Saturday, December 31, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #14 (Answered by Ol' Wally!)

The Highest Home Runs
Which was the highest altitude major league stadium before the Colorado Rockies entered the bigs? 
Answer according to Ballparks.com:

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With an altitude of more than 1,000 feet above sea level, Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium was (until the Colorado Rockies entered the major leagues) the highest park in the majors, which results in many homers and the nickname "the Launching Pad."

Grand Trivia Question #13 (Answered by Jane)

Degrees of Femininity
What was the first college in the world specifically chartered to grant degrees to women? 
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Wesleyan College in Macon Georgia is the oldest college specifically chartered for women. Congrats to Jane, the champion pursuer of trivia for the week.

Friday, December 30, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #12 (Answered)

Three “P”s
Even though Georgia is known as the Peach State it actually ranks third behind California and South Carolina in the production of peaches. (That's Gaffney, South Carolina's Giant Peach in the picture.) Georgia is, however, the undisputed number one producer of two other “P” products. What are they?

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Answer:
(Congratulations to Beth, Joan & Jane!) Peanuts and Pecans
Bonus Answer that the Grand Triviator overlooked:
(Thanks, Joan!!) Poultry!! I found this on a University of Georgia page:

Grand Trivia Question #11 (Answered by Jane)

The Sons-in-Law
In 1924 Al Smith deadlocked for the Democratic nomination for President with the son-in-law of an American President. A third dark horse candidate got the nomination but Republican Calvin Coolidge got the Presidency. Who was the son-in-law candidate and who was his father-in-law President? Bonus: Who is the only son-in-law of a President to actually succeed in becoming an American President? Ah, Jane (again!!) has searched out the answers:
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William McAdoo (above) was son-in-law to...
Rome's favorite son, Woodrow Wilson.

  
As indicated in an earlier post --Jefferson Davis (above) was the son-in-law of...

...Zachary Taylor (Second cousin of both Jane and the Great Triviator)
    

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #10 (Answered by Jane)

World’s Largest Campus
In terms of contiguous acres, what is the largest college campus in the world?
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Berry College 28,000 acres along US Highway 27 north of Rome, Georgia. Way to go, Jane!

Grand Trivia Question #9 (Answered)

Vicious Beasts
Which wild mammal (excluding untamed humans) in North America kills the most humans each year? It's not these guys:
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We have a Winner!! It's Jane again! According to CNN It's not the vicious wolf, the powerful grizzly, disease carrying mouse, or a prowling cougar that kills Americans most frequently... IT IS BAMBI!!!!

Grand Trivia Question #8 (Answered by Jane)

City of Bridges
They say Venice, Italy, is the World City of Bridges, but which is the American City of Bridges? Which city in the U.S. has the most bridges? (For our purposes we will define a bridge as a structure of at least twenty feet in length that spans a body or stream of water.) Update: It's not Chicago or San Francisco.
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.Answer: Where the Allegheny and the Monongahela join to form the Mighty Ohio lies the City of 1900 Bridges -- Pittsburgh!!

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #7 (Answered by Jane)

D-Day Brass

Henry Fonda played the part of our mystery person
in the movie,
The Longest Day.


Who was the highest ranking American officer to wade ashore in Normandy in the first wave of attack on D-Day, June 6, 1944? By the way, he was awarded the Medal of Honor for his valor that day and was one-half of the only father/son pair in the invading forces on the "Longest Day".

Update: Cousin Jane wins the prize! The Answer is below.







Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.
Gen. Roosevelt's son, Quentin, also participated in the D-Day invasion. His father, the late President, was also awarded the Medal of Honor -- Posthumously for his charge up that San Juan hill in the
Spanish-American War.

Check it out here.

Grand Trivia Question #6 (Answered by Carol)

As the Crow Flies
Try to make a guess without referring to a map. As the crow flies which is closest to Rome, Georgia?
a. Dallas, Texas b. Chicago, Illinois c. Miami, Florida d. Philiadelphia, Pennsylvania In case you have chanced upon this site and are not familiar with our fair city: Rome is about halfway between Atlanta and Chattanooga TN.
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The Answer is b. Chicago! TaDah!! Most folks are surprised to learn that The Windy City is closer to us here in Rome than Miami or Dallas. Miami, Dallas and Philly are all very nearly equidistant from Rome.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Jefferson C. & Jefferson F. Davis (Question 4)

