A1. Jamie Farr  (“Maxwell Klinger”)

A2. Devo

A3. Graham (Dalton)

A4. 18 inches

A5.  Les Nessman (Richard Sanders) WKRP in Cincinnati

A6. Dragnet

A7. Sollozo

A8. DISQUALIFIED

A9. Erle Stanley Gardner

A10. U-2   (“I Will Follow”)

A11. Blue Velvet

A12. My Own Private Idaho

A13. Tom Hulce

A14. 77 Sunset Strip

A15. The F.B.I.

A16. Seven Years Old

A17. Graham Nash & Neil Young

A18. Memphis Group

A19. Lethal Weapon 4

A20.  Morland Balkan OR Lark OR Senior Service OR H. Simmons Specials

A21. Dirty Harry (Det. Harry Callahan)

A22. Lorenzo’s Oil

A23. Ironside

A24. Telly Savalas

A25 Bob Newhart Show  (Dr Robert Anthony Hartley)

A26 Zero Mostel

A27. Kismet

A28. Kirk Douglas

A29. Porky’s Duck Hunt

A30. King Kong and Son of Kong

A31. The Andromeda Strain

A32. Jonas Grumby

A33. Marcel Marceau

A34. Shannon Hoon (of Blind Melon)

A35. Bud Abbott & Lou Costello

A36. Felix the Cat

A37. Beatles’ Abbey Road

A38. Pocahontas

A39. The Martini Shot

A40. Munster Masquerade

A41. Alex Reiger in Taxi played by Judd Hirsch

A42. DISQUALIFIED

A43. Babylon 5

A44. 220

A45. Torch Song Trilogy

A46. 1280  OR  1200

A47. 4:44

A48. The Smiths (Louder Than Bombs album)

A49. “Smile”

A50. $62.00  OR  $42.00 or $42.50

A51. Don’t Worry, Be Happy; Sung By BobBy McFerrin)

A52. DISQUALIFIED

A53. Juliet of the Spirits

A54. “American Dream...”  (sung By Crosby. Stills, Nash & Young)

A55. “A Simple Desultory Phillippic” (By Simon & Garfunkel)

A56. Leroy Gossett

A57. Robbery

A58.  Duckburg, Calisota   (Street address is okay but not necessary)

A59. 4 ½ minutes

A60. Leonard; Adolph OR Arthur; Julius; and Herbert   (Gummo Marx was born Milton Marx. Adolph changed his name to Arthur during  WW II)

A61. Reel 2, Dialogue 2

A62. Elzie Crisler Segar

A63. Frank Oz

A64. Scout

A65. Ringo Starr  (Also acceptable: John Lennon)

A66. Rock the Casbah  (By The Clash)

A67. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest

A68. Jesse Garon  (He died at birth)

A69. Lou Ferrigno

A70. The black Pontiac (OR: A car) in the show Knight Rider. Knight Industries Two Thousand

A71. Bob May played the robot; Dick Tufeld did the voice

A72.  The Time Tunnel OR Aliens from Another Planet

A73. Famous Funnies

A74. Jupiter 2  (Jupiter II)

A75. Tina Turner   

A76. John Larroquette

A77. T-negative

A78. Paul Reiser

A79. The Grateful Dead

A80. The Remains of the Day

A81. Theater people OR specifically, part of the revival of Cabaret (Either acceptable)

A82. The Truman Show

A83. Escape from New York

A84.  “I’ve just gotta get a message to you.” OR “I’ve just got to get a message to you.”

A85. Reg Smythe

A86. Buster Keaton  (1924)

A87.  Singers without instruments who reproduce the sounds of a popular band OR the borrowing of vocal clips OR a Cuban group of musicians

A88. Victor/Victoria

A89. Tibetan Freedom Concerts

A90. Ragas and Talas

A91. Born on the Fourth of July

A92. Echo and the Bunnymen

A93. 4222 Clinton Way

A94. The King Edward Hotel

A95. Peugeot

A96. Dr Sam Sheppard murder case

A97.  DISQUALIFIED after the close of the contest. Our clarification was wrong.

A98. DISQUALIFIED

A99. Joni Mitchell

A100. RUSH

A101. Billy Joel

A102. Gypsy

A103. On Golden Pond

A104. “He Saw it All”   (from Tommy)

A105. Freddie Hubbard

A106. 4 minutes, 16 seconds

A107. James Darrel Edwards III

A108. Spaceballs

A109. 142 minutes

A110. Close Encounters of the Third Kind

A111. Soap

A112. Matt Groening

A113. Sense and Sensibility

A114. Upstairs, Downstairs

A115.  DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

A116. ABBA

A117. Richard Burton

A118. James Brown

A119. SFX Entertainment

A120. Johnny Cash

A121. Peter Noone

A122. The show, “The Black Crook”  (The first American musical)

A123. Stevie Wonder

A124. DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

A125. Charlie Chaplin

A126. Eric Weissberg & Steve Mandel OR Steve Mandell

A127. Louis B. Mayer

A128. Kris Kristofferson

A129. D.J. Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince

A130. Rocky III

A131. Chim Chim Cher-ee (from Mary Poppins)

A132. “And then along comes Mary…”  (Sung by The Association)

A133. DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

A134. Miles Davis

A135. Tito Puente

A136. “Barn Dance”  (WSM  Radio) 

A137. New Adventures in Hi-Fi   (REM)

A138. 4:00 OR 5:24

A139. “Child, I never been around you much but I want to give you one thing…”  (B-52s -Whammy)

A140. A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy

A141. Franz Liszt

A142. Wall Street

A143. “Against All Odds” (By Phil Collins)

A144. Vaughn Meader

A145. The Cars (Also acceptable: ZZ Top)

A146. Violent Femmes

A147.  The Cage   (Also acceptable: Where No Man Has Gone Before)

A148. 430

A149. Dean Stockwell

A150. Feminum. (Also acceptable: Amazonium)

A151. Chris Carter

A152. Maxwell Street Precinct (in Chicago)

A153. I Spy (Bill Cosby and Robert Culp)

A154. DISQUALIFIED

A155. Frank Sinatra

A156. Let’s Active. (There were several other groups who performed a song with this title, including Eddie Bo, Flogging Molly, King Radio, Ray Anthony, Lion Heart, Sly and the Family Stone or Cadillac Moon. Any of these is accepted.)

A157. “Michelle” Best Song (1966)  OR “Hard Day’s Night” Best Performance by a Group (1964)

A158. Wonderful Town

A159. Antoinette Perry

A160. Mister Roberts

A161. Hill Street Blues

A162. Upstairs, Downstairs

A163. DISQUALIFIED

A164. La Strada

A165. Sophie’s Choice

A166. Burt Lancaster

A167. Chuck Berry

A168. Burt Bacharach and/or Hal David

A169. George Benson

A170. Paul Drake

A171. Shelley (or Shelly) Winters

A172. Sol Saks

A173. Battlestar Galactica

A174. Gamma Rays OR Radiation

A175. DISQUALIFIED

A176. Dr Rudy Wells (Six Million Dollar Man)

A177.  Captain Kirk OR Captain Walker OR Captain Pike OR Commander of the Starship Enterprise

A178. Blazing Saddles  (By Mel Brooks)

A179. The Beach Boys

A180. “Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water…”   (Simon & Garfunkel)

A181. "Money for Nothin'" (Dire Straits)

A182. Little Shop of Horrors

A183. “Joey…” (from Most Happy Fella)

A184.  Andersonville Trial OR Sesame Street OR Elizabeth R
A185. Bill Cosby

A186. Robert Stack

A187. Life Achievement Award (from the American Film Institute)

A188. An Officer and a Gentleman

A189. Ordinary People

A190. Men at Work

A191. “Tom Dooley” (Sung by the Kingston Trio)

A192. DISQUALIFIED

A193. Leave it to Beaver

A194. Mae West

A195. Bert the cop and Ernie the taxi driver in It’s a Wonderful Life (Or characters in the film)

A196. DISQUALIFIED

A197. “I don’t believe you’ll be open anymore.”  (Sung by Tanita Tikaram)

