Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

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Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#1 Post by franktangredi » Mon May 19, 2014 7:11 am

Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then match them into 53 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Two of the names will be matched with themselves. Four others will be used twice, each in two different capacities.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

Image


10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.

33. This Anglo-American architect is less known for his hundreds of buildings than for his development of a “pattern language” that allows an ordinary person to design a building to meet his or her own needs.

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.

38. This actor is best known for his roles as a young cop, a young hockey player, and a not-so-young Harry Truman.

39. In a 40-week period, he spent 32 weeks as the Number One-ranked pro golfer in the world – alternating the position with the man who both preceded and succeeded him.

40. This British writer is best known for a 1912 poem that begins with a traveler knocking on the door and asking, “Is there anybody there?” (He never does get an answer.)

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.

42. This clergyman was serving as Archbishop of New York when he was named the first American cardinal by Pope Pius IX.

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.

44. This Canadian American psychologist is best known for her contributions to attachment theory – in particular, her development of the Strange situation procedure to identify attachment patterns between children and caregivers.

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.

52. Before his death in 2006, he was considered by some to be the greatest living Irish novelist. (His best known novel was about a former IRA officer who tyrannizes his own family.)

53. At the time of his assassination, this gangster was head of the nation’s largest crime family. (His nephew played a prominent role in a classic gangster film.)

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.

56. The painting shown here was the work of this member of the Ashcan School and the Eight:

Image

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.

61. In a world where pornography hardly raises an eyebrow, this gonzo porn star regularly tested the limits of taste by featuring extreme acts with actresses dressed as underage girls – and managed to get sent to prison in 2009 on five counts of transporting obscene matter online and five counts of mailing obscene matter. (His internet domain was seized by the government, in case you’ve been looking for it.)

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.

65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."

66. DJMQ: This South African-born choreographer founded the first major ballet company in Germany.

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.

69. This fashion designer created the gown shown here, as well as many others for the same client:

Image


70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.

73. This co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize was a founding member of the Páirtí Sóisialta Daonlathach an Lucht Oibre – or, for those of you who prefer English, the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

74. From 1923 to 1954, he was president of one of the quintessentially American corporations, and his name appears on many educational and cultural institutions in Atlanta.

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.

78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.

80. “Forget not that I am an ass,” this officer of the law indignantly insisted – and for more than 400 years, no one ever has.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.

85. This Canadian prime minister – whom President Kennedy consider “a boring son of a bitch” – had to be dissuaded from sending a formal letter of protest when JFK mispronounced his name at a press conference.

86. Nine years after the murder of his more famous wife, this Kenyan game warden was also murdered.

87. Robert Koch called this onetime Surgeon General the “Father of American Bacteriology,” thanks to such achievements as discovering the cause of lumbar pneumonia and publishing the first American manual of bacteriology.

88. In a listing of the Top 100 Country Music Songs, CMT ranked a 1968 megahit by this singer and songwriter as Number One.

89. After assuring himself that not a single British soldier had been left behind, this commander of the 1st Infantry boarded the last ship to leave Dunkirk.

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

93. “I don’t care! I’d rather sink – than call Brad for help!” – these are the final thoughts of the girl who is the subject of one of this artist’s best-known paintings.

94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.

98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.
Last edited by franktangredi on Mon May 19, 2014 8:45 am, edited 2 times in total.

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pair

#2 Post by smilergrogan » Mon May 19, 2014 8:20 am

franktangredi wrote: 1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."
JAMES MADISON?
3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.
HEGEL?
4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.
JOSEPH PRIESTLEY
5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."
ENRICO CARUSO?
12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.
A. PHILIP RANDOLPH?
13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.
THOMAS CROMWELL
16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.
PINCUS
19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"
RON SWOBODA
20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.
JULIA CHILD
22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.
ARROWSMITH
23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.
JESSE JAMES
24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.
WILLIAM BRENNAN?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.
FRANCES CLEVELAND?
27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.
WILLIAM SHOCKLEY?
31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.
HARRISON SCHMIDT?
32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.
ROSS PEROT?
34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.
ELEANOR SMEAL?
35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
JOHN ANDERSON?
45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”
JEREMY BENTHAM?
48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.
Guy who wrote Brother Can You Spare a Dime - just saw him featured on Simon Schama's program on PBS about Jewish history, can't remember name
54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.
HALLEY?

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.
BURGOYNE?

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.
VINCE LOMBARDI?
60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.
CHARLES I?
63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
LISTER?
65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."
KEITH RICHARDS?
75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
WERNER HEISENBERG
77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.
SON OF SAM - forget his name
81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.
HAL GREER?
84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.
SEBASTIAN CABOT?
94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.
BJORN BORG?
97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.
BILL CLINTON
98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.
BECQUEREL

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#3 Post by plasticene » Mon May 19, 2014 11:37 am

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.
MAURICE CHEVALIER?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.
FRANCES CLEVELAND (According to Ken Jennings' new book, Cleveland started joking about marrying her someday when she was eight years old, then did it pretty much as soon as she turned legal. Ewwww.)

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)
BEAUMARCHAIS (The Marriage of Figaro and The Barber of Seville)

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.
I think it's ROSS PEROT, too

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
I think it's got to be JOHN ANDERSON

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”
JEREMY BENTHAM is my guess as well

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)
KATARINA WITT

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.
CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS? I might have guessed CLAUDE DEBUSSY, but I can't think of any opera by him.

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.
BARBARA TUCHMAN

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.
SIR FRANCIS DRAKE

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.
GARY COOPER

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.
PAUL MCCARTNEY

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#4 Post by jarnon » Mon May 19, 2014 12:29 pm

I think #11 is William T. Sherman. I knew a few others, but smilergrogan got them all first.
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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#5 Post by bazodee » Mon May 19, 2014 1:27 pm

70. Jayne Torville (of Torville and Dean.) Went pro after 1984 but restored to Olympic eligibility in 1994.

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#6 Post by mellytu74 » Mon May 19, 2014 1:57 pm

First pass

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?

BETTE DAVIS

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."

ARTURO TOSCANINI

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.

Congreve? Is the The Way of the World?

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.

