What film took the longest time between its original release and winning an Oscar?
Limelight. Won the Best Original Score Oscar for 1973, 21 years after its original release. The film was not shown in Los Angeles until 1972, so it wasn’t eligible when it first came out in 1951.
What US president has an entire province (and a city in that province) named after him in a country outside the US?
Rutherford B. Hayes. The Presidente Hayes province and the city of Villa Hayes in Paraguay are named for him. He arbitrated a land claim in Paraguay’s favor; they named the land after him. Though it looks like someone else actually made the recommendation and he signed off on it.
To elaborate on my somewhat abrupt challenge, each of the 6 other planets spends at least a third of its time inside that circle of 30.5AU radius- indeed, for the inner planets it’s closer to half. But let’s say 1/3 to give Mercury a chance. The probability of *none *of the other six planets being closer to Neptune than Mercury would then, at any given point in time, be (2/3) to the power 6, or about 8%.
Hi AABE. I’ve taken the liberty of numbering two bits of your earlier reply. Let’s suppose for the time being that (1) is given. Surely (2) only follows if all the other planets are usually outside Neptune’s radius at the same time?
Isn’t it possible that even if any particular planet is usually outside Neptune’s radius, there may still be one or more that are, at any given time, closer to Neptune that Mercury?
Hi hammos1, in the spirit of friendly discussion, I’d love to hear what you think is the flaw with AABE’s assertion?
Okay. I’m going to go ahead and provide “Daddy’s answer” to this, because I have been unable to find a real answer online. Maybe I haven’t framed the search criteria close enough or maybe there is no real answer. It won’t be the first time I found out that either Daddy didn’t know, Daddy was funning with me, or there just isn’t a valid answer.
His answer: a cucumber and another hog.
FWIW, I had a chance to use this last week at a dinner. At least I got a laugh since we had cucumbers in the salad.
First, a definition. By “usually closest” I mean that Mercury spends more time as the closest planet to Neptune than any other individual planet does. Stand with me on Neptune, and measure the distance to each of the 7 other planets. Now list them in order of increasing distance. One planet must head the list, that one being the currently closest. Now repeat this at regular intervals to produce a constantly updated list.
My assertion is that Mercury heads the list more often than any other planet - say Jupiter for example. (Clearly *some *planet must head the list more often than the others.) Could it be Jupiter? No, because Mercury is closer for the majority of the time. Similar reasoning eliminates all other planets other than Mercury.
BTW, I got this from Scientific American sometime in the 1970’s. If I’m wrong, so were they. I’m sure ianzin’s astronomer friends can give us the definitive answer.
Alaska’s only most Easterly if you cheat and take the International Date Line to be relevant to this question. If you cut the map such that all of the Aleutians are on the same side of the world (and that’s how most people think of them, since nobody would cross Eurasia just to get to the next island in the chain) then Maine is the Easternmost state.
(If Puerto Rico ever becomes a state, it will be Easternmost and Southernmost. But that hasn’t happened yet.)
This certainly used to be true but I have a feeling that since the Gambling Act (of 2006?), poker can now be played in pubs for small stakes (total prize pot of less than £200?) without a gambling licence. I could be wrong about the requirement for the licence, though.
The first one is Tony Blair, MP - I used to know the second one, too, but I’ve forgotten and can’t work it out.