A198. Goldfinger

A199. Tears for Fears

A200. Moonstruck

A201. Small Soldiers

A202. Talking Heads

A203. Craig Charles

A204. B-52s

A205. West Side Story

A206. The Great Santini OR The Ace

A207. Blazing Saddles

A208. The Heart of Darkness (By Joseph Conrad)

A209. Four Aces

A210. The Producers

A211. Hank Ballard

A212. Bee Gees

A213. John William Ricketts

A214.  The Butterfield Blues band, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Better Days, Buttercups, Danko-Butterfield Band, or Salt and Pepper Shakers. (Any three of these is accepted)

A215. Frank Sinatra

A216. Cloris Leachman and Lisa Gerritsen, respectively

A217. Dr Who  (1963-1992)

A218. The Woman in Red

A219. Twin Peaks

A220. Dick Clark

A221. Ry Cooder

A222. Antoine “Fats” Domino

A223. Bob Dylan

A224. “A Whiter Shade of Pale”

A225. Tim Buckley

A226. “Shake it Up”  (By The Cars)

A227. Slaughterhouse Five

A228. The Avengers

A229. Number 6   (Patrick McGoohan. The Prisoner is not the character’s name.)

A230. $200 a day plus expenses

A231. The Saint  OR Simon Templar

A232. Twin Peaks

A233. The Flintstones

A234. The Bank of Hanoi

A235. Lou Rawls

A236. Thin Lizzy

A237. “Mother and Child Reunion”

A238. Grover Washington Jr

A239. “Make No Mistake, She’s Mine”

A240. “Big Sandy/Leather Britches”

A241. K.T. Oslin

A242. Asleep at the Wheel

A243. Don Schlitz

A244. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting answers.

A245. Nino Rota

A246. Hal David
A247. Star Trek: The Next Generation

A248. “Own Your Own Cave and Be Secure” (Also acceptable: “Top Quality Stone at Rock Bottom Prices.”)

A249. The Wild, Wild West

A250. WXYZ, Detroit, Michigan

A251. Laura Ingalls Wilder

A252. Phil Fish

A253. Dick Zimmerman

A254. Spencer Elden  (corrected spelling)

A255. Steely Dan

A256. The same criminal number: 24601 OR  Both were prisoners

A257. Avant Garde—“Naturally Stoned”

A258. Bryan Adams

A259. “Have a Cigar”—Roy Harper  OR “The Great Gig in the Sky”--Clare Torry

A260. Duran Duran

A261. “Dear Prudence”

A262.  Rita Moreno OR Helen Hayes OR Richard Rogers

A263. “Unguaranteed of bad or good.”  (From Kismet)

A264. “The band on the run” OR “For the band on the run.”

A265. Happy Days

A266. The Kramdens or the Nortons

A267. The Phil Silvers Show  OR You’ll Never Get Rich  OR  Sergeant Bilko

A268. Al Gore and Tommy Lee Jones

A269. Paul McCartney’s sheep dog

A270. Breakfast at Tiffany’s

A271. 5A and 5B 

A272. Ice Cube

A273. Donatello

A274. Star Trek: Voyager

A275. The Seaview  (From Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea)

A276. McKenzie, Brackman, Chaney & Kuzak

A277. United Network Command for Law and Enforcement  

A278. Maddie Hayes & David Addison

A279. Peter Gunn

A280. “Are we, are we, are we ourselves?”   (The Fixx)

A281. Johnny Cash

A282. Neil Diamond (He was only rumored to have sung with this group)

A283. Leonard Bernstein

A284. Roy Orbison

A285. “Do you come from the land down under?”   (Men at Work)

A286. Dead Poets Society

A287. Dolly Parton

A288. Steele Pulse

A289. John Wayne

A290. Paladin  (Played by Richard Boone)

A291. Frederick Loewe & Alan Jay Lerner

A292. Peter Parker / Spiderman

A293. Class of Beverly Hills

A294. Dallas

A295. Joan Collins

A296. Emerson, Lake & Palmer

A297. Peter, Paul & Mary

A298. DISQUALIFIED

A299. Al Green

A300. Jaws

A301. Joni Mitchell

A302. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting answers
A303. The Streets of San Francisco

A304. Elizabeth to Adam; Inger to (Eric) Hoss; Marie to Little Joe

A305. Mike Judge

A306. The Beverly Hillbillies

A307. 1895  (1889 also accepted)

A308. Mel Brooks and Buck Henry

A309. Laverne and Shirley

A310. The Simpsons

A311. thirtysomething

A312. Hot Shots

A313. Maurice

A314. Amazing Grace and Chuck

A315. Mountains of the Moon

A316. Shine

A317. Sophie’s Choice

A318. Sleeper

A319. Fargo

 

 

 

B1. Van Cliburn

B2. Richard Addinsell

B3. “The Art of the Fugue” By J.S. Bach

B4. 3   (Julius Caesar, Richard III, and Hamlet)

B5. J.S. Bach

B6. “Adagio for Strings”

B7. Vincent van Gogh

B8. Tom Sawyer

B9. “Three quarks for Muster Mark!”

B10. Samuel Barber

B11. Bela Bartok

B12. Aeschylus

B13. The Seven Percent Solution

B14. Alexander Calder (Cow with Yellow Face painted in 1971)

B15.  DISQUALIFIED after close of contest. Conflicting answers given by many reliable sources

B16. Bela Bartok

B17. Hector Berlioz

B18. Paul Valéry

B19. Glenn Gould

B20. Esther and Song of Solomon

B21. The Blanched Soldier  and The Lion’s Mane

B22. Diogenes

B23. Aubrey Vincent Beardsley

B24. Liver cancer

B25. George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)

B26. Beethoven

B27. Alban Berg

B28. Music for orchestra and chorus by Leonard Bernstein

B29. Academic Festival Overture

B30. F. Scott Fitzgerald

B31. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe  OR Johann Gottfried von Herder  OR  Friedrich Schiller OR  J. Rousseau

B32.  Ernest Hemmingway OR Norman Dunn

B33.  The Sound and the Fury OR Absolam Absolam OR Quilters Apprentice

B34. Through the Looking Glass…

B35. Ricordi

B36. Hector Berlioz

B37. Leonard Bernstein

B38. Ernest Bloch OR Max Bruch

B39. E.M. Forster

B40. Thus Spake Zarathustra

B41. 802,701 A.D.

B42. 1856-58 OR 1858 OR 1863

B43. Alexander Borodin

B44. Alvar Aalto

B45. Peter Abelard

B46. St Augustine  (City of God)

B47. Samuel Johnson

B48. George Santayana

B49. Aeschylus  OR  Pindar  OR Simonides

B50. Gotthold E. Lessing

B51. Tainted Water (Ibsen’s Enemy of the People)

B52. John Gutmann  OR  Alexander Rodchenko

B53.  ‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore OR ‘Tis Pity Shees a Whore

B54. J E P D  (Also acceptable: JEPDR)

B55. e.e.cummings

B56. Theodore Rousseau

B57. Fra Bartolommeo, plus others. At least three artists painted a work titled The Mystical Marriage of St. Catherine.

