Game #147: The Gospel Truth
Posted: Mon Nov 03, 2014 9:09 am
Game #147: The Gospel Truth
Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Match them into 50 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Then, match each pair with one of the Associated Words.
I don’t think the Tangredi here is that hard, but you might find a few of the people in this puzzle to be more obscure than usual. That’s the way it goes.
1. This President swept into office with over 60% of the popular vote – still the biggest landslide since popular vote was recorded.
2. Though his oeuvre consists of only nine films, he was arguably the most influential film director after Griffith and, in 1925, put together what many (including me) consider to be the single greatest movie sequence of all time.
3. He was the first singer born in the twentieth century to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame
4. The sixth and last quarterback selected in the first round of the historic 1983 NFL draft, he currently has the fifth highest number of career wins of any quarterback in NFL history.
5. This nineteenth century German writer was known for his adventure tales for juveniles, including a series of novels set in the American west featuring the heroic Apache Winnetou.
6. His invention of a punch card tabulator, as well as his founding of one of the companies that eventually became IBM, combined to make him the father of modern data processing.
7. DJMQ:
When Martha Graham and Baroness Rothschild founded a dance company in Tel Aviv in 1964, they selected this dancer as its prima ballerina and choreographer.
Another DJMQ appears at #53.
8. Founder of the first uniquely American school of art, he gave us paintings such as this one:

9. The first president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, this onetime garment cutter went on to co-found both the CIO and the American Labor party.
10. Known for influential works on Gnosticism and bioethics, this German-born philosopher once received a standing ovation when he publicly repudiated his onetime teacher Martin Heidegger.
11. During his tenure as president of General Motors, it became the first corporation to earn a billion dollars in a year, and he himself was named Man of the Year by Time.
12. This American economist received the Nobel Prize “for having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behavior and interaction” – including a controversial model of “rational addiction.”
13. At age 22, he took part in a botched attempt to assassinate his country’s Prime Minister; at age 42, he became that country’s President; at age 66, he was deposed; at age 69, he came to a rather nasty end.
14. In 2002, the USMC granted this actor an honorary post-service promotion to a rank equal to that of his most famous character.
15. This soprano made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1935 in Die Walküre – and when the performance was broadcast over the radio, intermission host Geraldine Farrar threw away her prepared notes and announced that a star was born. (She was right.)
16. A state capital is named after this Revolutionary War officer, one of only ten Continental Army generals to die in battle.
17. This Ukrainian writer’s stories earned him the soubriquet “the Jewish Mark Twain.” (Reportedly, Twain was quite pleased with the comparison.)
18. Baseball Hall of Fame, Part One: Elected to the hall by the Negro Leagues Committee, he is today the oldest living member of a World Series championship team.
19. In 1871, this chief meteorologist for the National Weather Service personally prepared the very first official weather forecast.
20. This astronaut, who took the first photograph of an earthrise, later stated, "We came all this way to explore the Moon, and the most important thing is that we discovered the Earth.”
21. Shortly after being appointed the creative director of Bottega Veneta, this German fashion designer presented his first collection, which consisted solely of accessories.
22. Created by Roy Crane in 1924, this bumbling storekeeper was the eponymous star of America’s first action/adventure comic strip with a continuing story line.
23. This Romanian-born actor is best remembered for his screen and television portrayals of an O. Henry character that had previously earned another actor an Oscar.
24. This Norwegian was succeeded in office by a Swede, a Burmese, an Austrian, a Peruvian, an Egyptian, a Ghanan, and a South Korean.
25. Now aged 90 and living in a Chicago retirement community, this German-born poet won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Alive Together: New & Selected Poems.
26. A member of the NHL Hall of Fame, he coached the Boston Bruins to their first Stanley Cup win in 29 years.
27. As lead singer of the Enchanters, this soul singer had his biggest chart success with the song “Cry Baby.”
28. Once considered the world’s most dangerous terrorist, he died of a gunshot wound – possibly self-inflicted – in his Baghdad apartment in 2002. (By then, Americans weren’t paying much attention.)
29. In 1995, this Brit finally proved a 358 year-old theorem concerning the following equation:

And there was much rejoicing in the land.
30. This sportswriter helped create a legend when he wrote, “In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden.”
31. This architect’s crowning achievement can be seen on the back of a $50 bill.
32. Considered the world’s leading anti-pornography crusader, this British feminist considers porn a public health issue that needs to be contained by legal censorship.