DON SCHOLLANDER

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.

JAMES L. FARMER

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.

D.W. GRIFFITH

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)

IGGY POP

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"

RON SWOBODA

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

JULIA CHILD

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.

MARTIN ARROWSMITH

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.

MAURICE CHEVALIER? (Mimi and Louise and Thank Heaven for little girls)?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.

FRANCIS CLEVELAND

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

SMOKEY ROBINSON?

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.

BOB MATHIAS

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.

JOHN ANDERSON

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.

GEORGE JEFFERSON 

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.

CHARLIE MINGUS

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.

BOSS TWEED

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.

YIP HARBURG (Brother, Can You Spare a Dime, Lydia the Tattooed Lady and Wizard of Oz)

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.

MAX ROBINSON?

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.

JOEL MCCREA (Foreign Correspondent, Sullivan’s Travels, Palm Beach Story, More the Merrier)

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.

GEORGE MEANY

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.

RONALD MCDONALD?

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.

GEORGE S. KAUFMAN

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.

The Cross and the Switchblade guy

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.

ERNIE …. ERNIE …. The guy who did Nancy.

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)

JANE TORVILL

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.

PRESTON STURGES


78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.

Either Bill W or the other AA guy.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.

PAUL ARIZIN

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.

ROBERT WARSHOW

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.

GARY COOPER

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.

MARTIN LUTHER

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#7 Post by ToLiveIsToFly » Mon May 19, 2014 2:02 pm

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.
PRETTY BOY FLOYD?

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.
WILLIAM SHOCKLEY?

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.
BURGOYNE

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.
VINCE LOMBARDI?

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
JACOB SEMMELWEISS (SP?)

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.
ISAAK WALTON?

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
WERNER HEISENBERG

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.
DAVID BERKOWITZ

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.
EUGENE LEVY?

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#8 Post by mrkelley23 » Mon May 19, 2014 3:28 pm

First pass. Lotta guesses, marked with ??s.
franktangredi wrote:Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then match them into 53 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Two of the names will be matched with themselves. Four others will be used twice, each in two different capacities.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."

JAMES MADISON?

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.

SCHOPENHAUER?? Don't remember his first name.

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.

JOSEPH PRIESTLEY? I know he "discovered" oxygen, but not sure about carbon dioxide.

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

Image


10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.

Gotta Be SHERMAN, doesn't it?

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"

RON SWOBODA

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

JAMES BEARD??? (he just seems more American than Julia Child somehow.)

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.

JESSE JAMES?

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.

MAURICE CHEVALIER?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.

JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS?

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.

BRUCE JENNER??

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.

CHARLES DUKE

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.

33. This Anglo-American architect is less known for his hundreds of buildings than for his development of a “pattern language” that allows an ordinary person to design a building to meet his or her own needs.

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.

JOHN ANDERSON?

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.

Is the Excelsior clue a reference to STAN LEE, perhaps?

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.

38. This actor is best known for his roles as a young cop, a young hockey player, and a not-so-young Harry Truman.

JAMES WHITMORE?

39. In a 40-week period, he spent 32 weeks as the Number One-ranked pro golfer in the world – alternating the position with the man who both preceded and succeeded him.

Sounds more like the PALMER-NICKLAUS era than Tiger and anyone.

40. This British writer is best known for a 1912 poem that begins with a traveler knocking on the door and asking, “Is there anybody there?” (He never does get an answer.)

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.

42. This clergyman was serving as Archbishop of New York when he was named the first American cardinal by Pope Pius IX.

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.

44. This Canadian American psychologist is best known for her contributions to attachment theory – in particular, her development of the Strange situation procedure to identify attachment patterns between children and caregivers.

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.

BOSS TWEED?

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.

I think this is YIP HARBURG, who wrote "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" as well as the songs for Wizard of Oz.

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.

BERNARD SHAW?

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.

52. Before his death in 2006, he was considered by some to be the greatest living Irish novelist. (His best known novel was about a former IRA officer who tyrannizes his own family.)

53. At the time of his assassination, this gangster was head of the nation’s largest crime family. (His nephew played a prominent role in a classic gangster film.)

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.

56. The painting shown here was the work of this member of the Ashcan School and the Eight:

Image

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.

CHUCK NOLL????

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.

I Would say Tony the Tiger, except I thought his creator already died this year. Maybe Frank's just trying to make sure curse stays intact, even if only in retrospect.

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.

61. In a world where pornography hardly raises an eyebrow, this gonzo porn star regularly tested the limits of taste by featuring extreme acts with actresses dressed as underage girls – and managed to get sent to prison in 2009 on five counts of transporting obscene matter online and five counts of mailing obscene matter. (His internet domain was seized by the government, in case you’ve been looking for it.)

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.

65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."

Sounds like KEITH RICHARDS??

66. DJMQ: This South African-born choreographer founded the first major ballet company in Germany.

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.

Was it CHIC YOUNG who drew Blondie?

69. This fashion designer created the gown shown here, as well as many others for the same client:

Image


70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.

IZAAK WALTON??

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.

73. This co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize was a founding member of the Páirtí Sóisialta Daonlathach an Lucht Oibre – or, for those of you who prefer English, the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

Looks like Gaelic -- someone from Northern Ireland?

74. From 1923 to 1954, he was president of one of the quintessentially American corporations, and his name appears on many educational and cultural institutions in Atlanta.

EMORY?

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)

WERNER HEISENBERG

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.

SON OF SAM? It was like David Berkowitz or something.

78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.

80. “Forget not that I am an ass,” this officer of the law indignantly insisted – and for more than 400 years, no one ever has.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.

NOT Wilt Chamberlain.

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.

EUGENE LEVY?

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.

DRAKE?

85. This Canadian prime minister – whom President Kennedy consider “a boring son of a bitch” – had to be dissuaded from sending a formal letter of protest when JFK mispronounced his name at a press conference.

86. Nine years after the murder of his more famous wife, this Kenyan game warden was also murdered.

87. Robert Koch called this onetime Surgeon General the “Father of American Bacteriology,” thanks to such achievements as discovering the cause of lumbar pneumonia and publishing the first American manual of bacteriology.

