATIONS: He resolved that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the Earth”

A

Abraham Lincoln

40
Q

ROALD DAHL: This character “can make marshmallows that taste of violets”

A

Willy Wonka

41
Q

THE 2020 OLYMPICS IN 2021: Not an anthem but Tchaikovsky was played at gold medal ceremonies for the ROC, short for this team, the result of a ban

A

Russian Olympic Commitee

42
Q

THE 2020 OLYMPICS IN 2021: The first Hmong-American Olympian, she won all-around gold in gymnastics

A

Suni Lee

43
Q

CHILDREN’S LIT: This Roald Dahl book begins, “These two very old people are the father and mother of Mr. Bucket”

A

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory