Factactics (1984) [cr Whip]
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The game displays a trivia question and players have an opportunity to buzz in. If no player buzzes in the game will then display the answer with the letters re-arranged as a hint.
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Disk info for Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do:
File Name: a2_Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip/Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do
Disk Name: DISK VOLUME #254
Physical Size (bytes): 143360
Free Space (bytes): 61440
Used Space (bytes): 81920
Physical Size (KB): 140
Free Space (KB): 60
Used Space (KB): 80
Archive Order: DOS
Disk Format: DOS 3.3
Total Sectors: 560
Free Sectors: 240
Used Sectors: 320
Tracks On Disk: 35
Sectors On Disk: 16
Disk directory for Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do:
a2_Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip/Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do DISK VOLUME #254
T 002 D
T 014 MOVIES 1
T 014 MOVIES 2
T 014 MOVIES 3
T 013 MOVIES 4
T 012 MUSIC POTPOURI 1
T 013 MUSIC POTPOURI 2
T 013 MUSIC POTPOURI 3
T 012 MUSIC POTPOURI 4
T 013 ROCK & ROLL 1
T 014 ROCK & ROLL 2
T 013 ROCK & ROLL 3
T 013 ROCK & ROLL 4
T 012 SPORTS 1
T 012 SPORTS 2
T 012 SPORTS 3
T 013 SPORTS 4
T 013 TELEVISION 1
T 013 TELEVISION 2
T 013 TELEVISION 3
T 013 TELEVISION 4
T 012 AMERICANA 1
T 012 AMERICANA 2
T 012 AMERICANA 3
T 012 AMERICANA 4
T 013 THE BIG MIX 1
T 014 THE BIG MIX 2
T 013 THE BIG MIX 3
T 014 THE BIG MIX 4
A 002 STARTUP
B 026 K2.0;GEN
B 002 I/S
B 034 LG
T 002 HR
A 064 TRIVIA
T 003 C
DOS 3.3 format; 61,440 bytes free; 81,920 bytes used.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/AMERICANA 1.txt:
22
3
Pansy [Yokum] & Marryin' [Sam] were
characters in a comic strip called
"[Li'l Abner]", created by [Al Capp].
4
Princess [Aura] & [Dale] [Arden] were
characters in a comic strip called
"[Flash Gordon]", created by
[Alex Raymond].
2
The Boy Scouts' motto is
"[Be Prepared]".
4
[John Reid] had a secret identity.
He was a hero known as
"[The Lone Ranger]". His cry:
"Hi-O, [Silver], Away!"
5
The Broadway play "[Dreamgirls]"
is based on the lives of Motown
record mogul Berry [Gordy] and a
group he raised to stardom, the
[Supremes].
5
The cow on the Borden's packages
is named [Elsie]. Her husband's
name is [Elmer], her daughter is
[Beulah], and her son is named
[Beauregard].
5
The U.S. national flower is:
A) rose, B) goldenrod,
C) columbine,
D) none of the above.
Type the correct letter: [D]
5
Nearly 40% of our presidents were
born either in:A) NY or Ohio
B) Mass or Virginia
C) Virginia or Ohio
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
Choose the president and his
assailant: A) Reagan - Chapman,
B) Ford - Fromme,
C) Garfield - Lawrence.
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
The only president and vice-
president of different parties:
A) Abe Lincoln & Andrew Johnson,
B) John Adams & Thomas Jefferson.
Type the correct letter: [B]
4
The two states that border the
most other states are
[Tennessee] and [Missouri].
They both touch [8] other states.
3
Cowboy [William Cody] was more
commonly known by his
nickname, [Buffalo Bill].
4
The comic strip "[Doonesbury]", by
[Gary Trudeau], began as
"[Bull Tales]" in the Daily News
on the [Yale] campus in 1969.
3
Cowboy actor-singer [Gene Autry]
was almost inseparable from his
horse, named [Champion].
5
The capital city of [Liberia] is
[Monrovia], named for President
[James Monroe]. It is the only
foriegn capital named for an
American President.
3
The first American to win the
[Nobel] Prize in literature was
[Sinclair Lewis] in 1930.
3
The first American human in space
was [Alan Shepard], in the
[Mercury] Space Program.
3
Three U.S. Presidents have had red
hair: [Washington], [Van Buren],
and [Jefferson].
5
The first woman elected to the
U.S. Senate was in: A) 1932
B) 1936
C) 1940
Type the correct letter: [A]
5
The first freeze-dried coffee in
the U.S. was: A) Sanka
B) Taster's Choice
C) Maxim
Type the correct letter: [C]
4
[George Washington] raised money
for his army with the slogan,
"If you can't send money, send
[tobacco]".
5
The first game marketed by Parker
Brothers was: A) Finance
B) Monopoly
C) Banking
Type the correct letter: [C]
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/AMERICANA 2.txt:
22
5
Henry [Mitchell] and [Ruff], the
dog, were characters in a domestic
comic strip that was called
"[Dennis the Menace]", created by
[Hank Ketcham].
2
[Billy Joe McAllister] jumped off
the [Tallahatchee] Bridge.
3
[Britt Ried] had a secret
identity: he was a superhero
known as the "[Green Hornet]".
3
[Dick Grayson] had a secret
identity: he was a superhero
sidekick called "[Robin]".
5
After anarchist Leon Czolgosz shot
and killed President [McKinley],
activist/writer [Emma Goldman] was
arrested for writing works that
influenced the assassin.
3
The sailor boy on the [Cracker Jack]
box is named [Jack]. His dog's name
is [Bingo].
4
Famous theorist and scientist
[Albert Einstein] refused the honor
of serving as the first [president]
of the country of [Israel].
5
Two foreign-born composers on U.S.
stamps are: A) Beethoven & Bach,
B) Berlin & Gershwin,
C) Herbert & Stravinsky.
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
Gen. [George Custer], commanding
officer in the massacre at
[Little Big Horn], ranked [last]
in his West Point graduating
class.
5
[Harriet Beecher Stowe], the author
of the influential "[Uncle Tom's
Cabin]," was called "the little
lady who started the great war" by
politician [Abraham Lincoln].
4
True or False? The coastline of
Alaska is longer than the entire
coastline of the lower 48 states.
Type T or F: [T]
4
President [McKinley] is pictured
on the $500 bill. [Cleveland] is
on the $1000 bill, and [Madison]
is on the $5000 bill.
3
Comic-strip character [Alley Oop]
lived in the Stone Age kingdom of
[Moo].
5
The first U.S. credit-card company
was: A) Bank Americard
B) American Express
C) Diner's Club
Type the letter: [C]
5
Famous actor/writer/comedian
[Woody Allen] is known to
his family by another name.
He was originally named
[Allen Konigsberg].
4
American revolutionary naval hero
[John Paul Jones] was credited
with the famous saying:
"[I have not yet begun to fight]".
4
"[Friendship 7]" was the name of
[John Glenn]'s space capsule. He
was the first American to [orbit]
the earth.
3
The number one publication (in
terms of circulation) in the U.S.
is the "[T.V. Guide]."
3
True or False? More actors live in
New York State than in California.
Type T or F: [T]
3
"[Uncle Sam]" is the symbol of the
[U.S.] just as "[John Bull]" is the
symbol of Britain.
5
The first woman on U.S. paper
currency was: A) Martha Washington
B) Betsy Ross
C) Susan B. Anthony
Type the correct letter: [A]
4
The [Hula Hoop] originated in the
country of [Australia], where it
was made of [bamboo] and used in
gym classes.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/AMERICANA 3.txt:
22
4
[Gravel] [Gertie] & [B.O]. [Plenty] were
characters in a comic strip called
"[Dick Tracy]", created by
[Chester Gould].
2
[Jacques Cousteau]'s research ship
is called the "[Calypso]".
3
[Babs Gordon] had a secret
identity-she was a superhero
called "[Batgirl]".
3
[Steve Rogers] had a secret
identity: he was a superhero
known as"[Captain America]".
4
President [Theodore Roosevelt]
tried to have the inscription
"[In God We Trust]" removed from
U.S. coins.
3
The first of the 50 states to be
named by Europeans was [Florida],
on April 2, 1513.
5
The only president born on the
4th of July was: A) James Polk,
B) Thomas Jefferson,
C) Calvin Coolidge.
Type the correct letter: [C]
4
Humorist and author [Mark Twain]
considered the vegetable
[cauliflower] to be "just
cabbage with a college
education".
5
The popular toy, the yo-yo, was:
A) first a Filipino jungle weapon,
B) developed by Duncan Hines,
C) a toy used in Colonial times.
Type the correct letter: [A]
5
What do presidents Grant and
Kennedy have in common? A) mothers
named Rose, B) birthdays, C) both
parents alive while in office.
Type the correct letter: [C]
2
[Maine] is the only U.S. state that
borders on only one other state.
4
Famous cowboy-actor [Roy Rogers]
rode a horse named [Trigger],
while wife [Dale Evans] rode
[Buttermilk].
5
President [Eisenhower] used
F.D.R.'s retreat in the Maryland
mountains for special meetings.
He changed the name from
[Shangri-la] to [Camp David].
5
Most severe earthquake to hit U.S.
was the: A) Alaskan quake
B) San Francisco quake
C) Mt. St. Helens quake
Type the letter: [A]
5
A female blue whale weighs as much
as: A) 15 elephants
B) 30 elephants
C) 50 elephants
Type the letter: [B]
5
There was neither cranberry sauce
nor pumpkin pie at the first
[Thanksgiving] celebration. But
Indians did bring a tasty, fluffy
snack now called [popcorn].
5
The first Black U.S. Senator began
his tenure in: A) 1870
B) 1910
C) 1964
Type the correct letter: [A]
4
The name "El Pueblo de Nuestra
Senora la Reina de los Angeles de
Porciuncula" was the original name
of what city? [Los Angeles]
4
As of 1983, the only Hollywood
film producer to be honored with a
commemorative postage stamp was
[Walt Disney] in 1968.
5
The largest office building in the
world is: A) the Pentagon
B) the Kremlin
C) "Great Hall", China
Type the correct letter: [A]
4
Who was the first president to fly
in a plane, ride in a car, and go
underwater in a submarine?
[Theodore Roosevelt]
5
In '60's surfer lingo, "hodad"
means: A) lousy
B) fake surfer
C) Beach party
Type the correct letter: [B]
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/AMERICANA 4.txt:
22
5
[Beauregard] [Bugleboy] and
[Churchy] [LaFemme] were two
characters in a comic strip
called "[Pogo]"', created by
[Walt Kelly].
2
[Alfred E. Neuman]'s motto is
"[What, me worry?]"
3
[Billy Batson] had a secret
identity: he was a superhero
known as "[Captain Marvel]".
3
[Lamont Cranston] had a secret
identity: he was a superhero
known as "[The Shadow]".
4
President [George Washington]
instituted the [Purple Heart]
military decoration on April
7, 1782.
3
The [48]th state to join the Union
was [Arizona], which was admitted on
[Valentine]'s Day, 1912.
5
Two Americans buried in the Krem-
lin: A) Emma Goldman & Theda Bara,
B) William Haywood and John Reed,
C) Dred Scott and Benedict Arnold.
Type the correct letter: [B]
4
Author [Louisa May Alcott] was best
known for books about her largely
female family, "[Little Women]," and
her Nephew's family, "[Little Men]."
4
What is the pen name of the
American author who was born under
Haley's Comet and died 75 years
later when it returned? [Mark Twain]
5
The heaviest president ever,
weighing 350 lbs: A) Taft,
B) Cleveland,
C) Hoover.
Type the correct letter: [A]
5
The movie "[Ice Station Zebra]"
was one of billonaire
[Howard Hughes]'s favorites. He
watched a private copy of it more
than 150 times.
3
While the [Lone Ranger] rode a
horse named [Silver], his sidekick
[Tonto] rode a horse named [Scout].
4
In 1868, the American Colonization
Society was formed to establish a
colony in Africa. Today the
colony is known as [Liberia].
4
Only U.S. President to serve 2
non-consecutive terms:
A) Hoover B) Cleveland C) F.D.R.
Type the letter: [B]
4
Searching through their hair and
the hair of their companions,
monkeys find dead [skin] to eat.
Yum. Yum.
4
On [Valentine]'s Day, 1866, two
infamous outlaws, [Jesse] and
[Frank] James staged America's
first [daytime] [bank] robbery.
4
The name of the security guard
who discovered the [Watergate]
break-in on June 17, [1972] was
[Frank Wills].
2
The U.S. city nicknamed "Mile-High
City" is [Denver].
3
The highest mountain in [North]
America is Mt. [McKinley], and was
named for a presidential candidate
5
In 1857, Joseph Gayetty came up
with an invention he called,
"Gayetty's [Medicated Paper]".
Today we refer to this product as
[toilet paper].
5
Which president was the first to
telecast from the White House?
A) Harry S. Truman
B) Dwight D. Eisenhower
C) F.D.R. Type the letter: [A]
5
The "New York Times" said that she
looked like a skinny 12-year-old
boy; "Newsweek" said she was "17
and starved". Born Lesley [Hornby]
this model was known as "[Twiggy]".
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/D.txt:
7
MOVIES
MUSIC POTPOURI
ROCK & ROLL
SPORTS
TELEVISION
AMERICANA
THE BIG MIX
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/MOVIES 1.txt:
22
4
In producer [Cecil B. deMille]'s
movie "[The Ten Commandments]",
the role of [Moses] was played by
actor [Charlton Heston].
3
[James Mason] played the role of
[Captain Nemo] in the movie
"[20,000 Leagues Under the Sea]".
5
"[Top Hat]", a 1935 musical
starring [Fred Astaire] and his
most famous partner,
[Ginger Rogers], includes
spectacular ballroom dancing.
4
In the Star Wars sequel
"[Return of the Jedi]," Luke
Skywalker's real father turns
out to be [Darth Vader].
5
[Marion Crane], played by actress
[Janet Leigh], was stabbed in the
shower at the [Bates] motel.
The movie: [Psycho]. The moral:
Don't shower alone!
4
Famous for his role in early
horror movies, [Boris Karloff] had
changed his name from the less
frightening [William Pratt].
5
[Jodie Foster], the child actress
who played a 12-year-old prosti-
tute in the film "[Taxi Driver],"
became the real-life obsession of
gunman [John Hinkley].
5
Evangelist [Billy Graham] said
"The enthusiasm for the movie
'The [Exorcist]' is symptomatic
of a jaded society, reaching ever
further for sensory thrills."
5
The film "[Harold and Maude]"
is a touching comedy about an
unlikely love affair, portrayed by
actor [Bud Cort], in his 20's, and
actress [Ruth Gordon], almost 80.
5
A New Yorker, director Martin
[Scorsese] had leading man
[Robert De Niro] depict the
harshness of city life in the
movie "[Taxi Driver]."
5
[Francis Ford Coppola] produced &
directed films "The [Godfather]"
and "[Apocalypse Now]"-- one in
an urban jungle, the other in a
tropical one.
4
The most popular musical of the
70's was the disco dance film
"[Saturday Night Fever]," starring
[John Travolta].
5
The [Watergate] scandal sparked the
movie "[All the President's Men]"
starring [Robert Redford] and
[Dustin Hoffman] as reporters
[Woodward] and [Bernstein].
5
Based on a bizarre real-life
bank robbery, the movie
"[Dog Day Afternoon]" starred
actor [Al Pacino] robbing a bank
in the N.Y. borough of [Brooklyn].
5
Child-hating comedian [W.C. Fields]
showed why he always said "go away
kid, you bother me" in the 1941
classic "Never [Give a Sucker an
Even Break]."
5
Playing the oddball president of
[Huxley] College, [Groucho Marx]
staged one of comedy's best
football spoofs. The movie:
"[Horsefeathers]."
5
An all-black cast starred in the
film remake of "The Wizard of Oz",
called "The [Wiz]". [Diana Ross]
played Dorothy, [Michael Jackson]
was the [Scarecrow].
5
Actor [Rex Harrison], as Professor
[Higgins], taught the "loverly"
Miss [Eliza] [Doolittle] all about
"The [rain] in [Spain]. The movie:
"[My Fair Lady]".
5
The movie [Alice's Restaurant] saw
our hero, singer [Arlo Guthrie] at
the draft induction center. He
was the guy wearing underwear,
long hair, and a [hat].
5
Actor [Marlon Brando] made the
famous cry for his wife,
"[Stella]" in a movie based on
the play by [Tennessee Willams]:
"A [Streetcar Named Desire]".
5
The movie that made you afraid to
take a shower, "[Psycho]",
depicted a deranged character
named [Norman Bates] who blamed it
all on his [mother].
5
The acclaimed "[Citizen Kane]" was
directed by and starred
[Orson Wells]. It was loosely
based on the life of
[William Randolph] [Hearst].
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/MOVIES 2.txt:
22
4
The movie "[The Sting]" featured a
captivating theme song titled
"[The Entertainer]". It was
composed by [Scott Joplin].
5
The film "[Flying Down to Rio]",
featured dozens of women tap-
dancing on the wings of real
airplanes. (They were wired in
place, but still- pretty tricky!)
5
"[West Side Story]" is a modern
musical version of Shakespeare's
"[Romeo and Juliet]".
The music was composed by
[Leonard Bernstein].
5
Returning Vietnam vets were por-
trayed in "[Coming Home]" with
Jon [Voight], and "The [Deer Hunter]"
with Robert [De Niro]. Both films
were released in the year [1978].
5
The movie "[My Little Chickadee]"
has [W. C. Fields] as the portly
Cuthbert J. [Twillie] and
[Mae West] as [Flower Belle] Lee,
an ever-so risque social outcast.
3
The coolest of Ladies' Men, actor
[Cary Grant] was originally named
[Archibald Leach].
5
Actor [Dustin Hoffman] played a
divorced father trying to keep
his son in the heartbreaking movie
"[Kramer vs. Kramer]". Actress
[Meryl Streep] played his ex-wife.
5
A Sci-Fi film told us that music
could be the universal language.
The movie: "[Close Encounters of
the Third Kind]," directed by
[Steven Spielberg].
5
One of the best performances by
comedian [Peter Sellers] was the
role of [Chauncey Gardiner], the
childlike man raised on TV in
the film "[Being There]."
5
Actor [Gene Wilder] played the man
who was in love with a [sheep] in
the movie spoof "Everything You
Always Wanted to Know About Sex
[But Were Afraid to Ask]."
5
Crazed Colonel [Kurtz], played by
movie veteran [Marlon Brando],
ended the film "[Apocalypse Now]"
with this line:
"[The horror, the horror]".
4
In the movie version of the 60's
musical "[Hair]," the songs were
much the same as in the play, but
the actors wore more clothes.
5
The prophetic film "The [China
Syndrome]," starring activist
[Jane Fonda], premiered shortly
before the real nuclear "incident"
at [Three Mile Island] in 1979.
5
Known for his comedy remakes of
classic movies, director [Mel
Brooks] starred his favorite funny
men [Gene Wilder] and [Marty Feldman]
in "[Young] Frankenstein."
5
Silent humorist [Charlie Chaplin]
knew that his character "The
Little [Tramp]" could not survive
in the speaking world so he did
no talking films in that role.
4
"Hail, hail, [Freedonia], land of
the [brave]"... this was an often
sung phrase in the [Marx Brothers]'
movie "[Duck Soup]."
5
In an ending heavy with lead,
actress [Faye Dunaway] and
actor [Warren Beatty] were
riddled with bullets in the
movie "[Bonnie and Clyde]".
4
The hills were alive when actress
[Julie Andrews] became governess
to the singing [von Trapp] family
in the movie"[The Sound of Music]"
4
Chopper-riding rebels, actors
[Peter Fonda] and [Dennis Hopper]
rode across country, searching for
America. The film: "[Easy Rider]"
5
Still body building, but wearing
more now, actress [Jane Fonda]
once bared it all through a filmy
fabric tube in her steamy film
"[Barbarella]".
5
The Mike [Nichols] film in which
actor [Dustin Hoffman] stops the
wedding of Mrs. [Robinson]'s
daughter was a classic.
The movie: "The [Graduate]".
5
Coincidently, the film
"[Casablanca]," starring actor
[Humphrey Bogart], was released
just a week after the Americans
really did land in North Africa.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/MOVIES 3.txt:
22
4
Dashing spy hero [James Bond],
also known as Agent [007], usually
carries a particular kind of gun--
it's a [Walther PPK 38].
5
"[Singin' in the Rain]" is a film
about the backstage problems of
the first sound movies. Starring
[Gene Kelly], the film is regarded
as a splendid musical.
4
The old [Jedi] knight called upon by
Princess [Leia] for help in the
movie "[Star Wars]" was a wise
man named [Obiwan Kenobi].
4
An autobiographical/fantasy
film features actor [Roy Scheider]
playing choreographer [Bob Fosse].
The movie: "[All That Jazz]."
4
The first motion pictures were
shown in West [Orange], New
Jersey by the famous inventor
[Thomas Edison].
5
The true story of a vigilant
narcotics cop who uncovers police
corruption sparked the movie
"[Serpico]," starring actor
[Al Pacino].
5
"The [Towering Inferno]" was a
disaster film of the 70's. It
featured some of our hottest stars
- Paul [Newman] and Faye [Dunaway] -
trapped inside the doomed tower.
5
The box-office smash of the 70's,
"[Star Wars]" was director
[George Lucas]'s ticket to a
future full of chatty androids
and slimy space creatures.
5
Actor [Jack Nicholson] gave one of
his most memorable performances as
a rebellious inmate in a mental
hospital in a controversial movie:
"[One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest]."
5
One of the most creative yet
inexpensive films ever made was
"[What's Up, Tiger Lily?]," a
Japanese spy thriller with a crazy
sound track dubbed by [Woody Allen].
3
The movie "[Apocalypse Now]" began
with the song "[This is the End]" by
rock group The [Doors].
5
A movie tear-jerker opened with
actor [Ryan O'Neal] saying "What
can you say about a 25-year-old
girl who died?" That summed it
up for the movie "[Love Story]."
5
The touching film about an
emerging union activist called
"[Norma Rae]" featured an award-
winning performance by actress
[Sally Field] in the title role.
4
A movie made about early star
Rudolph [Valentino] starred dancer
[Rudolph Nureyev] and ex-Mamas and
Papas singer [Michelle Phillips].
4
Actor [Charlie Chaplin]'s classic
movie "[Modern Times]" touched a
modern topic: the dehumanizing of
society by mechanization.
4
Actor [William Powell] and actress
[Myrna Loy] were a famous private
eye and wife in the 30's movie
"[The Thin Man]."
4
A movie about Britain's enigmatic
hero, "[Lawrence of Arabia]",
starred actor [Peter O'Toole] as
the British leader [T.E. Lawrence].
5
Portraying the tough life
of the English innercity,
actor [Sidney Portier] taught
his students self-respect in
the film "[To Sir With Love]".
5
Disney had actress [Julie Andrews]
as a formidable nanny named
[Mary Poppins] singing verses like
"a spoonful of [sugar] helps the
[medicine] go down". Yech.
5
"[The Defiant Ones]", a defiant
movie, shows prejudice and
comradeship in the escape of the
two ex-cons played by [Tony Curtis]
and [Sidney Poitier].
5
The comedy satire
"[Dr. Strangelove]" shows
actor [Slim Pickens] pre-
paring to ride the "Bomb
of Destiny" to its end.
5
The genius of the postwar musical,
[Gene Kelly] did it all -- from
dancing to directing in the
classic "An [American in Paris]".
Music was by [George Gershwin].
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/MOVIES 4.txt:
22
4
The first Academy awards, given in
the year [1928], gave the award
for [Best Picture] to the movie
"[Wings]".
5
"[The King and I]" tells the story
of an English woman who goes to
teach the 50 children of the king
of [Siam], and falls in love with
him.
4
The noble [Jedi] knight
Obiwan [Kenobi], of
Star Wars fame, was played
by actor [Alec Guiness].
5
Actor [Paul Newman] played the
title role in the 1961 movie
"[The Hustler]." His technical
advisor was pool player
[Minnesota Fats].
4
In 1942 actor [James Cagney] won
an Academy Award for his portrayal
of [George M. Cohan] in the movie
"[Yankee Doodle Dandy]".
4
At age [12], child actress
[Brooke Shields] played the coveted
daughter of a prostitute in the
movie "[Pretty Baby]."
4
A disaster movie directed by
newcomer [Steven Spielberg] made
Americans afraid to go to the
beach. The movie: "[Jaws]."
5
Using black and white photography
to depict the city he loves,
director [Woody Allen] blended the
humorous with the humane in the
movie "[Manhattan]."
4
Actor [Harrison Ford] appeared
in a movie directed by film master
[George Lucas] BEFORE Star Wars.
The movie: "[American Graffiti]"
5
A comedy playing off the nostalgia
for old [Humphrey Bogart] movies,
the movie "[Play It Again, Sam]"
starred [Woody Allen] and actress
[Diane Keaton].
5
The two actors who played
[Vito Corleone] in "The [Godfather]"
movies were [Marlon Brando] in the
first film and [Robert De Niro] in
the second.
5
The portrayal of the lives
of aspiring and successful
dancers featured ballet great
[Mikhail Baryshnikov] in the
film "The [Turning Point]."
5
Two Oscar-winning actors declined
their awards in the 70's. They
were [Marlon Brando] for "The
[Godfather]" and [George C. Scott]
for the movie "[Patton]."
4
The featured dancer in Cole
[Porter]'s brilliant musical
"[Born to Dance]" was Broadway
favorite [Eleanor Powell].
5
Actor [Charlie Chaplin], known for
his role as the "[Little Tramp]",
was married to his frequent
co-star, an actress named
[Paulette Goddard].
5
Playing ghosts in the movie comedy
"[Topper]," actor [Cary Grant] and
his haunting sidekick, actress
Constance [Bennett] indulged in
unearthly antics.
4
In the 1963 movie extravaganza
about the "[Queen] of the Nile",
actress [Elizabeth Taylor] played
the sultry [Cleopatra].
4
In the film [Midnight Cowboy]",
our "Graduate" hero
[Dustin Hoffman] played a
slimy fellow called "[Ratso]".
5
One of moviedom's most famous
couples, [Elizabeth Taylor] and
[Richard Burton] teamed up in
their classic rendition of
"The Taming [of the Shrew]".
5
Actor [Paul Newman]'s first try
at producing was the movie
"[Rachel, Rachel]." The film's
leading lady, [Joanne Woodward],
was also the director's wife.
5
When the Wicked Witch of the
[West] screamed "And your little
dog, too", she was talking about
a dog named [Toto]. The movie:
"The [Wizard of Oz]".
5
Actor [Humphrey Bogart] took his
future wife [Lauren Bacall]'s
advice in their first movie
together "[To Have and Have Not]".
He learned to [whistle].
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22
4
In the "Big Band" era, every band
had a theme song. Bandleader
[Duke Ellington] used the theme
song "[Satin Doll]".
3
What is the name of the opera in
which the hero and heroine are
shut in a tomb? [Aida]
2
A major triad has how many
inversions? [3]
5
French composer Claude [Debussy]
broke the stylistic mode of his
period, with a prelude on one of
Mallarme's poems: "Prelude to the
[Afternoon of a Faun]"
4
A [shanty] is a song, used
traditionally by [sailors] to help
them keep rhythm while they worked
together.
3
Two forms of [opera] were popular
in the 18th century: [Seria], or
serious, and [buffa], or comic.
4
The opera "[La Boheme]" by
[Puccini] tells the story of a
group of poor artists and writers
in the city of [Paris].
4
The most famous American operetta
composer was Sigmund [Romberg]. He
wrote "The [Student] Prince" and
"The [Desert] Song".
5
A popular dance in the 16th
century, the [pavan] had couples
stepping forward in a graceful,
stately line. The dance was
supposed to imitate a [peacock].
5
In "The [Nutcracker]", a ballet by
[Tchaikovsky], a girl falls asleep
after a [Christmas] party. A toy
leads her on a wonderful journey
in her dreams.
5
Claude [Debussy]'s music showed an
eastern influence. Some of his
piano pieces have names like
paintings -- "The Isle of [Joy]";
"Gardens in the [Rain]".
5
Born [Thomas Jones] [Woodward],
in Pontypridd, [Wales], the
debonair ladykiller changed
his name to associate himself with
the book and film "[Tom Jones]".
5
The Blues song "'Tain't Nobody's
Bizzness [If I Do]" has been
associated with many Blues singers
including [Bessie] Smith and
Billie [Holiday].
3
The song "[Tea] For Two" was
composed by Vincent [Youmans]
in 1924.
3
Humorous country songster
[Roger Miller] is best known for
his hobo hit "[King of the Road]."
4
Called the "father of [country]
music," [Jimmy Rodgers] was partly
responsible for its nation-wide
popularity.
4
"Sweet [Rosie O'Grady] is a
song still sung by "[Barber Shop]"
Quartets for its close harmony.
It was first published in 1896.
3
Known to the world only as
[Perry Como], the crooner was
originally named [Pierno Como].
5
[Bing Crosby] said: "...I'm proud to
acknowledge my debt to the Rev.
Satchelmouth. He is the beginning
& the end of music in America". He
meant jazz star [Louis Armstrong].
5
Country songwriter David Allen
[Coe] has truly lived up to his
outlaw image. Orphaned at age 9,
he stole a car at 10 and later was
jailed 14 years for [murder].
4
[Richard Rodgers] wrote the music
for some of Broadway's greatest
hits: "Oklahoma!", "South Pacific"
and "Carousel"
4
The song "Stardust" was written by
Mitchell [Parish] with music by
[Hoagy Carmichael]. It was first
recorded in the year 1929.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/MUSIC POTPOURI 2.txt:
22
4
Which of these five composers was
not born in Germany -- Bach,
Brahms, Mendelssohn, Liszt and
Handel? [Liszt]
2
There are 2 sharps in the key of B
minor: they are [F] and [C].
2
Chopin was a native of what
country? [Poland]
5
[Lee Wiley] was an atypical jazz
performer-- a blonde American
Indian with a throaty vocal style,
she performed with Eddie Condon
and other groups in the 1940's.
4
"The [Jazz Singer]", starring
[Al Jolson] was the first film
released with sound - it was
popularly called a "[talkie]"
5
"The [Barber of Seville]", an
opera by [Rossini], features a
song titled "[Figaro, Figaro]"
about how busy and important the
title character is.
5
The words of an [opera] are called
the "[libretto]". The person who
writes them is often not the
musical composer. Wagner, however,
wrote both words and music.
5
In [Offenbach]'s operetta
"Orpheus in the [Underworld]",
Orpheus is a [violin] teacher
whose [wife] hates the "music"
made by him and his students.
5
The [tango] imitates dances from
the country of [Brazil]. The
dancers prance across the room
while arching their necks, holding
their arms and bodies stiff.
5
In the magic land visited by
[Clara], the young heroine of "The
[Nutcracker]" ballet, the Queen of
the Kingdom of Sweets is the
[Sugar Plum Fairy].
5
George Frederic [Handel]'s most
famous oratorio, or religious
opera, is the "[Messiah]". He
also composed "The Arrival of the
Queen of [Sheba]".
5
The country superstar who made
the song "Okie From [Muskogee]"
famous is a good ole boy from
[Bakersfield], California named
[Merle Haggard].
4
[Billie Holiday] is the famous
Blues singer portrayed by
actress/singer [Diana Ross] in the
movie "[Lady Sings the Blues]."
2
The song "[Blue] Moon" was composed
by [Richard Rogers] in 1934.
5
The song "[Tennessee Waltz]", sung
by [Patti Page] in 1950, is known as
the first country song to cross
over to the number [1] spot on the
popular charts.
4
[Bob Wills], a country musician
raised in the state of [Texas],
popularized a style of music known
as "[Western Swing]."
5
A 1942 movie titled
"[Yankee Doodle Dandy]" and the
1968 Broadway musical "[George M]"
both sung the praises of
songwriter [George M. Cohan].
5
Born in the state of [Texas]
as [Henry John] Deutschendorf,
singer songwriter [John Denver]
changed his name upon reaching
the Rocky Mountains.
4
"A camera pointed at him would
make him look like a taxi with
doors open." This was said of
crooner [Bing Crosby].
4
The [Pogo] was a Punk/New Wave
dance that had young punksters
bouncing to the beat like they had
springs on their feet.
5
A song that is still a favorite
today, "[Over The Rainbow]", was
from the movie "[Wizard of Oz]".
It won an Academy Award in [1939]
for the best film song of the year
5
The #10 song on "Your Hit Parade"
between 1935 and 1958 was composed
by [Richard Rodgers]:
"[Some Enchanted Evening]", from
the musical "[South Pacific]".
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22
4
The popular song of the twenties,
"[Indian Love Call]" begins with
these four words:
"[When I'm calling you]".
3
[George Gershwin] is perhaps best
known for composing the orchestral
"Rhapsody in [Blue]".
2
[Beethoven]'s only opera is called
"[Fidelio]", or "[Leonore]".
3
W.C. [Handy], writer of "[Beale]
Street Blues", was known as the
"Father of the Blues."
5
[Ragtime] was a popular musical
form of the late [19]th century --
jerky, rhythmic and lively music.
The featured instrument was
typically a [piano].
4
"[Don Giovanni]", the classic
opera by [Mozart], features a
dinner invitation given to, and
accepted by, a [statue].
5
The word "[operetta]" means
"little" opera. The first ones
were written by [Offenbach] in the
19th Century in the city of
[Paris].