B58. Sandro Botticelli

B59. Paul Cézanne  (Also Acceptable: Paul Gauguin—because of poor wording in the question)  

B60. John Singleton Copley

B61. Giotto

B62. Wassily Kandinsky

B63. Nicolas Poussin

B64. Jasper Johns

B65. Angels in America

B66. Waiting for Godot (By Samuel Beckett. Pozzo drags Lucky by a rope leash)

B67. Winston Smith

B68. Emily Dickinson

B69. Prometheus

B70. Marcel Proust (Remembrance of Things Past)

B71. The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe of York, Mariner…

B72. Toronto, Ontario, Canada

B73. William Hogarth

B74.  Index of American Design OR WPA OR Federal Arts Project OR Treasury Relief Art Project

B75. Julius Caesar OR Titus Andronicus

B76. Miss Julie   (By Strindberg)

B77. Nausea   (By Jean Paul Sarte)

B78. American painters in 1908 through 1915

B79. Roy Lichtenstein

B80. Stephen Dedalus

B81. Emily Dickinson

B82. Beethoven OR Chopin

B83. Stepan Trofinmovich Verhovensky 

B84. Plato  OR  Socrates

B85. Germany

B86. Shakespeare

B87. Charlotte Bartholdi (mother of the designer and model for the face) and Jeanne-Emile (the sculptor’s girl friend and model for the arms and body)

B88. Beethoven’s Symphony #5

B89. Sarah Caldwell

B90. Twelve radios tuned at random (OR: Radio)

B91. Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart  OR  Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart

B92. Sir John Falstaff

B93. Symphonie Fantastique

B94. Isaac Asimov

B95. J.R.R. Tolkien

B96. Ray

B97. The two thieves crucified with Christ

B98. Anthony Burgess  (In Byrne)

B99. Beethoven OR  Holst

B100. Johannes Brahms

B101. The Importance of Being Earnest  (By Oscar Wilde)

B102. Moby Dick

B103. Heinrich Harrer (Seven Years in Tibet)

B104. Claes Oldenburg

B105. Saul Bellow

B106. A Thousand Days (By Arthur Schlesinger Jr)

B107. Poetry

B108. Vanessa  (By Samuel Barber)

Other operas include: The Consul, Giants in the Earth, The Saint of Bleecker Street, and The Crucible.

B109. Love! Valour! Compassion! and Master Class

B110. Max Weber  (The Protestant Ethic & the Spirit of Capitalism)  

B111. Nicholas Nickleby

B112. Johannes Brahms

B113. “Peter Grimes” (By Benjamin Britten)

B114. A song cycle by Benjamin Britten

B115. Best children’s literature by an American

B116. Leonard Bernstein

B117. Gestalt psychology

B118. Kant

B119. E = Elohim;  J = Yahweh (Jehovah)

B120. History of civilization, etc.

B121. Publius Virgilius Maro

B122. The Royal Swedish Ballet

B123. My Heart Laid Bare

B124. Regarded as the first true opera

B125. Eugene O’Neill

B126. La Favola d’Orfeo  (Or: The Fable of Orpheus)

B127. Tremolo

B128. Giovanni Gabrieli

B129. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

B130. Moses and Ezra  OR  Moses and Josiah

B131. The Age of Reason (Thomas Paine) OR Philosophical Dictionary (Voltaire)

B132. The Alchemist  OR The Mountebanks

B133. Parolles (In All’s Well That Ends Well)

B134. Antigone  (By Sophocles)

B135. Benjamin Franklin

B136. William Butler Yeats

B137. Gustave von Aschenbach (In Death in Venice)

B138. The Decameron

B139. Beatrice  OR  St Bernard

B140. Nora’s husband in A Doll’s House

B141. DISQUALIFIED

B142. Amsterdam

B143. Roderick Usher

B144. A Farewell to Arms (By Hemmingway)

B145. Great Expectations  (By Dickens)

B146. No Man is an Island OR Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions OR  Meditations 17   (By John Donne)

B147. The Upanishads OR The Aranyakas

B148. Atman OR Brahman OR Shiva Shakti

B149. Bloomsbury Group

B150. Pieter Bruegel or Breughel

B151. Gold Medalist Award winners OR  members of the American Institute of Architects

B152. Charles Doyle OR D.H. Friston

B153. Tom Jones   (By Henry Fielding)

B154. The Hispaniola (Treasure Island)

B155. Twelfth Night  (By Shakespeare)

B156. Michelangelo

B157. John Milton

B158. George Orwell

B159. The Murders in the Rue Morgue  (By Poe)

B160. Rembrandt

B161. C3.3

B162. Virginia Woolf.

B163 William Wordsworth OR Cecil Day-Lewis

B164. Dmitri Shostakovich

B165. Denis Diderot

B166. Pirandello

B167. Monet

B168. Tirso de Molina OR Gabriel Tellez

B169. Tirthankara OR Jina

B170. Edgar Varese  (Ionisation)

B171. Joshua; Judges; 1 & 2 Samuels; 1 & 2 Kings

B172. The Ambassadors (By Henry James)

B173. Anna Karenina  (By Leo Tolstoy)

B174. Antony & Cleopatra (By Shakespeare)

B175. As You Like It

B176. George F. Babbitt

B177. Unknown.

B178. Rights of Man & Indomitable (Also acceptable: Bellipotent)

B179. Aristophanes   (The Birds)

B180. Alexander Pope

B181. Henry the Fifth

B182. The Iliad  (By Homer)

B183. The Importance of Being Earnest

B184. Hinduism OR Judaism

B185. Bellini

B186. William Blake

B187. Pablo Picasso & Georges Braque

B188. Caravaggio

B189. Marc Chagall

B190. Giotto OR Cimabue

B191. Butley   (By Simon Gray)

B192. Lewis Carroll OR Charles Dodgson

B193. Nautilus and the Abraham Lincoln

B194. Hermann Melville OR Peter Freuchen

B195. Mark Twain  (Samuel Clemens)

B196. Jules Verne

B197. Voltaire  (Arouet)

B198. The Captain’s Daughter

B199. The Castle

B200. St Augustine   (Confessions)

B201. David Copperfield

B202. A Doll’s House

B203. East of Eden (By John Steinbeck)

B204. The Faerie Queene (By Edmund Spenser)

B205. The Father

B206. Wagner  OR  Mephistopheles 

B207. Charles Baudelaire (Flowers of Evil)

B208. Frankenstein    (By Mary Shelly)

B209. Heart of  Darkness (By Joseph Conrad)

  

 

 

C1. January 1, 1902 (By Nathan B. Stubblefield)

C2. World’s longest-range air-to-air missile

C3. St Louis Gateway Arch

C4. Any two: biopsies, caesarians  hysterectomies, heart catheterizations, birth laceration repairs

C5. Plutonium

C6. The Lie Detector

C7. Teflon

C8. Bronze

C9. Casein

C10. Aerobatic aircraft  OR aircraft

C11. Garnet

C12. Ernest Rutherford OR Enrico Fermi

C13. DISQUALIFIED

C14. Norfolk Four-Course System

C15. Leptin

C16. Motorola

C17. Sony Portable Computer

C18. NOVA  (At Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, University of California)

C19. 1951  OR  1952

C20. Gunpowder  OR Black Powder

C21. A radio telescope  (Also: Very Long Baseline Array antenna radio telescopes)

C22. Mars 3  (USSR: 1971)  Note: First US probe to soft land: Viking 1 in 1975

C23. Salyut 1 (Launched April 19, 1971)

C24. Frogs

C25. Otto Hahn OR Enrico Fermi

C26. John Napier  (1614)

C27. Newton and Leibniz

C28. British and American usage differ

C29. DISQUALIFIED

C30. Cornelis Drebbel   (1620)

C31. Great Britain

C32.  IBM computer OR automatic sequence calculator, OR first digital computer

C33. 1951

C34. Alan Kay  (1969. Later to become a chief designer with Apple)

C35.  Xerox OR Apple

C36. IBM and Sears.

C37. The Thinking Machines Inc. 

C38. Toll Free Numbers

C39. Tim Berners-Lee at CERN, the European Physics Lab, Geneva, 1991

C40. Particulate matter

C41. The Whip

C42. Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation

C43. Hot air  OR  Hydrogen

C44. Give or take 9-10 ¾  hours

C45. Pioneer 10  (June 13, 1983)

C46. The Hubble Telescope

C47. Birth Control Pills

C48. Lear Jet, 8-Track Tape, car radio, audio detection finder, and more.