33. In 1556, this Italian priest founded the Congregation of the Oratory, a brotherhood of secular clergy bound together by no formal vows.
34. This real estate mogul is ranked #97 on the Forbes list of the richest – but he ultimately owes it all to birdseed, fish food, and hamster wheels.
35. He was the third actor to appear in the fourth slot in the opening credits of Law and Order.
36. Despite intermittent bouts of senile dementia, this Supreme Court justice was determined to beat John Marshall’s longevity record and succeeded: his 34-year tenure is still the second-longest in the Court’s history.
37. This playwright won both a Pulitzer and a Tony for his dark comedy about the dysfunctional Weston family of Pawhuska, Oklahoma.
38. Despite a short life – he died in 1916 at the age of 43 – this German composer produced an impressive volume of orchestral, organ, and vocal works, but is probably best known for his “Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart.”
39. This Vermont native shared a Nobel Prize with two other chemists "for their development and use of molecules with structure-specific interactions of high selectivity." (No, I don’t know what that means, so shut up.)
40. This American golfer won his only major championship in 2009 after a four-hole playoff with Tom Watson.
41. In 1971, a court martial acquitted this infantry captain of war crimes; the lieutenant under his command did not get off so easily.
42. The resume of this New York-based child psychologist includes hosting a nationally syndicated radio show, acting as a contributing editor to Family Circle,, and authoring such books as Not in Front of the Children.
43. In a major novel by Henry James, she tries to solve all her romantic and financial problems by arranging for the man she loves to become engaged to a terminally ill heiress. It does not end well.
44. During his fifteen year tenure as co-anchor of an NBC news magazine, he interviewed figures ranging from Boris Yeltsin to Jeffrey Dahmer, and won an Emmy for his interview with NYC subway vigilante Bernhard Goetz.
45. One of the founding Yippies, he was proudly clubbed on the head during the 1968 DNC, but missed out on his chance to become one of the Chicago Seven. (He had to settle for ‘unindicted co-conspirator.’)
46. Thanks to his talkative bride, you now know more about this actor’s impressive genitalia and sexual prowess than you ever knew you wanted.
47. This Harlem Renaissance author only produced two novels, but has recently enjoyed a revival of interest thanks to the racial and gender themes in her 1929 novel about a mixed-race woman passing for white.
48. He overthrew one of Africa’s longest-reigning dictators in 1997, was himself assassinated after three years as president, and was immediately succeeded by his son (who still holds the office today).
49. She married for the first time five years after her tenure as U.S. First Lady ended.
50. This singer’s career got an unexpected jump start when, at the age of 15, he was hastily recruited to fill in for Buddy Holly.
51. This physicist and his colleague Robert Wilson won the Nobel Prize for their discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation, which played a major role in the formation of the Big Bang theory. (No, not the tv show.)
52. HBaseball Hall of Fame, Part Two: As an Indian, he was part of one of the best pitching rotations of the 1950s, but he won his only Cy Young Award during his shorter tenure with the White Sox.
53. DJMQ
After parting ways with the Denishawn School in 1928, she began to develop her own approach to modern dance based on a principle she called "fall and recovery."
54. In the 1930s, he was the fourth and last outlaw to earn the title Public Enemy Number One, and the only one of the four to die in bed.
55. When he was seventeen, he borrowed $1,000 from a friend to start a sandwich shop – which grew to become the #2 chain restaurant in America.
56. One of the leading Flemish mannerist of the 16th century, this painter founded the Guild of the Romanists, a society of Antwerp artists and nobles who had visited Rome.
57. Now a canonized martyr saint, this Carmelite nun spent a good part of her time in the convent attempting to synthesize the philosophies of Thomas Aquinas and her onetime teacher Edmund Husserl.
58. Two years before taking on his defining television role, this actor starred in the only episode of The Twilight Zone that is still withdrawn from syndication in the United States.
59. England’s fifth Astronomer Royal, he is best known for developing a method of measuring longitude by the position of the moon.
60. He was the first Prime Minister of Israel to be born in Israel.
61. In addition to being one of the leading Elizabethan pamphleteers, he also wrote verse, drama, one of the first English picaresque novels – and some notable erotica, including these immortal lines written from a female viewpoint: “My little dildo shall suplye their kind/A knave that moves as light as leaves by winde/That bendeth not, nor fouldeth anie deale/But stands a s stiff as he were made of steele/And plays at peacock twixt my leggs right blythe.”
