Game #208: A Listless Game
Posted: Tue Sep 20, 2022 8:22 am
Anyone caught trying to inject political commentary into this game will be shot on sight.
Game #208: A Listless Game
Identify the 99 people in the clues below and match them into 33 trios according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. No names will be used twice.
Alternate solutions are likely, but only one combination will use all the names.
1. Though not generally known for his writings on social etiquette, he did offer this useful clarification: "A revolution is not a dinner party."
2. Even members of Congress from the segregated South voted in favor of funding a national monument to this man – the first such monument honoring an African American.
3. He is the only player to be named both MVP and Coach of the Year by the NBA
4. He won 21 Tony Awards for producing and/or directing works by Kern and Hammerstein, Bock and Harnick, Kander and Ebb, Adler and Ross, Stephen Sondheim, and Andrew Lloyd Weber.
5. After jumping ship in 1842, he lived for a time among the people of the Marquesas Islands – an adventure which provided the material for his first two books and gained him the reputation as the "man who lived among the cannibals.”.
6. A highly uncharacteristic rock ballad on his group’s final album was written in memory of his five-year-old son, who had died the year before.
7. He admonished his fellow business leaders that “the man who dies leaving behind him many millions of available wealth which was his to administer during life will pass away ‘unwept, unhonored, and unsung,’ no matter to what uses he leaves the dross which he cannot take with him. Of such as these the public verdict will then be: ‘The man who dies thus rich dies disgraced.’”
8. This activist stirred considerable controversy when he commented that the assassination of John F Kennedy was a case of “chickens coming home to roost.” (But, then, almost everything he said stirred controversy.)
9. This artist is best known for two historical paintings depicting the deaths of British military heroes at the moment of their greatest triumphs.
10. JMMQ (Judy Murphy Memorial Question): A Prima Ballerina during her 20 years with the Royal Ballet, she left them in 2001 to serve as a Creative Director for the Royal Opera House.
Another JMMQ appears at #69.
11. He took over Thomas Gage’s command in 1775; things didn’t go well after that.
12. This influential American sociologist did not coin the term “post-industrial society,” but in a 1973 book he correctly forecast that such a society would be information-led and service-oriented.
13. This physician completes a list that also includes Robert Morris, John Morton, George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, James Wilson, George Ross … and, of course, Benjamin Franklin.
14. This English physicist shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work in developing magnetic resonance imaging.
15. In his nine seasons with the Denver Broncos, this Hall of Famer amassed a rushing total of 6,323 yards – at the time the 7th highest in the NFL.
16. This beloved Danish writer was not so beloved by Charles Dickens, who reportedly modeled the character of Uriah Heep on him.
17. This actor’s last two completed film roles were adaptations of works by Ernest Hemingway and Agatha Christie.
18. The career of this jazz trumpeter took off in the late 1950s when he began playing with Ornette Coleman; three decades later, his son and stepdaughter made their own appearances on the pop charts.
19. She is the linchpin of a romantic quadrangle formed by her husband Charles and her lovers Rodolphe and Léon.
20. In a 1900 obituary, the New York Times called this proponent of Reform Judaism “the foremost rabbi in America.”
21. In addition to his influence on political thought, education, and the development of Romanticism, this philosopher was also an advocate of breastfeeding.
22. Though she was hanged only for the poisoning of her stepson, she is believed to have murdered three of her four husbands and eleven of her thirteen children for their insurance. (She died of slow strangulation rather than a quick neck break, due to a ‘mistake’ on the part of the hangman.)
23. Longtime president of the organization Consumer Watchdog, this activist is also the author of such books as The Progressive’s Guide to Raising Hell.
24. In 1918, he sent an infamous telegram in which he recommended the public hanging of “no fewer than one hundred known kulaks, fat cats, and bloodsuckers.”
25. This American shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discoveries regarding ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. (No, I haven’t any idea what that means.)
26. A classic Honeymooners episode about Ralph’s efforts to find the perfect gift for Alice was one of many works to borrow the basic premise of this author’s most famous work.
27. In 1965, a radio station in New York aired a special version of the latest hit by a popular vocal group in which this lead singer held a single note for over a minute. (No, it wasn’t Ethel Merman.)