88. In a listing of the Top 100 Country Music Songs, CMT ranked a 1968 megahit by this singer and songwriter as Number One.

George Jones and Tammy Wynette were 1 and 2, but I don't remember which order. Never thought of Wynette as a songwriter, but she would be more likely be described as having a megahit, with either Stand by Your Man or D-I-V-O-R-C-E.

89. After assuring himself that not a single British soldier had been left behind, this commander of the 1st Infantry boarded the last ship to leave Dunkirk.

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.

HOBBES? (Certainly not Calvin.)

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

93. “I don’t care! I’d rather sink – than call Brad for help!” – these are the final thoughts of the girl who is the subject of one of this artist’s best-known paintings.

94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.

BILL CLINTON

98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.

WILHELM ROENTTGEN

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.

Oooh, trick question. MARTIN LUTHER.
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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#9 Post by frogman042 » Mon May 19, 2014 3:43 pm

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."
WAG: John Adams?

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?
Elizabeth Taylor?

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.
Kant?

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.
Priestly?

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.
Twyla Tharp?

10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.
Buffett?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.
Sherman

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.
Cromwell? (not Oliver the other one)

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."
Pat Robertson?

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)
Iggy Pop (and the Stooges)?

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"
Tommy Agee?

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.
Julia Child?

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
John Anderson?

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.
Joel McCrae

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.
Newton?

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.
Moss Hart? George S Kaufman?

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
Lister?

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.
Max Fleischer?

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.
Preston Sturgis

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
Heisenberg

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)
Thornton Wilder?

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.
Gary Cooper?

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.
Bill Clinton

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.
Paul McCartney?

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#10 Post by kroxquo » Mon May 19, 2014 4:52 pm

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."

James Madison?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.

William Sherman

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.

Charlie Chaplin?

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."

Pat Robertson

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)

Iggy Pop

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"

Donn Clendenon?

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

Julia Child

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.

Walter Reed

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.

John Marshall

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.

Mrs. Cleveland - 18 when she married Grover in the White House

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

Smokey Robinson

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.

Bob Beamon?

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)

Whoever wrote the original Figro

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.

John Anderson

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.

It's so tempting to say George Jefferson

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.

Eddie Rickenbacker

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.

Max Robinson

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.

John Burgoyne

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.

Louis XVI?

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.

Thomas Paine?

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.

Whoever wrote Nancy

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)

Katarina Witt

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.

David Berkowitz

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.

Francis Drake

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.

Thomas Hobbes

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.

Bill Clinton

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.

Martin Luther
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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs CONSOLIDATION

#11 Post by smilergrogan » Tue May 20, 2014 6:44 am

I think #11 is Phil Sheridan, not William Sherman.
For #23, was there a mass killing in Lawrenceville NJ that I've never heard of, or is that supposed to say the Lawrence massacre?

Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then match them into 53 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Two of the names will be matched with themselves. Four others will be used twice, each in two different capacities.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."
JAMES MADISON?

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?
BETTE DAVIS

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.
ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER? IMMANUEL KANT? GEORGE FRIEDRICH HEGEL?

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.
JOSEPH PRIESTLEY

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."
ARTURO TOSCANINI

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.
CONGREVE?

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.
DON SCHOLLANDER

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.
TWYLA THARP?

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.
WARREN BUFFET?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.
PHIL SHERIDAN

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.
JAMES L. FARMER

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.
THOMAS CROMWELL

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.
D.W. GRIFFITH

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."
PAT ROBERTSON

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.
PINCUS

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)
IGGY POP

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"
RON SWOBODA

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.
JULIA CHILD

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.
MARTIN ARROWSMITH

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.
JESSE JAMES

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.
JOHN MARSHALL

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.
MAURICE CHEVALIER?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.
FRANCES FOLSOM CLEVELAND

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.
WILLIAM SHOCKLEY?

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.
SMOKEY ROBINSON

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.
BOB MATTHIAS

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)
BEAUMARCHAIS

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.
HARRISON SCHMITT? CHARLES DUKE?

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.
ROSS PEROT?

33. This Anglo-American architect is less known for his hundreds of buildings than for his development of a “pattern language” that allows an ordinary person to design a building to meet his or her own needs.

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.
ELEANOR SMEAL?

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
JOHN ANDERSON

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.
GEORGE JEFFERSON

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.
CHARLIE MINGUS

38. This actor is best known for his roles as a young cop, a young hockey player, and a not-so-young Harry Truman.
JAMES WHITMORE?

39. In a 40-week period, he spent 32 weeks as the Number One-ranked pro golfer in the world – alternating the position with the man who both preceded and succeeded him.

40. This British writer is best known for a 1912 poem that begins with a traveler knocking on the door and asking, “Is there anybody there?” (He never does get an answer.)

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.

42. This clergyman was serving as Archbishop of New York when he was named the first American cardinal by Pope Pius IX.

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.
EDDIE RICKENBACKER?

44. This Canadian American psychologist is best known for her contributions to attachment theory – in particular, her development of the Strange situation procedure to identify attachment patterns between children and caregivers.

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”
JEREMY BENTHAM?

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.
BOSS TWEED

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.
YIP HARBURG

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.
MAX ROBINSON? BERNARD SHAW?

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.
JOEL MCCREA

52. Before his death in 2006, he was considered by some to be the greatest living Irish novelist. (His best known novel was about a former IRA officer who tyrannizes his own family.)

53. At the time of his assassination, this gangster was head of the nation’s largest crime family. (His nephew played a prominent role in a classic gangster film.)

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.
EDMUND HALLEY?

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.
GEORGE MEANY

56. The painting shown here was the work of this member of the Ashcan School and the Eight:

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.
JOHN BURGOYNE

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.
VINCE LOMBARDI?

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.
RONALD MCDONALD?

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.
CHARLES I? LOUIS XVI?

61. In a world where pornography hardly raises an eyebrow, this gonzo porn star regularly tested the limits of taste by featuring extreme acts with actresses dressed as underage girls – and managed to get sent to prison in 2009 on five counts of transporting obscene matter online and five counts of mailing obscene matter. (His internet domain was seized by the government, in case you’ve been looking for it.)

