(9 of 12)
1. Female baldness.
2. The common cold.
3. Cancer.
4. Arthritis.
5. Deafness.
86. Just behind the front lines in Korea, U.S. soldiers diligently hunted rabbits, rats and mice in an attempt to run down a virus or near-virus which has killed at least 25 of their buddies and made hundreds ill since June with:
1. Epidemic heartburn.
2. fever.
3. Skin infection
4. Postnasal tetanus
5. Tularemia
87. Stoutly denied by U.S. anthropologists were the charges published in the Communist Chinese press that American forces had stolen:
1. Sacred idols from the summer palace of the emperors
2. Priceless 12th Century manuscripts from the presidental library in Seoul
3. 500,000-year-old bones, the last remains of Peking Man.
4. Bones of the largest mastodon ever foudn in Siberia.
5. Relics of a lost Tibetan civilization.
88. The annoyance of Dr. Charles Allen Thomas over the poor land on his farm led to the discovery by Monsanto Chemical Co. of a new soil conditioner:
1. Soilax.
2. Polyurion.
3. Sulfur
4. Worms.
5. Krilium.
Religion and Education
89. Fulton Oursler's The Greatest Book Ever Written is a popularization of:
1. The Old Testament.
2. The New Testament.
3. Book of Job.
4. The whole Bible.
5. Genesis.
90. Without waiting for the state supreme court to decide on constitutionality, the regents of the University of California voted to scrap:
1. Football.
2. Special loyalty oaths for faculty and other employees.
3. The athletic stadium.
4. Rose Bowl contests.
5. The university's articles of incorporation.
Press
91. With the Bratten-Shaver case, Jack Steele of the New York Herald Tribune adds to his record as:
1. One of New York's top crime reporters.
2. A big cog in the uncovering of dope smugglers.
3. A tracker of corruption in the Administration.
4. The capital's best labor reporter.
5. A sucker for a false tip.
92. Back on the stands, but under a completely Peronized management was Argentina's famed:
1. La Nación
2. Democracia.
3. El Heraldo.
4. O Globo
5. La Prensa.
93. Before he died in Decemoer, his amazing sensitivity for words, pouncing eye for the phony, and rigorous taste had made a whopping success of his magazine:
1. Harper's.
2. Atlantic Monthly.
3. The American Mercury.
4. The New Yorker.
5. Coronet.
94. When several of the authors objected, Simon & Schuster called off publication in book form of the controversial Collier's Magazine issue which:
1. Exposed the number of U.S. Communists.
2. Previewed World War III.
3. Analyzed British Socialism.
4. Lambasted the U.N.
5. Forecast the conquest of the world by Russian insects.
Sports
95. Generally hailed as one of the top football players of the year was Princeton's great triple-threat back:
1. Chris Cagle.
2. Johnny Bright
3. Dick Kazmaier
4. Jack Slagle
5. Bob Mathias
96. Both Drake and Bradley withdrew from the Missouri Valley Conference shortly after the football
