Women in
Government
Authors
Americana
Who Am I?
Football
Disasters
100

The mayor of Los Angeles

Karen Bass

100

“Profiles in Courage”

John F. Kennedy

100

The music genre that originated in New Orleans in the late 19th and early 20th centuries

Jazz

100

“The Greatest Showman on Earth”

P.T. Barnum

100

Erie’s Fred Biletnikoff played 14 seasons with this NFL team

Oakland Raiders

100

Mrs. O’Leary’s cow purportedly caused this major city disaster

Chicago fire

200

The first female Attorney General

Janet Reno

200

“Little Women”

Louisa May Alcott

200

The illustrator who gave us Charlie, Lucy, and Linus

Charles Schultz

200

President Trump’s second wife

Marla Maples

200

The NFL franchise with the most team victories

Green Bay Packers

200

The most common type of natural disaster in the United States

Floods

300

The first woman nominated for Vice President by a major party

Geraldine Ferraro

300

“The Grapes of Wrath”

John Steinbeck

300

Carl Perkins – and later, Elvis – warned not to step on these

Blue Suede Shoes

300

"The Wizard of Menlo Park”

Thomas Edison

300

The player with the most NFL MVP awards

Peyton Manning

300

“Oh, the humanity”

The Hindenburg

400

The first Hispanic Supreme Court Justice

Sonia Sotomayor

400

The given name of the “Doctor” who wrote of the Grinch, Yertle, and a chapeau-wearing Cat

Theodore Geisel

400

The western-themed show that featured three half-brothers and their father

Bonanza

400

I played a paleontologist on television’s “Friends”

David Schwimmer

400

He had – and has – the most D-1 wins as a head football coach

Joe Paterno

400

A deadly 1906 earthquake and fire killed more than 3000 people in this city

San Francisco

500

The first woman to serve as a Cabinet member 

Frances Perkins

500

“Common Sense”

Thomas Paine

500

This singing cowboy recorded the song, “Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer”

Gene Autry

500

The wrestler born Terry Bolea

Hulk Hogan

500

The Hall of Fame quarterback with more career interceptions than touchdowns

Joe Namath

500

A 1900 hurricane struck this Texas city, killing more than Pearl Harbor and 9/11 combined

Galveston