Monday, Oct. 26, 1953

(THIS TEST COVERS THE PERIOD FROM LATE JUNE THROUGH MID-OCTOBER 1953)

Prepared by The Editors of TIME in collaboration with Alvin C. Eurich and Elmo C. Wilson

(Copyright 1953 by TIME Inc.)

This test is to help TIME readers and their friends check their knowledge of current affairs. In recording answers, you needn't mark opposite the questions. Use one of the answer sheets printed with the test: sheets for four persons are provided. After taking the test, check your replies against the correct answers printed on the last page of the test, entering the number of right answers as your score on the answer sheet. For most of the 105 test questions, five possible answers are given. You are to select the correct answer and put its number on the answer sheet next to the number of that question. Example:

0. The President of the U.S. is:

1. Nixon

2. Hoover

3. Eisenhower

4. Truman

5. Stevenson

Eisenhower, of course, is the correct answer. Since this question is numbered 0, the number 3--standing for Eisenhower--has been placed at the right of 0 on the answer sheet.

NATIONAL AFFAIRS

Congressional Record

1. Congress finally gave the President an extension on the excess profits tax, though House Ways & Means Chairman Dan Reed had almost killed the bill by:

1. A 24-hour filibuster.

2. Attaching a rider to it.

3. Bottling it up in committee.

4. Lining up Democrats against it.

5. Branding it unconstitutional.

2. After long debate, the Administration's request for foreign aid appropriations was:

1. Passed as proposed.

2. Tabled for further consideration.

3. Cut $3 billion and passed.

4. Crippled with unworkable restrictions.

5. Flatly turned down.

3. On the death of G.O.P. Leader Robert A. Taft, his colleagues filled the post of Senate Majority Leader with the successor he had chosen:

1. Styles Bridges.

2. James Mitchell

3. Wayne Morse.

4. William Knowland.

5. Earl Warren.

4. Ike's only major defeat in the session was Congressional refusal to:

1. Pass the Bricker Amendment.

2. Increase the federal debt limit.

3. Raise income taxes.

4. Establish a Small Business Administras tion.

5. Continue his power to allocate defense materials.

The Paring Knife

5. Ike told the nation that this year's budget, as compared with Truman's estimate for the same period, would save taxpayers almost:

1. $100 million.

2. $7 billion.

3. $13 billion.

4. $22 billion.

6. To help him decide which 400 of his employees should be fired, budget-needled Harold Stassen asked all his Foreign Operations staff members to:

1. Submit to investigation by the FBI.

2. Re-apply for their jobs in writing.

3. Report their other sources of income.

4. Take a series of intelligence tests.

5. Look for another job.

7. An extra $242,000 rolled into federal coffers when Internal Revenue Commissioner Andrews tried this new collection gimmick in six New England states:

1. A door-to-door hunt for tax evaders.

2. Telegrams to delinquents.

3. A 1% rebate for payment in full.

4. A discount for expatriate movie stars coming home through the port of Boston.

5. Singing commercials on the radio.

8. Faced with cutting $5 billion out of its '54 budget, the Air Force will slice all but one of these:

1. Personnel.

2. Its combat wing goal.

3. New pilot training.

4. Authorized flying time.

5. Its commitment to NATO.

Looking Abroad

9. On the heels of the East German riots, President Eisenhower promptly made public:

1. A U.S. offer of free food for hungry East Germans.

2. An appeal to all satellite peoples to join the revolt.

3. An offer to accept all East German refugees, quota-free.

4. His decision to withdraw the U.S. Ambassador from Russia.

10. Later, the U.S. sent 1,000,000 tons of surplus wheat to relieve the famine in:

1. Poland.

2. Syria.

3. Turkey.

4. Pakistan.

5. Transjordan.

11. Defining U.S. Asian policy at the governors' conference in Seattle, Ike named as its immediate object:

1. The restoration of Nationalist China.

2. Statehood for Hawaii.

3. The defense of Indo-China.

4. Acquisition of new air bases.

5. Rehabilitation of Japan.

12. Secretary Dulles told an American Legion convention that the U.S. would take a firm stand against:

1. Any further aggression by Communist China.

2. The return of Trieste to Italy.

3. A Big Four conference.

4. A non-aggression pact with Russia.

13. Next day at a press conference Dulles ad-libbed a statement which was widely deplored as:

1. Appeasement to Red China.

2. Hostile to the British.

3. A leak of atomic secrets.

4. Direct U.S. interference in the German elections.

5. An attack on French conduct of the Indo-China war.

14. After 20 months of negotiations, the U.S. signed a treaty trading $226 million in military and economic aid for the right to use and develop bases in:

1. Portugal.

2. Spain.

3. Argentina.

4. Iceland.

5. Denmark

Trials and Errors

15. Death for convicted spies Ethel and Julius Rosenberg was delayed one day when a stay of execution was ordered by:

1. Supreme Court Justice Douglas.

2. Attorney General Brownell.

3. President Eisenhower.

4. FBI Director Hoover.

5. Intelligence Chief Allen Dulles.

16. Arizona state troopers moved in on the town of Short Creek and arrested almost all adults on the grounds of:

1. Tax evasion.

2. Draft dodging.

3. Opium growing.

4. Vagrancy.

5. Polygamy.

17. When Methodist Bishop G.Bromley Oxnam was accused of fronting for Communists by members of the House Un-American Activities Committee, he:

1. Sued the entire committee for libel.

2. Admitted he had been duped.

3. Demanded a public hearing and flatly denied the charge.

4. Sent a protest direct to the President.

5. Made no comment.

18. Ex-Serviceman Bob Toth, flown back to Korea to face an Air Force court-martial for murder, was returned because:

1. He was the wrong man.

2. His supposed victim was still alive.

3. President Eisenhower pardoned him.

4. A federal judge questioned Air Force authority to arrest a civilian.

5. Air Force officers refused to prosecute.

19. High in the Sierra Nevada range, the FBI ended an important manhunt with the dramatic capture of:

1. The Boston Brink's robbers.

2. Two fugitive Communist leaders.

3. The Greenlease kidnapers.

4. Willie ("The Actor") Sutton.

5. Three counterfeiters whose output was estimated at $2,000,000.

20. Lucille Ball's fans forgave her for registering as a Communist in a 1936 election, when she explained she did it:

1. On a dare.

2. To please her grandfather.

3. Only as a protest.

4. By mistake.

5. In a fit of temper.

The Farm Front

21. Disaster threatened Texas cattle ranchers this summer as a result of:

1. Consumer resistance to beef prices.

2. A meat-packing strike.

3. : A record drought in the Southwest.

4. Freak hail storms.

5. A plague among Hereford herds.

22. Backed by the decisive vote of U.S. farmers themselves, Agriculture Secretary Benson won approval for:

1. Strict production quotas and high price supports for wheat.

2. Wheat quotas but no price supports.

3. A ban on all food imports.

4. Fewer working hours for all farm hands.

5. A crackdown on child labor.

23. With the U.S. piling up a record agricultural surplus, the only basic crop which seems likely to remain free of quotas next year is:

1. Cotton. .

2. Tobacco.

3. Peanuts.

4. Rice

5. Corn.

Business

24. In the past few months, the harried U.S. auto industry took all but one of these body blows:

1. A $70 million fire at a key G.M. plant.

2. A cutback in Studebaker production.

3. A drop in the profits of independent automakers.

4. A serious slump in used-car sales.

5. A wave of jurisdictional strikes.

25. In an effort to build up volume of sales, members of the New York Stock Exchange may soon sell their wares: 1. In vending machines.

2. On a monthly purchase plan.

3. At greatly reduced commissions.

4. In supermarkets.

5. Through department store charge accounts.

26. Acting on its promise to stop Government competition with business, the Administration sold this property to private industry:

1. The Federal National Mortgage Association.

2. The Inland Waterways Corp.

3. The Grand Coulee Dam.

4. The Reconstruction Finance Corp.

5. Fort Knox.

INTERNATIONAL & FOREIGN

The Shooting Wars

35. Korean truce negotiations were delayed when Syngman Rhee surprised both sides by:

1. Demanding that Red China withdraw from the talks.

2. Taking a trip to Washington.

3. Sending a raiding party across the Yalu.

4. Freeing thousands of North Korean prisoners.

5. Insisting on reparations from Russia.

36. Signed in silence, with no jubilation, the armistice terms included all but one of these:

1. Return within 60 days of all prisoners wishing repatriation.

2. A neutral nations commission to supervise prisoners unwilling to be repatriated.

3. A redrawn truce line with a net territorial gain for the U.N.

4. A political conference to be held within three months.

5. A plebiscite in North Korea to be held within six months.

37. A warm welcome in Freedom Village met returned prisoner William F. Dean:

1. Jet ace downed over MIG Alley.

2. Commander of the first U.S. forces in the Korean war.

3. War correspondent trapped in the fall of Seoul.

4. Missionary who refused to leave his North Korean post.

5. Leader of "reactionary " prisoners who fought hardest against "brainwashing."

38. In a vigorous new attempt to win the war in Indo-China, Washington and Paris promised all but one of these moves:

1. Elevation of a Cambodian general to equal rank with French Commander Navarre.

2. A doubled U.S. contribution to the cost of the war.

3. Assurance of Indo-Chinese indepen dence at war's end.

4. An increase in French troops.

5. A buildup of native troops.

Inside the U.N.

39. To keep the post-Armistice conference on Korea from becoming a round table on all Asiatic affairs, the U.S. took a firm stand against:

1. The agenda proposed by the French.

2. Syngman Rhee's plan to act as conference chairman.

3. Holding the conference in Peking.

4. The participation of India.

5. Holding the conference before other issues have been settled.

40. Well qualified for her new post as first woman president of the U.N. General Assembly, India's Madame Pandit has also been all but one of these:

1. An ambassador to Moscow.

2. A member of her country's Parliament.

3. A leader of its delegation to the U.N.

4. Jailed on three separate occasions for civil disobedience.

5. Author of a bestselling novel.

41. It cost the U.N. $135,000 to $185,000 when its own tribunal ruled that it had to pay damages to:

1. Some American employees fired on a question of disloyalty to the U.S.

2. A tourist who tripped over a window-cleaner's bucket.

3. A Polish delegate misquoted in a U.N. press release.

4. Syngman Rhee, for property damaged by celebrating U.N. troops.

5. New York City, for illegal parking by delegates.

Behind the Iron Curtain

42. "Enemy of the people" was the charge, when the power struggle in the Kremlin found its first victim, once-powerful Vice Premier:

1. Molotov.

2. Lavrentiev.

3. Vishinsky.

4. Voroshilov.

5. Beria.

43. In his first major policy address as chief of state, Malenkov made clear that Russia has the H-bomb. But he seemed to place more stress on:

1. Promising the Russians "a drastic upsurge" in the production of consumer goods.

2. The urgent need for an immediate Big Four conference.

3. Scolding his people for their "decadent" interest in creature comforts.

44. After their June riots, East Germans won a good many concessions from their Russian masters, among them all but one of these:

1. No more reparations after Jan. 1.

2. Cancellation of their postwar debts to Russia.

3. Release of German war prisoners guilty of "minor" crimes.

4. Permission to elect their own leaders.

5. Return of 33 requisitioned plants.

Hemisphere

45. Canadians re-elected Prime Minister St. Laurent in the fifth straight victory for his:

1. Liberal Party.

2. Labor Party.

3. Conservative Party.

4. Socialist Party.

5. Whig Party.

46. Elected President by the greatest popular vote ever received in his country, Jose Figueres plans to remodel Costa Rica into:

1. The perfect Marxist state.

2. A moderately socialistic state.

3. The last bulwark of conservatism.

4. A miniature U.S.A.

47. Russia slid a foot in the door of Latin America trade with a treaty providing for the exchange of $150 million worth of goods between the U.S.S.R. and:

1. Guatemala.

2. Chile.

3. Argentina.

4. Brazil.

5. Colombia.

48. A new kind of revolution, bent on wiping out graft and corruption, was introduced into Mexico with the regime of its austere new President:

1. Miguel Aleman.

2. El Galleguito.

3. Adolfo Ruiz Cortines.

4. Laureano Gomez.

5. Gustavo Rojas Pi-nilla.

Around the Globe

49. Ordered by his doctors to take a complete rest, Sir Winston Churchill chose his own pinch-hitter, Acting Prime Minister:

1. Anthony Eden.

2. Lord Salisbury.

3. Richard Austen Butler.

4. Clement Attlee.

5. Sir Gladwyn Jebb.

50. Meanwhile, all Britain buzzed over Princess Margaret's supposed romance with:

1. An American millionaire.

2. A divorced R.A.F. officer.

3. An African prince.

4. The Duke of Edinburgh's brother.

51. Nationwide strikes forced French Premier Laniel to modify his plan for:

1. Slashing government expenses.

2. Nationalization of industry.

3. Drafting women.

4. Granting independence to all French colonies.

5. Exporting all French wines.

52. Alarmed by the excesses of Mossadegh's triumphant supporters, the Shah of Iran fled to exile in Rome. Six days later, he:

1. Applied for a visa to the U.S.

2. Returned in triumph, after street mobs overthrew Mossadegh.

3. Narrowly escaped an attempted assassination.

4. Divorced his wife.

5. Asked the U.N. to oust Mossadegh.

53. The three-way contest for the Presidency of the Philippines became a two-man race when:

1. Romulo withdrew and threw his support to Magsaysay.

2. Quirino withdrew and threw his support to Romulo.

3. Magsaysay withdrew and threw his support to Quirino.

54. Italy was propelled into her worst political crisis since the war when Premier Alcide de Gasperi:

1. Threatened Yugoslavia with war.

2. Closed all banks.

3. Outlawed all labor unions.

4. Called for a return to monarchy.

5. Resigned because the post-election Cabinet he proposed was rejected.

55. Despite Red efforts to sabotage the German elections Chancellor Konrad Adenauer won a smashing victory and a clear mandate for his:

1. Social Democratic Party.

2. Christian Democratic Union.

3. German Reich Party.

4. All-German bloc.

5. Prussian Party.

OBIT

Within the last few months, death came to many noted men and women. For each question below two correct answers are possible. Write in either name.

63. The nation mourned two distinguished citizens: one a heroic general, the other the holder of the country's highest judicial post.

64. New Hampshire lost a crime-investigating Republican Senator and West Berlin a courageous mayor.

65. The Arts will miss two famous names: one the beloved original Peter Pan, the other a lusty, gusty Catholic author and rhymester.

OTHER EVENTS

Arts and Entertainment

66. White, sound-reflecting "clouds" will hang inside the dome of this building, designed by Architect Eero Saarinen to be:

1. Los Angeles' new airplane hangar.

2. New York's new planetarium.

3. M.I.T.'s new auditorium.

4. Florida's new jail.

5. Seattle's new art museum.

67. "Grandma, your ears are the most to say the least," says the new groovy version of Grimm, updated by:

1. Red Skelton

2. Garry Moore.

3. Steve Allen.

4. Bing Crosby

5. Ogden Nash.

68. The Salzburg Festival saw the world premiere of Gottfried von Einem's opera The Trial, which took its libretto from a novel by:

Ludwig Bemelmans.

George Sand.

Franz Kafka.

Sir William Walton.

Jean-Paul Sartre.

69. Canada's remarkably successful Shakespeare festival featured British favorites:

1. Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh.

2. Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester.

3. Maurice Evans and Judith Evelyn.

4. Alec Guinness and Irene Worth.

5. Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.

70. Back in the U.S. for its third tour, Sadler's Wells opened with an eye-filling Swan Lake and a cast headed by Ballerina:

1. Maria Tallchief.

2. Moira Shearer

3. Nadia Nerina.

4. Margot Fonteyn.

5. Ruth St. Denis.

71. Tabbed as a likely hit on the strength of its costars, Mary Martin and Charles Boyer, is Joshua Logan's coming production of:

1. Kind Sir.

2. Return to Paradise.

3. Sailor's Delight.

4. Ladies of the Corridor.

5. The Queen and I.

72. In his 80s, Philosopher Bertrand Russell suddenly turned fictioneer to write:

1. The Rascal Russell.

2. Father, Dear Father.

3. Life Begins Too Late.

4. Satan in the Suburbs.

5. A Mingled Yarn.

73. The Bridges at Toko-ri tells an uncompromising story of fear, truth and death. Its hero is a naval aviator, its author is:

1. Nicholas Monsarrat.

2. Pearl Buck.

3. James Michener.

4. Philip Deane.

5. Charles Lindbergh.

74. The Robe, which represents Hollywood at its supercolossal best, also introduces this important new technical advance:

1. Colorama.

2. Screen-Aroma.

3. CinemaScope.

4. 4-D.