28. This American tennis player won 18 Grand Slam championships between 1936 and 1940.
29. This actor lost the role in Ghostbusters that eventually went to his colleague Rick Moranis, but at least he got to appear in the music video.
30. In a 1908 English novel, he became one of the earliest – and still one of the greatest – portraits of a car freak and reckless driver in literary history.
31. This economist is best remembered for something he reportedly sketched on a cocktail napkin during a 1974 meeting with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.
32. In addition to launching the “It’s Get Better” campaign, this columnist and activist was responsible for Rick Santorum’s “Google problem.”
33. She was the first First Lady to visit Sesame Street.
34. Son of a wealthy Kentucky slaveholding family, he converted to abolitionism while a student at Yale after hearing William Lloyd Garrison speak; he was later appointed ambassador to Russia by Abraham Lincoln and helped win the tsar’s support for the Union cause.
35. This French-American artist gained renown for her installations and monumental sculptures, especially a 30-feet high spider made of steel, bronze and marble.
36. After his lithography business failed in 1860, this businessman found a new way to succeed at the game of life.
37. In 1934, this American politician proposed a radical economic plan, the provisions of which included a cap on inheritances, incomes, and private fortunes; free higher education for all; a four-day work week with four weeks of paid vacation a year; and free medical service to all citizens.
38. Though this singer charted five number one and 18 top-ten singles on the Billboard country charts, her only crossover hit was a 1970 hit that went to #3 on the pop chart.
39. In addition to describing the genetic condition that now bears his name, this British physician was a pioneer in improving the treatment of the mentally disabled.
40. Though some critics find his lyricism ‘slow’ and others accuse him of glorifying poverty, he is still considered his country’s greatest filmmaker – placed by no less than Martin Scorsese on a par with his contemporaries Kurosawa, Bergman, and Fellini.
41. More than a century later, this poet and playwright remains the only Belgian to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature.
42. The high point of this pitcher’s nine-year career with the Pirates was a no-hitter against the Mets in 1969; the low point was a wild pitch in 1972 that sent the Reds into the World Series.
43. After a 1796 expedition down the Niger River, this explorer wrote a book theorizing that the Congo and the Niger eventually merged into a single river – a theory that was finally disproven until 1830.
44. He was the officer in charge of the defense of U.S. military installations in Hawaii on December 7, 1941. (The Senate absolved him of all responsibility … more than 50 years later.)
45. This English idealist philosopher’s two most important works, the Prolegomena to Ethics and the Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation, were not published until after his death.
46. The best-known designs of this English architect include Buckingham Palace and the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.
47. The #MeToo movement brought renewed attention to this attorney and activist, who first emerged on the national stage more than two decades earlier.
48. This Houston-born diplomat was one of the most trusted advisors to the President of the United States, but after clashes at the Paris Peace Conference, the two never spoke again.
49. One of the great actor-managers of his day – and founder of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts – he was knighted in 1909 for his services to the British theatre.
50. In a career spanning 48 years, this lyricist put words to the music of – among others – Jerome Kern, Sigmund Romberg, Jimmy McHugh, Arthur Schwartz, and Cy Coleman.
51. At various times, his employees included Henry Ford, African American inventor Lewis Latimer, and film director Edwin S. Porter.
52. This English novelist is best known for a series of eleven novels published over a 30-year span and covering 43 years in the life of a civil servant named Lewis Eliot.
53. Winner of nine Triple Crown races, this jockey set a North American record in 1989 when he rode eight out of nine mounts to victory in a single day.
54. His rise to power was cemented by the murder of Paul Castellano.
55. A biography written by this minister is arguably the foundational document of American hagiography.
56. This chef’s restaurant La Pyramide was considered the finest in France during his lifetime, but it eventually lost all three of its Michelin stars after his death.
57. The business he founded in Venice, California in 1965 came to be known as “the Mecca of bodybuilding.”
58. Along with Agravain, Gareth, and Gaheris, this knight of the Round Table was King Arthur’s nephew by his sister Morgause and King Lot.
59. This actor completes a list that also includes Mahershala Ali, Walter Brennan, Michael Caine, Melvyn Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Jason Robards, and Peter Ustinov.