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.
MOSS HART? GEORGE S. KAUFMAN?

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
JACOB SEMMELWEISS? LISTER?

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.
THOMAS PAINE?

65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."
KEITH RICHARDS?

66. DJMQ: This South African-born choreographer founded the first major ballet company in Germany.

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.
"THE CROSS AND THE SWITCHBLADE" Author

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.
"NANCY" CARTOONIST? MAX FLEISCHER? CHIC YOUNG?

69. This fashion designer created the gown shown here, as well as many others for the same client.

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)
JANE TORVILLE

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.
IZAAK WALTON

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.
PRESTON STURGES

73. This co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize was a founding member of the Páirtí Sóisialta Daonlathach an Lucht Oibre – or, for those of you who prefer English, the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

74. From 1923 to 1954, he was president of one of the quintessentially American corporations, and his name appears on many educational and cultural institutions in Atlanta.
EMORY?

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
WERNER HEISENBERG

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.
CAMILLE SAINT-SEANS?

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.
DAVID BERKOWITZ

78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.
AA Guy? Bill W.?

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.
BARBARA TUCHMAN

80. “Forget not that I am an ass,” this officer of the law indignantly insisted – and for more than 400 years, no one ever has.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.
PAUL ARIZIN

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)
THORNTON WILDER?

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.
EUGENE LEVY?

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.
FRANCIS DRAKE

85. This Canadian prime minister – whom President Kennedy consider “a boring son of a bitch” – had to be dissuaded from sending a formal letter of protest when JFK mispronounced his name at a press conference.

86. Nine years after the murder of his more famous wife, this Kenyan game warden was also murdered.

87. Robert Koch called this onetime Surgeon General the “Father of American Bacteriology,” thanks to such achievements as discovering the cause of lumbar pneumonia and publishing the first American manual of bacteriology.

88. In a listing of the Top 100 Country Music Songs, CMT ranked a 1968 megahit by this singer and songwriter as Number One.

89. After assuring himself that not a single British soldier had been left behind, this commander of the 1st Infantry boarded the last ship to leave Dunkirk.

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.
ROBERT WARSHOW

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.
THOMAS HOBBES

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

93. “I don’t care! I’d rather sink – than call Brad for help!” – these are the final thoughts of the girl who is the subject of one of this artist’s best-known paintings.

94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.
BJORN BORG?

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.
GARY COOPER

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.
BILL CLINTON

98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.
HENRI BECQUEREL

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.
PAUL MCCARTNEY

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.
MARTIN LUTHER

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs CONSOLIDATION

#12 Post by franktangredi » Tue May 20, 2014 7:50 am

smilergrogan wrote: For #23, was there a mass killing in Lawrenceville NJ that I've never heard of, or is that supposed to say the Lawrence massacre?
Oops!

Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then match them into 53 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Two of the names will be matched with themselves. Four others will be used twice, each in two different capacities.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."
JAMES MADISON?

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?
BETTE DAVIS

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.
ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER? IMMANUEL KANT? GEORGE FRIEDRICH HEGEL?

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.
JOSEPH PRIESTLEY

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."
ARTURO TOSCANINI

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.
CONGREVE?

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.
DON SCHOLLANDER

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.
TWYLA THARP?

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.
WARREN BUFFET?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.
PHIL SHERIDAN

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.
JAMES L. FARMER

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.
THOMAS CROMWELL

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.
D.W. GRIFFITH

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."
PAT ROBERTSON

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.
PINCUS

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)
IGGY POP

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"
RON SWOBODA

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.
JULIA CHILD

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.
MARTIN ARROWSMITH

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrenceville massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.
JESSE JAMES

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.
JOHN MARSHALL

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.
MAURICE CHEVALIER?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.
FRANCES FOLSOM CLEVELAND

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.
WILLIAM SHOCKLEY?

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.
SMOKEY ROBINSON

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.
BOB MATTHIAS

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)
BEAUMARCHAIS

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.
HARRISON SCHMITT? CHARLES DUKE?

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.
ROSS PEROT?

33. This Anglo-American architect is less known for his hundreds of buildings than for his development of a “pattern language” that allows an ordinary person to design a building to meet his or her own needs.

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.
ELEANOR SMEAL?

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
JOHN ANDERSON

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.
GEORGE JEFFERSON

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.
CHARLIE MINGUS

38. This actor is best known for his roles as a young cop, a young hockey player, and a not-so-young Harry Truman.
JAMES WHITMORE?

39. In a 40-week period, he spent 32 weeks as the Number One-ranked pro golfer in the world – alternating the position with the man who both preceded and succeeded him.

40. This British writer is best known for a 1912 poem that begins with a traveler knocking on the door and asking, “Is there anybody there?” (He never does get an answer.)

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.

42. This clergyman was serving as Archbishop of New York when he was named the first American cardinal by Pope Pius IX.

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.
EDDIE RICKENBACKER?

44. This Canadian American psychologist is best known for her contributions to attachment theory – in particular, her development of the Strange situation procedure to identify attachment patterns between children and caregivers.

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”
JEREMY BENTHAM?

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.
BOSS TWEED

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.
YIP HARBURG

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.
MAX ROBINSON? BERNARD SHAW?

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.
JOEL MCCREA

52. Before his death in 2006, he was considered by some to be the greatest living Irish novelist. (His best known novel was about a former IRA officer who tyrannizes his own family.)

53. At the time of his assassination, this gangster was head of the nation’s largest crime family. (His nephew played a prominent role in a classic gangster film.)

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.
EDMUND HALLEY?

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.
GEORGE MEANY

56. The painting shown here was the work of this member of the Ashcan School and the Eight:

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.
JOHN BURGOYNE

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.
VINCE LOMBARDI?

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.
RONALD MCDONALD?

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.
CHARLES I? LOUIS XVI?

61. In a world where pornography hardly raises an eyebrow, this gonzo porn star regularly tested the limits of taste by featuring extreme acts with actresses dressed as underage girls – and managed to get sent to prison in 2009 on five counts of transporting obscene matter online and five counts of mailing obscene matter. (His internet domain was seized by the government, in case you’ve been looking for it.)

