Trivia Newsletter XCVI Submission Form
Note: Some folks like to share their guesses for all of the questions, but in order to submit this form, only your initials (the first question) and a guess on the sixth question (the last question) are necessary.
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For purposes of the Question #6 Leaderboard, please write below a THREE-LETTER initialism you'd like me to use to track your entries. (You might choose your initials, but this is not necessary.)  *
Question #1 - In 1906, an businessman influential in Chicago passed away due to pneumonia contracted while playing golf with Robert Todd Lincoln, the eldest son of Abraham Lincoln. 106 years later, entirely coincidentally, an acclaimed actress with the same last name as that businessman played Robert Todd Lincoln’s mother in the film Lincoln and was nominated for an Oscar. WHAT is the shared last name of the businessman and actress?
Question #2 - The Curse of Capistrano, a 1919 novel by Johnston McCulley set in the early 19th century in what is today California, is the first work to feature WHAT fictional character, who has since appeared in dozens of films?
Question #3 - WHAT infectious disease, which can be vaccinated against by a common vaccine that also protects against measles and rubella, is typically characterized by pain and swelling of the salivary glands?
Question #4 - The headline of a 2019 Vanity Fair retrospective on the television show The Sopranos referred to the offing of the character Adriana as the WHAT that changed everything? This answer, an informal word used to certain killings (whether or not the victims were moles), repeatedly appears in reviews and recaps of the show.
Question #5 - What is the SECOND WORD of the two-word term, stamped on likely thousands of American whiskeys, that has no precise legal meaning but practically refers to whiskey that is neither vatted or single-barrel? For example, the brands Four Roses, Elijah Craig, 1792, and Evan Williams all offer varieties of whiskey labeled with this term.
Question #6 - Oh no! I forgot to write Question #6 again! Can you just come up with a noun—maybe a big one?—that completes this weird chart below? 

[Chart in newsletter]
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