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Clare Boothe Luce (the American ambassador to Italy in the years just following World War II) died of arsenic poisoning.
Question 1:
Clare Boothe Luce (the American ambassador to Italy in the years just following World War II) died of arsenic poisoning.
A.
False
B.
True
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Some questions from the same exam
Which Ohio-born singer was famous with the hits Music! Music! Music!, Molasses, Molasses, and Youll Never Get Away?
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Which of the following statements is not correct?
One of the most famous cases of poisoning is that of the Bulgarian Georgi Markov, who was poisoned by ricin. The latter was inserted into his body through this.
One of the most popular fictional cases of poisoning occurs in the movie Arsenic and Old Lace, based on a play by this playwright.
A fictional case of poisoning is observed in Agatha Christies And Then There Were None. In the novel, this character dies of poisoning.
Arsenic became a popular murder weapon in the Middle Ages, because symptoms resembled those of this disease.
There is a theory that Napoleon Bonaparte was poisoned with this substance.
Clare Boothe Luce (the American ambassador to Italy in the years just following World War II) died of arsenic poisoning.
Until the French Revolution, this torture device was used to execute those accused of treason. It was also used on nobles to provide a swift and humane death.
This instrument of torture was thrust into the victims’ chin and sternum rendering them motionless.
This pyramid-shaped seat was used to extract confessions from the victims who were placed on top of it.
This torture device was used to rip the victim’s flesh to shreds. Once this was accomplished, the victim would be left to dangle alive, with arms bound, left at the mercy of flies and other insects.
The head crusher was used as a swift and humane form of execution for the nobleman. It was designed in such a manner that upon impact it would cause immediate death of its victim.
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