Rivers and Roads
Music
Presidential Politics
Potpourri
Landmarks
100

The longest in the world, this river stretches from its headwaters in Peru and snakes nearly 4,000 miles to its mouth at the Atlantic Ocean

The Amazon

100

This crooner (not Mark E. Boy) and rat pack member is known by the nickname “Ol’ blue eyes"

Frank Sinatra

100

Article II Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution states that the president also holds this title, putting him/her in charge of our armed forces

Commander in Chief

100

The United States has held the summer Olympic games five times: 1904 in St. Louis, 1996 in Atlanta, and twice in this city

Los Angeles

100

This modern expressionist landmark, designed by Danish architect Jørn Utzon, features a series of white “shells” and is situated on a harbor in its host country's most populous city

Sydney Opera House

200

This famed road, the subject of a 1946 Nat King Cole hit song and a tourist destination, was made obsolete by high-speed interstates and decommissioned in 1985

Route 66
200

This iconic entertainer with a sovereign nickname stared in his first film in 1956; the film was named after and featured one of his best-known songs, which reached #1 on the billboards a November 1956

Elvis Presley

200

The White House, then called the Presidential Mansion, was burned in August of 1814 during this war

War of 1812

200

According to Article III of the U.S. Constitution, the Supreme Court has this many justices

9

200

This building in Agra, completed in 1653 and now a World Heritage site, shares it name with a famous American blues musician

Taj Mahal

300

The Danube River divides this Hungarian capital city into two distinct halves, and each side of the river bears half of the city’s name

Budapest

300

This trumpeter player, often considered the epitome of “cool,” released his landmark album “Kind of Blue” in 1959

Miles Davis

300

Of the two father-son duos to be elected President of the United States, this pair came first. 

John Adams and John Quincy Adams

300

This animated series, which premiered in 1989 and currently spans 684 episodes, is the longest running show in television history

The Simpsons

300

Guarded by roughly 1,000 mo’ai statutes, this remote island lies roughly 3,500 kilometers from Chile

Easter Island

400

This interstate runs along nearly the same route that revolutionaries used during the war in 1775-1783—this is, of course, before it grew to the 1,900+ mile, 15 state highway that we know and love today

I-95

400

No matter “What a Fool Believes,” the 2020 class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame includes this band, fronted by a soulful keyboardist with a distinctive voice

The Doobie Brothers

400

Nine U.S. Vice Presidents ultimately inherited the presidency—eight upon the death of the President and the other due to the resignation of this president.

Richard Nixon

400

The Siamese cat was the most popular breed of cat in the 19th century and though originally from China, the breed derived its name from the former name of this Asian country

 

Thailand

400

Finnish architect Eero Saarinen designed Dulles International Airport in Washington D.C.  as well as the world’s tallest arch in this city

St. Louis

500

This road—the longest road in the United States—runs from Kenmore Square in Boston to Newport, Oregon

Route 20

500

The 1969 Altamont Music Festival in California, which sought to be the “Woodstock of the West,” is not known for peace and love but for the violence, including the Hell’s Angels stabbing a concertgoer while running security for this British band

The Rolling Stones

500

The concept of Presidential libraries began in 1939 when this president, known primarily by this initials, began construction of the library on his Hyde Park estate

FDR

500

In 1859, abolitionist John Brown led an armed rebellion against the federal armory at Harpers Ferry, now in this U.S. state

West Virginia (then Virginia)

500

This palace complex in Beijing served as the home of Chinese emperors for almost 500 years and, despite its name, hosted 19 million visitors in 2019

The Forbidden City