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.
MOSS HART? GEORGE S. KAUFMAN?

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
JACOB SEMMELWEISS? LISTER?

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.
THOMAS PAINE?

65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."
KEITH RICHARDS?

66. DJMQ: This South African-born choreographer founded the first major ballet company in Germany.

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.
"THE CROSS AND THE SWITCHBLADE" Author

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.
"NANCY" CARTOONIST? MAX FLEISCHER? CHIC YOUNG?

69. This fashion designer created the gown shown here, as well as many others for the same client.

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)
JANE TORVILLE

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.
IZAAK WALTON

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.
PRESTON STURGES

73. This co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize was a founding member of the Páirtí Sóisialta Daonlathach an Lucht Oibre – or, for those of you who prefer English, the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

74. From 1923 to 1954, he was president of one of the quintessentially American corporations, and his name appears on many educational and cultural institutions in Atlanta.
EMORY?

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
WERNER HEISENBERG

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.
CAMILLE SAINT-SEANS?

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.
DAVID BERKOWITZ

78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.
AA Guy? Bill W.?

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.
BARBARA TUCHMAN

80. “Forget not that I am an ass,” this officer of the law indignantly insisted – and for more than 400 years, no one ever has.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.
PAUL ARIZIN

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)
THORNTON WILDER?

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.
EUGENE LEVY?

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.
FRANCIS DRAKE

85. This Canadian prime minister – whom President Kennedy consider “a boring son of a bitch” – had to be dissuaded from sending a formal letter of protest when JFK mispronounced his name at a press conference.

86. Nine years after the murder of his more famous wife, this Kenyan game warden was also murdered.

87. Robert Koch called this onetime Surgeon General the “Father of American Bacteriology,” thanks to such achievements as discovering the cause of lumbar pneumonia and publishing the first American manual of bacteriology.

88. In a listing of the Top 100 Country Music Songs, CMT ranked a 1968 megahit by this singer and songwriter as Number One.

89. After assuring himself that not a single British soldier had been left behind, this commander of the 1st Infantry boarded the last ship to leave Dunkirk.

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.
ROBERT WARSHOW

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.
THOMAS HOBBES

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

93. “I don’t care! I’d rather sink – than call Brad for help!” – these are the final thoughts of the girl who is the subject of one of this artist’s best-known paintings.

94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.
BJORN BORG?

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.
GARY COOPER

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.
BILL CLINTON

98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.
HENRI BECQUEREL

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.
PAUL MCCARTNEY

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.
MARTIN LUTHER

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#13 Post by mellytu74 » Tue May 20, 2014 8:40 am

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.
MAX ROBINSON? BERNARD SHAW?

Bernard Shaw isn't dead.

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”

I am pretty sure (but not positive) that this is JAMES JOYCE in Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

This is someone from IBM, but the name escapes me.

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs CONSOLIDATION

#14 Post by Catfish » Tue May 20, 2014 8:49 am

smilergrogan wrote: 68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.
"NANCY" CARTOONIST? MAX FLEISCHER? CHIC YOUNG?

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.
EUGENE LEVY?
The Nancy cartoonist is Ernie Bushmiller, and I'm 99% sure you can remove the ? from #83.
Catfish

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#15 Post by plasticene » Tue May 20, 2014 9:31 am

plasticene wrote:76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.
CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS? I might have guessed CLAUDE DEBUSSY, but I can't think of any opera by him.
After consultation with my resident opera expert, I've discovered the answer is indeed CLAUDE DEBUSSY. The opera is Pelléas et Melisande.
bazodee wrote:70. Jayne Torville (of Torville and Dean.) Went pro after 1984 but restored to Olympic eligibility in 1994.
That's the correct spelling of her first name, not Jane, in case that ends up being relevant.
mellytu74 wrote:92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.

This is someone from IBM, but the name escapes me.
Could it be that WATSON guy?

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#16 Post by Bob Juch » Tue May 20, 2014 1:00 pm

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.
THOMAS J. WATSON
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)

Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#17 Post by Pastor Fireball » Tue May 20, 2014 5:50 pm

Didn't see this game this morning. Let's see what I know off the top of my head this time.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."

JAMES MADISON was really short. Don't know if it was him, but I can't think of any other short presidents.

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."

Sounds like something PAT ROBERTSON might have said.

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

JULIA CHILD. I've seen it.

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.

WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

MARVIN GAYE?

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.

There are 12 to choose from, and I know that it wasn't Armstrong or Aldrin.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.

PAUL ARIZIN

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.

SEAN PENN?

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.

BILL CLINTON

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.

Has to be PAUL McCARTNEY. All of those Beatles #1s, all of those Wings #1s, all of his solo #1s in the early 1980s, and "Yesterday".

Yeah... not a good start.
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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#18 Post by Weyoun » Wed May 21, 2014 12:51 pm

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."

MADISON was very short

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.

SCHOPENHAUER

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.

carbonated water was discovered by PRIESTLEY, who also isolated oxygen sorta first

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."

TOSCANINI conducted the premier of Turandot

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.

This is The Way of the World by CONGREVE

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.

Don SCHOLLANDER, a swimmer

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#19 Post by Weyoun » Wed May 21, 2014 12:58 pm

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

Image

Has to be CONSTABLE, yes?

10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.

WALTON?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.

Philip SHERIDAN said the "only good Indian is a dead Indian" line

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.

James FARMER founded CORE

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.

Thomas CROMWELL was the advisor to Henry VIII

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."

ROBERTSON?

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.

PINCUS?

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#20 Post by Weyoun » Wed May 21, 2014 1:05 pm

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)

IGGY POP of the Stooges

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.

If I had to guess, this is Richard LOVELACE

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.

Julia CHILD makes the most sense

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.

Probably WINKELMANN

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.

ARROWSMITH from that book

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.

William O DOUGLAS

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#21 Post by Weyoun » Wed May 21, 2014 1:09 pm

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.

Frances FOLSOM Cleveland I think

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.

William SHOCKLEY

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.

Barrett STRONG

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)

BEAUMARCHAIS

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.

Patricia IRELAND I think

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#22 Post by Weyoun » Wed May 21, 2014 3:44 pm

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.