4
In an 18th Century dance craze,
people did the "[hornpipe]", which
was supposed to imitate the way
sailors danced on board ship.
5
"[Giselle]", a ballet by [Adam],
tells the story of a young village
girl, who saves the life of
Albrecht and breaks the power of
the Wilis by her dancing.
5
The latest, and least illustrious,
of the distinguished family,
[PDQ] Bach has composed music for
the [sewer] pipe as well as other
classy instruments.
5
Franz [Liszt] was a brilliant
composer for piano, writing
"[Hungarian] Rhapsodies", as well
as several orchestral works
including "The [Faust] Symphony".
3
What 1920's jazz singer was often
associated with what were called
"mammy songs"? [Al Jolson]
5
Known not only as a Blues singer
but as a popular jazz vocalist
of the 20's, 30's and 40's,
[Ethel Waters] was perhaps most well
known for her Broadway acting.
3
[Gene Autry] was known as the
first "[singing cowboy]" of the
motion pictures.
3
A "father" of Bluegrass music,
[Bill Monroe] is best known for his
classic "[Blue Moon] of [Kentucky]."
5
The made-for-TV singing group the
"[Monkees]" consisted of:
[Mickey Dolenz], [Davy Jones],
[Mike Nesmith] and [Peter Tork].
5
A member of the famed country
group The [Carter Family] before
her marriage, [June Carter Cash]
now frequently performs with her
black-clad husband [Johnny Cash].
5
Getting her start as a secretary
for [Motown] records, singer Martha
[Reeves] of [Martha and the Vandellas]
first hit the charts in 1963 with
a song called "[Heat Wave]."
5
The exclamation, "She's the
greatest!", has followed jazz
singer [Ella Fitzgerald] ever
since she won the "Esquire" Gold
award in 1946.
5
With awards stretched to cover
every conceivable catagory, Jazz
great [Miles Davis] won a grammy
in 1960 for the best jazz compo-
sition of more than [5 minutes].
3
The most often recorded song
between 1900 and 1950 was
"[St. Louis] Blues".
5
The classic song "Ol' Man [River]"
was from Jerome Kern's musical
"[Showboat]". The show first
opened in the [Ziegfeld] Theater
in New York.
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22
5
Name the famous trumpeter who
said "All music's gotta be folk
music - I ain't never heard no
horse sing a song".
[Louis Armstrong]
5
"[Bix]" Biederbecke was a
legendary jazz performer. His
instruments: [cornet] and [piano].
His most famous composition:
"[In A Mist]".
2
How many keys on a modern piano?
[88]
3
An [aria] is a song, usually sung
in an opera- it means "[air]" in
Italian.
4
[Thomas Edison] invented the first
machine for recording music in
1877. It was called a
[phonograph].
5
"[Carmen]", the colorful and
dramatic opera by [Bizet] tells of
the love affair between a gypsy
girl, [Carmen], and a Spanish
soldier named [Don Jose].
4
The most famous English operettas
were by [Gilbert and Sullivan],
including "The Mikado" and
"The [Pirates] of [Penzance]".
5
The most famous dance craze of the
"Roaring Twenties" was the
[Charleston]. One might exclaim
"Oh, you [kid]!" as a compliment
to an especially hot dancer.
5
"[Coppelia]", a ballet by
[Delibes], opens in the window of
a [toy] shop. Frans flirts with a
real doll, despite his fiancee
Swanhilda's jealousy.
5
For Renaissance folk, [madrigals]
were a popular form of music --
songs for four to six voices,
often about shepherds, nymphs, or
lovers.
5
In 1969 prolific songwriter
[Burt Bacharach] won a [Grammy]
for the Best Original Score
for the movie "[Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid]."
5
Known in musical history as
the "Empress of the Blues,"
[Bessie Smith] was the only
artist of Afro-American music
to receive such a title.
2
The song "Smoke [Gets In Your Eyes]"
was composed by [Jerome Kern].
5
TV and movie star [Roy Rogers]
is also well known for his
musical accomplishments with
the country singing group
[Sons of the Pioneers].
4
Known as "The [Texas] Troubador,"
[Ernest Tubb] is best known for
the country music favorite
"[Walkin' the Floor] Over You."
5
The first gold record (1 million
sold) was presented to
[Glenn Miller] for his 1941 hit,
"[Chattanooga Choo Choo]" by RCA
Victor.
5
Known to fans and family alike as
"[Mother Maybelle]", the beloved
matriarch of The [Carter Family]
was well known for songs like
"Keep [on the Sunny Side]".
4
Famous jazz singer/player
[Louis Armstrong] was often
referred to as "[Satchmo]" and
"Pops".
4
Baritone singer and movie star
[Bing Crosby] began his career
in the 20's with the group,
"The [Juicy Seven]".
4
What famous fiddler was Cajun
born, son of an alligator hunter
and recorded such C&W hits as
"Diggy Liggy Lo"? [Doug Kershaw]
5
The title of the most popular song
between 1801 and 1825, still seen
on kitchen and living room walls
all over America, was
[Home! Sweet Home!]
3
The World War I-inspired song
"Over There" was written by
[George M. Cohan] in the year 1918.
1918.
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22
5
"[Herman's Hermits]", with toothy
lead singer [Peter Noone], had
their first hit in the year
[1964]. The song was titled
"[I'm Into Something Good]".
4
One of the only surviving psyche-
delic bands, The [Grateful Dead],
still have a large hard-core
following known as [Dead Heads].
5
A group known for their unique
sound and perfection in the stu-
dio, [Steely Dan], has won Grammies
for Best Engineered Albums with
its LP's "[Aja]" and "[Gaucho]".
4
Beginning as an "all girl" punk
novelty act, the group The [Go-Go's]
had a number 1 album in '82 with
the LP "[Beauty and the Beat]."
4
The late sixties folk/pop group
[Spanky and Our Gang] got their
name from kids in the TV series
the "[Little Rascals]."
5
English pop singer and actress
[Petula Clark] won a 1965 Grammy
for her hit "[Downtown]." She
also appeared in a remake of
the film "[Goodbye, Mr. Chips]."
5
Life imitated art when singer
[Jan Berry] of the group
[Jan and Dean] demolished his
car shortly after he released
the hit "[Dead Man's Curve]."
5
English singer [Graham Nash] of
a group featured at Woodstock,
[Crosby, Stills and Nash], began
his career with a British band,
The [Hollies].
5
In the early days the Fab Four
were known as the [Silver]
Beatles. They often played
in a club called the [Cavern]
in the town of [Liverpool].
5
The first hit single for the
[Four Seasons] was "You're the
[Apple of My Eye]," recorded
when they were known as "The
[Four Lovers]."
4
The minor hit "[We Love You]" by the
band The [Rolling Stones] featured
backup vocals by [John Lennon] and
[Paul McCartney].
5
Singer/songwriter
[Melissa Manchester] was
discovered by a singer, the
divine [Bette Midler], and sang
backup vocals for her in 1971.
4
Welshman [Dave Edmunds] used the
Motown and Rockabilly sounds of
the 60's to produce a group he
introduced: The [Stray Cats].
5
A big novelty group called
"The [Chipmunks]" originated
when producer David [Seville]
was recording special effects
for his 1958 hit "[Witch Doctor]".
3
Sassy rock singer [Bette Midler]'s
story is told in her autobiography
"A View From a [Broad]".
5
Famous for the 4-letter "cheer"
(changed to "fish" after they were
arrested), [Country Joe and the
Fish] made their second film
appearance in "[Woodstock]".
4
Not brothers at all, the
[Righteous Brothers] are still
remembered for their hit "You've
Lost [That Lovin' Feeling]".
4
A powerful Blues/Rock group of the
Pyschedelic era, [Cream] was a
trio comprised of [Ginger Baker],
[Eric Clapton], and [Jack Bruce].
5
The autobiographical song
"[Fat Man] in the [Bathtub]"
was written by the heavy songster
[Lowell George] and performed by
his group [Little Feat].
5
The first major rock festival
where groups like the "Byrds",
"The Mamas and the Papas" and
"The Who" played without pay was
held in [Monterey], Ca. in [1967].
5
What does the B.B. stand for in
B.B. King? A) "Big Bad"
B) "Blues Boy"
C) "Bodacious Bluesman"
Type the letter: [B]
5
Grammy award winner,
[Rickie Lee Jones], is
pictured on the back of
[Tom Waits] 1978 album
"[Blue Valentine]".
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22
4
A bleak ballad titled
"[In the Year 2525]" was the
only hit single recorded by the
duo [Zager and Evans].
5
Named for an Egyptian prayer, the
rock group The [Grateful Dead]
(previously known as the [Warlocks])
became the house band for
Ken Keesey's [acid] tests.
5
What sensitive singer of the '70's
announced, "I'm no longer seeking
applause and fame" and auctioned
off all his material possessions?
[Cat Stevens]
5
Musicians [Stephen Stills] and
[Neil Young] were members of the
group [Buffalo Springfield] before
joining the popular band
[Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young].
4
Turban-clad 60's songsters
[Sam the Sham and the Pharoahs]
first hit it big with the song
"[Wooly Bully]."
4
A band that blended blues, R&B and
country, The [Allman Brothers] Band,
featured brother [Gregg Allman] who
later married singer/actress [Cher].
5
"The Queens of the Crash Songs,"
the singing sisters of the group
The [Shangri-Las], received a gold
disc in 1964 for the song
"[Leader of the Pack]."
4
Lead vocalist [Eric Burdon] has
cut hit records with his 2
groups The [Animals] in the
60's, and [War] in the 70's.
4
Ex-Beatle [George Harrison] was
sued for copyright infringement of
a hit song called "[He's So Fine],"
by the [Chiffons].
5
Obscure record label [Vee Jay]
acquired 2 unlikely groups: the
[Four Seasons] and the [Beatles],
releasing one joint album with
both groups in 1963.
4
The [Rolling Stones]' gold-selling
album "[Let It Bleed]" was a twist
on the title of the last album the
Beatles released, "[Let It Be]."
5
Known as a national hero in his
native country of [Jamaica], Reggae
musician [Bob Marley] and his band
[The Wailers] were devoted to the
religious sect of [Rastafari].
4
The song "[Stage Fright]", by the
group The [Band] was written about
a musician friend of theirs named
[Van Morrison].
3
Rock group The [Beach Boys]
appeared in a Walt Disney movie
called "The [Monkey's Uncle]".
5
English Rocker and "Ex-Maddog"
[Joe Cocker] cleaned up his
convulsive act and won a Grammy
for a duet in the film
"[An Officer and A Gentleman]".
5
[Charlie Daniels], a Southern
fiddler who wrote "The Devil
[Went Down To Georgia]", performed
at the Inaugural Ball of President
[Jimmy Carter].
5
A Country-Western song called
"[Harper Valley PTA]," by singer
[Jeannie C. Riley], became so
popular that it inspired a
prime-time TV series.
5
First known as the [Blue Velvets],
then as the [Golliwogs],
[Creedence Clearwater Revival]
featured the downhome sounds of
[Tom] and [John] [Fogerty].
4
The [Detergents] were an early
sixties band that washed out
after their one big hit
"[Leader of the Laundromat]".
5
What song was dropped from the
Rolling Stones'tours for six years
because it supposedly inspired the
Hell's Angel killing at Altamont?
[Sympathy for the Devil]
5
What California country rock group
employed ex-members of "The Byrds"
and evolved into "The Eagles" and
"Firefall" after their breakup?