62. At the age of 64, this swimmer became the first person confirmed to have swum from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage.
63. This hip-hop artist has won three Grammy Awards, but that didn’t impress the Electoral Commission of his native country: they rejected his bid to run for president on the grounds that he no longer met residency requirements.
64. Son of Cole and Nana, he was for ten years the main character of a popular comic strip – that is, until 1929, when his younger sister’s new beau shanghaied the whole thing.
65. A major figure in the Norman conquest of Ireland, this nobleman was created first Earl of Ulster by King John.
66. This entrepreneur opened her first salon in New York City in 1915, launching a lifelong rivalry with another dame who was already working the same racket.
67. In his first book, The Immense Journey, this American anthropologist wrote, "There is no logical reason for the existence of a snowflake any more than there is for evolution. It is an apparition from that mysterious shadow world beyond nature, that final world which contains—if anything contains—the explanation of men and catfish and green leaves." (No, I don’t know what that means, either.)
68. This 13th century Italian saint penned what is generally considered the first monastic rule written by a woman.
69. This perpetual starlet did have a number of tv and film roles, but is far better known for her marriage to an infamous maker of sexploitation films and her showy appearances at the Academy Awards.
70. He is currently serving a life sentence in Rimonim Prison for killing someone who is the answer to one of the previous clues.
71. His most famous voyage began on April 28, 1947, and ended 101 days later.
72. This playwright was the first Latino to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
73. In a seminal 1942 book, this evolutionary biologist proposed a solution to Darwin’s “species problem” by defining a species as a group that can reproduce only among themselves. s
74. A leading exemplar of New Orleans jazz, this influential trombonist developed the “tailgate” style of improvisation in which the role of the trombone is to play a rhythmic line underneath the trumpets and cornets.
75. This philanthropist – who supported such institutions as the New York Public Library, the Animal Medical Center, and the Lighthouse for the Blind – ended up becoming the unwitting poster child for a totally different social problem.
76. Phineas T. Barnum’s offer to buy this political leader’s bath tub was rejected in favor of an offer from the Paris wax museum where it still resides today.
77. This shooting guard was a two-time All Star for the Chicago Bulls, but in his sixth season – after a new coach decided to bench him – he was traded to a team he himself would later coach.
78. Recipient of the Legion of Honor, this chef is best known for his 43-year tenure at a New York restaurant that was independently ranked the best in America by Julia Child, Playboy, and the Zagat survey.
79. As commander of the Army of the James, this Union general led a march on Appomattox Courthouse that helped force Lee’s surrender.
80. This cadet was by far the most famous attendee of a left-wing youth conference held last year in Quito, Ecuador.
81. His Famous Last Words were, “Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die.”
82. She got by far the most public attention of any baby born June 15, 2013. Poor kid.
83. One of the original members of Group f.64, this American photographer was best known for her in-depth studies of plant life, but was also hired by Vanity Fair to shoot a series of portraits of movie stars without makeup.
84. Sometimes touted as France’s answer to Marilyn Monroe, this actress is best remembered for her eponymous role as the mistress of Ludwig I of Bavaria.
85. This German scientist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to inorganic chemistry, such as the synthesis of indigo, the discovery of pthalein dyes, and research into uric acid derivatives. (It was a dirty job, but somebody had to do it.)
86. This American inventor and entrepreneur founded the Swiss American Aviation Corporation, one of the first companies to manufacture private luxury aircraft. (It was later renamed for him.)
87. This pop composer and tv personality has received six Emmy awards for his sports themes, as well as three gold albums. (He’s also tall. Really tall.)
88. Less than a month ago, the Toronto Maple Leafs recalled this winger from the minors – no doubt hoping he’ll do better than last season, when he scored three goals, earned ten points, averaged less than nine minutes, and got into four fights.
89. This 19th century German historian – whose works included studies of the popes, the Reformation, and the Ottoman empire – played a key role in developing an empirical approach to history based on the objective use of primary sources.
90. A leading member of a group of fantasy writers who call their style the “New Weird,” this British writer won the Hugo award in 2010 for a police procedural novel set in two cities that actually occupy the same space, except that the citizens of one are not allowed (under threat of terrible punishment) to acknowledge the existence of the other. Got that?