C49. The Open Group  (Formerly AT&T)

C50. The Soviet Sukhoi-34

C51.  Blood albumen glue OR glue OR pet food OR fertilizer OR cider

C52. 1939

C53. Asymmetric[al] or Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Link, Line or Loop

C54. Northern Telecom Ltd  OR Nortel

C55. Dell

C56. Dell

C57. Canada

C58. France

C59. Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea volcano, Hawaii

C60. 94 inches in diameter  (94.5” OK Also: 2.4 meters)

C61. Mars 1

C62. Area of a triangle

C63. Googolplex (One followed by 100 zeros)

C64.  Romans OR Egyptians

C65.  China OR Germany

C66. Hippolyte Mege Mouries   (1869)

C67. The first calculating machine (built by Pascal in 1642)

C68. J. Presper Eckert Jr and John W. Mauchly   (1946)

C69. Lexitron  (1970)

C70. First personal computer in kit form  (1975)

C71. Cordless phones  (21,673,000)

C72. The Internet  OR  The Information Superhighway OR World Wide Web

C73. Municipal Solid Waste

C74. John Bardeen, Walter H. Brattain, & William B. Shockley  (1948)

C75. First fully transistorized computer  (Control Data 1958 by Cray)

C76. Digital’s PDP-1   (1960)

C77. EDVAC   (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer, 1950)

C78. UNIVAC   (CBS in 1952)

C79. Stephen Jobs   (1976)

C80. IBM RS/6000 SP ---“Deep Blue”

C81. Intel’s iPSC/860   (1989)

C82. Compaq   (1988)

C83. King Uzziah   (II Chron, 26:15)

C84. Word processing software from MicroPro

C85. 1981 OR 1982

C86. $2,495.00

C87. Cray 2  (Supercomputer)

C88. Electronic books

C89. Compaq notebook computer 

C90. 128

C91. A computer virus originated in Venezuela with some 60 varieties

C92. X-Files Game

C93. BMW

C94. Extensible Markup Language

C95. AT&T

C96. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting answers     

C97. Germany  (During WW II)

C98. DISQUALIFIED

C99. Answers acceptable range from 92 to 138 pounds

C100. Alberto Santos-Dumont  (1906)

C101. Brooklyn Bridge  (1,595 feet)

C102. 1956  (Also acceptable: 1957)

C103. Photography

C104. DISQUALIFIED

C105. 94 pounds

C106. “Puffing Billy”  (1813 in the UK by William Hedley)

C107. International Standards Organization OR American Standards Association

C108. Tribology

C109. Mitrailleuse

C110. Magnetic bubble memory

C111. Gangue

C112. Scanning electron microscope

C113. In a film projector, this jerks down to allow the next frame to be positioned behind the lens

C114. Piloting, dead reckoning, electronic navigation, celestial navigation

C115. Gas-cooled or power reactors

C116. Einstein X-ray Orbiting Astronomical Observatory  OR The High Energy Astrophysical Observatory-2  (HEAO-2)

C117. Kraft process

C118. Soap

C119. SPADATS  (Space Detection and Tracking System)  OR  NORAD

C120. Piston-cylinder pumps

C121. Vacuum technology




D1. A skein

D2. J  OR  Q

D3. Plaster of Paris

D4. A black eye

D5. Greenland  (Dwarf Willows)

D6. The HIV protein spike that enables it to enter white blood cells

D7.  26,000 to 30,000 light years

D8. Astrology

D9. 41-47

D10. Heart disease (Originally asked for communicable, so Tuberculosis OK)

D11. Principles of Geology (By Lyell in 1830)

D12. Mesozoic

D13. Bacteria and blue-green algae  (4.6 billions years old)

D14. Henry Cavendish  (1784)

D15. Rudolf J.E. Clausius

D16. Hominids (Hominodea)

D17. Homo habilis, ancestor to humans  (By Louis S.B. Leakey)

D18. 310.15 K

D19. Large Magellanic Cloud

D20. 130 to 175 miles per second (Sources vary)

D21. Milky Way and the Andromeda (M31 or NGC 224)

D22. William Herschel  (1785)

D23. Van Allen radiation belts

D24. Red

D25. Gerard Kuiper  (1939)

D26. Radio waves of 21cm

D27. The Dark Halo  (Dark Matter OK)

D28. A proton and neutron combined to form the nucleus of Hydrogen OR cooling of the universe

D29. A black hole

D30. Chlorine

D31. Indonesia  (Java)

D32. DISQUALFIED

D33. All possible paths

D34. Zero

D35. Black holes, wormholes, other universes, etc.

D36. Quantum chromodynamics

D37. Lucy OR A. Afarensis OR Hominid

D38. Homo habilis

D39. Arteries

D40. Internal environment; OR the circulating blood plasma and nutrient liquid that bathes the cells

D41.  Elan Vital OR Life Force OR Vital Impulse

D42. Autonomic & Somatic OR Efferent & afferent OR Spinal & Cranial

D43. Dendrites

D44. Neurotransmitters

D45. Dartos

D46. Hox genes OR Homeotic Selector Genes OR Homeobox

D47. The brain OR the heart

D48. Cortex or neo-cortex or cerebrum

D49. Temporal or Olfactory lobe  

D50. Daniel C. Dennett

D51. A place on the roof of an animal’s mouth used for smell

D52. Armadillo

D53. Owl

D54. A baby eel

D55. The lunula

D56. Polar bear

D57. 28  OR  56  (Finger bones and toe bones are known as known as phalanges)

D58. The tongue

D59. Stroking the sole of the foot

D60. Testicles

D61.  A star’s velocity and direction OR star’s velocity through space. (Strictly speaking, velocity and direction in regards to movement away from the galactic center, movement in regards to galactic rotation, and vertical velocity.)

D62. Digitalis Purpurea (from the Foxglove plant)

D63. Tooth

D64. The Bumblebee Bat (Kiti Hog-Nosed Bat (By weight) OR the Etruscan Shrew (By length)

D65. The retina which reflects light and glows in the dark

D66. 0.00024”  OR  .00035”

D67. One billion (US)

D68. Hydrogen

D69. S & R processes (Slow & Rapid)

D70.  DISQUALIFIED after the close of the contest. Our mistake.

D71. Carbon and Nitrogen

D72. Ia

D73. Center of the Milky Way  (most likely a black hole)

D74. Draco

D75. Fish

D76. Red, green and blue

D77. Thermodynamic arrow of time

D78. The carotids

D79. Bloodstream

D80. Acetylcholine

D81. Sympathetic nervous system OR adrenal medulla

D82. HIV

D83. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest. Symptoms were extreme example of this syndrome.)

D84. Dr Albert Hoffman

D85. Giraffe

D86. A dzo OR dso OR zum

D87. Shark  OR  Ostrich

D88. Silver

D89. Goldfish

D90. When lightning strikes sand

D91. Meteorites

D92. Ice from Lake Erie blocked the outlet

D93. The platypus and the echidna (spiny anteater)

D94. Moon, Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Titan and Triton

D95. The middle finger’s nail

D96.  17.2 OR 17 OR 17 hours, 14 minutes

D97. The pig OR the monkey

D98. A twit

D99. Mauna Kea (Hawaiian dormant volcano measures 30,000 feet when measured from its ocean base)

D100. DISQUALIFIED

D101. Yoctosecond  (one-septillionth of a second)

D102. A hinny

D103. Zebra fish

D104. At least 1200 cc

D105. American Museum of Natural History  (New York City)

D106. The Actinide Elements

D107. 10-30 decibels accepted

D108. Lift to drag ratio

D109. 5,880 billion (US)

D110. Hydronium  OR Hydrogen ion

D111. Los Alamos OR Savannah River Nuclear Plant 

D112. DISQUALIFIED

D113. Approximately 10%

D114. Jacobus Kapteyn  (and D. Gill accepted as well with Kapteyn’s name) 

D115. Vesto Slipher OR Bertil Linblad OR Jan Oort

D116. Joseph John Thomson  (1897)

D117. Spectral types of stars from blue to red

D118. The Orion Arm

D119. Neutral hydrogen

D120. E.M. Burbidge, G. Burbidge, W. Fowler and F. Hoyle

D121. Leo I

D122. None

D123. Stars  (At the center of the Galaxy; IRS 7 is a red supergiant; IRS 16 is a blue star cluster)

D124. Sirius (Also called Alpha Canis Majoris or “Dog Star”) Any of these accepted.