John ANDERSON?

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.

George JEFFERSON!

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.

MINGUS

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.

David BALTIMORE

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”

Sure sounds like BENTHAM

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.

Boss TWEED

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.

I'd say Hobey Baker but he played for Princeton

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.

Max ROBINSON

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.

HARSANYI or something like that

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#23 Post by Pastor Fireball » Thu May 22, 2014 12:00 pm

So I've been thinking about the title of this game for the last couple of days. I'm wondering if we're removing a pair of letters from one person's name and adding them to another person's name to form two new names. If JAMES MADISON is correct for #1, I know that you can remove the "DI" to form JAMES MASON, the old movie actor. Some other name would receive the "DI". Like if we had a guy with the name of (and I'm totally making up a name here) JOSHUA KASON, then he would get the "DI" to make JOSHUA KADISON, the pop singer.

I'm not sure how this would work with names like Bushmiller, Schopenhauer, Harsanyi, or Iggy Pop. I'm just giving everybody something to think about.
"[Drumpf's] name alone creates division and anger, whose words inspire dissension and hatred, and can't possibly 'Make America Great Again.'" --Kobe Bryant (1978-2020)

"In times of crisis, the wise build bridges. The foolish build barriers." --Chadwick Boseman (1976-2020)

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#24 Post by mellytu74 » Thu May 22, 2014 12:00 pm

Parasitic.

The puzzle name intrigues me.

Frank always chooses his words carefully.

Are we looking people who were the beneficiary of someone else's fame? Accomplishments? Sidekicks?

With the reminder that Torvill's first name is spelled JAYNE, the first two people I thought of were Jayne Meadows and Jayne Mansfield.

Are we looking for an (Steve) Allen? A Mansfield? A Calvin to go with our Hobbes?

I suspect that once we figure out the meaning of the title ....

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Re: Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

#25 Post by Pastor Fireball » Thu May 22, 2014 7:24 pm

New consolidation...



Game #145: Parasitic Pairs

Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then match them into 53 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Two of the names will be matched with themselves. Four others will be used twice, each in two different capacities.

1. Though a giant in American history, this President was once described by a friend as "no bigger than a half piece of soap."
JAMES MADISON

2. Many people thought that this actress won her first Oscar as a compensation for not being nominated the year before, and her second Oscar for a movie she made as compensation for not getting the role that would win another actress an Oscar the year after. Got that?
BETTE DAVIS

3. “My body and my will are one,” declared this great philosopher who influenced such later thinkers as diverse as Nietzsche, Wagner, Einstein, Freud, and Borges.
ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER

4. If you’re a member of the Pepsi Generation or enjoy ending the day with a gin and tonic, thank this 18th century English scientist known for an even more important discovery.
JOSEPH PRIESTLEY

5. His tombstone features the very words he spoke at the end of the world premiere of Turandot: "Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died."
ARTURO TOSCANINI

6. This writer’s final play – considered by some the greatest of all Restoration comedies – is especially notable for the “proviso scene” in which Mirabell and Millamant negotiate the terms under which they would consider marrying one another.
WILLIAM CONGREVE

7. This one-time frat brother of George W. Bush won the most gold medals of any athlete at the Tokyo Olympiad.
DON SCHOLLANDER

8. DJMQ: One of the most influential figures in modern dance, this American choreographer often used the I Ching to determine the sequence of dances in a program – not informing the dancers until just before the performance.
Another DJMQ appears at #66.
TWYLA THARP?

9. This painter is famous for landscapes such as this one found in the Tate Gallery:

Image
JOHN CONSTABLE?

10. In addition to frequently topping the Forbes 400, this business mogul was named by Forbes as the sixth wealthiest American of all time based on percentage of the U.S. economy under his control.
WARREN BUFFETT? SAM WALTON?

11. This general is best remembered for his scorched earth tactics during the Civil War – and for an oft-quoted reply to a Comanche chief that he denied ever came out of his mouth.
PHILIP SHERIDAN

12. The civil rights organization he founded in 1942 was the key player in the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s – in fact, he personally organized the first one.
JAMES L. FARMER

13. He climbed to the top of the political tree by engineering the king’s second marriage, but lost his head as a result engineering the king’s fourth marriage.
THOMAS CROMWELL

14. Orson Welles once said of him," No town, no industry, no profession, no art form owes so much to a single man." And it’s still true.
D.W. GRIFFITH

15. In January 2007, he told viewers that God had personally warned him of a massive terrorist attack on the United States in the coming year. In January 2008, he told viewers, "Somehow the people of God prayed and God in his mercy spared us."
PAT ROBERTSON

16. This New Jersey-born biologist helped advance the sexual revolution when he discovered that progesterone would act as an inhibitor to ovulation.
GREGORY PINCUS

17. Though not widely known for his delicacy and tact, this singer and songwriter reportedly did call Moe Howard personally before naming his band. (I guess he didn’t want a finger in his eye.)
IGGY POP

18. This “Son of Ben” wrote the quintessential example of the carpe diem poem in the English language.
RICHARD LOVELACE

19. When asked how long he intends to keep living off one catch, this onetime Met outfielder replies, “How long have I got left?"
RON SWOBODA

20. Since 2001, this chef’s kitchen has belonged to the Smithsonian Institution.
JULIA CHILD

21. This 18th century German archaeologist was the first to distinguish between Greco, Roman and Greco-Roman art and was the greatest influence on the growth of the neoclassical movement.
JOHANN WINCKELMANN

22. This eponymous physician goes from treating the aches and pains of the residents of a small town in North Dakota to fighting bubonic plague in the Caribbean.
MARTIN ARROWSMITH

23. There is considerably more evidence that this thug participated in the Lawrence massacre than there is that he ever robbed from the rich to give to the poor.
JESSE JAMES

24. At forty, he was one of the youngest jurists ever appointed to a seat on the Supreme Court, so it is not surprising that he ended up parking his butt there longer than anyone before or since.
WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS

25. This smooth entertainer is remembered for four signature songs: three – written between 1924 and 1932 – named after women, and a much later tribute to all women.
MAURICE CHEVALIER?