Jefferson C. Davis
Finally, after grovelling, I persuaded someone to actually give a stab at my Jefferson Davis question. Carol said today at 5:46 AM... "He was a Union general in the Civil War. He also fought at Stones River - which is next door to me in Murfreesboro, TN. He marched with Sherman..." Yes!! Jefferson C. Davis, despite the coincidence of his name, was a Union General, to whom Sherman gave the order in May 1864 (referring to our fair city, Rome, Georgia), "attack the town directly, at the point of greatest resistance." The Rome folk, what there was left of them, did their best to offer great resistance. They and the Army had built fortifications around the city. The fiercest fighting took place just a few blocks from where I am sitting at Fort Attaway (There's a Japanese restaurant there now.) Our boys retreated across the river to Myrtle Hill (Fort Stovall to the Army) and managed to keep up some aggravation for the Yankees from that high ground. Sherman moved into Rome and used it as his HQ for a while as he prepared to take Atlanta. My question went like this:
Who was Jefferson C. Davis?
  • President of the Confederate States of America
  • Union General during the Civil War
  • Son-in-law of the President of the USA
  • United States Secretary of War
Bonus: Who is the very interesting match for each of the other answers?
Answer to the Bonus: All of the answers except "Union general" apply to the more famous Jefferson F. Davis (No one knows what the "F" stands for, though some sources say his folks named him "Finis" cause they didn't plan any further Davis editions.) The President of the Confederacy had married the daughter of Zachary Taylor, though she died young and before Taylor was elected President. Davis served as Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce. He was the prominent and nationally respected U.S. Senator from Mississippi when Abraham Lincoln was elected President by the smallest plurality of votes before or since (and without even appearing on the ballot in many states). Davis tried valiantly to hold the South in the Union, but when Mississippi seceded he announced his resignation from the Senate:
"I find in myself perhaps a type of the general feeling of my constituents toward yours. I am sure I feel no hostility toward you, Senators of the North. I am sure there is not one of you, whatever sharp discussion there may have been between us, to whom I cannot say in the presence of my God, I wish you well, and such I am sure is the feeling of the people whom I represent toward those whom you represent. I carry with me no hostile remembrance. Whatever offense I have given which has not been redressed or for which satisfaction has not been demanded, I have, Senators, in this hour of our parting, to offer you my apology for any pain which in the heat of discussion I have inflicted. I go hence unincumbered by the remembrance of any injury received, and having discharged the duty of making the only reparation in my power for any injury offered, Mr. President and Senators, having made the announcement which the occasion seemed to me to require, it only remains for me to bid you a final adieu."

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #5 (Revealed by the Triviator)

Separated at Birth:
Terrell's Celebrity Twin
My sister at Daddy's Roses has linked to the site above that compares your very own uploaded facial image to the faces of a gazillion celebrities and declares which you most closely resemble -- physically, not emotionally, politically, intellectually or etceterally. So my Grand Trivia question of today is: Who is Terrell's Celebrity Twin? Follow this link before you peek below.
Don't Peek!!!.
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Don't Peek!!!.
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I Said Don't Peek!!!.
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Did You Guess Yet???!!!
Yep, ugly ol' Dennis Hopper!! Can you believe it??

Thursday, December 22, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #4 (Answered by Carol)

Jeff Davis
The Line Item Veto trivia question reminded me of this one: Who was Jefferson C. Davis?
  • President of the Confederate States of America
  • Union General during the Civil War
  • Son-in-law of the President of the USA
  • United States Secretary of War
Bonus: Who is the very interesting match for each of the other answers?
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Watch for the answer here. 12/23 -- Alrighty, now, folks!! Surely somebody's gonna step up and take a guess on this one. Remember Google is sitting right there at the top right hand side of your browser just waiting to help you search for the answer. Maybe I should call this A Google Scavenger Hunt. ANSWERED (Finally!) Here!

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Grand Trivia Question #3 (Answered by Joan & Jane)

Ohi
Ohio is the only State of the United States the name of which can be spelled using only three letters of the Alphabet: O, H, and I. The names of which of our States can be properly spelled using only four different letters each?
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.Answers Below Hurray for Joan (and Jane!!) Ten states have names that can be spelled with 4 or less letters each: ALBM ALSK HAWI INDA IOWA KANS MISP OHI TENS UTAH

Grand Trivia Question #2 (Answered -sorta- by Jane)


Due South
You lead an expedition from Rome, Georgia. You have been instructed by your commanders to travel by land and water due south until such time as you set foot on foreign soil. When you acheive your goal, on the soil of what nation will you find yourself? (Alabama doesn't count.)


Answer Below:







Rome GA is located at 85.2º W, a line of longitude that passes out of Georgia into Alabama, across the Gulf of Mexico, just misses the western tip of Cuba and strikes the Honduran northern coast near Santa Rosa de Aguan. Traveling further in a Southerly direction will take you across Nicaragua and Costa Rica into the Pacific passing to the west of South America and finally making landfall again on the coast of the Bellinghausen Sea in Ellsworth Land in Antarctica passing just east of Vinson Massif (the highest point on the continent) before reaching the South Pole.

I suspect that a low percentage of the populace of Northwest Georgia would guess that they live west of the entire continent of South America.

Congrats to Cousin Jane who supposed Cuba or Honduras to be the answer.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

GrandTrivia Question # 1 (Answered by Carol)

Line Item Veto
President Clinton gained the power of Line Item Veto on January 1, 1997. It was a short-lived privilege of the President. The Supreme Court on a 6-3 vote, June 25, 1998, struck down the legislation under which Clinton exercised that veto. Only one American President other than Clinton has been allowed to veto line items. Who was it? 
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Answer Below: Congratulations, Carol! The other Line Item Veto President was also a Southernor. Many folks forget that there was one American President who is not counted in the usual list of 43. The President of the Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis, was granted the Line Item Veto in the (Confederate) American Constitution of 1861.