D125. Hercules

D126. DISQUALIFIED

D127. Fornax

D128. Pleistocene OR Pliocene Epoch (1.6 million years ago)

D129. Mendeleev  (1869)

D130. Johann W. Ritter  (1801)

D131. Planck’s constant

D132. Anton von Leeuwenhoek   (1683)

D133. California OR Western USA

D134. All matter OR fermions OR quarks & leptons

D135. Expand, Contract, or remain Static

D136. The mind is limited and may never solve the mysteries of the universe

D137. Hypothalamus  OR  Medulla (Medulla Oblongata)

D138. When a girl reaches puberty OR a woman’s menstrual cycle OR during puberty

D139. Water

D140. Macrophages

D141. Limbic System

D142. The fruit fly  (Drosophila bifurca. 60 millimeters long)

D143. Coprolites

D144. Orthorhomic perskovite OR Silicate Perovskite OR Quartz

D145. Sagittarius OR Scorpius / Scorpio

D146. Proxima Centauri OR Alpha Centauri

D147. 70%

D148. Eta Aquilae

D149. The Cepheids

D150. Whirlpool (M51) and Pinwheel/Triangulum (M33)

D151. Cerebrum

D152. Corpus Callosum

D153. Sleep

D154. ATP  (Adenosine Tri-Phosphate) OR  Fructose

D155. The lymph system

D156. Kurt Godel

D157. James Lovelock  (1972)

D158. Steven Pinker

D159. The weak force

D160. Inflation

D161. A spacetime point not surrounded by a black hole or event horizon

D162. Metastasis

D163. Spiral galaxies  OR the thickness of ice

D164. Ejnar Hertzsprung 

D165. Sagittarius OR Three Kiloparsec Arm

D166. DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

D167. Heinrich Hertz  (1888)

D168. Hubble Constant

D169. 3.26 million light years

D170. 154

D171. False. (Hawking changed his mind in A Brief History of Time, 1988, page 50, where he argues that there was no Big Bang)

D172. Deimos and Phobos

D173. Olympus Mons  (Mars)

D174. Sunflower (OR: Compositae or Asteraceae), Orchid (OR: Orchidaceae), and Legume (OR: Fabaceae) OR Rubiaceae  (Any three of these four)

D175. Venus

D176. Lyra

D177. Curium

 

 

 

E1. William Mulholland

E2. 20

E3. LeRoy Schweitzer OR Daniel Peterson

E4. Southern Baptists

E5. DISQUALIFIED

E6. Grand Rapids, Michigan

E7. Pope John XXIII  (During WW I, he was a sergeant in the Italian Army)

E8. Henry VII

E9. Rubber gloves during surgery

E10. The mathematician Girolamo Cardano

E11. Jan Davis & Mark Lee   (On Endeavour 9-12 to 9-20 1992)

E12. Derringer

E13. John Quincy Adams

E14. Iceland

E15. Turkey

E16. His favorite horse OR Incitatus

E17. Ronald Reagan

E18. Jimmy Carter

E19. Ron Evans   (Apollo 17 who circled the Moon alone).

E20. John Hancock & Charles Thomson

E21. Used Furniture Dealer

E22. Prime Minister of Ethiopia

E23. Gholamhossein Karabaschi (Variations allowed)

E24. Mitsubishi Motor Corp.

E25. Florida Representative Bill McCollum

E26. The AMA (American Medical Association)

E27. Sir David English (of the Daily Mail)

E28. 1971-1978  OR 1971-1974 and 1976-1978

E29. India  OR  Brazil

E30. Konrad Adenauer (Conrad okay)

E31. Nottingham UK  (1790s)

E32. Advertising

E33. Tariq Aziz  OR  Ramiz Alia

E34. India exploded underground nuclear bombs

E35. Yigal Amir

E36. Australia

E37. Tanzania

E38. During WW II they were wrongfully placed in internment camps

E39. Dayton, Ohio OR Paris, France (treaty signed in Paris)

E40. Nigerian political prisoners  

E41. Senator Trent Lott

E42. Those who defied the House Committee on Un-American Activities

E43. 1966-1976

E44. The US Embassy

E45. Taliban

E46. The Opium War

E47. Killed his parents and two classmates in Oregon

E48. Orange County

E49. James C. Hormel

E50. Brill’s Content

E51. The Hmong

E52. DISQUALIFIED

E53. Wouter Basson

E54. Thucydides

E55. Visigothic troops  (OR: Goth) OR:  Alaric

E56. Disputed elections to the papacy 1378-1417

E57. Spain and Portugal

E58. DISQUALIFIED

E59. DISQUALIFIED

E60. France—Bourbon Branch

E61. Peter

E62. DISQUALIFIED

E63. The Prince (By Nicolo Machiavelli)

E64. Afghanistan

E65. Australia

E66. Nicephore Soglo

E67. Pedro Alvares Cabral OR V.Y. Pinzon

E68. Todor Zhivkov  OR  Georgi Dimitrov

E69. 1608  (By Samuel de Champlain)  OR 1605  (Nova Scotia)

E70. Spain & Cuba

E71. England

E72. Djibouti

E73. Vatican City

E74. Teddy Roosevelt for negotiating the peace treaty for the Russo-Japanese War

E75. Galusha Pennypacker  (20 years, 1 month old)

E76. The Great Harry, a British naval vessel

E77. $1.27

E78. DISQUALIFIED

E79. Zanzibar-England (Lasted 38 minutes in 1896)

E80. Joseph Stalin

E81. Greece and Turkey

E82. Saddam Hussein

E83. Italy

E84. Luxembourg

E85. The Netherlands

E86. The United Nations

E87. The Hubble Telescope was launched

E88. Mt Tambora  (Sumbawa on East Indies, April 5, 1815)

E89. $9.2 million or Krona 31-33 million

E90. Albert Schweitzer

E91. Francis Bacon

E92. Orlando, Florida

E93. New Zealand

E94. Speechwriter

E95. The Castorland Medal

E96. Henry Adams

E97. The Aegean Civilization OR the Minoan Civilization OR Mycenae OR Bronze

E98. 18  OR  17

E99. Jiang Zemin (China)

E100. 15

E101. John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson, Chester Arthur

E102. Kamal Kharrazi

E103. 1911 OR 1912

E104. Dick Armey  (Texas)

E105. Hudson’s Bay Company OR Hudson Bay Company

E106. Sergei M. Krikalev  (1994)

E107. United States  (1813)

E108. Saul, David and Solomon

E109. Sparta  OR  Milazzo, Sicily 

E110. Auschwitz

E111. Taliban

E112. DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

E113. Bahamas (San Salvador, Guanahani, etc.) OR Watling Island

E114. Bangladesh

E115. Alexander the Great

E116. Gherman S. Titov  (1961)

E117. UNESCO Headquarters

E118. Kofi Annan

E119. Augustus, Tiberius

E120. Reduce the disparity between rich and poor provinces in the 1950s

E121. China OR Cyprus OR Nigeria

E122. Costa Rica

E123. They formed a federal union (British North America Act)

E124. Qin  OR  Ch’in

E125. European Christendom, Islamic World, India, China

E126. Canada

E127. Finland

E128. Eritrea, Africa

E129. Napoleon

E130. Abe Reles

E131. Florence Nightingale

E132. Nero

E133. Tutankhamen

E134. King Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette, and the royal family (Could also say the guards of the King and the royal family, and others also)

E135. Verrazano and Cartier

E136. 1532  OR  1534  (Under King Henry VIII)

E137. 15

E138. P.W. Botha

E139. Christa McAuliffe

E140. 1815  (Upon the defeat of Napoleon)

E141. 1919

E142. Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland

E143. Alfred the Great  (871-899) (There are other acceptable answers: Athelstan or Egbert)

E144. AD 800  OR  AD 962 

(AD 800: The coronation of Charlemagne and the beginning of the Frankish Roman Empire. The Germanic Roman Empire began in AD 888 and the Saxon Holy Roman Empire began in AD 962).

