Dem 47
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GOP 53
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Reader Question of the Week: Trivial Pursuits (the Answers)

We promised the answers to yesterday's quiz; and now we deliver:

  1. Three U.S. vice presidents have shared the same last name. What is that last name?
    Johnson (Richard, 1837-41; Andrew, 1865; Lyndon, 1961-63)

  2. Within 10 billion, how many people have ever lived on planet Earth?
    120 billion

  3. Marbury v. Madison (1803) was the first case in which the Supreme Court exercised judicial review to declare an act of Congress unconstitutional. What famous case marked the second time that happened?
    Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)

  4. What religious leader, who ran for President in 1844, was charged with treason against the states of Missouri and Illinois?
    Joseph Smith

  5. Nintendo was founded in what century?
    The Nineteenth (1889)

  6. Once known as Pig's Eye Landing, what Midwestern American city ultimately switched to a more respectable, religious-based name?
    St. Paul, MN

  7. What nation is only 42nd in size by land area, and yet has the largest number of different time zones, with 12 (13, if Antarctica is included)?
    France (because it considers its overseas territories to be French territory)

  8. Harry S. Truman and Ulysses S. Grant had the same middle name. What was it?
    S

  9. Insulin, the pacemaker, alkaline batteries, basketball and Hawaiian pizza were all invented by citizens of what nation?
    Canada

  10. What letter was the last to be added to the English alphabet?
    J (in 1524)

  11. Laika the dog is notable as the first animal to do what?
    Travel to space

  12. What board game was originally designed to show the evils of capitalism?
    Monopoly

  13. The author who wrote the children's book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is better known as the creator of what British character, featured in several dozen novels and an even larger number of movies?
    Bond. James Bond.

  14. Three people, from three different nations (though all of them customarily portrayed as bearded), have been the subject of more than 5,000 biographies (nobody else comes within 1,000 of that). Name any two of the three.
    Jesus of Nazareth, William Shakespeare, Abraham Lincoln

  15. What was the first country to give women the right to vote in national elections?
    New Zealand (1893)

  16. What was the first U.S. state to give women the right to vote?
    Wyoming (1869)

  17. What duo taught Hap Arnold, the only American ever to be promoted to the rank of General of the Air Force, how to fly?
    The Wright Brothers

  18. What state is home to all four largest cities in the U.S. by area?
    Alaska (Sitka, 2,878 square miles; Juneau, 2,702 square miles; Wrangell, 2,542.5 square miles and Anchorage, 1,704.7 square miles)

  19. When Nichelle Nichols, who played Lieutenant Uhura on Star Trek, was attending an NAACP luncheon to receive an award in 1967, the host asked her if she would mind meeting a fan in the audience. She agreed and mentioned that she was thinking of leaving the show. The fan immediately protested that it was very important that Americans saw an intelligent, capable Black woman in their living rooms once a week. If she left, the character could be replaced with an alien or a robot. He asked her to stay on the show, and she did. Who was the fan?
    Martin Luther King Jr.

  20. In what decade of the 20th century were Americans with disabilities guaranteed the right to enter public buildings and private businesses?
    1990s

  21. There are five universities that have produced a U.S. President and a Super-Bowl-winning quarterback. Name any two of those universities.
    University of Delaware: Joe Biden and Joe Flacco; Stanford University: Herbert Hoover and John Elway/Jim Plunkett; University of Michigan: Gerald Ford and Tom Brady; U.S. Naval Academy: Jimmy Carter and Roger Staubach and Miami University (OH): Benjamin Harrison and Ben Roethlisberger

  22. Two states joined the union on the same day, in November 1889, and the order of entry was such a controversy in those states that the President actually shuffled the paperwork before signing and hid the names of the states so that to this day, no one knows exactly which state is 39th and which is 40th. What states are they?
    North and South Dakota

  23. What movie, which is within shouting distance of its 100th anniversary, has been seen by more human beings than any other movie in film history (an estimated 2 billion viewers)?
    The Wizard of Oz

  24. What president told Chief Justice Earl Warren, before the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education (1954): "These [Southerners] are not bad people. All they are concerned about is to see that their sweet little girls are not required to sit in school alongside some big, overgrown Negro."
    Dwight D. Eisenhower

  25. The United States has won the most medals in the Summer Olympics, with 2,765. What nation has won the most medals in the Winter Olympics, with 406 (as of Feb. 14, 2026)?
    Norway


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