91. In a famous – or infamous – anti-immigration speech, this conservative British politician warned, “As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding. Like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River Tiber foaming with much blood.’ That tragic and intractable phenomenon which we watch with horror on the other side of the Atlantic but which there is interwoven with the history and existence of the States itself, is coming upon us here by our own volition and our own neglect. Indeed, it has all but come. In numerical terms, it will be of American proportions long before the end of the century. Only resolute and urgent action will avert it even now.” (He did not, however, suggest building a fence.)
92. This long-time cartoonist for Look and the New Yorker achieved his greatest popularity with his creation of the chubby, fun-loving monk shown here:

93. He was working in the fields one spring day when he "heard a loud noise in the heavens, and the Spirit instantly appeared to me and said the Serpent was loosened, and Christ had laid down the yoke he had borne for the sins of men, and that I should take it on and fight against the Serpent, for the time was fast approaching when the first should be last and the last should be first." Three years later, he did something about it. It did not end well.
94. Her work on the catalytic conversion of glycogen made her the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
95. In his magnum opus Ars generalis ultima, this 14th century Catalan mystic and philosopher formulated a system that could answer any argument or question through the use of charts and visual aids. (At least, that’s the nearest I can get to understanding what the hell he was doing.)
96. One of a handful of actors to net three consecutive Oscar nominations, he is also the only actor to win an Oscar for playing a South American.
97. Baseball Hall of Fame, Part Three: This pitcher holds the record for victories after the age of 40, and was also the last MLB pitcher to both win and lose 20 games in the same season.
98. Taking over the baton from Stokowski, this conductor spent a near-record 44 years leading the same orchestra.
99. The hero of this writer’s most famous novel was accidentally circumcised by a falling sash while he was urinating out the window. (This was not even close to the weirdest moment in the novel.)
100. His conquest of the Sumerian city-states made him the first true emperor in recorded history.
ASSOCIATED WORDS
IQ
JFK
1 of 5
666
Animals
Bull
Caterpillar
Broncos
Raiders
Bombay
Toronto
Detroit
Atlanta
Memphis
Vermont
New Jersey
Clara
Alice
Joy
Lily
Suzanne
Tom
Raul
Diego
Diablo
Walt
Walton
Fleming
Brooks
Masters
Hull
Karenina
Mystic
Zombie
Chanteuse
Bandleader
Soup
Chocolat
Chips
Opium
Magnificent
Happy
Lost
Drift
Remember
Court
Cabin
Gallows
Compulsion
Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Match them into 50 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Then, match each pair with one of the Associated Words.
I don’t think the Tangredi here is that hard, but you might find a few of the people in this puzzle to be more obscure than usual. That’s the way it goes.
1. This President swept into office with over 60% of the popular vote – still the biggest landslide since popular vote was recorded.
2. Though his oeuvre consists of only nine films, he was arguably the most influential film director after Griffith and, in 1925, put together what many (including me) consider to be the single greatest movie sequence of all time.
3. He was the first singer born in the twentieth century to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame
4. The sixth and last quarterback selected in the first round of the historic 1983 NFL draft, he currently has the fifth highest number of career wins of any quarterback in NFL history.
5. This nineteenth century German writer was known for his adventure tales for juveniles, including a series of novels set in the American west featuring the heroic Apache Winnetou.
6. His invention of a punch card tabulator, as well as his founding of one of the companies that eventually became IBM, combined to make him the father of modern data processing.
7. DJMQ:
When Martha Graham and Baroness Rothschild founded a dance company in Tel Aviv in 1964, they selected this dancer as its prima ballerina and choreographer.
Another DJMQ appears at #53.
8. Founder of the first uniquely American school of art, he gave us paintings such as this one:

9. The first president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, this onetime garment cutter went on to co-found both the CIO and the American Labor party.
10. Known for influential works on Gnosticism and bioethics, this German-born philosopher once received a standing ovation when he publicly repudiated his onetime teacher Martin Heidegger.
11. During his tenure as president of General Motors, it became the first corporation to earn a billion dollars in a year, and he himself was named Man of the Year by Time.
12. This American economist received the Nobel Prize “for having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behavior and interaction” – including a controversial model of “rational addiction.”