E145. Saxe-Coburg-Gotha Family  OR  Hanover

E146. Russia

E147. Cordell Hull

E148. DISQUALIFIED

E149. Armenia

E150. Benjamin Disraeli

E151. Francis Drake

E152. Louis Riel

E153. Thomas Alva Edison

E154. Albert Einstein OR Sigmund Freud

E155. The Statute of Westminster

E156. Benjamin Franklin

E157. Princess George of Greece in 1938 OR  Marie Bonaparte

E158. Meech Lake Agreement or Accord OR Charlottetown Agreement

E159. South Africa

E160. US Army  (Also acceptable: US Interior Department)

E161. German Parliament (or Bundestag) OR National People’s Congress (China)

E162. Croatia OR The Netherlands OR Morocco

E163. DISQUALIFIED

E164. Carolingians

E165. King Stephen

E166. 135

E167. 1790

E168. Ivan IV, the Terrible  OR Atalahuapa Inca

E169. John Wilkes Booth

E170. DISQUALIFIED

E171. The license number of the car driven by Richard Hauptmann, who was convicted of the Charles Lindbergh baby kidnapping and killing. A gas station attendant noticed the serial number on the ransom money and wrote down the car’s license number) Only change here was originally we incorrectly said the driver’s license number.

E172. Queen Anne OR Charles II

E173. New Jersey Governor Harold Hoffman

E174. Queen Elizabeth I

E175. Charles Lindbergh and Richard Hauptmann

E176. 1940, 1941, 1942

E177. 28

E178. Mozambique  ($80.00 per person per year)  OR Sierra Leone  OR Ethiopia

E179. Caligula

E180. John Sununu

E181. East River Bridge

E182. Shangri-La (spelling correction)

E183. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting answers 

E184. 33 Hours and 30 minutes  OR 39 minutes  OR 29 minutes OR 32 minutes

E185. Raoul Wallenberg




F1. Yugoslavia (Kosovo / Serbia)

F2. Mount Rainier, Washington State, USA

F3. Savannah, Georgia USA

F4. Montpelier, Vermont

F5. Cape Agulhas

F6. Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada  OR Fredericton, NB

F7. Tirana  (The capital of Albania)

F8. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Poorly worded question

F9. Hampstead Station

F10. Lake Havasu, Arizona

F11. Addis Ababa

F12. Africa

F13. Montego Bay, Jamaica

F14. DISQUALIFIED

F15. Caspian Sea

F16. Nigeria

F17. Russia's largest mountain OR mountain in Tajistan OR Pamirs

F18. K2

F19. (Papua) New Guinea OR Borneo

F20. Mackenzie (1025 miles) OR Mackenzie-Peace  (2,635 miles)

F21. Europe and Australia (Oceania accepted)

F22. Antarctica

F23. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting answers
F24. Scotia Sea OR Atlantic Ocean OR South Atlantic Ocean

F25. The Java Trench  or Sunda Double Trench (24,440 feet deep)

F26. Greenland

F27. London

F28. Canada

F29. A strait or estuary leading to the river Forth, north of Edinburgh

F30. Representative Fraction or RF Scale

F31. Zurich, Switzerland

F32. Norway

F33. Aral Sea  (15,000 square miles)

F34. Caribbean Sea  OR  Philippine Sea

F35. Great Bear

F36. Daniel Johnson Reservoir (Quebec) OR Williston Lake

F37. Paris  OR  Moscow  (There are different ideas about Europe’s geography)

F38. Afghanistan

F39. Cairo & Lagos OR Cairo & Kinshasa

F40. DISQUALIFIED

F41. Canada

F42. Port Said

F43. Mt Aconcagua  (23,000 feet)

F44. Tokyo

F45. Tirich Mountain  (25,000 feet) 

F46. Utigard or Mardalsfossen

F47. Ivory Coast

F48. Sea of Okhotsk, Pacific Ocean,  East China Sea, Sea of Japan  (Korea Strait okay)

F49. Kiribati

F50. England

F51. Lake Assal  (515 feet below sea level)

F52. Mt Kosciusko   (7,310 feet)

F53. Brazil

F54. DISQUALIFIED

F55. Liechtenstein

F56. Maldives

F57. Mexico OR El Salvador OR Guatemala OR Honduras OR Peru   

F58. Morocco  OR  Algeria

F59. Nepal

F60. Norway

F61. Maine

F62. Stockholm  (Now on 14 islands)

F63. Lines of Latitude and Longitude

F64. DISQUALIFIED

F65. Hinnoya

F66. 2  (Sweden and Finland)

F67. 68-70

F68. Germany  OR  Russia

F69. DISQUALIFIED

F70. Arabian desert OR Gobi desert

F71. Lake Michigan

F72. Baffin Island

F73. DISQUALIFIED

F74. Belize

F75. San Bernardino (California. 20,154 square miles)

F76. Canary Islands

F77. Canton, China  OR  Guangzhou

F78. DISQUALIFIED

F79. Casablanca, Morocco

F80. Charlotte, North Carolina (There can be other answers here: Greenville, SC, Burlington, NC, to name a few.)

F81. New York City (Central Park) and London (the Thames embankment)

OR:  USA and England

F82. The Jordan

F83. Kew Gardens

F84. Sebastian Vizcaino  OR  Juan R. Cabrillo

F85. Florida Keys

F86. Kobe, Japan

F87. Kodiak Island

F88. La Paz, Bolivia 

F89. Lansing, Michigan

F90. Le Havre

F91. Limerick  OR  Tipperary

F92. Lisbon, Portugal

F93. DISQUALIFIED (Clarification misled contestants)

F94. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Conflicting sources

F95. El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles (Also: El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de Los Angeles…)

F96. Madrid, Spain

F97. Maracaibo, Venezuela

F98. Marshall Islands

F99. DISQUALIFIED

F100. Miami, Florida

F101. Milan

F102. Morocco

F103. St Petersburg  OR  Petrograd

F104. Murray River  (Australia)

F105. 12

F106. Paris

F107. (New) Scotland Yard OR Metropolitan Police

F108. Ukraine  OR  Russia

F109. Warsaw  (“It Defies the Storms”)

F110. Yellowknife  (Northwest Territories, Canada)

F111. Vladivostok

 

 

 

 

G1. Teemu Selanne, Joe Nieuwendyk, and Mike Bossy

G2. Boston Red Sox, Chicago White Sox, Colorado Avalanche, Miami Heat, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, Orlando Magic, Tampa Bay Lightning, Utah Jazz (Also acceptable as a ninth team: Minnesota Wild)

G3. Hulk Hogan

G4. Maurice Richard  OR  Bobby Hull

G5. Ferdie Adoboe    (Running 100 yards backwards in 12.8 seconds, 1983)

G6. Max Baer

G7. L’oeuf  (French for egg)

G8. 60 feet

G9. Bao Ge

G10. $2.78 million

G11. Boston Celtics

G12. Steve Jones OR Jerry Pate

G13. Most valuable player in the Stanley Cup Playoffs

G14. Olympia

G15. Sammy Sosa

G16. 108  OR  216

G17. DISQUALIFIED –Added After Close of Contest (Conflicting sources)

G18. DISQUALIFIED (Added after close of contest) Poorly worded. 

G19. Just Fontaine  (France)  

G20. Schooners and cutters in the America’s Cup

G21. Tenley Albright, Janet Lynn OR Peggy Fleming

G22. Lake Placid and Squaw Valley

G23. 2.5 miles

G24. 21  or  20

G25. DISQUALIFIED

G26. The Masters, US Open, British Open, PGA

G27. Tiger Woods ($19.6M), OR  David Love III ($14.5M)  OR  Greg Norman ($13.0M)

G28. Black Tie Affair

G29. Philadelphia Eagles  (1936)

G30. George Blanda

G31. Don King Productions Inc.