The [Flying Burrito Brothers]
5
What musician/producer composed
the theme music for the shows
"Ironsides", "The Bill Cosby Show"
and "Sanford and Son"?
[Quincy Jones]
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/ROCK & ROLL 3.txt:
22
4
Six-foot tall, model-turned-singer
[Grace Jones] recorded her first
disco hit, "[I Need a Man]" in the
year [1977].
5
An unlikely crew, the members of
the group [Old And In The Way]
include Grateful Dead's
[Jerry Garcia] and bluegrass
fiddler [Vassar Clements].
5
Gritty-voiced singer [Rod Stewart]
was once the lead vocalist for The
[Jeff Beck] Group, before staging a
solo career with his backup band,
now known as [Faces].
5
The soundtrack which made
the character and the song
"[Mrs. Robinson]" famous was
written by [Paul Simon] for
the movie "[The Graduate]."
5
Jazz guitarist/vocalist [George
Benson] got his start when he
won a singing contest at the
age of [4] and began performing
as "[Little Georgie Benson]."
5
Superstar singer/performer
[Michael Jackson] received [8]
Grammies during the awards
in the year [1984], breaking
[Paul Simon]'s previous record.
5
Paul McCartney's longtime
actress/girlfriend [Jane Asher]
is the [sister] of British folk
singer [Pete Asher], of the
group [Peter and Gordon].
3
The [Dave Clark Five] was the
first British group in the
60's to tour the U.S.
5
Known as "The Queen of the Teen
Weepers," [Lesley Gore] wailed to
stardom with "[It's My Party]" and
its almost equal sequel "It's
[Judy's Turn To Cry]."
5
Songstress [Grace Slick] of the
band [Jefferson Airplane] brought
the hit song "[Somebody to Love]"
with her from her previous group,
The [Great Society].
4
The lips and tongue logo of the
record label formed by the group
The [Rolling Stones] was designed
by artist [Andy Warhol].
5
Foreign recognition of the Reggae
band [Bob Marley] and The [Wailers]
began after singer [Eric Clapton]
recorded their Jamaican hit
"[I Shot the Sheriff]."
5
The first Beatle album under the
[Capitol] record label was called
"[Meet the Beatles]". It had
already been released in England,
titled "[With the Beatles]."
5
Known as one of the first west
coast Blues-Rockers, musician
[Steve Miller] formed his first
band at age 12. The band included
childhood friend [Boz Skaggs].
5
The daughter of famous singer
[Nat King Cole], [Natalie Cole],
made a name for herself by winning
2 Grammy awards with the 1975 hit
"[This Will Be]".
4
Major Jazz/Blues trumpeter
[Miles Davis] is known for
recording improvisational LPs
like "[Miles] in the [Sky]".
4
What 1960's musical variety show
was taped on location at different
college campuses and featured
Folk/Rock musicians? [Hootenanny]
5
Son of comedian [Jerry Lewis],
[Gary] and his group, "The
[Playboys]" had their first
smash hit in 1964 with the
song "[This Diamond Ring]".
3
What's green and wavy and wears
blue suede shoes?
[Elvis Parsley]
4
A film documentary called
"The [Last Waltz]" depicted the
musical finale of rock favorites
"The [Band]".
5
Classical guitarist
[Mason Williams] had a
fleeting glance at success
with his one Top-Ten in-
strumental "[Classical Gas]".
5
Neighbors in the ghettos of
[Detroit], singing groups first
known as The [Primes] and the
[Primettes] are now known as The
[Temptations] and The [Supremes].
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/ROCK & ROLL 4.txt:
22
4
[John Lennon] and [Yoko Ono] won
the Grammy award for Album of the
Year in the year [1981] for their
album, "[Double Fantasy]".
5
A Canadian band, the [Guess Who],
were ceremoniously invited to play
at the White House in 1970. First
Lady [Pat Nixon] asked them not
to play the song "[American Woman]."
2
With what record label did the
Beatles first sign? [EMI]
5
Husband and wife [Sonny and Cher]
first made it big with the song
"[I Got You Babe]." Before
divorcing, they had a daughter
named [Chastity].
4
Beatle [George Harrison]'s ex-wife
[Patti Boyd] was the inspiration
for the hit "[Layla]", written by
her husband-to-be [Eric Clapton].
5
Avant-garde master of music
[David Bowie] changed his given
name, [David Jones], to avoid
confusion with the Monkees'
lead singer [Davy Jones].
3
[Freddie and the Dreamers] began the
dance craze "The [Freddie]" with the
short-lived hit "[Do The Freddie]."
4
Songwriters [James] Paul McCartney
and John [Winston] Lennon first
played together in Lennon's group,
the [Quarrymen].
5
The allegedly obscene super-hit
"[Louie, Louie]", sung by the
clean cut group [The Kingsmen],
was banned by the governor of
[Indiana] in 1963.
5
The so-called founding fathers
of "outlaw" country music,
[Waylon Jennings] and [Willie Nelson],
received a Grammy for a hit about
[Mamas], [Babies] and [Cowboys].
4
English vocalist and pop star of
the 80's, [Sheena Easton] sang the
theme song for the James Bond
movie "[For Your Eyes Only]."
5
[Paul McCartney] has been the most
commercially successful ex-Beatle.
He has recorded for more years
with his band "[Wings]" than he did
with the Beatles.
5
Beatles' group member [John Lennon]
returned his medal for the "Order
of the [British Empire]" some time
after it had been presented by
[Queen Elizabeth].
4
The name of [John Lennon]'s first
rock group, the [Quarrymen], came
from the high school he attended
in Liverpool: [Quarry Bank] High.
5
Crazed "[Commander Cody]" and his
band, the [Lost Planet Airmen],
debuted with the album "Lost in
the [Ozone]". It included such
favorites as "[Seeds] and [Stems]"
4
A flamboyant and funky Rock
star named [Prince] recorded
the explicitly naughty album
"[Dirty] Mind".
4
Billed as "L.A.'s answer to
London", rock group "The [Byrds]"
hatched musical greats like Roger
[McGuinn] and David [Crosby].
4
Born [Richard] [Penniman],
frenetic pianist and singer
[Little Richard] made it big with
his first R&R hit "[Tutti Frutti]"
5
Name the raspy-voiced English rock
star whose lips rivaled Mick
Jagger's, and was well-known for
her involvement with Mr. Jagger
(and his lips):[Marianne Faithful]
5
The most successful of the tropic-
ally funky dance groups known for
the "[Miami] Sound" was a group
from Florida called "[K.C. and the
Sunshine Band]".
2
The Five [Blobs] performed the
short-lived 50's hit "The Blob."
2
White Blues-Mama [Janis Joplin]'s
nickname was "[Pearl]".
e was "[Pearl]".
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/SPORTS 1.txt:
22
4
[Weeb Ewbank] coached the
[New York Jets] football team
when they won the Super Bowl
in the year [1969].
5
A US President, [Gerald Ford],
had once received offers to play
football with the
[Green Bay Packers] and
the [Detroit Lions].
5
In 1978 [Pete Rose] tied
[Wee Willie Keeler]'s all-time
National League batting streak by
hitting safely in [44] straight
games.
5
[Lou Brock]'s modern record of
[118] stolen bases was broken
by [Rickey Henderson] of the
[Oakland Athletics] in 1982, with
a total of [130] steals.
3
The number of grand slams hit by
[Roger Maris] during his record 61
home run season of [1961] was [0].
4
[Lou Gehrig] of the
[New York Yankees] hit the last
of his major league record
[23] grand slams in [1938].
5
The first Black pitcher in the
majors to toss a no-hitter was:
A) Sam Jones, B) Dan Bankhead,
C) Satchel Paige.
Type the correct letter: [A]
2
Who was the last manager of the
Brooklyn Dodgers? [Walter Alston]
3
What one-armed outfielder played
for the St. Louis Browns in 1945?
[Pete Gray]
3
In 1979, [Kansas City Royals]'
outfielder [Willie Wilson] hit 5
"[inside-the-park]" home runs.
3
Pitcher [Denny McLain] of the
[Detroit Tigers] posted a total
of [31] wins in the 1968 season.
4
[Glenn Ford] portrayed
[Ben Hogan] in the 1951 film
"[Follow the Sun]", the story of
a championship golfer.
4
In the 1912 Olympics, [Jim Thorpe]
won gold medals in the [decathlon]
and the [pentathlon] - a feat
never matched.
4
[Cal Hubbard] was the first player
elected to both the [Baseball]
Hall of Fame and the Pro
[Football] Hall of Fame.
5
Dick "[Night Train]" Lane played
for the [Chicago Cardinals], the
[L. A. Rams], and the
[Detroit Lions] between
1952 and 1965.
3
Race car driver [Richard Petty]
was the first driver to win the
[Daytona] 500 twice.
4
[Soccer] is the leading inter-
national sport. Outside the
U.S. and Canada, it is called
[football].
5
Boxing great [Rocky Marciano]
retired in [1956] after defending
his heavyweight crown [6] times
and suffering no defeats in his
[49]-bout career.
5
As of 1984, the longest winning
streak for a professional basket-
ball team stands at [33] - a record
made by the [Los Angeles Lakers]
in the 1971-72 season.
4
The abbreviations for the three
major professional bowling
organizations are [ABC], [WIBC] and
[PBA].
5
Which president was first to throw
out the first ball of the season?
A) Wilson,
B) Hoover,
C) Taft. Type the letter: [C]
4
In the year [1975] [O. J. Simpson]
became the first running back to
score a season record of [23]
touchdowns.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/SPORTS 2.txt:
22
3
The maximum weight in the
[flyweight] boxing class is
[112] pounds.
4
In game 6 of the 1977 World
Series, [Reggie Jackson] of the
[New York Yankees] hit [3] home
runs.
4
On April 8, 1974 [Hank Aaron] of
the [Atlanta Braves] became the
all-time home run king by hitting
his [715]th home run.
5
The [New York Mets]' pitcher
[Tom Seaver] set a major league
record for consecutive strikeouts
in one game by fanning [10]
straight.
4
In Ernest [Thayer]'s poem
"[Casey at the Bat]", the
[Mudville] Nine lost by a
score of [4] to [2].
5
The oldest player in major league
baseball history (as of 1984) was
[Satchel Paige]. At the age of 59
he was still playing for the
[Kansas City] Athletics.
5
The first Black pitcher to pitch
in a World Series was:
A) Sam Jones, B) Dan Bankhead,
C) Satchel Paige.
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
Catching great for the
[New York Yankees], [Yogi Berra]
ended his major league career
playing for the [New York Mets]
in 1965.
4
Before arriving in Oakland, base-
ball's Athletics were first based
in [Philadelphia] and then moved
to [Kansas City] in [1955].
4
On May 2, [1876], [Ross Barnes]
hit the first home run in major
league history, his only homer
of the year.
4
As of 1983, the only brothers to
hit home runs in the same game of
a World Series were [Ken] and [Clete]
[Boyer] in [1964].
4
The first [Heisman] Trophy was
awarded to [Jay Berwanger], a
halfback from the University of
[Chicago], in [1935].
4
Olympic star [Jim Thorpe] signed
with the [Canton Bulldogs]
football team in 1916 for $[250]
a game.