60. This former Atlanta mayor currently serves as director of the White House Office of Public Engagement.
61. This Scottish-born singer became the leading soprano at the Opera Comique in Paris, where she originated roles in works by Debussy and Massenet.
62. Author of more than 140 novels since 1973, she is currently the world’s best-selling living writer.
63. During the Open Era, he was the youngest player to achieve a career Grand Slam and the first to achieve the Surface Slam.
64. In 1931, this gynecologist was the only Roman Catholic doctor to sign a petition to legalize birth control; two decades later, he oversaw a critical milestone in its development.
65. A year after Svetlana Savitskaya became the second woman to do something, this woman became the third.
66. This social reformer was the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
67. This English antiquarian won renown for his 1674 history of Oxford University.
68. There is strong evidence that this fashion designer collaborated with – and may even have acted as an agent for – the Nazis, but was shielded from postwar prosecution by Winston Churchill himself.
69. JMMQ: This choreographer’s best-known work, Le Jeune Homme et la Mort, told the story of a young man driven to suicide by his unfaithful lover.
70. This cartoonist created the first comic strip in which the characters aged with the years.
71. He was the only actor to win both the Oscar and the Tony twice.
72. In the 1930s, this blues musician was discovered by folklorist John Lomax in a Louisiana prison.
73. In January 2017, this prime minister became the first foreign leader to meet with newly inaugurated President Donald Trump.
74. This physicist made his seminal discovery in 1895 while conducting experiments with cathode tubes.
75. The first nine mystery novels published under this pseudonym each contained a national or geographic designation (Roman, Dutch, Chinese, etc.) in its title.
76. After this driver’s 2013 suicide, the chairman of NASCAR released a statement eulogizing him as “a legend in the short track racing community, particularly in his home state of Wisconsin.”
77. In 1848, he suddenly found himself the most famous sawmill owner in America.
78. As proprietor of the Emporia Gazette, this journalist became a leading figure of the Progressive movement and spokesman for Middle America.
79. As a master thief-taker, he was responsible for the arrest and hanging of highwayman Jack Sheppard; as a master criminal, he was eventually hanged himself.
80. In 2020, his statue in the U.S. Capitol was replaced by one of civil rights activist Barbara Rose Johns.
81. At the age of nine, he worked twelve hours a day as a crow scarer … later became a key figure in the unionization of British agricultural workers … and eventually wound up in Parliament.
82. The last active player from the NHL’s inaugural season, this Hall-of-Famer won three Stanley Cups with the Toronto St. Pat’s and the Montreal Maroons.
83. In 1896, this French filmmaker became the first woman to direct a movie.
84. Until the advent of Bruce Wayne, the most notable use of a particular costume was in this composer’s most popular operetta.
85. This chemist for 3M is credited with inventing the adhesive that made Post-It Notes possible.
86. He was only 22 when he won both the American League MVP and the Cy Young Award.
87. Many works of this French writer – who ultimately died in a wartime plane crash –were informed by his experiences as a pioneering aviator
88. Nominated by President James Madison at the age of 32, he remains the youngest Justice ever to serve on the Supreme Court.
89. Don Hewett wrote that this broadcasting pioneer “erected two towers of power: one for entertainment and one for news… [He] was the guy who put Frank Sinatra and Edward R. Murrow on the radio.”
90. On January 8, 1972, her “Problem” broke a major television taboo.
91. This singer amassed an impressive series of hits along with her brother Bubba and her cousins William and Edward.
92. This Russian-American sculptor first gained widespread attention in the 1940s when she exhibited a found shoeshine box at the Museum of Modern Art.
93. This American psychologist is known for his contributions to aptitude testing and his development of drive theory, an attempt to systematically analyze human drives.
94. This novelist famously described her writing as a “little bit (two inches wide) of Ivory on which I work with so fine a Brush.”
95. Though his reputation rests primarily on horror, he directed films in many genres – including what many consider the definitive screen version of a great American musical.
96. A magistrate who tried this religious leader for blasphemy in 1650 gave his followers what was intended to be a mocking soubriquet.
97. In an 1869 essay, this philosopher stated that the “legal subordination of one sex to another is wrong in itself, and now one of the chief hindrances to human improvement.”
98. On a trip to Santa Fe in 1944, his daughter expressed impatience to see a picture he had just take of her; the rest is history.
