Actually, I believe the third one is the only fictional entry – it was the case in which Edmund Gwenn was tried for impersonating Kris Kringle in the film Miracle on 34th Street. I’m not familiar with Stogner, but Mapp has something to do with sex – white slavery, I believe. Checking Google as soon as I hit “submit”…
Hannibal Hamlin finished his term as VP: King died in office, and Agnew and Calhoun resigned.
:smack: D’oh. Of course I shoulda’ realized Roe v. Wade is not fictional. The mention of Kringle shut out all reason. You may begin the paddeling, Sternvogel.
lso, I have search for the name Topo Gigio, and I now suspect the question has something to do with the Ed Sullivn show.
You got it, Scott. “Janice” was a member of the Muppets band “Electric Mayehm” and “Dr. Teeth,” and she was also a nurse in the “Dr. Bob” segments.
57. Stogner did involve sex crimes; Mapp v. Ohio was a search-and-seizure case.
59. The (MAD) Hate Book was also a Jaffee creation. “Quivering Quotations” were in Sex to Sexty. 
- KISS, the Royal Canadians, AC/DC, Darryl Hall & John Oates
The Royal Canadians was Guy Lombardo’s band; the others are rock personalities.
- 1804 silver dollar, 1922 quarter, 1894 dime, 1913 nickel
The 1804 dollar, the 1894 dime, and the 1913 nickel are very rare. The 1922 quarter does not exitst at all.
- Rocky Road, divinity fudge, dulce de leche, tin roof sundae
Divinity fuge is a kind of chocolate. The others are flavors of ice cream. - Dan Rowan, Woody Guthrie, Ted Knight, Audie Murphy
Exceptg for Guthrie, these performers were all in combat in World War II. - Fold-In, Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions, The [MAD] Hate Book, Quivering Quotations
The first three are indeed Al Jaffee articles in Mad. The last is from Sex to Sexty.
Here are ten more: - Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Andrew Jackson, Theodore Roosevelt
- Poor Boy, Hoagy, Reuben, Submarine
- Cy Young, 1904; Don Larsen, 1956; Andy Hawkins, 1990; Charlie Robertson, 1923
- Daniel Terwilliger, Ma Joad, Victor Lemoyne, Buster
- Puyallup, Spokane, Seventy Mile House, Port Orchard
- Chester Hunnyhugger, Maude Frickert, John Tower, Lester P. Quillsap
- Fly, placket, peplum, cuff
- Foss, Hodge, Ginger, Inigo
- Virgil Partch, John Houseman, Syd Hoff, John Severin
- A convenience-store owner born in India; a DMV clerk who smokes high-tar cigarettes; a bumbling, redheaded teenager; an overweight store owner who wears his hair in a ponytail
a) Andrew Jackson is the only one not on Mount Rushmore
b) Theodore Roosevelt is the only one not on money
c) Thomas Jefferson is the only one not married while serving as President
Reuben is a specific sandwich, the other three of types of sandwiches.
Andy Hawkins did not throw a perfect game. (BTW, retrosheet.org gives the date of Robertson perfect game as April 30, 1922.)
Seventy Mile House is not a city in Washington.
Partch, Hoff, and Severin were artists, John Houseman was a 19th Century baseball player with the Cubs and the Cardinals.
All of these are Simpsons characters (Apu; Patty and/or Selma; generic teenager; Comic Book Guy). I’m guessing that all but the DMV clerk are voiced by Hank Azaria? (Julie Kavner does Marge and her sisters.)
Not quite, Thudlow. This teenager isn’t with the Simpsons at all. His co-characters include:
A red-headed mother and balding father.
A goofy friend who wears a hat like a crown.
A rich brunette and a not-rich blond girl.
A slick-topped smart aleck.
A fat, bald principal.
A Swedish janitor with a Teddy Roosevelt moustache.
Etc. 
I stand corrected about Charlie Robertson. :o
And I think you have the wrong John Houseman. 
OoOoh. That red-headed teenager.

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To expand on Julius Henry’s answer: “poor boy” (or po’ boy), “hoagy” (also spelled “hoagie”), and “submarine” are regional variant names for the sandwich also known as a “hero”, “grinder”, or “zeppelin” in other areas.
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John Tower was a U.S. Senator from Texas. The others were characters created by comic Jonathan Winters.
Zeppelin? Where do they call it that? 
- Fly, placket, and cuff are closings on garments. They may feature buttons. A peplum isn’t and doesn’t.
Not exactly. The placket, cuff, and peplum are found on women’s garments. Not the fly, except on jeans. 