13. At age 22, he took part in a botched attempt to assassinate his country’s Prime Minister; at age 42, he became that country’s President; at age 66, he was deposed; at age 69, he came to a rather nasty end.
14. In 2002, the USMC granted this actor an honorary post-service promotion to a rank equal to that of his most famous character.
15. This soprano made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1935 in Die Walküre – and when the performance was broadcast over the radio, intermission host Geraldine Farrar threw away her prepared notes and announced that a star was born. (She was right.)
16. A state capital is named after this Revolutionary War officer, one of only ten Continental Army generals to die in battle.
17. This Ukrainian writer’s stories earned him the soubriquet “the Jewish Mark Twain.” (Reportedly, Twain was quite pleased with the comparison.)
18. Baseball Hall of Fame, Part One: Elected to the hall by the Negro Leagues Committee, he is today the oldest living member of a World Series championship team.
19. In 1871, this chief meteorologist for the National Weather Service personally prepared the very first official weather forecast.
20. This astronaut, who took the first photograph of an earthrise, later stated, "We came all this way to explore the Moon, and the most important thing is that we discovered the Earth.”
21. Shortly after being appointed the creative director of Bottega Veneta, this German fashion designer presented his first collection, which consisted solely of accessories.
22. Created by Roy Crane in 1924, this bumbling storekeeper was the eponymous star of America’s first action/adventure comic strip with a continuing story line.
23. This Romanian-born actor is best remembered for his screen and television portrayals of an O. Henry character that had previously earned another actor an Oscar.
24. This Norwegian was succeeded in office by a Swede, a Burmese, an Austrian, a Peruvian, an Egyptian, a Ghanan, and a South Korean.
25. Now aged 90 and living in a Chicago retirement community, this German-born poet won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Alive Together: New & Selected Poems.
26. A member of the NHL Hall of Fame, he coached the Boston Bruins to their first Stanley Cup win in 29 years.
27. As lead singer of the Enchanters, this soul singer had his biggest chart success with the song “Cry Baby.”
28. Once considered the world’s most dangerous terrorist, he died of a gunshot wound – possibly self-inflicted – in his Baghdad apartment in 2002. (By then, Americans weren’t paying much attention.)
29. In 1995, this Brit finally proved a 358 year-old theorem concerning the following equation:

And there was much rejoicing in the land.
30. This sportswriter helped create a legend when he wrote, “In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden.”
31. This architect’s crowning achievement can be seen on the back of a $50 bill.
32. Considered the world’s leading anti-pornography crusader, this British feminist considers porn a public health issue that needs to be contained by legal censorship.
33. In 1556, this Italian priest founded the Congregation of the Oratory, a brotherhood of secular clergy bound together by no formal vows.
34. This real estate mogul is ranked #97 on the Forbes list of the richest – but he ultimately owes it all to birdseed, fish food, and hamster wheels.
35. He was the third actor to appear in the fourth slot in the opening credits of Law and Order.
36. Despite intermittent bouts of senile dementia, this Supreme Court justice was determined to beat John Marshall’s longevity record and succeeded: his 34-year tenure is still the second-longest in the Court’s history.
37. This playwright won both a Pulitzer and a Tony for his dark comedy about the dysfunctional Weston family of Pawhuska, Oklahoma.
38. Despite a short life – he died in 1916 at the age of 43 – this German composer produced an impressive volume of orchestral, organ, and vocal works, but is probably best known for his “Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart.”
39. This Vermont native shared a Nobel Prize with two other chemists "for their development and use of molecules with structure-specific interactions of high selectivity." (No, I don’t know what that means, so shut up.)
40. This American golfer won his only major championship in 2009 after a four-hole playoff with Tom Watson.
41. In 1971, a court martial acquitted this infantry captain of war crimes; the lieutenant under his command did not get off so easily.
42. The resume of this New York-based child psychologist includes hosting a nationally syndicated radio show, acting as a contributing editor to Family Circle,, and authoring such books as Not in Front of the Children.
43. In a major novel by Henry James, she tries to solve all her romantic and financial problems by arranging for the man she loves to become engaged to a terminally ill heiress. It does not end well.
44. During his fifteen year tenure as co-anchor of an NBC news magazine, he interviewed figures ranging from Boris Yeltsin to Jeffrey Dahmer, and won an Emmy for his interview with NYC subway vigilante Bernhard Goetz.