4
Kicking a total of [7] field
goals, [Jim Bakken] became the
first to accomplish this feat
in a single game.
4
Southern Cal running back
[O. J. Simpson] was the first
back to rush for over [2,000]
yards in a single season.
4
In 1977, [Janet Guthrie]
became the first woman
race car driver to qualify
for the "[Indianapolis 500]."
5
The foremost international soccer
competition is the [World Cup],
which was first held in 1930
and is known formally as the
[Jules Rimet] Trophy.
4
Before he became an oil tycoon and
one of the world's richest men,
[J. Paul Getty] was a sparring
partner for mauler [Jack Dempsey].
4
[Dave] DeBusschere, well-known
[New York Knicks] forward, also
played baseball for the [Chicago
White Sox].
5
Who first hit a home run in the
Astrodome? A) Bobby Bonds,
B) Mickey Mantle,
C) Lou Brock.
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
[Debbie Armstrong], winner of the
women's giant slalom at the [1984]
Olympics, had never placed better
than #[3] in an international
competition before that.
3
[Alvin Dark] managed the NL
All-Stars in [1963] and the AL
All-Stars in [1975].
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/SPORTS 3.txt:
22
3
[Roger Bannister] was the first
runner to run a mile in under
4 minutes.
4
On October 1, 1961, [Roger Maris]
surpassed [Babe Ruth]'s record of
home runs in a single season with
a total of [61].
5
[Lou Brock] broke [Maury Wills]'
stolen base record in 1974 with
his [105]th steal of the season.
His total steals that season:
[118]
4
[Los Angeles Dodgers]'
left-hander [Al Downing] gave up
[Hank Aaron]'s record-breaking
[715]th career home run.
4
The number of [Chicago White Sox]
players who were barred from base-
ball in 1920 for allegedly fixing
the 1919 [World Series] was [8].
5
The smallest player in major
league history was [Eddie Gaedel],
who stood [3] feet, [7] inches and
wore uniform number 1/8 for the
[St. Louis Browns].
4
The first Black manager in
major league baseball was
[Frank Robinson], who managed
the [Cleveland Indians].
4
Former Minnesota Twins slugging
star [Harmon Killebrew] finished
his baseball career with the
[Kansas City Royals] in 1975.
4
Dodgers' shortstop [Pee Wee Reese]
was the only man to play in all
[44] World Series games between
Brooklyn and the [N. Y. Yankees].
4
The man who managed the
[Philadelphia Athletics] for
50 seasons, 1901-1950,
was [Connie Mack].
5
The first brothers to pitch
no-hitters were [Bob Forsch] of the
[St. Louis Cardinals] in 1978, and
[Ken Forsch] of the [Houston Astros]
in 1979.
2
[Michigan] won the first Rose Bowl
game by a score of [49] to [0].
5
During his college career at
[Pittsburgh] from 1973 to 1976,
[Tony Dorsett] set a record for
the most yards gained [rushing]
and the most [points scored].
4
The first college player to win
the [Heisman] Trophy twice was
running back [Archie Griffin] of
[Ohio State] University.
5
The 4 main events of the Pro-
fessional Golfers Association
are the [Masters], the [US Open],
the [British Open], and the
[PGA Championship].
4
Yes or No: Has a race car
driver ever completed the Indy
500 without making a pit stop?
Type Y or N: [Y]
4
[Boxing] took a leap in popularity
when fighter [John L. Sullivan]
toured the U.S. with a theater
troupe giving exhibitions in 1882.
5
Known as the "[Manassa Mauler],"
[Jack Dempsey] won his first
heavyweight title in [1919] by
knocking out Jess [Willard] in the
third round.
5
Famous [baseball] player
[Jackie Robinson] led the
[Pacific Coast] Conference in
scoring in 1940 while playing
[basketball] for [UCLA].
4
The play and film titled
"The [Great White Hope]" are
based on the life of heavyweight
boxer [Jack Johnson].
5
Pitcher [Don Drysdale] of the
[L.A. Dodgers] holds the record
for the most consecutive [shutout]
innings pitched, thru 1984: a
total of 58.
5
How many dimples does a golf ball
have? A) 56
b) 226
C) 336
Type the correct letter: [C]
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/SPORTS 4.txt:
22
4
The first two schools to play a
college [football] game in the
United States were [Rutgers] and
[Princeton].
4
[Stan Musial] of the [St. Louis
Cardinals] set a record for home
runs in a doubleheader on May 2,
1954 by hitting [5] homers.
5
Center fielder [Joe DiMaggio] of
the [New York Yankees] compiled a
record [56]-game hitting streak
in [1941] - a record still intact
as of 1983.
5
On June 17, 1915, [Zip Zabel] of
the Chicago Cubs set a record for
the most innings pitched by a
relief pitcher in one major league
game at [18] & 1/3 innings.
5
The A. L.'s second Washington
Senators played their final game
on Sept. 30, [1971] - and ended in
a 9-0 forfeit! The franchise went
on to become the [Texas Rangers].
4
[Jim Banning] was the first to
[pitch] for both the American
League and the National League in
All-Star Games.
3
The first Black player-manager in
the majors, [Frank Robinson], hit
a home run in his first at-bat.
5
All-time Giant great
[Willie Mays], also known as the
"[Say-Hey]" kid, concluded his
baseball career playing for the
[New York Mets].
5
Batting for the [New York Giants]
in 1952, pitcher [Hoyt Wilhelm]
homered in his first major league
at-bat, but never connected again
in his 21-season career.
4
Who was the only man to play for
the Boston Braves, the Milwaukee
Braves and the Atlanta Braves?
[Eddie Mathews]
5
As of 1983, [Frank Robinson] was
the only man to be named the
[Most Valuable Player] in both
major leagues. He played for
the [Reds] and the [Orioles].
4
In his 11 seasons with the NFL,
quarterback [Fran Tarkenton]
played with the [New York Giants]
and the [Minnesota Vikings].
4
[Detroit] was the first city
to have its teams win both
the [World Series] and the [NFL]
championship in the same year.
5
As of 1981, famous running back
[Jim Brown] held career records
for most [touchdowns] and most
yards [rushing]. He also led the
league in [rushing] for 8 seasons.
5
The first Black player on the U.S.
Davis Cup team, [Arthur Ashe],
was also the first [amateur] to
win the [U.S.] Open tennis title
in 1968.
5
In auto racing, E.T. signifies:
A) Entering Time,
B) Elapsed Time,
C) Time to phone home.
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
Boxing great [Cassius Clay],
who later changed his name to
[Muhammad Ali], won his first
heavyweight title by defeating
champion [Sunny Liston] in [1964].
4
As of 1984, who holds the record
for the most points scored, 100,
in a professional basketball game?
[Wilt Chamberlain].
5
In basketball, "deep bench" means:
A) players sit below floor level,
B) officials watch from sidelines,
C) a team has talented substitutes
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
Highest season batting average
(through '84) A) Ty Cobb
belongs to: B) Ted Williams
C) Roger Hornsby
Type the correct letter: [C]
4
Since downhill skiing became an
Olympic event in the year [1936],
no U.S. male had ever placed
higher than [5]th until 1984.
3
Before the 9-inning rule, a
baseball game ended when one team
scored a total of [21] runs.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/STARTUP.bas:
5 TEXT : HOME
10 IF PEEK(104) <64 THEN POKE 2051,0: POKE 16384,0: POKE 103,1: POKE 104,64: PRINT CHR$(4)"RUN STARTUP"
20 IF NOT PEEK(2051) THEN PRINT CHR$(4)"BLOAD K2.0;GEN"
40 PRINT CHR$(4)"RUN TRIVIA"
50 END
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/TELEVISION 1.txt:
22
5
[McLean Stevenson] played the
part of [Henry Blake] on M*A*S*H.
A pacifist in real life, he
refused to fight in WW II and
instead worked as a [medic].
5
On M*A*S*H, the character
[BJ Hunnicut] had gone to
[Stanford] Unversity where
he had belonged to the
[Delta Phi Epsilon] fraternity.
5
"[The Beverly Hillbillies]" told
the TV story of the [Clampett]
family. [Buddy Ebsen] played
[Jed], [Donna Douglas] was [Ellie
Mae].
5
Actor/producer [Robert Redford]
appeared in his early days in Rod
Serling's "[Twilight Zone]" playing
the role of [Death] visiting an
elderly woman.
2
[Steve Allen] was the original host
of "The [Tonight] Show."
5
[Ricky Ricardo] lived at [623] East
68th St., Apt. [4-A], in New York
City. He performed at the
[Tropicana] nightclub for
$[150] a week.
3
On TV's "[Rawhide]," [Clint Eastwood]
played the ramrod cowboy named
[Rowdy] [Yates].
4
TV's [Sanford and Son] were the duo
who lived and operated their junk
business at [9114] [South Central]
in the city of Los Angeles.
4
TV's "[All in the Family]" featured
a bigoted dock foreman named
[Archie Bunker], played by suave
actor [Carroll O'Conner].
4
[Arthur Godfrey], nicknamed
"[Old Redhead]", pioneered
the "natural" style of talking
directly to the TV audience.
3
The "[Rocky and Bullwinkle]" TV
animated serial was narrated by
[William Conrad].
3
[Leo Carroll], in the title role
of [Cosmo Topper], played host to
a pair of ghosts and their [dog].
5
In "[Logan's Run]" the hero and
two friends, [REM]-the-robot and
[Jessica], fled the City of [Domes]
in the year [2319], seeking a
a utopia called [Sanctuary].
3
Line: And now for something
[completely different]"
Show: [Monty Python]'s [Flying Circus]
5
Actress [Gilda Radner], playing
TV's hard-of-hearing [Emily]
Latella, took it back with the
words "Oh, that's different.
[Never mind]."
5
Born of a [Vulcan] father and
Earthling Mother, this brillant,
but emotionless creature was first
officer on TV's USS [Enterprise].
Mr. [Spock].
5
The first "[Star Trek]" pilot,
called "The [Cage]" was later
incorporated into a 2-part episode
called "The [Menagerie]" and won a
[Hugo] award in Science Fiction.
5
What TV show was suspended in 1965
when the star told young viewers
to reach in their father's wallets
and send him "those little green
pieces of paper"? [Soupy Sales]
4
On the TV Western "[Gunsmoke]",
Marshal [Matt Dillon] maintained
the peace in [Dodge] City. He was
played by actor [James Arness].
5
Sheriff [Andy Taylor] along with
son [Opie] and his deputy
[Barney Fife], were the main
characters of a TV show called
"The [Andy Griffith] Show".
4
Cartoon character
[Fred Flintstone]
worked at the
[Slaterock] Gravel Company.
5
Colonel [Hogan] and his band of
POW's operated a spy network under
the noses of Colonel [Klink] and
Sergeant [Schultz], their German
captors on TV's "[Hogan's Heroes]"
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/TELEVISION 2.txt:
22
5
The M*A*S*H unit's head nurse was
[Margaret Houlihan]. Her nickname,
[Hot Lips], fell into disuse
during the last few years of the
TV show.
4
On M*A*S*H, Colonel [Potter]'s
favorite singer was [Tex Ritter].
His favorite author was
[Zane Grey].
4
[Leonard Bernstein] first directed
the [New York Philharmonic]
orchestra in the CBS-televised
series "[Young People's Concert]".