5. Double Vision.

75. From Here to Eternity, bestseller-turned-movie, featured top performances from all but one of these male leads:

1. Burt Lancaster.

2. Van Heflin.

3. Montgomery Clift.

4. Ernest Borgnine.

5. Frank Sinatra.

Radio and TV

76. Perched on stools, these two were the hit of the Ford Motor Co.'s 50th Anniversary TV program:

1. Abbott and Costello.

2. Sophie Tucker and Patachou.

3. Ethel Merman and Mary Martin.

4. Charlie McCarthy and Edgar Bergen.

5. Bette Davis and Tallulah Bankhead.

77. The FCC made a long-awaited announcement which: 1. Bars giveaway programs after Jan. 1.

2. Gives color TV the green light.

3. Requires all studios to give one-third of their time to public service programs.

4. Restricts half the available air waves to educational stations.

5. Limits plunging necklines.

78. In a major TV achievement, Studio One opened its sixth season with Nineteen Eighty-Four, the late George Orwell's bitter satire on:

1. The police state.

2. The role of women in our society.

3. American tourists abroad.

4. Dollar diplomacy.

5. Life on the planet Venus.

SPELL IT OUT

The first letter of each correct answer below spells out a ten-letter word that has recently been in the news. Only the last names of people are used. You get one point for each answer and one for the meaning of the word.

79. Controversial confidant of 5,940 females.

80. Her daddy won the Hambletonian, too.

81. The kind of holiday Audrey Hepburn took.

82. Grotewohl is Premier, but this Deputy is the real boss.

83. This is the kind of World Series it was.

84. General who signed the truce in behalf of the U.N.

85. A North Korean pilot took him up on his offer to pay $100,000 for a MIG.

86. Prime Minister of the brand-new federation of British Central Africa.

87. Summer boarder at the Doud's in Denver.

88. New five-time-a-week radio voice of the C.I.O.

89. The word spelled out is:

1. Polish U.N. delegate who asked for U.S. asylum.

2. New No. 2 man in Moscow.

3. Pro-Communist Party in Iran.

Science and Medicine

90. R.C.A.'s inventor, Dr. Vladimir K. Zworykin, has designed a system he thinks fills the greatest need of U.S. driving:

1. Highways that move like escalators.

2. Electronically controlled cars that need no drivers.

3. An automatic parker.

4. Television sets for cars.

5. A set of neon signals for drivers.

91. According to the Carnegie Institution chemical "farms" growing one-celled algae may someday provide the world with an almost unlimited supply of:

1. Food.

2. Gamma globulin.

3. Penicillin.

4.Rubber.

5.Cortisone.

92. The Trieste, Professor Auguste Picard's newest type of balloon, successfully completed its maiden voyage to:

1. The moon.

2. The North Pole.

3. The bottom of the sea.

4. Saturn.

5. The Matterhorn.

93. After a generation of waiting, the U.S. Public Health Service finally got the $64 million research tool it wanted:

1. A cyclotron.

2. A clostridium.

3. A new clinical center for observation and treatment of patients with chronic diseases.

4. A mechanical brain for recording morbidity statistics.

5. A laboratory for studying the effects of cosmic rays.

94. Microbiologist Selman Waksman announced that German scientists have taken the sting from his drug, actinomycin, turned it into a potential weapon against: 1. Polio

2. Cancer.

3. Cardiac diseases.

4. Blindness.

5. Tuberculosis.

Press

95. As an unusual answer to the "one-party press," the Democratic Party launched:

1. A daily paper.

2. A monthly digest-type magazine.

3. A syndicated column.

4. A nationwide letters-to-the-editor cam paign.

5. A blacklist of news papers.

96. After its recent demise, Quick hurried back on the newsstands, this time published by:

1. Gardner Cowles.

2. Walter Annenberg.

3. Colonel Robert McCormick.

4. Dorothy Schiff.

5. Blair Moody.

97. On the death of Bert Andrews, the post of Washington bureau chief for the New York Herald Tribune went to longtime "State of the Nation" byliner:

1. Bill Oatis.

2. Eddy Gilmore.

3. Whitelaw Reid.

4. Roscoe Drummond.

5. James Reston.

Religion and Education

98. Roman Catholic priests in the diocese of Raleigh, N.C. got a letter from Bishop Vincent S. Waters which in one stroke ended:

1. Racial segregation in the Catholic churches of his diocese.

2. The local controversy over a "miracle cure" in Raleigh.

3. The feud between parochial and tax-supported schools.

4. Rumors of his impending resignation.

5. All plans for a fund-raising supper which would feature roulette and faro.

99. When an FBI agent identified Harvard's Dr. Helen Deane Markham as a Communist, the Corporation of the University first suspended her, then:

1. Summarily dismissed her.

2. Reinstated her but announced she would not be reappointed when her term expires.

3. Decided it was "irrelevant" to her competence as a professor.

100. In his new book, The Conflict in Education, Robert M. Hutchins attacks U.S. higher education on the grounds that it:

1. Ignores the student's need for practical vocational training.

2. Doesn't specialize enough.

3. Doesn't use its opportunities to further social reform.

4. Devotes less and less attention to the classics.

5. Doesn't weed out students who "should never have learned to read in the first place."

Sports

101. To Britons the news that the "Ashes" had come home meant that for the first time in 20 years England had:

1. Won the famed international Henley regatta.

2. Beaten France at tennis.

3. Captured top place in her own Open Golf tournament.

4. Retrieved the Olympic torch of 1924.

5. Beaten Australia at cricket.

102. Though a hard core of Scots insisted "No American is going to burn up Carnoustie," this U.S. champion shot a birdie to win the British Open:

1. Sam Snead.

2. Ben Hogan.

3. Bob Hope.

4. Byron Nelson.

5. Lloyd Mangrum.

103. After a bout with cancer, this sportswoman made a comeback, proved she still had the old stuff:

1. "Little Mo" Connolly.

2. Babe Didrikson Zaharias.

3. Florence Chadwick.

4. Jacqueline Auriol.

5. Melinda MacLean.

104. Shuttle-eyed tennis fans at Forest Hills saw the U.S. National Singles tournament clinched when:

1. Tony Trabert out-hit Seixas.

2. Seixas took the title from Trabert.

3. Cornelius Shields beat Gardnar Mulloy.

4. Ken Rosewall walked off with the title for Australia.

5. Lewis Hoad won.

105. The ninth-inning hit that gave the Yankees their fifth straight World Series victory was made by:

1. Mickey Mantle.

2. Billy Martin.

3. Allie Reynolds.

4. Casey Stengel.

5. Roy Campanella.

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Cut along dotted lines to get four individual answer sheets

ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED 50...

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OTHER EVENTS 66...

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81... 82...

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101...

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104...

105...

Cut along dotted lines to get four individual answer sheets

ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED

50...

51...

52...

53....

54...

55...

56...

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60...

61...

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OTHER EVENTS 66...

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ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED

50...

51...

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53....

54...

55...

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57...

58...

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60...

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OTHER EVENTS 66...

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SCORE 0.. .3 36 NATIONAL 13 27 AFFAIRS 14;;;;;;; 28" ; 37 1 15 29 38 2 16 30 39 -- l 31 40 - iy 9 33 32 . 41 42 <<;;;;;;; % 34 43 44.

22. INTER-45 .

9 23 NATIONAL 46 !?:: : L4:: : (TM)N II: 12.. . 26.. . 35 49.

Cut along dotted lines to get four individual answer sheets

ANSWER SHEET

SCORE 0....3

NATIONAL 13 27 36.

14 28 37.

15 29 38.

6 l IS ' 30 31 39-40.

4 18. ' 32 41.

5 19 -33 42.

6 20 34 43.

7 21 44.

8.. . 22 " INTER-45.

9 23 NATIONAL 46 JJ H FOR!IGN JJ.

12.. 26.. . 35.. . 49.

Cut along dotted lines to get -Four individual answer sheets ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED 50.... . . 65 76 91 51 77 92 52 78.. 93 53 OTHER 7g q4 54 80 95 55.... . . 66 81 96 56 . . 67 82 97 57.... . . 68 83 98 58.... . . 69 84 99 59.... . . 70 85 100 60.... . . 71 86 101 61.... . . 72 87 102 62.. . . . 73. 88 103 63.. . . . 74 89 104 64.. . . . 75 90 105 ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED 50 .... . . 65 76 91 51 77 92 52 78 93 ...

53 OTHER 7q 04 54 80 95 55 . . 66 81 96 56 ..67.. 82 .. 97 57 . . 68 83 98 58 . . 69 84 99 59 . . 70... 85 100 60 . . 71 86 101 61 . . 72 87 102 62.. . . 73 88 103 63 . . . . . . 74 89 104 64 . . . . . . 75 90 105 ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED 50 65 76 91 51 77 92 52 78 93 53 -- OTHER EVENTS 7n 8; --;-; 04 |S;;;;;; 54 55 . . 66 81 96 56 67 82 ' 97 57 . . 68 83 98 58 69 . . . 84 99 59 70 ... . 85 100 60 .. 71 86 101 61 72 87 102 62 73 88 103 63 . . . . . . 74 89 104 64 .. 75 90 105 B| ANSWER SHEET CONTINUED 50 . . 65 76 91 51 77 92 .

78 Q3 53 --V OTHER VTT'MT'? ' y 7n n/t y^ 54 80 95 55 66 81 96 56 . . 67 82 97 57 68 83 98 fiQ 84 QQ 59 . . 70 85 100 60 71 86 101 61 72 87 102 62 . . . . . . 73 88 103 63 . . . . . . 74 89 104 64 . . . . . . 75

JUST FOR FUN

Three of the recent TIME cover personalities shown here are identified by the three groups of statements below. No score for this section, but just for fun, see if you can write in the correct name on the first clue. If not, read the second clue. And don't feel too bad if you have to go on to the third.

A. At the age of eight he turned out a 31 -page history of the Boer War roundly criticizing theBritish.

B. Joshua, Sir Francis Walsinghamand Cardinal Richelieu ran organizations similar to his.

C. His brother is not unknown in State Department circles.

A. She likes to quote the British reviewer who said she has a face like a cabbage.

B. A new musical, By the Beautiul Sea, is being written to order for her by Herbert and Dorothy Fields.

C. As a slovenly housewife in Come Back, Little Sheba she captured every acting award in sight.

3 A. Although he looks and acts likean intellectual, his background is more bohemian than Brahmin.

B. At the Versailles Conference, he served as the hearing aid to Delegate Joseph Clark Grew.

C. As governor, he is giving Massachusetts a refreshing sample of purposeful direction.

ANSWERS & SCORES "Z sz r is "t" 92 "-L- >L "Z OS "Z SZ The correct answers to the 105 questions in the News Quiz are printed below. You can rate yourself by comparing your ^ ZL -L- 8fr p score with the scale: I 11 -L- L^ I ZZ Below 50 --Poorly informed -QL Z 9t -L- IZ 51-65 --Not well-informed "p 69 "1 Sfr "Z" "02 66-80 -- Somewhat well-informed ---L- gg ' ' p fcf ' ' -L- 61 "-L-" "L9 T -L-t P 81 -L- 99 -L- IV l LI -- H3HXO ..-L-.. ..^ ..f.. ..gl CO moog Aaptqs 'Z' ' ' 'saiFKI U3tlV 'I w by "I'' "8-L- "p" "-L-I UOSUJA -> ' ' C Q-L- "-L- It }tiatj/MiiB/v fcy ->-- "se "p" "oi I Z9 NO13HO.S "8 --1 6 1VNOIXVN "Z""SOI "Z" "56 ^-"TO sg 9 19 -naxNi m'g" "8 ' ' 1 POl Z t-6 UOSUJBH fcg H 09 ' I L "I -L-01 "-L- -L-6 -<">>qns eg ---L-[ 6s --p t-L- --p 9 f v) L o 6O "m Co Cf O3 o CO c-3 -L- 101 I 16 JJOJI 18 PI LS 6 Z-L- Z fr p 001 Z 06 -raidoonaH Qg p 95 I I-L- p -L- Z DO c DO -- Oi o as Z 0-L- -L- Z --T Ofi 31000 japuBA no --/-O/ --c -bC ''C f7 ''C T "p L6 J3MDEGM<<3sia ^g ---L- n --[ pc. ---L- 8t sjTiv^jiv "Z" "96 su133nHgg ---L--- --gi ---L-----35 '-/-- ' ' LI

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