G32. Trenton, New Jersey, in 1896

G33. USC  (56 points in 1995)

G34. Travis Prentice (456)  OR  Ricky Williams (452)  OR  Roman Anderson (423)

G35. 6  (1944, 1957, 1961, 1963, 1989, 1997)

G36. Penn State University

G37. Stanford University women’s basketball

G38. Cuardrilla  OR Picadors  OR  Banderilleros

G39. 46,145 yards

G40. None

G41. Ray Harroun  (6:42:03 in 1911)

G42. Secretariat  1:59:2/5ths (1973)

G43. Basketball  (in the 1930s)

G44. San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XXIV  (55 points)

G45. Percentage of completions, percentage of touchdown passes, percentages of interceptions, average gain per pass attempted

G46. Bases on Balls (BB) and Bat Boy (BB), the latter often worn on jersey; Also acceptable: Ball Bearing pellet, as in a fast ball; Batter’s Box OR Bean Ball

G47. Ron Blomberg

G48. The day before and the day after Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game

G49. Greece and Australia OR France and Great Britain

G50. Volleyball

G51. Lacrosse

G52. It caused too many traffic accidents

G53. Squidger OR shooter

G54. Spades=King David; Clubs=Alexander the Great; Hearts=Charlemagne; Diamonds=Julius Caesar

G55. The full name of a Barbie Doll

G56. 240  (also: 244)

G57. Won the NFL Championship  (1926) or Ended Cleveland’s 31-game winning streak

G58. Super Bowl I

G59. 99-year return by Desmond Howard OR 81-yard pass from Brett Favre to Antonio Freeman (Super Bowl XXXI)

G60. ABA OR ABL (1961)

G61. 6

G62. Dave Cowens, Geoff Petrie, Grant Hill and Jason Kidd OR Elton Brand & Steve Francis

G63. Aces Full

G64. The Stanley Cup

G65. Montreal and Seattle  (1919)

G66. James Thomas Bell  (Negro League Baseball player, Hall of Fame inductee)

G67. Bed and Breakfast

G68. Joe Davis

G69. 57 

G70. DISQUALIFIED

G71. Nebraska

G72. Harvard

G73. Oklahoma State

G74. Mike Aulby  (1989)

G75. 50

G76. All-England Club’s Lawn Tennis Championships

G77. They have won the Tour de France five or more times

G78. Anatoly Karpov

G79. First woman to win eight US Open Championships (Four consecutive wins)

G80. Kelso  (1960-1964)

G81. Ki-Jana Carter  OR  Courtney Brown

G82. Jim Brown  (5.2 yards per carry)

G83. Scott Norwood

G84. Robert Parrish OR Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

G85. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain

G86. 5  (Ottawa Senators, Montreal Canadians, Toronto, Montreal Wanderers, and Quebec)

G87. Frederick Arthur  OR  Lord Stanley of Preston

G88. Pete Rose  (3,562)

G89. Carl Yastrzemski  (1967)

G90. $3,000.00  OR  $10,000.00

G91. Baseball Writers’ Association

G92. Don Newcombe  (1956)

G93. John T. Brush and John McGraw (owner  and manager, respectively, of the New York Giants) 

G94. Joe McCarthy

G95. Bobby Richardson  (12 in the 1960 Series)

G96. Betsy Ross

G97. Frank Lloyd Wright  OR his son John Lloyd Wright

G98. They have a law forbidding the sale of dolls without a human face

G99. Will Clark

G100. Pittsburgh

G101. Ray Chapman  (Cleveland Indians, 1920. Hit in the temple by a pitch and died the next day)

G102. Mayfair

G103. Los Angeles Rams

G104. Kentucky Derby

G105. Tennis  (13 officials to two players)

G106. Wayne Levi  (1982 Hawaiian Open)

G107. Ty Cobb

G108. Ed Walsh

G109. East Lansing, Michigan

G110. The New York Giants’ drive to the pennant in 1951, after being out 13 ½ games in mid August

G111. 49 Points  (Chicago Bulls)  OR 54  (Utah Jazz)

G112. Steve Bartalo  (1215)

G113. Tim Rattay  OR  Brian McClure  OR  Steve Stenstrom

G114. University of Las Vegas (UNLV), 103 points  (1990)

G115. California

G116. Theodore Roosevelt  OR Henry M. MacCracken

G117. Oregon  (1939)

G118. 311  OR  245

G119. 11

G120. Jimmy Connors  (1974)

G121. Power Alley

G122. Cal State Northridge

G123. Run for the Roses

G124. College woman’s basketball player  OR  Basketball

G125. Arkansas

G126. St Paul, Minnesota, and Columbus, Ohio, each paying $80 million

G127. Los Angeles Dodgers

G128. 1959-1962

G129. Pete Rose

G130. Volleyball

G131. Roy Campanella

G132. Camping

G133. Thomas Hiram Holding

G134. Michael Chang

G135. Backgammon

G136. 225

G137. Ruy Lopez

G138. Monopoly  (1930)

G139. Kite Flying

G140. Lineman (Guard, Tackle, or End at Fordham University)

G141. Marbles

G142. Karate

G143. Z Gauge  OR  Z Scale

G144. 1859 or 1860

G145. Shuffleboard

G146. Iditarod International Dog Sled Race

G147. Water Polo

G148. NCAA college wrestling weight classifications  OR  wrestling

G149. Pawn in front of King’s knight moves to the 4th square in the King’s knight file

 

 

 

H1. Putting one word inside another word

H2. CQD  (CQ standing for Seek You and D for Danger)

H3. Quartzy OR Muzjiks OR Bezique

H4. Someone who fears virgins

H5. 24
H6. DISQUALIFIED–Added After Close of Contest (Incorrect hint)

H7. Someone who grinds his teeth

H8. Someone working in railroad track repair groups

H9. Set

H10. DISQUALIFIED

H11. Craven Walker

H12. Duluth OR Atlanta, Georgia

H13. Knight-Ridder

H14. Timothy R. McVeigh

H15. Nissan Motor Corporation

H16. Jakarta   (Indonesia)

H17. Lawyers for Paula Jones  OR  Lawyers

H18. Citroen 2CV automobile

H19. Conditions of US coins

H20. Refinancing OR A company servicing machinery in the leather industry OR Dataplot Command OR Sight singing OR Resau Electronique Francophone International

H21. T.H. Huxley

H22. Owens Lake

H23. Rev. Claude Nicolas

H24. Flint, Michigan

H25. Olean

H26. Frito-Lay Corporation

H27. Florida

H28. Continental Airlines

H29. Pakistan

H30. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette  (April 1970)

H31. Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution

H32. Lotus  (Owned by IBM)

H33. National survey of economic indicators

H34. Steve Coll  (Washington Post)

H35. Ted Waitt and Michael Hammond (Spelling corrected for Ted Waitt)

H36. American Advertising Federation

H37. Any answer is a winner

H38. He was fired from Sunbeam Corporation

H39. Air Traffic Controllers

H40. Polish for Auschwitz

H41. Medi-Cal

H42. Japanese for suicide from overwork

H43. Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts

H44. June 15, 1998

H45. Samuel Ruiz Garcia  OR  Raul Vera Lopez OR F.A. Esquivel

H46. Time-Warner & MediaOne Group OR Microsoft OR Compaq (need two)

H47. DISQUALIFIED

H48. stock performance in the Netherlands

H49. Ebony, Jet  (and others)

H50. Sexual arousal by coldness

H51. Bolus

H52. An enneahedron  OR nonahedron

H53. Grabatology

H54. J, V, W

H55. They were both presidents of GM’s Brazilian operations

H56. Au Pair Louise Woodward

H57. Chung Ju Yung

H58. Organization of American States

H59. Bill Gates

H60. Ads are sold before a season begins

H61. Richard Branson

H62. Restaurant in London  OR Restaurant in Sydney, Australia

H63. A building which houses diplomats in Belarus

H64. Altis  OR the quad with the temples of Zeus and Hera (Also acceptable: a temple, an oak grove at Dodona, a religious center)

H65. The seed of a lentil

H66. Knowledge and creations are shared freely by all members of society OR status to those who give the most

H67. Credit Suisse, Swiss Bank Corporation, and Union Bank of Switzerland

H68. Did not treat a dying man

H69. 200 OR  281 (81 Senate Members)

