|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A small part of this California mountain range extends into the Lake Tahoe area of Nevada |
Sierra Nevadas
|
|
|
Venus, Earth, Mars... |
Jupiter
|
|
|
Her foreword to the 35th Anniv. edition of "To Kill a Mockingbird" says, "I am still alive, although very quiet" |
Harper Lee
|
|
|
Burt Lancaster starred as a general plotting to overthrow the U.S. government in "Seven Days in" this month |
May
|
|
|
It can be a fugitive, a criminal or a social nonconformist; Josey Wales was one |
outlaw
|
|
|
If your fleece is "white as snow", you might be tended by this classic nursery rhyme shepherdess |
(Greg: Who is Little Bo Peep?)
Mary
|
|
|
This Utah river named for a river in the Holy Land flows from freshwater Utah Lake to the Great Salt Lake |
Jordan River
|
|
|
In the U.S. Army: 2nd Lieutenant, 1st Lieutenant, Captain... |
Major
|
|
|
An accidental gunshot wound when she was 8 left this "Color Purple" author blind in one eye |
Alice Walker
|
|
|
This pop artist's 1974 film "Dracula" was actually directed by Paul Morrissey |
(Alex: Ellen was trying to ring in on that one; she didn't quite make it!)
Andy Warhol
|
|
|
It's another name for the privy, cousin |
outhouse
|
|
|
For many years this award-winning puppeteer left her hand to Lamb Chop |
Shari Lewis
|
|
|
In 1644 Aquidneck Island in Narragansett Bay was officially renamed this |
(Greg: What is Nantucket?) (Ellen: What is Prince Edward Island?)
Rhode Island
|
|
|
Hexagon, heptagon, octagon... |
Nonagon
|
|
|
Henry Miller hailed this novel as a female "Tropic of Cancer" when Erica Jong published it in 1973 |
Fear of Flying
|
|
|
Ella Fitzgerald played herself in "St. Louis Blues", the film biography of this composer |
W.C. Handy
|
|
|
Popular in Hawaii, it's the type of transport seen here |
an outrigger canoe
|
|
|
The lambskin aprons worn by this largest fraternal order represent innocence & purity |
Masons
|
|
|
Of the states that have counties, it has the fewest: Kent, New Castle & Sussex |
(Dave: What is New York?)
Delaware
|
|
|
Edward V, Richard III, Henry VII... |
Henry VIII
|
|
|
Jackie Collins published her first novel the year before this other Jackie published "The Love Machine" |
Jacqueline Susann
|
|
|
Topol was tops as this Italian astronomer in the 1973 film based on Bertolt Brecht's play |
Galileo
|
|
|
Bret Harte told the story of these "Poker Flat" exiles |
outcasts
|
|
|
This controversial daughter of Winston Churchill has been called "The lamb who strayed from the fold" |
Sarah Churchill
|
|
|
The Valley of the Sun is the locale of this state capital |
Phoenix
|
|
|
Pius XI, Pius XII, John XXIII... |
(Greg: Who is John Paul I?)
Paul VI
|
|
|
Kids who grew up with her "Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret" now enjoy her adult novels like "Summer Sisters" |
Judy Blume
|
|
|
This cartoonist wrote the screenplays for two 1971 films: "Little Murders" & "Carnal Knowledge" |
Jules Feiffer
|
|
|
Like a 1981 Sean Connery sci fi movie, or anything conspicuously unconventional or bizarre |
outlandish
|
|
|
You'd be like this "Lady" if you were Lord Byron's lover in 1812 |
Lady Caroline Lamb
|
|