LJ Daily Quiz: 5 September 2006
Sep. 5th, 2006 09:25 amBonus: Due to extreme workloads, AL and CV need some extra time this month. So we're giving you a super-sized quiz that will run for the next two weeks, to give us a chance to catch up and stuff. Also, it will give you student types a chance to get settled in your new classes and be all studious. We expect good report cards at the end of the semester.
1. The island of Mauritius was home to the now extinct Raphus cucullatus, more commonly referred to as what?
2. Who was the 24th Governor-General of Canada?
3. June Lockhart has been "Lost In Space" on television and, thirty years later, on the big screen. Her part in the movie was just a cameo; who played her original character in the film?
4. Which religious organization's name means "Practice of the Wheel of Law"?
5. Stanislaw Lem's most famous novel was first published in 1961, first filmed in 1972, and that film remade thirty years later. What was the name of the book?
6. Which Puccini opera tells the tragic tale of Mimi and Rodolfo?
7. Captain Jean-Luc Picard routinely orders which drink from his replicator?
8. During the American Civil war, what slang term referred to Northerners, especially Congressmen, who were sympathetic to the South or supportive of slavery?
9. What instrument plays your tune?
1. The island of Mauritius was home to the now extinct Raphus cucullatus, more commonly referred to as what?
2. Who was the 24th Governor-General of Canada?
3. June Lockhart has been "Lost In Space" on television and, thirty years later, on the big screen. Her part in the movie was just a cameo; who played her original character in the film?
4. Which religious organization's name means "Practice of the Wheel of Law"?
5. Stanislaw Lem's most famous novel was first published in 1961, first filmed in 1972, and that film remade thirty years later. What was the name of the book?
6. Which Puccini opera tells the tragic tale of Mimi and Rodolfo?
7. Captain Jean-Luc Picard routinely orders which drink from his replicator?
8. During the American Civil war, what slang term referred to Northerners, especially Congressmen, who were sympathetic to the South or supportive of slavery?
9. What instrument plays your tune?