4
One of the most loved and
rerun TV series, Rod Serling's
"[Twilight Zone]" only ran for
[4] years with 151 episodes.
5
Country star [Eddy Arnold] was best
known for living the country life
in the TV series "[Green Acres]."
The show co-starrred a real ham,
[Arnold] the [Pig].
4
The original [Three Stooges] were:
[Larry] Fine, [Moe] Howard, and [Curly]
Howard. Curly was later replaced
by [Shemp] Howard.
4
On TV's "[My Favorite Martian],"
[Bill Bixby] played [Tim] O'Hara. His
uncle [Martin] O'Hara was played by
[Ray Walston].
5
The [Clampett] family, nicknamed the
"[Beverly Hillbillies]", were [Jed],
[Elly May], [Granny], and [Jethro].
They lived at [518] [Crestview] Dr.,
Beverly Hills.
4
Actor [David Carradine] played a
Shaolin priest in the TV show,
"[Kung Fu]." His master, [Po], called
him the [Grasshopper].
3
[Howdy Doody] was a freckle-faced
[puppet] and one of television's
first kidvid stars.
5
Improbable history segments of
the animated TV program
"[The Bullwinkle Show]" featured
an inventor named Mr. [Peabody]
and his friend [Sherman].
5
[Madison] High School was the
setting for the TV series,
"[Our Miss Brooks]" which
featured [Eve Arden] as teacher
[Connie Brooks].
4
On the TV western "Bonanza", the
character [Ben Cartwright] was
married [3] times, each marriage
producing one son.
2
Famous TV line: "And [away we go]!"
Spoken by: [Jackie Gleason]
5
[Chevy Chase], also known as
"[Cheddar Cheese]" to deaf charac-
ter Emily Latella, was once the
prime crazy of late-night TV.
The show: [Saturday Night Live].
5
Known for great lines like: "Aye,
Captain, the dylithium crystals
can't take much more!" Star Trek's
Chief Engineer, Mr. [Scott] some-
how managed to keep his ship going
5
On TV's "Star Trek" the "Prime
Directive" is: A) exploration
B) safety of the ship and crew
C) non-interference
Type the correct letter: [C]
4
Dave Crabtree, a small-town lawyer
looking for a second car, found a
1928 [Porter]. The TV show:
"[My Mother, the Car]"
4
Actor [James Arness] played the
marshal of a western town. He
had a warm spot in his heart for
saloon proprietor Miss [Kitty].
4
TV Marine [Gomer Pyle] was well
known for his down-home style and
his two favorite expressions:
"[Shazam]!" and "Gaaaw-leee!"
4
Actor [Chuck Connors] starred in 4
different TV series: "[Branded],"
"The [Rifleman]," "[Arrest] & Trial,"
and "[Cowboy in Africa]".
4
TV's "[Gilligan's Island]" marooned
a millionaire couple, 2 beautiful
women, ([Ginger] and [Mary Ann]), and
[3] single men on a tropical island.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/TELEVISION 3.txt:
22
5
On M*A*S*H, [Walter Eugene]
O'Reilly, nicknamed [Radar], was
from the state of [Iowa]. His
mother, [Edna], needed money for
her [electrolysis] treatments.
5
Actor [Bob Keeshan] played a clown
named [Clarabell] on the
"[Howdy Doody]" TV show. He later
became famous as a TV personality
called "[Captain Kangaroo]."
4
TV writer/producer [Rod Serling]
claimed that in his early works
he imitated the adventurous
author Ernest [Hemingway].
3
Actor [George Reeves] played the
dual TV role of [Superman] and
[Clark Kent] until 1957.
5
Marshal [Matt Dillon] from TV's
"[Gunsmoke]" was played by
[James Arness]. His first
sidekick's name was [Chester],
played by [Dennis Weaver].
4
The [Cleaver]s were the TV family
who lived at [211] [Pine] Street in
the town of [Mayfield]. The show:
"[Leave it to Beaver]."
5
After a crash nearly killed
him, [Steve Austin] - played by
[Lee Majors] - was revamped as a
cybernetic hunk known as "The
[Six Million Dollar Man]."
3
TV's [Doctor Kildare], played by
[Richard Chamberlain], practiced at
[Blair] General Hospital.
3
The [Flintstones] are the TV show
residents of [345] [Stone Cave] Rd.
in the town of [Bedrock].
5
In 1948, Hooper conducted the
first television ratings of
New York City. "[Ted Mack]'s
[Original Amateur] Hour" had top
rank.
4
On radio and TV, "[Amos] 'n [Andy]"
focused on the adventures of
character [George Stevens],
popularly called "The [Kingfish]".
4
In the 50's sitcom, "The
[Many Loves of Dobie Gillis]",
[Warren Beatty] played Dobie's
rival.
3
On the 60's western, "[Bonanza]",
the sons were named [Hoss], [Adam],
and [Little Joe].
4
Line: "And that's [the Truth]"
Character : [Edith Ann]
Actress: [Lily Tomlin]
Show: Rowan & Martin's [Laugh-in]
4
An NBC comedy series called
[Rowan and Martin]'s [Laugh-in]
featured [Sammy Davis Jr.] repeating
the line "Here come de [Judge]."
5
The bridge crew of the TV
"Enterprise" included navigators
[Sulu] and [Chekov], along with
communications officer Lieutenant
[Uhura] whose name means [Freedom]
5
The sick bay on the TV spaceship
"Enterprise" was run by ship's
medic Dr. Leonard [McCoy] also
known as "[Bones]", with the help
of chief Nurse [Chapel].
5
The [Cartwrights], on the TV
Western "[Bonanza]", included: the
father [Ben], the largest [Hoss],
youngest son [Little Joe], and the
oldest son [Adam].
5
The TV show "[F Troop]" featured the
wheeling-dealing Sergeant [O'Rourke]
who had a private treaty with the
"Hekawi" (as in where the
heck-are-we) Indians.
3
The TV show, "[Mr. Ed]", featured
[Carol] and [Wilbur] [Post], along
with their articulate mount.
5
Astronaut Tony [Nelson] found a
genie in a bottle on a desert
island. The show: TV's
"[I Dream of Jeannie]". The geni:
Actress [Barbara Eden].
5
Color TV reached a turning point
when "The [Walt Disney] Show"
moved to NBC and became "Disney's
[Wonderful World of Color]" in
1961.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/TELEVISION 4.txt:
22
4
On M*A*S*H, the character called
[Klinger] dressed in drag to get
a Section [8] discharge and return
to his home town of [Toledo].
4
The two lead TV characters
[Lavern and Shirley] worked for the
[Shotz] beer brewery in the city
of [Milwaukee].
5
An eerie episode of TV's
"[Twilight Zone]" depicted actress
[Agnes Moorehead] in a battle with
tiny spacemen who had come from
the planet [Earth].
5
Debuting the same year as
[Rod Serling]'s "[Twilight Zone]",
TV show "[One Step Beyond]" broached
the serious study of psychic
phenomena. It ran for [2] years.
5
The three Bradley girls who
helped run The [Shady Rest] Hotel
in [Hooterville] were [Billie] Jo,
[Bobbie] Jo, and [Betty] Jo. The
show: "[Petticoat Junction]."
2
What was Howdy Doody's twin
brother's name? [Double Doody]
5
[Rusty] and his loyal pooch named
[Rin Tin Tin] helped the cavalry
soldiers at Fort [Apache] protect
the townspeople of nearby
[Mesa Grande]. Yo ho, Rinty!
4
In the TV program "The
[Honeymooners]," [Jackie Gleason]
portrayed [Ralph Kramden]. His
wife's name was [Alice].
4
On the 1950's TV program called
"[Howdy Doody]", Howdy had a
sister. Her name was
[Heidi Doody].
5
The first series ever to play on
all four networks was the variety
show, "[The Arthur Murray Party]",
with [Katherine Murray] as the
"hostess with the mostest".
5
On the "[I Love Lucy]" show,
Lucy and guest, [Harpo Marx],
passed for mirror images of one
another in a restaging of a scene
from the movie "[Duck Soup]".
5
In a 50's sitcom, the lead
character, [Dobie Gillis],
delivered his asides near a
replica of a statue titled
"The [Thinker]".
3
Best-known line: "[Sock it to me]"
Speaker: [Judy Carnes]
Show: [Rowan & Martin's Laugh-in]
5
Immortal words from the late-night
boob tube: "Get a load of these,
[Connie Chung]."
Speaker: [Jane Curtin]
Show: [Saturday Night Live]
4
"Space: the [final frontier]..."
This was the opening of one of the
most popular TV shows of the
sixties, "[Star Trek]"
5
Wouldn't it be nice to get a shot
without rolling your sleeve up?
Thanks to Dr. Leonard [McCoy]
the crew of TV's "[Star Trek]"
never winced once.
5
The shortest running TV show of
the 60's was: A) "Daktari"
B) "The Virginian"
C) "Turn On"
Type the correct letter: [C]
3
The Chinese houseboy who worked at
the Ponderosa was named [Hop Sing]
on TV's Western "[Bonanza]."
5
Out of the Ozark Mountains came
Jed [Clampett]-along with the rest
of his family-[Elly May], [Granny]
and cousin [Jethro], to begin life
anew in the [Beverly Hills].
5
In the year [1950], a noted radio
personality gave music lessons on
TV. The show: "[Arthur Godfrey and
his Ukulele]". The show ran for
[3] months.
3
Stalag [13] was the location of a
Nazi POW camp on the TV series
"[Hogan's Heroes]".
5
Addressing contempory issues such
as the Vietnam War, & Who Mom
Liked Best, this duo often
battled CBS censors. They were
billed as the [Smothers Brothers].
.
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/THE BIG MIX 1.txt:
22
3
[Mary Bromfield] had a secret
identity: she was actually a
superhero called "[Mary Marvel]".
5
Who said, "Public service is my
motto"? A) Al Capone,
B) Ralph Nader,
C) Richard Nixon.
Type the correct letter: [A]
5
How many Apollo missions landed
men on the moon? A) 4
B) 5
C) 6
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
As of 1983, the most money ever
paid to an actor for a part in a
film was the $[10] million paid to
[Marlon Brando] for his role in
the movie "The [Godfather]"
4
A movie made for [Woody Allen]'s
leading lady, "[Annie Hall]"
stared actress [Diane Keaton] at
her kooky best.
5
A movie titled "[Dead End]"
introduced the series "The [Dead
End] [Kids]." It starred movie
giant [Humphrey Bogart] as the
kids' older friend.
4
A [fanfare] is a short tune,
usually played on [brass]
instruments, intended to catch
people's attention
5
[Baroque] is a term referring to
music, but was borrowed from
architecture -- it refers to
buildings with twisted, curling
patterns.
3
Folk singer [Woody Guthrie]'s
full name was [Woodrow Wilson]
Guthrie.
4
[Irving Berlin] composed
a song made popular by
crooner [Bing Crosby].
The song was "White [Christmas]"
5
Imitating the glitter rockers of
the 70's, singer [Joan Jett] and
her band The [Blackhearts] bounced
to the top of the charts with the
heavy hit "[I Love Rock & Roll]."
4
"[Rap] songs" were a 70's phenomenon
in which the vocalists speak in
rhyme in time to various musical
beats.
5
[Rickey Henderson] of [Oakland]
set 2 major league records in
1982. One was for stealing bases
[130] times, the other for being
caught stealing [42] times.
