|  |  |  |  |  | 
  | QUESTIONS FROM A 1927 QUIZ BOOK |  |
 | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Founded in April 1919, this organization sold its first stamps or "seals" to help disabled children in 1934 | the Easterseals 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In fiction, it's the term for the one who tells the story; first person & third person are 2 types | narrator 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This wood cylinder with a handle at each end will have you undulating in dough | (Alex: Yes, with less than a minute.) 
 a rolling pin
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | 24 years after his death in Las Vegas, this rapper as well as actor had his "Greatest Hits" on the Billboard 200 in 2020 | Tupac 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Spirit or determination, & what the American Academy of Pediatrics says not to do to children as punishment | spank & spunk 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | With 10.3 million, it's the largest American state by population according to the 1920 Census | (Andrew: What is New York City?) (Alex: Yes. No?)
 
 New York
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | The people who founded this organization in 1976 had previously built a bunch of homes in Zaire | (Andrew: Uh, let's dance. Let's make it a True Daily Double.) [Audience laughter]
 (Alex: Let's dance?)
 (Andrew: You only get one shot.)
 (Alex: Even James Holzhauer never said, "Let's dance." [Shoves hands forward] This he did, but not [Acts out dancing with a partner] "Let's dance.")
 
 Habitat for Humanity
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | It's the practical lesson about right & wrong that results from an instructive story like a fable | a moral 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Instead of evaluating all applications after a hard deadline, some colleges use this 2-word process & reply more quickly | rolling admission 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 2001 this alliterative woman's "30 Minute Meals" premiered with a 30-minute episode about leftovers | Rachael Ray 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | The animals of a given region, & a Finnish-style steam bath | sauna & fauna 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This "heavier-than-air flying machine is intended to rise & descend vertically" | (Andrew: What is a hot air balloon?) 
 a helicopter
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1942 this org. was founded in Oxford, England to feed hungry children in Greece; it has since branched worldwide | Oxfam 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | From Greek words for "first" & "actor", it's the main character in a story | protagonist 
 
 |  |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | She says, "There's rarely a day that I'm out in the world that somebody doesn't mention '13 Going on 30'" | Jennifer Garner 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | A small electronic device, & a surfer girl played on TV by Sally Field | Gidget & gadget 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | 12 1/2 miles long, the Simplon Tunnel through these European mountains was then the longest in the world | the Alps 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1944 Tuskegee president Frederick Douglass Patterson started this scholarship organization | (Andrew: What is the NAACP?) (Ben: What is the American Negro College Fund?)
 
 the United Negro College Fund
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | The 6-line "Scottish stanza" is also known by the name of this 18th century poet | (Rabbie) Burns 
 
 |  |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Hopper was back & sporting a mustache for the 3rd season of this '80s-set Netflix series | Stranger Things 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | An old term for a poet, & the last name of the man who passed away in 2010 at age 92 as the Senate's oldest member | (Ben: [*]. What are [*]?) ...
 [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 Byrd & bard
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | The "3 new European nations of more than 10 million...as a result of the World War" were Poland, Czechoslovakia & this Slovene-ly one | Yugoslavia 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This philanthropic organization with a fez for a logo dates back to a meeting of Masons in 1870 | the Shriners 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This 5-letter word for a figure of speech is widely used to mean any familiar reference | a trope 
 
 |  |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1995 she starred as a teacher in the film "Dangerous Minds"; in 2014 she was mentioned in the lyrics of "Uptown Funk" | Michelle Pfeiffer 
 
 |  |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Best known for his many portraits, like the one seen here, this three-named American painter died in London in 1925 | John Singer Sargent 
 
 |  |