99. This President famously commented that he could run the country or he could control his daughter, but he couldn’t do both.
Game #208: A Listless Game
Identify the 99 people in the clues below and match them into 33 trios according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. No names will be used twice.
Alternate solutions are likely, but only one combination will use all the names.
1. Though not generally known for his writings on social etiquette, he did offer this useful clarification: "A revolution is not a dinner party."
2. Even members of Congress from the segregated South voted in favor of funding a national monument to this man – the first such monument honoring an African American.
3. He is the only player to be named both MVP and Coach of the Year by the NBA
4. He won 21 Tony Awards for producing and/or directing works by Kern and Hammerstein, Bock and Harnick, Kander and Ebb, Adler and Ross, Stephen Sondheim, and Andrew Lloyd Weber.
5. After jumping ship in 1842, he lived for a time among the people of the Marquesas Islands – an adventure which provided the material for his first two books and gained him the reputation as the "man who lived among the cannibals.”.
6. A highly uncharacteristic rock ballad on his group’s final album was written in memory of his five-year-old son, who had died the year before.
7. He admonished his fellow business leaders that “the man who dies leaving behind him many millions of available wealth which was his to administer during life will pass away ‘unwept, unhonored, and unsung,’ no matter to what uses he leaves the dross which he cannot take with him. Of such as these the public verdict will then be: ‘The man who dies thus rich dies disgraced.’”
8. This activist stirred considerable controversy when he commented that the assassination of John F Kennedy was a case of “chickens coming home to roost.” (But, then, almost everything he said stirred controversy.)
9. This artist is best known for two historical paintings depicting the deaths of British military heroes at the moment of their greatest triumphs.
10. JMMQ (Judy Murphy Memorial Question): A Prima Ballerina during her 20 years with the Royal Ballet, she left them in 2001 to serve as a Creative Director for the Royal Opera House.
Another JMMQ appears at #69.
11. He took over Thomas Gage’s command in 1775; things didn’t go well after that.
12. This influential American sociologist did not coin the term “post-industrial society,” but in a 1973 book he correctly forecast that such a society would be information-led and service-oriented.
13. This physician completes a list that also includes Robert Morris, John Morton, George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, James Wilson, George Ross … and, of course, Benjamin Franklin.
14. This English physicist shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work in developing magnetic resonance imaging.
15. In his nine seasons with the Denver Broncos, this Hall of Famer amassed a rushing total of 6,323 yards – at the time the 7th highest in the NFL.
16. This beloved Danish writer was not so beloved by Charles Dickens, who reportedly modeled the character of Uriah Heep on him.
17. This actor’s last two completed film roles were adaptations of works by Ernest Hemingway and Agatha Christie.
18. The career of this jazz trumpeter took off in the late 1950s when he began playing with Ornette Coleman; three decades later, his son and stepdaughter made their own appearances on the pop charts.
19. She is the linchpin of a romantic quadrangle formed by her husband Charles and her lovers Rodolphe and Léon.
20. In a 1900 obituary, the New York Times called this proponent of Reform Judaism “the foremost rabbi in America.”
21. In addition to his influence on political thought, education, and the development of Romanticism, this philosopher was also an advocate of breastfeeding.
22. Though she was hanged only for the poisoning of her stepson, she is believed to have murdered three of her four husbands and eleven of her thirteen children for their insurance. (She died of slow strangulation rather than a quick neck break, due to a ‘mistake’ on the part of the hangman.)
23. Longtime president of the organization Consumer Watchdog, this activist is also the author of such books as The Progressive’s Guide to Raising Hell.
24. In 1918, he sent an infamous telegram in which he recommended the public hanging of “no fewer than one hundred known kulaks, fat cats, and bloodsuckers.”
25. This American shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discoveries regarding ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. (No, I haven’t any idea what that means.)
26. A classic Honeymooners episode about Ralph’s efforts to find the perfect gift for Alice was one of many works to borrow the basic premise of this author’s most famous work.
27. In 1965, a radio station in New York aired a special version of the latest hit by a popular vocal group in which this lead singer held a single note for over a minute. (No, it wasn’t Ethel Merman.)
28. This American tennis player won 18 Grand Slam championships between 1936 and 1940.
29. This actor lost the role in Ghostbusters that eventually went to his colleague Rick Moranis, but at least he got to appear in the music video.
