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Quiz about This Quiz is Murder
Quiz about This Quiz is Murder

This Quiz is Murder!


Regardless of how well you know people in the headlines or the history books, you'll think this quiz is murder.

A multiple-choice quiz by sidnobls. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
sidnobls
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
308,846
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
935
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Name the MC, rapper, and winner of multiple Grammy awards who changed his stage name at least three times, but don't get all puffed up if you can do so. Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Which of these noted Rabbis was instrumental in establishing a community of Breslov Hassidim in Safed, Israel? Far removed from German royalty, his first name was Gedaliah. Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. What first child of the 24th President of the United States was allegedly the inspiration for a candy bar? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. When Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling wrote "K-ALS" on his shoe, it was a reference to finding a cure for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. What most famous sufferer of ALS now shares his name with the disease? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. What was the name of the Deaconess who actively protested Hitler's co-opting of the church to propagandize the Third Reich in Berlin during WWII? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. What British-Italian boy actor appeared in episodes of "Berkeley Square", "Grange Hill" and many others, Martino__? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Name "the other Winston" - a veteran of the Boer War and WWI who went on to serve as Governor of South Australia and then Victoria. Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Name the Irishman who, before his death at the age of 32, was a Member of Parliament, Finance Minister, Director of Army Intelligence, and Commander-in-Chief. Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Boston Marathon spectators over the last twenty years of the Twentieth Century witnessed the inspiring picture of a father pushing his son's wheelchair the 26.2 miles from start to finish. What was the last name shared by this team that competed in over 25 Boston Marathons? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. What name do the American TV Shows 'Maverick', 'The Fugitive', and 'The Rockford Files' all have in common? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Name the MC, rapper, and winner of multiple Grammy awards who changed his stage name at least three times, but don't get all puffed up if you can do so.

Answer: Combs

Sean Combs achieved stardom under the names Puff Daddy and P. Diddy, among others. He recorded and produced rap music records. Wallace, Broadus and Young were also rap artists, better known as Notorious B.I.G, Snoop Doggy Dogg and Dr. Dre, respectively. In addition to being an entertainer, Combs created the Sean John line of urban wear clothing.
2. Which of these noted Rabbis was instrumental in establishing a community of Breslov Hassidim in Safed, Israel? Far removed from German royalty, his first name was Gedaliah.

Answer: Koenig

Rabbi Gedaliah Aharon Koenig established the Breslover community in Safed, Israel. Breslov Hassidim seek a joyous relationship with God, using as their guide, the teachings of founder Rebbe Nachman. Capers Funnye Jr. was the first African-American member of the Chicago Board of Rabbis; Harold Kushner, was a rabbi, theologian, and writer; Zecharias Frankel was the 19th century father of Conservative Judaism.
3. What first child of the 24th President of the United States was allegedly the inspiration for a candy bar?

Answer: Ruth

"Baby" Ruth Cleveland was born to Grover Cleveland in 1891, between his two non-consecutive terms as United States President. She became sick with diphtheria, and died at the age of twelve at the former Summer White House in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, ending the President's desire to ever stay there again.

In 1904, her broken-hearted father sold the house known as Gray Gables. He died four years later. Two U.S. Presidents from Massachusetts had daughters named Caroline: John Adams, and John F. Kennedy. Louisa was the daughter of Massachusetts native John Quincy Adams. Mary Jane was no presidential daughter, but a peanut butter and taffy candy sold by the NECCO Company.
4. When Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling wrote "K-ALS" on his shoe, it was a reference to finding a cure for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. What most famous sufferer of ALS now shares his name with the disease?

Answer: Gehrig

ALS, is a progressive disease that is almost always fatal. Those who contract it lose control of their voluntary muscle movement, eventually requiring mechanical aid in respiration and feeding. Lou Gehrig retired in 1939 and recorded one of the most poignant speeches in sports history when he told a silent Yankee Stadium that despite the diagnosis, he considered himself the luckiest man in the whole world.

The man who for decades after held the record for consecutive games played - a testimony to his tremendous strength and physical condition at the outset lasted only two years with the disease, dying in 1941.

As of 2009, there was no known cure for this horrible disease, but sites such as www.alsa.org/schilling/ remained diligent in the fight against it. Lou Holtz was a football coach at Notre Dame University, Lou Merloni was a utility infielder for several major league baseball teams and Lou Ferrigno was a hearing impaired actor famous for portraying Marvel Comics hero The Incredible Hulk.
5. What was the name of the Deaconess who actively protested Hitler's co-opting of the church to propagandize the Third Reich in Berlin during WWII?

