(7 of 12)
5. Captured control of Patagonia.
55. After Churchill named Viscount Alexander of Tunis as British Minister of Defense, the post of Canada's Governor General was filled by a famous actor's brother:
1. Zeppo Marx.
2. Clyde Olivier.
3. George Lunt.
4. Percival Gable.
5. Vincent Massey.
56. Loudest cheers voiced over the resignation of RFC Chairman Symington came from Bolivians, bitter because he had slashed the prices for Bolivia's main source of income:
1. Rubber.
2. Nitrates.
3. Lumber.
4. Copper.
5. Tin.
57. Rampaging floods ruined thousands of acres of farmland, cost more than 150 lives and 30,000 cattle.
58. Despite Britain's objections to treaty-breaking, Farouk I styled himself King of this region.
59. Nationalist mobs broke up French-called elections for Consultative Chambers of Commerce and Agriculture.
60. The death of her father brought to the throne a 25-year-old queen.
61. As a gesture toward Arab unity, Jordan's King journeyed here to make a bond with his father's ancient enemy.
62. George F. Kennan, the State Department's "Mr. X," was named new U.S. Ambassador to this country.
63. Need for Western assistance caused the conditional release of Archbishop Stepinac.
64. Edgar Faure managed to form (at least temporarily) a new cabinet.
65. A sage old Moslem spiritual leader became the world's newest king, Idris I.
66. Despite Russia's violent opposition, this country was elected to a seat on the Security Council.
OTHER EVENTS
Art & Entertainment
67. Back conducting the NBC Symphony this season despite his 84 years was the white-maned perfectionist:
1. Leopold Stokowski.
2. Arturo Toscanini
3. Dimitri Mitropoulos.
4. Charles Munch.
5. Sir Thomas Beecham
68. The first opera to be commissioned by TVand a much-applauded Christmas Eve productionwas Amahl and the Night Visitors by:
1. Gian-Carlo Menotti
2. Igor Stravinsky.
3. Eric Coates.
4. Roy Harris.
5. Darius Milhaud.
69. Largely responsible for the brilliant style of the Met's light and elegant Così Fan Tutte was the painstaking care of its director:
1. Cecil B. DeMille.
2. Alfred Lunt.
3. Arturo Toscanini.
4. Alfred Hitchcock.
5. John Ford.
70. Back in Rudolph Bing's good graces after nine ignominious months of exile from the Met was singer:
1. Robert Merrill.
2. Hilde Gueden.
3. Frankie Laine.
4. Kirsten Flagstad.
5. Lauritz Melchior.
71. C. W. Ceram's Gods, Graves & Scholars makes popular a somewhat dusty subject:
1. Religion.
2. Archeology.
3. Psychology.
4. Journalism.
5. Harvard.
72. A tale of Marxist revolutionaries and FBI counter-espionage is told in "I Led Three Lives," by:
1. Whittaker Chambers.
2. Joseph Barnes.
3. Bertrand Russell.
4. Ferdinand Waldo Demara Jr.
5. Herbert Philbrick.
73. The 1951 Nobel Prize for literature went to a writer little known outside his native Sweden:
1.