26. She was the youngest First Lady in U.S. history.
FRANCES FOLSOM CLEVELAND

27. This American physicist was the only Nobel laureate to admit to donating to the “Nobel Prize sperm bank” – not surprising, given his controversial interest in eugenics.
WILLIAM SHOCKLEY

28. This member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wrote and recorded the first hit for Motown Records – and quite a few more after that.
SMOKEY ROBINSON? MARVIN GAYE? BARRETT STRONG?

29. He was the first athlete to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals in the Decathlon.
BOB MATTHIAS

30. This playwright is best known for a trilogy of comedies, two of which were adapted into highly successful operas by one Austrian and one Italian composer. (The third was also turned into an opera, but nobody noticed.)
PIERRE BEAUMARCHAIS

31. At 37, he was the youngest astronaut to walk on the moon.
HARRISON SCHMIDT? CHARLES DUKE?

32. This businessman founded the nation’s second largest payroll processing company in the United States and once co-owned a New York hockey team, but his attempts to enter the political arena were less successful.
H. ROSS PEROT

33. This Anglo-American architect is less known for his hundreds of buildings than for his development of a “pattern language” that allows an ordinary person to design a building to meet his or her own needs.

34. This activist began her law career as a legal adviser to the National Organization for Women and later became its longest-serving president.
ELEANOR SMEAL? PATRICIA IRELAND?

35. A debate among potential Republican presidential candidates – in which he supported a grain embargo against the Soviet Union, advocated a national gas tax, and admitted that his biggest political regret was voting for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – launched what became one of the more successful third-party candidacies in U.S. history.
JOHN ANDERSON

36. Excelsior! Born poor in Harlem, this one-time navy cook used the settlement from an auto accident to start a cleaning store.
GEORGE JEFFERSON

37. Known as the “Angry Man of Jazz,” this influential bassist cited Duke Ellington and church as his greatest influences.
CHARLES MINGUS

38. This actor is best known for his roles as a young cop, a young hockey player, and a not-so-young Harry Truman.
JAMES WHITMORE?

39. In a 40-week period, he spent 32 weeks as the Number One-ranked pro golfer in the world – alternating the position with the man who both preceded and succeeded him.
JACK NICKLAUS? ARNOLD PALMER?

40. This British writer is best known for a 1912 poem that begins with a traveler knocking on the door and asking, “Is there anybody there?” (He never does get an answer.)

41. While at MIT, this American biologist isolated the enzyme responsible for reverse transcriptase – an achievement which earned him a share of the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine.
DAVID BALTIMORE

42. This clergyman was serving as Archbishop of New York when he was named the first American cardinal by Pope Pius IX.

43. His 26 confirmed victories made him his country’s leading flying ace of World War I.
EDDIE RICKENBACKER?

44. This Canadian American psychologist is best known for her contributions to attachment theory – in particular, her development of the Strange situation procedure to identify attachment patterns between children and caregivers.

45. This English philosopher wrote, “The principle of utility judges any action to be right by the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interests are in question.”
JEREMY BENTHAM

46. When this once-powerful political figure died in the Ludlow Street Jail, the mayor refused his daughter’s request to fly the flag at City Hall at half-mast.
BOSS TWEED

47. Playing before the era of professional ice hockey, this future Hall of Famer compiled an impressive record with the Queen's University Golden Gaels, but later died in action on the Western Front.
HOBEY BAKER?

48. In a single decade, this versatile lyricist penned one of the anthems of the Great Depression, one of Groucho Marx’s best patter songs, and the score for one of the best-loved movie musicals of all time.
YIP HARBURG

49. This television journalist died at Howard University Hospital of complications resulting from AIDS.
MAX ROBINSON

50. This Hungarian economist won the Nobel Prize for his contributions to game theory, particular the analysis of games of incomplete information.
JOHN HARSANYI

51. In the early years of his career, this actor played in a wide variety of genres – including the title role in a Hitchcock thriller and the male leads in three of the greatest comedies of the early 1940s – but for the last 30 years of his career, he appeared almost exclusively in westerns.
JOEL MCCREA

52. Before his death in 2006, he was considered by some to be the greatest living Irish novelist. (His best known novel was about a former IRA officer who tyrannizes his own family.)

53. At the time of his assassination, this gangster was head of the nation’s largest crime family. (His nephew played a prominent role in a classic gangster film.)

54. Two critical discoveries – the aberration of light and the nutation of the Earth’s axis –helped him earn the post of Astronomer Royal.
EDMOND HALLEY?

55. This one-time plumber served on the National War Labor Board during World War II – good preparation for the major role he would later play in organized labor.
GEORGE MEANY

56. The painting shown here was the work of this member of the Ashcan School and the Eight:

Image

57. On October 17, 1777, this general surrendered his entire army of over 6,000 men – an action that had far-reaching consequences and made him rather unpopular back home.
JOHN BURGOYNE

58. He was the last coach to lead his team to three consecutive NFL championships.
VINCE LOMBARDI? CHUCK NOLL?

59. This advertising icon celebrated his fiftieth birthday last year; the man who first brought him to life celebrated his eightieth birthday this year.
RONALD MCDONALD

60. Prior to his execution, this monarch requested – and was given – two shirts so that they crowd would not mistake his shivering from the cold for quaking in fear.
CHARLES I? LOUIS XVI?

61. In a world where pornography hardly raises an eyebrow, this gonzo porn star regularly tested the limits of taste by featuring extreme acts with actresses dressed as underage girls – and managed to get sent to prison in 2009 on five counts of transporting obscene matter online and five counts of mailing obscene matter. (His internet domain was seized by the government, in case you’ve been looking for it.)

62. In addition to his most famous partnership, this playwright also collaborated with Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, the Gershwins, John P. Marquand, Rodgers and Hart, Ring Lardner, and his second wife.
GEORGE S. KAUFMAN? MOSS HART?

63. In 1847, this Hungarian doctor wrote a book explaining how incidences of childbed fever could be dramatically reduced by the use of hand disinfection in obstetrical clinics. Nobody paid much attention at the time.
IGNAZ SEMMELWEIS?

