Bob
Bob's Music
Babe Ruth
Babe's Sport History
Random
100

What is Bob's last name

Marley

100

Bob's music is called

A. Rock and Roll 

B. Reggae

B. Reggae

100

Babe Ruth's first name was?

George or Herman or Bob or Roman

George Herman Ruth Jr. was born on February 6, 1895, at 216 Emory Street in a house which belonged to his maternal grandfather Pius Schamberger, a German immigrant

100

What sport did Babe ruth play?

Baseball

100

Was the Baby Ruth Candy bar named after the baseball player Babe Ruth?

No,the Baby Ruth candy bar is named after President Cleveland's daughter, Ruth. 

200

Bob was never a member of a band. 

Yes or No

No, he was a member of several bands the most famous of them being called "The Wailers"

200

Bob's music continues to sell albums since he died.

Yes or No

Yes

200

Did Babe grow up in an orphanage?

Yes or No

Yes, 

Babe Ruth was the eldest of eight children born to a Baltimore bartender and his wife. They had no time for their son, and when he was seven they placed him in St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys, a combination orphanage and reform school. They even signed over custody to the Brothers who ran the institution.


200

What position did Babe play?

Pitcher and Outfielder

200

Bob Marley is was born in Cuba?

Yes or No

No,  Born in Nine Mile, Jamaica, and was a was a Jamaican reggae singer, guitarist, and songwriter. 

300

What year was Bob posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?

A. 1981  B.  1977 C. 1994 D.  2001

C.  1994


300

The song "I shot the Sheriff? written and song by Bob Marley?

Yes or No

Yes, but the US popular version was sung by Eric Clapton

300

Did Babe Ruth every visit Sioux City Iowa?

Yes or No

Yes

 The New York Yankee legends Ruth and Gehrig were both attending a backyard party in Sioux City on Oct. 18, 1927, less than two weeks after the Yankees finished a World Series sweep against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

/siouxcityjournal.com/uploaded-images/babe-ruth-and-lou-gehrig/image_417cd844-1a87-5fa6-8aab-56d91c6edd3e.html#tracking-source=in-article

300

Did Babe ever play for the Boston Red Sox?

Yes or No

Yes,

Boston Red Sox (1914–1919)

300

What is a Baby Ruth made of?

A Baby Ruth Chocolate Bar is made with fresh peanuts, caramel and chocolate-flavoured flavoured nougat covered in a delicious milk chocolate. Baby Ruth are American Chocolate Bars thought to be named after the baseball pitcher Babe Ruth. 



400

Bob was shot and that is how he died? 

Yes or No

No, however, Bob was shot and wounded in in his home in 1976 but he died on May 11, 1981 from cancer.

400

According to the music magazine ROLLING STONES, Bob's number one song is 

Get Up, Stand up OR Buffalo Soldier

“Get Up, Stand Up” may be the most potent song ever about human rights and the fight to secure them. Marley and Peter Tosh were often at odds about the Wailers’ music (for instance, how many Tosh songs should be featured on their albums), but the co-written “Get Up, Stand Up” was a case of two minds thinking as one. Marley had taken a trip to Haiti and witnessed its poverty firsthand, and Tosh was similarly attuned to oppression, particularly in the music business. “I am doing something,” he said, “because I see the exploitation.” The song’s direct, chant-style chorus was further enhanced by the Wailers themselves; unlike its predecessor, Catch a Fire, which used overdubs by U.S. musicians, Burnin’ presented the Wailers’ sound undiluted, propelled by bassist Aston “Family Man” Barrett and his brother, drummer Carlton Barrett. But the group worked hard to nail the definitive album version. One alternate take from the Jamaican sessions had more of a soul groove; another, cut in New York in the summer of 1973, when they were in town to play Max’s Kansas City with Bruce Springsteen, had a busier vocal arrangement. An instant signature, it was a highlight of 1975’s Live! (where Marley added the indelible “wo-yo-yo-yo” chant), and frequently led the battle-hardened troika that capped many of Marley’s late-Seventies concerts, appearing alongside “War” and “Exodus.” It has since been reworked by everyone from Tosh (on his 1977 solo set Equal Rights) to Public Enemy, from Springsteen to Rihanna. In the words of Chuck D, “This song is a battle cry for survival.”

400

Where did Babe play baseball in the 1920's?

He played for the New York Yankees

Midway through Babe Ruth's first season with the New York Yankees in 1920, after he had already broken his own single-season home run record of 29 and was on his way to shattering a dozen other statistical marks, he began to publicly express his home run goal for the year: “A half-century.”


400

How many world series did Babe Ruth WIN?


3 or 5 or 7 or 11

He played on 7 World Series champions: four with the Yankees (1923, 1927, 1928, 1932), and three with the Red Sox (1915, 1916, 1918). 

He was also on the losing side of three World Series teams with New York (1921, 1922, 1926). 1933 was Ruth's 20th season in major league baseball

400

Bob Marley had how many children?

3 or 5 or 7 or 11

On his website they list 11 children 


500

Bob was a practicing member of the Catholic Faith all during his life?            Yes or No

No, Bob was however brought up Catholic and was a member for some years of the Rastafari movement, whose culture was a key element in the development of reggae. He became an ardent proponent of Rastafari, taking its music out of the socially deprived areas of Jamaica and onto the international music scene.

500

What was name of Bob Marley's first song that he released?

Judge Not 


In 1962, Robert Nesta Marley released his debut single, “Judge Not”, on Beverley's Records in Jamaica, under the name Robert Marley & Beverley's All-Stars.



500

What state did Babe Ruth grow up in?

Baltimore, Maryland

Early years. George Herman Ruth Jr. was born on February 6, 1895, at 216 Emory Street in the Pigtown section of Baltimore, Maryland. Ruth's parents, Katherine (née Schamberger) and George Herman Ruth Sr., were both of German ancestry. According to the 1880 census, his parents were both born in Maryland.


500

What is one of Babe Ruth's nicknames?

Known by many nicknames including the "Sultan of Swat," the "Behemoth of Bust" and the "Great Bambino," Babe Ruth was one of baseball's most celebrated players with a legacy that extended beyond the baseball field and onto home radio sets, coveted trading cards

500

Did Babe's family give him that nickname or someone else? 

Someone else.....



Ruth obtained the nickname “Babe” when a sportswriter referred to him as one of “Dunn's babes.” For his day, Ruth was a large man; he stood more than six feet tall and weighed more than 200 pounds


M
e
n
u