Answer: Meusel

The "Confessing Church" in Berlin was the underground Christian church opposed to the co-opting of the German Protestant Churches by the Nazi Party. Marga Meusel was an outspoken critic of the church for failing to protect the Berlin Jews. In the face of rising anti-Semitism of the mid 1930's, Meusel complained "Why does the church do nothing? Why does it allow unspeakable injustice to occur? ...What shall we one day answer to the question, where is thy brother Abel? The only answer that will be left to us, as well as to the Confessing Church, is the answer of Cain." ("Am I my brother's keeper?" Genesis 4:9)". (-Daniel Goldhagen, "Hitler's Willing Executioners") The famed theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a pastor in "die Bekennende Kirche".
6. What British-Italian boy actor appeared in episodes of "Berkeley Square", "Grange Hill" and many others, Martino__?

Answer: Lazzeri

Lazzeri is testimony to the age old advice that you don't need to have household recognition in order to make a good living in entertainment. Perhaps best known for stints on British soaps 'Grange Hill', 'Hollyoaks' and 'The Lodge', Lazzeri began working in television at the age of 15. Martin Scorsese, Martin Sheen and Martin Clunes have all done a bit more in TV than the soaps.
7. Name "the other Winston" - a veteran of the Boer War and WWI who went on to serve as Governor of South Australia and then Victoria.

Answer: Dugan

Major General Winston Joseph Dugan, 1st Baron Dugan of Victoria was a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, a Companion of the Order of Bath, was a recipient of the Distinguished Service Order, and a Knight of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem.

He carried his business cards in a wheelbarrow and had no difficulty getting appointed as Governor of two separate Australian states. Winston Churchill was the Prime Minister of England who, when he said "This was their finest hour," was not speaking of the international law firm Winston & Strawn, founded in Chicago in 1853. Nor was he praising longtime broadcaster Winston "Buddy" Deane, whose live Philadelphia teen dance show came to an end as a casualty of racism - much as in the recent musical hit "Hairspray".
8. Name the Irishman who, before his death at the age of 32, was a Member of Parliament, Finance Minister, Director of Army Intelligence, and Commander-in-Chief.

Answer: Collins

All are figures in the Irish war for independence and the subsequent civil war. Michael Collins was a revolutionary leader who negotiated the Anglo-Irish Treaty with Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George on behalf of Eamon de Valera and the "Free State" faction of the Irish revolution. Liam Lynch became an adversary in the civil war as a supporter of the Republican viewpoint which rejected the Treaty as a betrayal of the independence movement. Collins was killed in Cork in 1922; Lynch, the next spring, essentially ending the civil war.
9. Boston Marathon spectators over the last twenty years of the Twentieth Century witnessed the inspiring picture of a father pushing his son's wheelchair the 26.2 miles from start to finish. What was the last name shared by this team that competed in over 25 Boston Marathons?

Answer: Hoyt

Dick Hoyt, a retired Lt. Colonel in the Air National Guard and Rick provided an inspiring sight for thousands upon thousands of runners and spectators in Boston Marathons dating from 1977. Many times, son Rick, who is challenged with Cerebral Palsy, could be heard to coach his father as they ran. Dick Hoyt pushed Rick in an adapted wheelchair.
10. What name do the American TV Shows 'Maverick', 'The Fugitive', and 'The Rockford Files' all have in common?

Answer: Huggins

Bret Maverick was one of four Maverick brothers (the others were Bart, Beau and Brent) played by James Garner, who also played the title role in 'The Rockford Files'. Dr. Richard Kimble was the escapee/doctor in search of the "one-armed man" in the TV series 'The Fugitive.' All three of these classic series were written by Roy Huggins (July 18, 1914 - April 3, 2002) who was a writer and producer of several American television series.

The answers to Questions 1-8 make up a group called Murderer's Row - the nickname for the 1927 NY Yankees batting lineup - assailed by some as the greatest batting order ever assembled. Center fielder Earle Combs ( .356 BA, 6 HR, 64 RBI) led off; short stop Mark Koenig (.285 BA, 3 HR, 62 RBI) batted second; and the immortal right fielder Babe Ruth (.356 BA, 60 HR, 164 RBI) batted third. First baseman Lou Gehrig (.373 BA, 47 HR, 175 RBI) hit cleanup; followed by left fielder Bob Meusel (.337 BA, 8 HR, 103 RBI); one of the greatest hitting second basemen of all time, Tony Lazzeri (.309 BA, 18 HR, 102 RBI) hitting sixth; third baseman Joe Dugan (.269 BA, 2 HR, 43 RBI) seventh and catcher Pat Collins (.275 BA, 7 HR, 36 RBI) batting in the eight hole. The pitcher batted ninth, as there was no designated hitter in 1927. Waite Hoyt was the pitching staff's ace, with a 1927 record of 22-7, and the second best earned run average in the American league - 2.63. Miller Huggins was the Yankees ' manager. The Yankees won 110 games that year and swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World Series.
Source: Author sidnobls

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor Snowman before going online.
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