30. In a 1908 English novel, he became one of the earliest – and still one of the greatest – portraits of a car freak and reckless driver in literary history.
31. This economist is best remembered for something he reportedly sketched on a cocktail napkin during a 1974 meeting with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.
32. In addition to launching the “It’s Get Better” campaign, this columnist and activist was responsible for Rick Santorum’s “Google problem.”
33. She was the first First Lady to visit Sesame Street.
34. Son of a wealthy Kentucky slaveholding family, he converted to abolitionism while a student at Yale after hearing William Lloyd Garrison speak; he was later appointed ambassador to Russia by Abraham Lincoln and helped win the tsar’s support for the Union cause.
35. This French-American artist gained renown for her installations and monumental sculptures, especially a 30-feet high spider made of steel, bronze and marble.
36. After his lithography business failed in 1860, this businessman found a new way to succeed at the game of life.
37. In 1934, this American politician proposed a radical economic plan, the provisions of which included a cap on inheritances, incomes, and private fortunes; free higher education for all; a four-day work week with four weeks of paid vacation a year; and free medical service to all citizens.
38. Though this singer charted five number one and 18 top-ten singles on the Billboard country charts, her only crossover hit was a 1970 hit that went to #3 on the pop chart.
39. In addition to describing the genetic condition that now bears his name, this British physician was a pioneer in improving the treatment of the mentally disabled.
40. Though some critics find his lyricism ‘slow’ and others accuse him of glorifying poverty, he is still considered his country’s greatest filmmaker – placed by no less than Martin Scorsese on a par with his contemporaries Kurosawa, Bergman, and Fellini.
41. More than a century later, this poet and playwright remains the only Belgian to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature.
42. The high point of this pitcher’s nine-year career with the Pirates was a no-hitter against the Mets in 1969; the low point was a wild pitch in 1972 that sent the Reds into the World Series.
43. After a 1796 expedition down the Niger River, this explorer wrote a book theorizing that the Congo and the Niger eventually merged into a single river – a theory that was finally disproven until 1830.
44. He was the officer in charge of the defense of U.S. military installations in Hawaii on December 7, 1941. (The Senate absolved him of all responsibility … more than 50 years later.)
45. This English idealist philosopher’s two most important works, the Prolegomena to Ethics and the Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation, were not published until after his death.
46. The best-known designs of this English architect include Buckingham Palace and the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.
47. The #MeToo movement brought renewed attention to this attorney and activist, who first emerged on the national stage more than two decades earlier.
48. This Houston-born diplomat was one of the most trusted advisors to the President of the United States, but after clashes at the Paris Peace Conference, the two never spoke again.
49. One of the great actor-managers of his day – and founder of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts – he was knighted in 1909 for his services to the British theatre.
50. In a career spanning 48 years, this lyricist put words to the music of – among others – Jerome Kern, Sigmund Romberg, Jimmy McHugh, Arthur Schwartz, and Cy Coleman.
51. At various times, his employees included Henry Ford, African American inventor Lewis Latimer, and film director Edwin S. Porter.
52. This English novelist is best known for a series of eleven novels published over a 30-year span and covering 43 years in the life of a civil servant named Lewis Eliot.
53. Winner of nine Triple Crown races, this jockey set a North American record in 1989 when he rode eight out of nine mounts to victory in a single day.
54. His rise to power was cemented by the murder of Paul Castellano.
55. A biography written by this minister is arguably the foundational document of American hagiography.
56. This chef’s restaurant La Pyramide was considered the finest in France during his lifetime, but it eventually lost all three of its Michelin stars after his death.
57. The business he founded in Venice, California in 1965 came to be known as “the Mecca of bodybuilding.”
58. Along with Agravain, Gareth, and Gaheris, this knight of the Round Table was King Arthur’s nephew by his sister Morgause and King Lot.
59. This actor completes a list that also includes Mahershala Ali, Walter Brennan, Michael Caine, Melvyn Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Jason Robards, and Peter Ustinov.
60. This former Atlanta mayor currently serves as director of the White House Office of Public Engagement.
61. This Scottish-born singer became the leading soprano at the Opera Comique in Paris, where she originated roles in works by Debussy and Massenet.
