This Roman god of love is often shown with a bow and arrow.
Cupid
This 1960s show featured a starship crew exploring space, led by Captain Kirk and First Officer Spock.
Star Trek
In Peanuts, this boy hopes to receive Valentine’s cards but usually gets none.
Charlie Brown
This show followed the Brady family, including six children and their parents Mike and Carol, and aired in the late 1960s and ’70s.
The Brady Bunch?
This formerly enslaved man became a leading activist and published the newspaper The North Star.
Frederick Douglass
These birds are often seen as a symbol of love and are mentioned in the song “Lovebird.”
Doves
This 1964 musical stars Julie Andrews as a magical nanny who flies with an umbrella.
Mary Poppins
This Italian dish is made with dough, sauce, and cheese, often baked in an oven.
pizza
Before his 1962 space flight, astronaut John Glenn asked this Math expert to check the rocket calculations by hand.
Thomas Edison
This U.S. state produces the majority of the country’s roses for Valentine’s Day.
California
This 1961 musical starring Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer tells the story of rival gangs in New York City.
Westside Story
This Dutch painter, famous for “Starry Night,” spent much of his life in mental institutions.
Vincent van Gogh?
This 1963 event in Washington, D.C., featured the famous “I Have a Dream” speech.
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom?
This 1981 song by Dolly Parton later became a huge 1992 hit when covered by Whitney Houston and is often played around Valentine’s Day.
I will always love you
This 1967 comedy features the Marx Brothers-style antics of Peter Sellers as a bumbling detective.
Pink Panther
He is the scientist who formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation in the 17th century.
Issac Newton