45. One of the founding Yippies, he was proudly clubbed on the head during the 1968 DNC, but missed out on his chance to become one of the Chicago Seven. (He had to settle for ‘unindicted co-conspirator.’)
46. Thanks to his talkative bride, you now know more about this actor’s impressive genitalia and sexual prowess than you ever knew you wanted.
47. This Harlem Renaissance author only produced two novels, but has recently enjoyed a revival of interest thanks to the racial and gender themes in her 1929 novel about a mixed-race woman passing for white.
48. He overthrew one of Africa’s longest-reigning dictators in 1997, was himself assassinated after three years as president, and was immediately succeeded by his son (who still holds the office today).
49. She married for the first time five years after her tenure as U.S. First Lady ended.
50. This singer’s career got an unexpected jump start when, at the age of 15, he was hastily recruited to fill in for Buddy Holly.
51. This physicist and his colleague Robert Wilson won the Nobel Prize for their discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation, which played a major role in the formation of the Big Bang theory. (No, not the tv show.)
52. HBaseball Hall of Fame, Part Two: As an Indian, he was part of one of the best pitching rotations of the 1950s, but he won his only Cy Young Award during his shorter tenure with the White Sox.
53. DJMQ
After parting ways with the Denishawn School in 1928, she began to develop her own approach to modern dance based on a principle she called "fall and recovery."
54. In the 1930s, he was the fourth and last outlaw to earn the title Public Enemy Number One, and the only one of the four to die in bed.
55. When he was seventeen, he borrowed $1,000 from a friend to start a sandwich shop – which grew to become the #2 chain restaurant in America.
56. One of the leading Flemish mannerist of the 16th century, this painter founded the Guild of the Romanists, a society of Antwerp artists and nobles who had visited Rome.
57. Now a canonized martyr saint, this Carmelite nun spent a good part of her time in the convent attempting to synthesize the philosophies of Thomas Aquinas and her onetime teacher Edmund Husserl.
58. Two years before taking on his defining television role, this actor starred in the only episode of The Twilight Zone that is still withdrawn from syndication in the United States.
59. England’s fifth Astronomer Royal, he is best known for developing a method of measuring longitude by the position of the moon.
60. He was the first Prime Minister of Israel to be born in Israel.
61. In addition to being one of the leading Elizabethan pamphleteers, he also wrote verse, drama, one of the first English picaresque novels – and some notable erotica, including these immortal lines written from a female viewpoint: “My little dildo shall suplye their kind/A knave that moves as light as leaves by winde/That bendeth not, nor fouldeth anie deale/But stands a s stiff as he were made of steele/And plays at peacock twixt my leggs right blythe.”
62. At the age of 64, this swimmer became the first person confirmed to have swum from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage.
63. This hip-hop artist has won three Grammy Awards, but that didn’t impress the Electoral Commission of his native country: they rejected his bid to run for president on the grounds that he no longer met residency requirements.
64. Son of Cole and Nana, he was for ten years the main character of a popular comic strip – that is, until 1929, when his younger sister’s new beau shanghaied the whole thing.
65. A major figure in the Norman conquest of Ireland, this nobleman was created first Earl of Ulster by King John.
66. This entrepreneur opened her first salon in New York City in 1915, launching a lifelong rivalry with another dame who was already working the same racket.
67. In his first book, The Immense Journey, this American anthropologist wrote, "There is no logical reason for the existence of a snowflake any more than there is for evolution. It is an apparition from that mysterious shadow world beyond nature, that final world which contains—if anything contains—the explanation of men and catfish and green leaves." (No, I don’t know what that means, either.)
68. This 13th century Italian saint penned what is generally considered the first monastic rule written by a woman.
69. This perpetual starlet did have a number of tv and film roles, but is far better known for her marriage to an infamous maker of sexploitation films and her showy appearances at the Academy Awards.
70. He is currently serving a life sentence in Rimonim Prison for killing someone who is the answer to one of the previous clues.
71. His most famous voyage began on April 28, 1947, and ended 101 days later.
72. This playwright was the first Latino to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
73. In a seminal 1942 book, this evolutionary biologist proposed a solution to Darwin’s “species problem” by defining a species as a group that can reproduce only among themselves. s
74. A leading exemplar of New Orleans jazz, this influential trombonist developed the “tailgate” style of improvisation in which the role of the trombone is to play a rhythmic line underneath the trumpets and cornets.