62. Author of more than 140 novels since 1973, she is currently the world’s best-selling living writer.
63. During the Open Era, he was the youngest player to achieve a career Grand Slam and the first to achieve the Surface Slam.
64. In 1931, this gynecologist was the only Roman Catholic doctor to sign a petition to legalize birth control; two decades later, he oversaw a critical milestone in its development.
65. A year after Svetlana Savitskaya became the second woman to do something, this woman became the third.
66. This social reformer was the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
67. This English antiquarian won renown for his 1674 history of Oxford University.
68. There is strong evidence that this fashion designer collaborated with – and may even have acted as an agent for – the Nazis, but was shielded from postwar prosecution by Winston Churchill himself.
69. JMMQ: This choreographer’s best-known work, Le Jeune Homme et la Mort, told the story of a young man driven to suicide by his unfaithful lover.
70. This cartoonist created the first comic strip in which the characters aged with the years.
71. He was the only actor to win both the Oscar and the Tony twice.
72. In the 1930s, this blues musician was discovered by folklorist John Lomax in a Louisiana prison.
73. In January 2017, this prime minister became the first foreign leader to meet with newly inaugurated President Donald Trump.
74. This physicist made his seminal discovery in 1895 while conducting experiments with cathode tubes.
75. The first nine mystery novels published under this pseudonym each contained a national or geographic designation (Roman, Dutch, Chinese, etc.) in its title.
76. After this driver’s 2013 suicide, the chairman of NASCAR released a statement eulogizing him as “a legend in the short track racing community, particularly in his home state of Wisconsin.”
77. In 1848, he suddenly found himself the most famous sawmill owner in America.
78. As proprietor of the Emporia Gazette, this journalist became a leading figure of the Progressive movement and spokesman for Middle America.
79. As a master thief-taker, he was responsible for the arrest and hanging of highwayman Jack Sheppard; as a master criminal, he was eventually hanged himself.
80. In 2020, his statue in the U.S. Capitol was replaced by one of civil rights activist Barbara Rose Johns.
81. At the age of nine, he worked twelve hours a day as a crow scarer … later became a key figure in the unionization of British agricultural workers … and eventually wound up in Parliament.
82. The last active player from the NHL’s inaugural season, this Hall-of-Famer won three Stanley Cups with the Toronto St. Pat’s and the Montreal Maroons.
83. In 1896, this French filmmaker became the first woman to direct a movie.
84. Until the advent of Bruce Wayne, the most notable use of a particular costume was in this composer’s most popular operetta.
85. This chemist for 3M is credited with inventing the adhesive that made Post-It Notes possible.
86. He was only 22 when he won both the American League MVP and the Cy Young Award.
87. Many works of this French writer – who ultimately died in a wartime plane crash –were informed by his experiences as a pioneering aviator
88. Nominated by President James Madison at the age of 32, he remains the youngest Justice ever to serve on the Supreme Court.
89. Don Hewett wrote that this broadcasting pioneer “erected two towers of power: one for entertainment and one for news… [He] was the guy who put Frank Sinatra and Edward R. Murrow on the radio.”
90. On January 8, 1972, her “Problem” broke a major television taboo.
91. This singer amassed an impressive series of hits along with her brother Bubba and her cousins William and Edward.
92. This Russian-American sculptor first gained widespread attention in the 1940s when she exhibited a found shoeshine box at the Museum of Modern Art.
93. This American psychologist is known for his contributions to aptitude testing and his development of drive theory, an attempt to systematically analyze human drives.
94. This novelist famously described her writing as a “little bit (two inches wide) of Ivory on which I work with so fine a Brush.”
95. Though his reputation rests primarily on horror, he directed films in many genres – including what many consider the definitive screen version of a great American musical.
96. A magistrate who tried this religious leader for blasphemy in 1650 gave his followers what was intended to be a mocking soubriquet.
97. In an 1869 essay, this philosopher stated that the “legal subordination of one sex to another is wrong in itself, and now one of the chief hindrances to human improvement.”
98. On a trip to Santa Fe in 1944, his daughter expressed impatience to see a picture he had just take of her; the rest is history.
99. This President famously commented that he could run the country or he could control his daughter, but he couldn’t do both.