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Trivia Bits by Stan Newman

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Stan Newman

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  • Trivia Bits, September 6
    STAN'S WEEKLY TRIVIA CHALLENGE CONTEST NO. 101 Who was the first American whose last name begins with "O" to be honored on a U.S. postage stamp? HOW TO WIN: Send your answer, with your full name and address, either by e-mail to TriviaBits@…

  • Trivia Bits, September 5
    Have you ever noticed that, of the four seasons, only "winter" and "summer" can be used as verbs? A search of our unabridged dictionaries could find no "seasonal" verb for "spring," "fall," or …

  • Trivia Bits, September 4
    Eponym of the week: William Mathias Scholl, the Dr. Scholl behind the foot-products company. Working in a Chicago shoe store as a teen around 1900, he started taking night classes in podiatry, eventually getting a medical degree but never practicing.…

  • Trivia Bits, September 3
    Where's the world's most tilted tower? Hint: It's not in Italy. The Leaning Tower of Pisa currently tilts a mere 3.97 degrees from perpendicular. Last November, Guinness World Records certified the 15th-century church tower in the northwest German …

Trivia Bits, May 12

Word of the week: "paraph." It is a handwritten flourish made under a person's signature, once popularly used as a forgery deterrent. Some famous Americans whose autograph often included a paraph: John Hancock, Benjamin Franklin, Sam Houston and Samuel Morse.

"Trivia Wanted" Category of the Month: Literature. Being a mathematician/statistician by academic training and a reader of nonfiction almost exclusively, your humble trivia author admits to a less-than-deep familiarity with the world of literature. So if you've know some fun facts on the subject, and long to see your name and hometown in newspapers throughout this great land, please let us know.


Mungo Park will be found as an entry in standard reference sources as:
A) A Scottish-born African explorer
B) An Australian soccer arena
C) A Korean-born Nobel Prize winner
D) A Canadian wildlife preserve

Previous answer: The two films whose entire credited cast was nominated for Academy Awards: "Give 'em Hell, Harry!" (James Whitmore) and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" (Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, George Segal, Sandy Dennis). (Thanks to Alan Dunn of Bellingham, Wash.)

TRIVIA FANS: Send the trivia questions you've always wanted answered, or original TriviaBits ideas of your own, with your full name and hometown, to Stan Newman at StanTrivia@aol.com or on a postcard to P.O. Box 69, Massapequa Park, NY 11762.



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Originally Published on Monday May 12, 2008

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Click on the title to read Stanley Newman's article from Newsday, "Exercise Your Puzzle Muscles", which explores the ways that puzzles can keep you mentally fit as you age.

Also, see the Editors's Note from this edition of Newsday recounting the history of the Newsday crossword puzzle and Stanley Newman's pivotal role in revolutionizing it.
 
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