H70. Chicago’s Midway Airport  OR  O’Hare

H71. Philadelphia

H72. 5

H73. Scaffolding

H74. Commerzbank Tower  (Frankfurt)

H75. 994

H76. Climate classifications

H77. 120 OR 134 (plus or minus 5)

H78. Geneva, Switzerland

H79. Australia

H80. 1-891696-03-3

H81. Ehrich Weiss

H82. A Good Sense of Humor

H83. Liechtenstein

H84. DISQUALIFIED

H85. Population of humans on the planet

H86. Celery

H87. New Jersey and Pennsylvania

H88. Philadelphia Inquirer  OR New York Times

H89. The Mediterranean (Southern France also acceptable)

H90. The # symbol

H91. DISQUALIFIED

H92. 12

H93. Abstemious and Facetious OR Arsenious

H94. Arachibutyrophobia

H95. Strait of Magellan  (Other acceptable answers: Kodiak, Alaska; Patagonia; Aleutians; Old Women’s Mountain)

H96. New York Tribune  (1917)

H97. Charles Darwin

H98. Henry Ford

H99. Benjamin Franklin

H100. Sigmund Freud

H101. Lenin (cars were leased not owned)

H102. Lincoln

H103. Mozart

H104. Subcontinental  OR  Uncomplimentary  OR  Duoliteral OR Quodlibetal OR Suoidea

H105. The world’s largest zipper manufacturer  (YKK)

H106. Gray  (The color of sandstone)

H107. Henry Ford

H108. DISQUALIFIED

H109. Bird Droppings

H110. Freud

H111. Catholic Church and Columbia University

H112. Saint Stephen

H113. Willard Scott

H114. Ferns

H115. DISQUALIFIED

H116. Baby Ruth  (Grover Cleveland’s daughter)

H117. President Reagan

H118. An avocado

H119. DISQUALIFIED

H120. Freud

H121. One hour and twenty-five minutes OR middle of the afternoon

H122. ¾ of a gallon

H123. Mercedes-Benz 

H124. 8

H125. Jade

H126. One Meter

H127. IBM

H128. Bloodhound

H129. Michigan

H130. Pierre, South Dakota

H131. OVNI

H132. DISQUALIFIED

H133. Wrigley’s gum

H134. It is the “You Are Here” arrow on a map  OR  on a map

H135. The G train  (Brooklyn-Queens cross-town local)

H136. DISQUALIFIED

H137. Hong Kong

H138. General Electric Company  (Schenectady, New York)

H139. WACO, Texas OR WARE, Mass. OR WISE, Virginia

H140. Lethologica

H141. DISQUALIFIED

H142. Jackie Robinson

H143. Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin

H144. Diastema

H145. Tadpole or Frog 

H146. Ralph Lauren

H147. Corduroy

H148. Herb Peterson  (Ed is not correct according to McDonald’s)

H149. Merck

H150. Lagoon

H151. Alvin Steffey

H152. Financial Accounting Standards Board

H153. Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 shares index

H154. Nippon Steel OR Pohang Iron & Steel

H155. Cooking  OR  Medicine (Chinese herbs)

H156. Gordon Bethune

H157. Trans-Atlantic Publications Inc.

H158. Montreal, Quebec, Canada

H159. Deutsche Bank

H160. 2 to 4.5% Acceptable

H161. Hong Kong’s stock performance

H162. Kim Dae Jung (South Korea’s President)

H163. The child fatally injured in the Louise Woodward case

H164. Korean Central News Agency OR  YONHAP

H165. Mikail Markhasev

H166. United States-China Education Foundation

H167. Calgary, Alberta, Canada

H168. New York Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange  OR  Chicago Mercantile Exchange

H169. (Protestant) “Orangemen” or Orange Order

H170. Susan B. Anthony dollar coin

H171. The cubit  (Elbow to extended finger tips)

H172. USA

H173. DISQUALIFIED

H174. Campbell Soup Company

H175. Approximately 5 feet

H176. Lettuce

H177. A peck  OR 8 quarts OR 16 pints

H178. University of Cambridge

H179. Ferdinand-Samuel Laur

H180. A match

H181. Bagels

H182. Liar Liar Pants on Fire

H183. Scratching Your Head

 

 

PC1. Another Country

PC2. Harvey Fierstein

PC3. Stephen J. Cannell

PC4. The Kid

PC5. Professor John Frink

PC6. 5.56 mm SG551-Sig-Sauer

PC7. Bette Midler

PC8. Carl Perkins

PC9. Dark Lady Divine

PC10. Mookie Blaylock

PC11. Matt Damon

PC12. Ritchie Valens

PC13. Alex Gonzalez

PC14. Admiral Byrd

PC15. Boris Pasternak

PC16. Claudius

PC17. George Lucas

PC18. Sherry Stringfield

PC19. Fixer Uppers

PC20. Lukas Haas

PC21. LaPhonso Ellis

PC22. Plato and Aristotle

PC23. Mexico City

PC24. Murders in the Rue Morgue

PC25. The Animals

PC26. Diana Spencer  (Princess Diana)

PC27. Rex Chapman

PC28. “Job Switching”

PC29. Chris Snopek

PC30. Inuyama-Jo OR Inuyama OR Inuyama Castle OR Matsumotojo

PC31. Aquarius rising; Jupiter & Saturn; Neptune & Uranus; also acceptable: Chiron & Pluto

PC32. Babylon 5

PC33. Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers

PC34. Anthony Burgess

PC35. Milton Friedman

PC36. Mirror Lake, Yosemite Park

PC37. Arthur Godfrey and Friends

PC38. My Beautiful Laundrette

PC39. Rene Descartes

PC40. Will Clark

PC41. Rodin of Balzac

PC42. Tex Avery

PC43. Vancouver, BC, Canada

PC44. Theodore “Blue” Edwards

PC45. Helena Christensen

PC46. Jean-Paul Belmondo

PC47. Karl Marx

PC48. Marvin’s Room

PC49. Philadelphia  (City Hall)

PC50. 1957 Mercury

PC51. Andy Benes

PC52. The Doom Generation

PC53. The Dillinger Gang

PC54. Jackie Chan

PC55. Northern Michigan University

PC56. Ludwig Wittgenstein

PC57. The Prisoner

PC58. Lisa Kudrow

PC59. The Whispers

PC60. Samuel Beckett

PC61. Constantine

PC62. Chuck Knoblauch

PC63. Edouard Manet

PC64. Parrot  (Hyacinth) (Macaw)

PC65. Harry Connick Jr

PC66. Jim Byrnes

PC67. The Long Kiss Goodnight

PC68. The Nobel Peace Medal

PC69. The Unbearable Lightness of Being

PC70. Alien symbol from “V”

PC71. Ottawa, Canada

PC72. 1990

PC73. Lila Feng

PC74. Sigmund Freud

PC75. Prince William

PC76. Sao Paulo, Brazil

PC77. 1958 Chevy Impala

PC78. Clyde Barrow

PC79. Claire Danes

PC80. David Gallagher

PC81. C.S. Lewis

PC82. The Caretaker

PC83. Bill Haley

PC84. Muddy Waters

PC85. Lisbon, Portugal

PC86. Kirk Rueter

PC87. Marine Helicopter Squadron

PC88. Richard Wagner

PC89. Matthew Lawrence

PC90. Paris, France

PC91. William Golding

PC92. Witches of Eastwick

PC93. Gene Roddenberry

PC94. Ginger Rogers

PC95. Ernie Kovacs

PC96. Royal Caribbean (Cruise Ship)

PC97. Jay Bell

PC98. Dengar, 4-Lom, and Zuckuss

PC99. History of the World, Part One

PC100. Steven Weinberg. 

PC101. Sandy Koufax

PC102. She Done Him Wrong

PC103. Shakespeare

PC104. David Wells

PC105. The Drifters

PC106. Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Jeff Spicoli

PC107. From Russia With Love

PC108. General Tire and Rubber

PC109. Irish Ferries OR Irish Continental Group

PC110. Harrier GR7

PC111. Karishma Kapoor

PC112. From left, composers Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland