Monday, November 22, 2021

RHS November 2021 Trivia

 

1.Which car company introduced the three point seat belt? In which year?
 
Volvo.   1959.

2. What is a Furcula?

A wishbone.

3. Canadian Thanksgiving is regularly on which day and week in October?

Second Monday of October.

4. Which U.S. President made Thanksgiving a national holiday?

Abraham Lincoln.

5. What is the term for the plastic or metal on the end of a shoelace designed to facilitate inserting the lace in the eyelets of a shoe?

Aglet.



 

Monday, October 25, 2021

RHS October 2021 Trivia

 

1. Hallowe'en, All Hallows (Saints) Evening, which comes just before All Hallows Day, was celebrated on the Celtic Calendar'sCross Quarter celebration of Samhain (Summer's End). It is believed to have been the start of the New Year on the CelticCalendar. What other Celtic Cross Quarter day is still observed regularly here in the United States and elsewhere?
 
February 2nd, Ground Hog Day, Celtic Imbolc (Lamb's Milk), later Catholic Candlemas 
https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Cross-Quarter+Days

2. Which early civilization first exhibited a number system with a specific character for zero in a true positional place notation?
A. Indian?  B. Chinese?  C. Pre-Columbian Meso-America? D. Ancient Middle East?
 
C. Pre-Columbian America
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0#Pre-Columbian_Americas
 


3. In the film "Ground Hog Day" who played Buster who presided over the ground hog shadow-detecting ceremony?
 
Brian Doyle-Murray, Bill Murray's older brother
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Doyle-Murray


4. Peggy Lou Snyder, a vaudeville dancer and vocalist who appeared under the name of Harriet Hilliard, later married a formercollege football player and saxophone-playing band leader. They had two sons, Eric and David. They became a famous comedy family. What was her married name?
 
Harriet Nelson
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_Nelson


5. What was the name of the British physician who developed the concept of "vaccination" by exposing patients to the more benign cow pox to build their immunity to the scourge of small pox?
 
Edward Jenner  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Jenner#Invention_of_the_vaccine
 Get Your Covid Vax!

 

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

RHS September 2021 Trivia

 

Something a little different: English borrows words from many languages and all over the world. Below I will list six continents and then provide six loan words borrowed into English from a language originally spoken on one of these continents. Just match the continents to the words!


Africa | Asia | Australia | Europe | North America | South America


1. pajamas    ___ASIA_______


2. corn          ______EUROPE_____


3. tomato      _____SOUTH aMERICA______



4. banana     _____AFRICA______



5. squash     _____NORTH AMERICA______



6. barramundi _____AUSTRALIA______



Extra Credit: Can you identify the single source, i.e., the people from whose language the following words were all borrowed?


bar [meaning 'coin'], drag [referring to cross-gender dressing], lollipop, pal, shiv [ knife, razor, or other sharp or pointed implement, especially one used as a weapon]
 
The Gypsies: aka Romani, aka Zigeuner,, Tsigane, Gitane, etc., etc.



 

Sunday, August 15, 2021

RHS August 2021 Trivia

 

1. The first commercially successful home blender was financed by and later named for what famous American band leader?

Fred Waring [and his Pennsylvanians] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Waring#Waring_blender

2.What first radio announcer, later show host, and later TV presenter who was the announcer for "The Original Amateur Hour," and the second announcer for "The Horn and Hardart Children's Hour," and presenter of TV's "Truth or Consequences" created, produced, and hosted TV's "This is your Life"?

Ralph Edwards  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Edwards


3. Who was the New York State-born, originally Dutch-speaking slave who was the first black woman to win a court suit against a white defendant and who became a prominent Abolitionist and women's rights activist?

Isabel Baumtree aka Sojourner Truth https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sojourner_Truth


4. Can you name the Vienna-born mathematician, American movie star, and inventor who improved traffic stoplights, influenced Howard Hughes' airplane designs, and devised frequency-hopping spread-spectrum communications to prevent German jamming of radio-controlled torpedoes [and which communications technology is critical in today's defense communication satellite networks]?


Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler aka Hedy Lamarr  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedy_Lamarr

5. What famous American author and wit became a close friend of Nikola Tesla [whose inventions made alternating current the basis of most electrical devices, creating the binary environment for electronic computing] and once while playing with a Tesla generator suddenly found his constipation relieved and who at times borrowed money from his friend Tesla?

Samuel Langhorne Clemens aka Mark Twain   https://www.thevintagenews.com/2019/01/11/twain-and-tesla/

Friday, July 23, 2021

RHS July Trivia

 

1. In honor of the Tokyo Olympic games: The modern Olympics began in the summer of 1896. Only four nations have participated in every summer games held since then. Can you name which four?
 
 Greece, Australia, Great Britain, and Switzerland

2. As many of us are turning or have turned 80, there was a TV program on air between 1950 & 1956, although it originally started on radio in 1948, "Life Begins at 80." Over the life of the show it aired first on NBC and ended on ABC. In between it was on a third network which no longer exists. What network was it and who was the host?
 

3. The current Attorney General of the United States, Merrick Garland, has been in the news trying to realign the Department of Justice. The first Attorney General was named also served as the second U.S.Secretary of State! Who was he? 


4. Princeton University was founded in 1746. Where was it founded and what was its first name?



 

Sunday, June 13, 2021

RHS June 2021 Trivia

 


Name the Missing Middle Man/Men/Woman


1. Jimmy Durante's old act of Clayton, JACKSON, and Durante


2. The Andrews Sisters: Patty, LAVERNE,  and Maxine


3. FDR's Republican oratorical targets, that old team of Martin, BARTON, and Fish


4. The Three Kings of Orient are Caspar [or Gaspar], MELCHIOR, and Bathalsar


5. The 1949 musical movie "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" celebrated the fictional double play combination of O'Brien, to RYAN, to Goldberg portrayed on screen by Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly, and Jules Munshin


6. The 1920's New York Yankees' Murderers Row: Earl Combs, Mark Koenig, BABE RUTH, LOU GEHRIG, Bob Meusel, and Tony Lazzari


7. The literary Bronte sisters, Charlotte, EMILY, and Anne


8. The 1905-1912 Chicago Cubs' great double play combo, Tinkers to EVERS, to Chance

Sunday, May 16, 2021

RHS May 2021 Trivia


1. Which school lost the NJSIAA Group II Boys' Basketball State Championship to Riverside High School?

Park Ridge High School

2. Recently Baltimore Orioles pitcher John Means pitched a no-hitter that was nearly a perfect game except for a wild pitch. On October 8, 1956, which pitcher pitched the first perfect game [no hits, no walks] in a World Series?

Don Larsen of the NY Yankees against the Brooklyn Dodgers. [I saw most of the last inning on a TV set up on the stage of the RHS auditorium,] 



3. Who portrayed Superman in the WOR Radio's "The Adventures of Superman" on the Mutual Broadcast Network and later hosted TV's original "Beat the Clock" game show?

Bud Collyer

4. August 6, 1926, the first woman, an American, successfully wam the English Channel, beating the then existing men's record by two hours. Who was she?

Gertrude Ederle