Question 2:
Without a means of seeing exactly how rearward force on a bike pedal would work in real life, my guess is the bike does one of two things, but first, it depends on the gear assembly. Can the bike be wheeled backwards with the pedals remaining stationary?
If so, as I said, the bike will do one of two things: either move forward slightly as the pedal [with the rope attached] moves the chain in a normal forward fashion, but the rope being pulled would prevent it from being able to continue in a full pedal motion, and would begin to pull the back backwards, or fall over depending on the way the chain/gear assembly works.
Or, the bike would simply begin to move backwards immediately. The rearward pulling force on the pedal would likely be greater than a single-pedal attempt at chain rotation, and without the added benefit of downward force on the pedals to ease the process of chain/gear rotation, and thus would simply pull the back back.
With no means of doing anything of that sort, and with a lack of super physics knowledge, I cannot begin to even guess at calculations in order to provide a solid choice between my two answers. However, one of them is right.
Answer 1:
If this piece of paper is divided into four quadrants, you could place, say, 299 of the points in the bottom left quadrant, in a circular formation (might not matter), 20 in a tight square in the furthest bottom-left corner, 49 points in a long rectangular formation in the top half of the upper left quadrant, half of the remaining (16) in a tight scatter group in the bottom-right corner, and the other 16 scattered all over the upper-right quadrant.