21. Shortly after being appointed the creative director of Bottega Veneta, this German fashion designer presented his first collection, which consisted solely of accessories.
dunno
22. Created by Roy Crane in 1924, this bumbling storekeeper was the eponymous star of America’s first action/adventure comic strip with a continuing story line.
Dunno
23. This Romanian-born actor is best remembered for his screen and television portrayals of an O. Henry character that had previously earned another actor an Oscar.
Dunno
24. This Norwegian was succeeded in office by a Swede, a Burmese, an Austrian, a Peruvian, an Egyptian, a Ghanan, and a South Korean.
Trygve LIE
25. Now aged 90 and living in a Chicago retirement community, this German-born poet won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for
Alive Together: New & Selected Poems.
Lisl MUELLEr
26. A member of the NHL Hall of Fame, he coached the Boston Bruins to their first Stanley Cup win in 29 years.
Don't know
27. As lead singer of the Enchanters, this soul singer had his biggest chart success with the song “Cry Baby.”
Hmm. Dunno
28. Once considered the world’s most dangerous terrorist, he died of a gunshot wound – possibly self-inflicted – in his Baghdad apartment in 2002. (By then, Americans weren’t paying much attention.)
Abu NIDAL
29. In 1995, this Brit finally proved a 358 year-old theorem concerning the following equation:
And there was much rejoicing in the land.
Andrew WILES, Fermat's Last Theorem
30. This sportswriter helped create a legend when he wrote, “In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden.”
Grantland RICE
31. This architect’s crowning achievement can be seen on the back of a $50 bill.
Capitol building, right? Latrobe, Thornton, Bullfinch?
32. Considered the world’s leading anti-pornography crusader, this British feminist considers porn a public health issue that needs to be contained by legal censorship.
Maybe Catherine Mackinnon but I thought she was Canadian.
33. In 1556, this Italian priest founded the Congregation of the Oratory, a brotherhood of secular clergy bound together by no formal vows.
Philip NERI
34. This real estate mogul is ranked #97 on the
Forbes list of the richest – but he ultimately owes it all to birdseed, fish food, and hamster wheels.
dunno
35. He was the third actor to appear in the fourth slot in the opening credits of
Law and Order.
So, the assistant DA? Linus ROACHE?
36. Despite intermittent bouts of senile dementia, this Supreme Court justice was determined to beat John Marshall’s longevity record and succeeded: his 34-year tenure is still the second-longest in the Court’s history.
Has to be Stephen FIELD since anyone post-Douglas would be aiming for his record
37. This playwright won both a Pulitzer and a Tony for his dark comedy about the dysfunctional Weston family of Pawhuska, Oklahoma.
Tracy LETTS
38. Despite a short life – he died in 1916 at the age of 43 – this German composer produced an impressive volume of orchestral, organ, and vocal works, but is probably best known for his “Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart.”
Max REGER
39. This Vermont native shared a Nobel Prize with two other chemists "for their development and use of molecules with structure-specific interactions of high selectivity." (No, I don’t know what that means, so shut up.)
Huh. Would have to think about it.
40. This American golfer won his only major championship in 2009 after a four-hole playoff with Tom Watson.
Stewart CINK, Britsih Open that year
41. In 1971, a court martial acquitted this infantry captain of war crimes; the lieutenant under his command did not get off so easily.
MEDINA, don't know first name
42. The resume of this New York-based child psychologist includes hosting a nationally syndicated radio show, acting as a contributing editor to
Family Circle,, and authoring such books as
Not in Front of the Children.
dunno
43. In a major novel by Henry James, she tries to solve all her romantic and financial problems by arranging for the man she loves to become engaged to a terminally ill heiress. It does not end well.
Kate CROY, in Wings of the Dove?
44. During his fifteen year tenure as co-anchor of an NBC news magazine, he interviewed figures ranging from Boris Yeltsin to Jeffrey Dahmer, and won an Emmy for his interview with NYC subway vigilante Bernhard Goetz.
dunno
45. One of the founding Yippies, he was proudly clubbed on the head during the 1968 DNC, but missed out on his chance to become one of the Chicago Seven. (He had to settle for ‘unindicted co-conspirator.’)
Stuart ALPERT
46. Thanks to his talkative bride, you now know more about this actor’s impressive genitalia and sexual prowess than you ever knew you wanted.
Pass
47. This Harlem Renaissance author only produced two novels, but has recently enjoyed a revival of interest thanks to the racial and gender themes in her 1929 novel about a mixed-race woman passing for white.
Nella LARSEN. The novel is called... Passing, go figure.
48. He overthrew one of Africa’s longest-reigning dictators in 1997, was himself assassinated after three years as president, and was immediately succeeded by his son (who still holds the office today).
Laurent KABILA
49. She married for the first time five years after her tenure as U.S. First Lady ended.
Maybe HARRIET LANE
50. This singer’s career got an unexpected jump start when, at the age of 15, he was hastily recruited to fill in for Buddy Holly.
Bobby VEE