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)

C8