San Diego Union-Tribune

I wish you luck in taking this Presidents’ Day quiz

- Please send your questions and comments about language to richardhle­derer@gmail.com website: www.verbivore.com.

In today’s headline, note my punctuatio­n of the federal holiday Presidents’ Day, not President’s Day. Why? Because the day salutes all the men who have served as our presidents. I also accept Presidents Day.

A number of studies indicate that history and civics are the subjects in which American students fare worst. Here’s your chance to prove that you are not one of them. After you’ve tried your hand and mind at these posers, use the answers to win bar bets.

How many men have been president of the United States?

Although Joe Biden is listed as our 46th president, only 45 men have held that office. That’s because Grover Cleveland was nonsequent­ially elected as our 22nd and 24th president and, unfortunat­ely, counted twice, messing up the math.

Who was the youngest man ever to serve as president of the United States?

If your answer is John Fitzgerald Kennedy, you’re slightly off the mark. When he took office, Kennedy was, at the age of 43 years and 7 months, the youngest man ever to have been

elected president, but Theodore Roosevelt became president at 42 years and 10 months, in the wake of the assassinat­ion of William McKinley. When TR’s second term was over, he was still only 50 years old, making him the youngest ex-president.

Now that you know the identity of our youngest president, who was our oldest president to enter the Oval Office?

Ronald Reagan became president two weeks shy of his 70th birthday, older than any other president, and left office two weeks short of his 78th.

At the age of 70 years and 7 months, Donald Trump superseded Reagan as the most chronologi­cally endowed man to ascend to the Oval Office, and was then superseded by Joe Biden, who became president at the age of 78 years and 2 months — older than Ronald Reagan when he left office!

Another way to identify our oldest president is to ask which one lived the longest?

For more than 150 years, the president most full of years was John Adams, who lived for 90 years and 8 months. John Adams has been superseded by Ronald Reagan (93 years and 4 months), Gerald Ford (93 years and 5 months), George H.W. Bush (94 years and 6 months), and, now, Jimmy Carter (98 years and 3 months).

Speaking of age, identify six U.S. presidents who are not buried in America.

Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden.

Our third, fourth, and fifth presidents — Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe — each consecutiv­ely served two full terms as president for a total of 24 years. Name three other presidents who consecutiv­ely served two full terms.

They’re recent presidents — Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama.

Five presidenti­al candidates have won the popular vote but lost the Electoral College and hence the presidency: Andrew Jackson (1824), Samuel Tilden (1876), Grover Cleveland (1888), Al Gore (2000), and Hillary Clinton (2016). In addition to this pattern, what else do they have in common?

They are/were all Democrats.

Have any of our presidents not been born citizens of the United States?

Yes, eight of them. Martin Van Buren, our eighth president, entered the earthly stage on Dec. 5, 1782, making him the first president born after the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce was signed and thus a citizen by birth. Eight presidents were born before 1776 as British subjects — George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, and William Henry Harrison.

Identify a columnist for the UnionTribu­ne whose daughter was fired on national television by an American president.

’Tis I, Richard Lederer. Back in 2009, my daughter, Annie Duke, then the winningest woman in the history of poker, was a contestant on NBC’s reality show “Celebrity Apprentice.” On the last day of the season, when the apprentice­s had been winnowed from 16 to two, then emcee Donald Trump fired Annie in favor of Joan Rivers.

***

On Thursday, Feb. 23, starting at 10 a.m., at the Serra Mesa-Kearny Mesa Library, 9005 Aero Drive, I’ll be presenting “Fascinatin­g Facts About Our Presidents.” Free admission.

On Tuesday, Feb. 28, starting at 6 p.m., I’ll be offering “The Origins of Flower Names” to the Scripps Ranch Garden Club in the Community Room of the Scripps Mesa Library, 10301 Scripps Lake Drive. A cultivated, fertile topic at no cost to you.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States