75. This philanthropist – who supported such institutions as the New York Public Library, the Animal Medical Center, and the Lighthouse for the Blind – ended up becoming the unwitting poster child for a totally different social problem.
76. Phineas T. Barnum’s offer to buy this political leader’s bath tub was rejected in favor of an offer from the Paris wax museum where it still resides today.
77. This shooting guard was a two-time All Star for the Chicago Bulls, but in his sixth season – after a new coach decided to bench him – he was traded to a team he himself would later coach.
78. Recipient of the Legion of Honor, this chef is best known for his 43-year tenure at a New York restaurant that was independently ranked the best in America by Julia Child, Playboy, and the Zagat survey.
79. As commander of the Army of the James, this Union general led a march on Appomattox Courthouse that helped force Lee’s surrender.
80. This cadet was by far the most famous attendee of a left-wing youth conference held last year in Quito, Ecuador.
81. His Famous Last Words were, “Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die.”
82. She got by far the most public attention of any baby born June 15, 2013. Poor kid.
83. One of the original members of Group f.64, this American photographer was best known for her in-depth studies of plant life, but was also hired by Vanity Fair to shoot a series of portraits of movie stars without makeup.
84. Sometimes touted as France’s answer to Marilyn Monroe, this actress is best remembered for her eponymous role as the mistress of Ludwig I of Bavaria.
85. This German scientist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to inorganic chemistry, such as the synthesis of indigo, the discovery of pthalein dyes, and research into uric acid derivatives. (It was a dirty job, but somebody had to do it.)
86. This American inventor and entrepreneur founded the Swiss American Aviation Corporation, one of the first companies to manufacture private luxury aircraft. (It was later renamed for him.)
87. This pop composer and tv personality has received six Emmy awards for his sports themes, as well as three gold albums. (He’s also tall. Really tall.)
88. Less than a month ago, the Toronto Maple Leafs recalled this winger from the minors – no doubt hoping he’ll do better than last season, when he scored three goals, earned ten points, averaged less than nine minutes, and got into four fights.
89. This 19th century German historian – whose works included studies of the popes, the Reformation, and the Ottoman empire – played a key role in developing an empirical approach to history based on the objective use of primary sources.
90. A leading member of a group of fantasy writers who call their style the “New Weird,” this British writer won the Hugo award in 2010 for a police procedural novel set in two cities that actually occupy the same space, except that the citizens of one are not allowed (under threat of terrible punishment) to acknowledge the existence of the other. Got that?
91. In a famous – or infamous – anti-immigration speech, this conservative British politician warned, “As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding. Like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River Tiber foaming with much blood.’ That tragic and intractable phenomenon which we watch with horror on the other side of the Atlantic but which there is interwoven with the history and existence of the States itself, is coming upon us here by our own volition and our own neglect. Indeed, it has all but come. In numerical terms, it will be of American proportions long before the end of the century. Only resolute and urgent action will avert it even now.” (He did not, however, suggest building a fence.)
92. This long-time cartoonist for Look and the New Yorker achieved his greatest popularity with his creation of the chubby, fun-loving monk shown here:

93. He was working in the fields one spring day when he "heard a loud noise in the heavens, and the Spirit instantly appeared to me and said the Serpent was loosened, and Christ had laid down the yoke he had borne for the sins of men, and that I should take it on and fight against the Serpent, for the time was fast approaching when the first should be last and the last should be first." Three years later, he did something about it. It did not end well.
94. Her work on the catalytic conversion of glycogen made her the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
95. In his magnum opus Ars generalis ultima, this 14th century Catalan mystic and philosopher formulated a system that could answer any argument or question through the use of charts and visual aids. (At least, that’s the nearest I can get to understanding what the hell he was doing.)
96. One of a handful of actors to net three consecutive Oscar nominations, he is also the only actor to win an Oscar for playing a South American.
97. Baseball Hall of Fame, Part Three: This pitcher holds the record for victories after the age of 40, and was also the last MLB pitcher to both win and lose 20 games in the same season.
98. Taking over the baton from Stokowski, this conductor spent a near-record 44 years leading the same orchestra.
99. The hero of this writer’s most famous novel was accidentally circumcised by a falling sash while he was urinating out the window. (This was not even close to the weirdest moment in the novel.)
100. His conquest of the Sumerian city-states made him the first true emperor in recorded history.
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