64. In a seminal 1792 book, this political philosopher wrote, “I wish to persuade women to endeavor to acquire strength, both mind and body, and to convince them that the soft phrases, susceptibility of heart, delicacy of sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with epithets of weakness, and that those beings who are only objects of pity and that kind of love, which has been termed its sister, will soon become objects of contempt.” Nobody paid much attention at the time.
THOMAS PAINE?

65. Rolling Stone ranked him the fourth greatest guitarist of all time and credited him with producing “rock's greatest single body of riffs."
KEITH RICHARDS?

66. DJMQ: This South African-born choreographer founded the first major ballet company in Germany.

67. This evangelist was best known for his work among gang members and drug addicts in New York City, as described in a best-selling 1962 book.
DAVID WILKERSON

68. In 1925, this cartoonist took over an existing comic strip about a frivolous flapper; by 1938, it had evolved into an entirely new strip focusing on the flapper’s niece.
ERNIE BUSHMILLER

69. This fashion designer created the gown shown here, as well as many others for the same client:

Image

70. Her skill on ice won her a gold medal at Sarajevo and a bronze medal at Lillehammer. (She was ineligible to compete in the years between.)
JAYNE TORVILL

71. Speaking through a character named “Piscator,” this writer famously discoursed on the relative merits of the frog, the grasshopper, and the live worm.
IZAAK WALTON

72. He wrote and directed two of the comedies referenced in Clue #51.
PRESTON STURGES

73. This co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize was a founding member of the Páirtí Sóisialta Daonlathach an Lucht Oibre – or, for those of you who prefer English, the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

74. From 1923 to 1954, he was president of one of the quintessentially American corporations, and his name appears on many educational and cultural institutions in Atlanta.
JOHN EMORY?

75. This physicist asserted that there is limit to the precision with which pairs of complementary variables of a particle can be known simultaneously. (At least I think that’s what he asserted; I’m not quite sure.)
WERNER HEISENBERG

76. Compositions by this impressionist composer – who heartily disliked the term ‘impressionist’ – included an opera based on a play by Maeterlinck and a symphonic poem inspired by a poem by Mallarmé.
CLAUDE DEBUSSY

77. At six in the morning on August 11, 1977, I woke up my entire family with the news that this serial killer had been arrested.
DAVID BERKOWITZ

78. It was while on an unsuccessful business trip to Akron in 1935 that he made the phone call that changed his life – and, subsequently, the lives of millions of other people.
BILL W(ILSON)? BOB S(MITH)?

79. This historian wrote eighteen books covering such topics as the medieval worldview, the rise and fall of a munitions dynasty, and the assassination of a U.S. President.
BARBARA TUCHMAN

80. “Forget not that I am an ass,” this officer of the law indignantly insisted – and for more than 400 years, no one ever has.

81. This Basketball Hall of Famer spent his entire career with the Philadelphia Warriors, retiring with what was at the time the third-highest career point total in NBA history.
PAUL ARIZIN

82. Dante never won a Pulitzer Prize for The Divine Comedy, but this American poet did for Divine Comedies. (I guess Dante just wasn’t trying hard enough.)
THORNTON WILDER?

83. He is the only actor to appear in all eight installments – both direct sequels and spinoffs – of a series of raunchy comedy films that began in 1999 and promises to continue until the day the franchise dies.
EUGENE LEVY

84. This English explorer led the third expedition to circumnavigate the globe, but his attempt to become the first to circumnavigate the globe twice ended with his death at sea.
SEBASTIAN CABOT? FRANCIS DRAKE?

85. This Canadian prime minister – whom President Kennedy consider “a boring son of a bitch” – had to be dissuaded from sending a formal letter of protest when JFK mispronounced his name at a press conference.

86. Nine years after the murder of his more famous wife, this Kenyan game warden was also murdered.

87. Robert Koch called this onetime Surgeon General the “Father of American Bacteriology,” thanks to such achievements as discovering the cause of lumbar pneumonia and publishing the first American manual of bacteriology.

88. In a listing of the Top 100 Country Music Songs, CMT ranked a 1968 megahit by this singer and songwriter as Number One.
GEORGE JONES? TAMMY WYNETTE?

89. After assuring himself that not a single British soldier had been left behind, this commander of the 1st Infantry boarded the last ship to leave Dunkirk.

90. This co-editor of Commentary penned such influential essays as “The Gangster as Tragic Hero” and was the first critic to write seriously about Mad magazine.
ROBERT WARSHOW

91. He was the first modern philosopher to formulate a detailed theory revolving around the concept of the “social contract” – though, unlike later Enlightenment thinkers, his theory led him in the direction of absolutism.
THOMAS HOBBES

92. While operating an unsuccessful butcher shop in Buffalo, this entrepreneur bought a cash register . . . which eventually led to his becoming a salesman for NCR . . . which eventually led to his becoming chairman and CEO of one of America’s most successful corporate giants.
THOMAS J. WATSON

93. “I don’t care! I’d rather sink – than call Brad for help!” – these are the final thoughts of the girl who is the subject of one of this artist’s best-known paintings.

94. He was the first male tennis player in the Open Era to rank No. 1 for a total of more than five years.
BJORN BORG?

95. This actor won two Oscars for playing men who really, really would have preferred not to fight.
GARY COOPER

96. This influential European novelist famously said that the artist “like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”
JAMES JOYCE

97. Rhodes Scholars who went on to become U.S. state governors include Richard Celeste of Ohio, David Boren of Oklahoma, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – oh yeah, and this guy.
BILL CLINTON

98. While trying to find out if uranium salts emitted x-rays, this physicist accidentally discovered an even more important phenomenon.
HENRI BECQUEREL

99. This singer-songwriter hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 32 times and wrote the single most covered copyrighted song of all time.
PAUL MCCARTNEY

100. This religious leader composed the theme music to Davey and Goliath – and did some other important stuff as well.
MARTIN LUTHER
"[Drumpf's] name alone creates division and anger, whose words inspire dissension and hatred, and can't possibly 'Make America Great Again.'" --Kobe Bryant (1978-2020)

"In times of crisis, the wise build bridges. The foolish build barriers." --Chadwick Boseman (1976-2020)

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