5
What N. Y. Mets player, after
hitting his 100th homer on June
26, 1963, ran around the bases
backwards - but in sequence?
[Jimmy Piersall]
5
Major Walter [Wingfield] invented a
game he called "sphairistike." It
was a game his lawn-party guests
could enjoy in Britain. We now
call it [tennis].
5
A romance between U.S. hammer
thrower Harold [Connolly] and
Czech [discus] thrower Olga
Fitovia caused an international
incident in the year [1956].
5
The only two brothers who both
held World, U.S., North American,
and Olympic [figure skating]
titles were [Allen Hayes] Jenkins
and [David] Jenkins.
5
The 50's TV variety show titled
"Your Show of Shows" featured four
main performers: [Sid Caeser],
[Imogene Coca], [Carl Reiner], and
[Howard Morris].
4
On the 1960's TV classic
"[Star Trek]", the starship USS
[Enterprise], represented the
"United [Federation of Planets]"
4
Three hip, disillusioned young
people, "one white, one black, one
[blonde]", were the undercover
agents on TV's "The [Mod Squad]".
4
The first female TV private
detective show premiered in 1965
featuring [Anne Francis] in
"[Honey West]".
5
"There is nothing wrong with your
TV set. We are controlling
transmission. We can control the
vertical..." This was the opening
to TV's "The [Outer Limits]".
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/THE BIG MIX 2.txt:
22
4
The [Wright] brothers' first
airplane was flown in the year
[1903] at [Kitty Hawk],
[North Carolina].
5
West Virginia seceded from
Virginia: A) to escape taxes,
B) to stay in the Union,
C) for religious reasons.
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
The Great Salt Lake in Utah is
about: A) 13 feet deep,
B) 573 feet deep,
C) 1,012 feet deep.
Type the correct letter: [A]
5
Walt Dinsey animators looked to
sex symbol [Marilyn Monroe]
as a model for [Peter Pan]'s
cartoon fairy companion,
[Tinker Bell].
5
The ads said that if you added up
the [Marx Brothers]' intellect,
[James Bond]'s social conscience,
and the [Marquis de Sade]'s morals,
you'd get the movie "[M.A.S.H.]."
5
The jungle movie classic "[Tarzan
and His Mate]" featured swimmer
[Johnny Weissmuller] as the apeman
and [Maureen O'Sullivan] as his
mate, named [Jane].
5
[James Dean], best known as "The
Rebel [Without a Cause]", starred
in only two other movies, "[Giant]"
and "[East of Eden]," before his
tragic car accident.
5
A [fugue] is a musical composition
based on a short theme which runs
constantly - fast, slow, upside
down, or even backward throughout
the piece.
4
In 1913 there was a riot in the
city of [Paris]. It was triggered
by a new ballet by [Stravinski]
called "The [Rites of Spring]".
4
The unoffical national anthem of
the U.S. was "[Yankee Doodle]"
before it was replaced by "The
[Star-Spangled Banner]".
5
"[Annie Get Your Gun]", a hit
musical of the 40's, contained
memorable tunes like "The Girl
[That I Marry]" and "There's No
[Business Like Show Business]".
5
The call and response song
"[Shout]" was the debut single
that introduced the group The
[Isley Brothers] into the record
industry.
5
Punk Rock band "The [Ramones]"
copped their name from ex-Beatle
[Paul McCartney] who briefly took
the pseudonym [Phil Ramone] in the
late 50's.
4
Montreal Expos' [Ron Hunt] set a
major league record in 1971 for
being hit by a pitch - a total of
[50] times in one season. Ouch!
5
3 teams in World Series history
(through 1983) came back from a
3-1 deficit to win the series:
the [Pirates], the [Tigers], and
the [Yankees].
3
In the [1968] and [1972] Olympics,
swimmer [Mark Spitz] earned a
total of [11] Olympic medals.
4
The first man from the U.S. to win
an Olympic gold medal in [figure
skating] was [Richard Burton] in the
year [1948].
5
[Don Adams] starred as
[Maxwell Smart], Agent [86] in
TV's "[Get Smart]." He worked
for [CONTROL] against [KAOS]
with his partner, Agent [99].
5
[Jackie Gleason] in the role of
[Ralph Kramden] starred with
[Audrey Meadows] as his wife
[Alice] in the 1950's TV series
titled "[The Honeymooners]".
5
TV cop [Joe Friday] was
known for his favorite
line: "[Just the facts, ma'am]".
The show, "[Dragnet]", was set
in the city of [L.A.].
5
The TV show "The [Untouchables]"
was set in Prohibition days.
Actor [Robert Stack] starred as
uncorruptible government agent
[Elliot Ness].
5
British TV series "The [Prisoner]"
starred actor [Patrick McGoohan]
as a resigned agent who was
drugged and then taken to a
place known as "The [Village]".
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/THE BIG MIX 3.txt:
22
3
In the year 1928,
[Alexander Fleming] discovered
the wonder-drug [penicillin].
5
The first president to visit
China: A) Franklin Roosevelt,
B) Richard Nixon,
C) Ulysses Grant.
Type the correct letter: [C]
5
What American revolutionary said,
"I only regret that I have but one
life to lose for my country"
before he was hanged as a spy by
the British in 1776? [Nathan Hale]
4
In the movie "[Holiday Inn]",
[Bing Crosby] sang the famous tune
"[White Christmas]", written by
[Irving Berlin] .
5
"[Hot Lips]" [Hoolihan] in the
movie "[M.A.S.H]" was played by
actress [Sally Kellerman].
Other characters wondered: was
she really a blonde?
5
A movie that upheld moral virtues
over sophistication and sex,
"[Lightnin']" was one of the last
films done by humorist/actor
[Will Rogers].
5
The beauty in the group,
[Marilyn Monroe] appeared with
the masquerading [Jack Lemmon]
and [Tony Curtis] in the movie
"[Some Like It Hot]".
3
A [nocturne] is a dreamy, quiet
piece of music, sometimes called a
"nightpiece."
5
French composer [Berlioz] had been
in medical training, but turned to
music after watching his first
operation. "[Fantastic] Symphony"
is one of his best known pieces.
2
"[Yankee Doodle]" was the first
tune recorded on a record.
4
The Broadway hit "[Annie]
[Get Your Gun]" was composed
by [Irving Berlin] and first
opened on Broadway in 1946.
5
Starting off as a Texas swing
band, [Bill Haley] and [The Comets]
soon switched to R&B and hit it
big with a timely song called
"[Rock Around the Clock]."
3
Soulful songwriter [Otis Redding],
sang and co-authored the hit
"Sitting [On The Dock of the Bay]"
5
Only 3 players have hit 600 or
more home runs in their major
league careers. They are
[Hank Aaron], [Babe Ruth], and
[Willie Mays].
4
As of 1983, [Hoyt Wilhelm] holds
the record for big-league
appearances by a pitcher, with
a total of [1,070].
5
A [Grand Slam] is achieved in the
sport of [tennis] by winning
[Wimbledon], the [U.S.], the [French]
and the [Australian] Opens in a
single season.
5
Who won the first official World
Series in 1905? A) Athletics
B) Red Stockings
C) Giants
Type the letter: [C]
5
The immortal line "We was robbed"
was uttered by [Joe Jacobs], the
boxing manager of [Max Schmeling]
at the end of his 1932 heavyweight
bout with [Jack Sharkey].
4
TV's [Munster] family consisted of
[Herman], his wife [Lily], their son
[Eddie], niece [Marilyn] and elderly
[Grandpa].
4
"[Thanks for the Memories]" was
the theme song for the popular
NBC radio comic, [Bob Hope], who
switched to television in 1950.
4
The famous first "[Star Trek]"
pilot was titled "The [Cage]".
It featured Captain Christopher
[Pike] as Spock's first commander.
5
Situated in a small New England
town, TV's "[Peyton Place]" became
one of the first prime-time soap
operas. The show was based on a
novel by Grace [Metalious].
Text found in Factactics_1984_Daystar_cr_Whip.do/THE BIG MIX 4.txt:
22
3
In the year [1957], the first
human-made satellite was launched.
It was called [Sputnik] I.
5
Most popular street name in the
U.S.: A) Main St.
B) Broadway
C) Park St.
Type the letter: [C]
5
Iva Toguri D'Aquino went on trial
in 1949 for her role as a radio
broadcaster during WW II. An L.A.
native, she was accused of being
[Tokyo Rose].
5
A National College Queen Pageant
event of 1962 was: A) Surfing
B) Doodling on electric blankets
C) Jigsaw puzzles
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
The classic jungle yell used by
actor [Johnny Weissmuller] in the
[Tarzan] movies was a combination
of 5 sounds: one was a [hyena]'s
howl played backward.
3
Producer/director [Robert Altman]
had his first big breakthrough
with the movie "[M.A.S.H]."
3
The man that actress [Jean Harlow]
was holding in the movie "Hold
[Your Man]" was actor [Clark Gable]."
5
Director [John Huston]'s movie
classic "[African Queen]" starred
[Katherine Hepburn] and
[Humphrey Bogart] together
on the river.
5
Frederic [Chopin] gave his first
concert performance at age [6].
His music is regarded as some of
the finest ever composed for the
[piano], his favorite instrument.
5
March 20, 1825 is an historic date
in American stage and music. It
is the date that [Rossini]'s opera
"[The Barber of Seville]" was
first performed in America.
4
The songs "Give My Regards to
[Broadway]" and "The [Yankee Doodle]
Boy" were both from the musical
play "[Little Johnny Jones]".
3
The song "Ain't [It A Shame]" was
recorded by both [Pat Boone] and
[Fats Domino] in the year 1955.
5
A prolific songwriter with country
roots, [John Hartford] wrote the
lyrical Grammy-winning song
"[Gentle on My Mind]". Singer
[Glen Campbell] made it popular.
5
[Paul Revere and the Raiders] were
a 60's group with pony-tailed
[Mark Lindsay] as lead singer and
"[Fang]" on drums. They wore
white tights and colonial clothing
5
During the surfing craze of the
60's, surfin' songs became very
popular. In 1963 the song
"[Surfin' USA]" by the
[Beach Boys] became a hit.
5
[Hank Aaron] is known as the
all-time home run leader with
[755] home runs. Including All-
Star Games and post-season play,
his total comes to [763].
5
When the [New York Mets] set a
major league record of [120] losses
in 1962, the [Chicago Cubs] were the
only NL team NOT to have a winning
record against them.
5
The first baseball team to play as
professionals: A) Cincinnati
B) New York
C) Chicago
Type the letter: [A]
5
"Where No Man Has Gone Before" was
a pilot for: A)"The Twilight Zone"
B)"Star Trek"
C)"Lost in Space"
Type the correct letter: [B]
5
The first TV sit-com about police
was "[Car 54, Where Are You]?" It
featured Officers Gunther [Toody]
and Francis [Muldon] as the
patrollers of the city streets.
5
One year after "[Perry Mason]"
went off the air, actor
[Raymond Burr] returned to TV as
detective [Robert Ironsides] in
a new police series.
5
The first successful World War II
TV drama, called "[Combat]",
starred actor [Vic Morrow] as the
sergeant of a U.S. Army platoon
fighting in Europe.
- Addeddate
- 2014-06-21 03:55:29
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- Kevin Armstrong, Dorcas Evans
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- Year
- 1984
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