|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Disguised as an Afghani, Sir Richard Burton visited this Muslim holy city in 1853 |
Mecca
|
|
|
As Mike Oldfield proved in his 1974 best-selling album, these instruments can be "Tubular", man |
Bells
|
|
|
This symbol of forest fire prevention is buried at a New Mexico state park near Capitan |
(Archie: Who is [*] the [*]?)
Smokey Bear
|
|
|
This J.M. Barrie play, subtitled "The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up", is produced every Christmas in London |
Peter Pan
|
|
|
Like atoms, comets also have this distinct inner core |
nucleus
|
|
|
"The Father of the Steamboat" |
Robert Fulton
|
|
|
An explorer from this country was first to reach the North Pole |
United States
|
|
|
It's the trombone's equivalent of valves |
slide
|
|
|
The cutthroat species of this fish was adopted as the state fish in 1955 |
trout
|
|
|
This title Roman walks off unmolested with the lion at the end of Shaw's play |
[Archie's pronunciation sound like he added a syllable, saying it like "an-DROCK-oh-lees".]
Androcles
|
|
|
Mainly composed of dust & ice, comets have been called "dirty" ones of these |
snowball
|
|
|
"The Father of the Telegraph" |
(Samuel) Morse
|
|
|
This Sound, an inlet of the Pacific, is named for a 2nd lieutenant in Geo. Vancouver's expedition |
Puget Sound
|
|
|
In "The Devil's Dictionary", Bierce called it "A parlor utensil for subduing the impenitent visitor" |
(Bill: What is the trumpet?)
piano
|
|
|
Because the U.S. supported a rival, this Mexican bandit raided Columbus, killing about 16 people in 1916 |
Pancho Villa
|
|
|
This A. Miller masterpiece is subtitled "Certain Private Conversations in Two Acts and a Requiem" |
(Bill: What is The Crucible?)
Death of a Salesman
|
|
|
Most asteroids are found between the orbits of these two planets |
Mars & Jupiter
|
|
|
"The Father of the Turks" which is what his name means |
Ataturk
|
|
|
In 1682 he reached the mouth of the Mississippi & claimed the region for France |
La Salle
|
|
|
Strictly speaking an orchestra's timpani are these vessel-shaped instruments |
kettledrums
|
|
|
Located in the foothills of the Guadalupe Mountains it's New Mexico's only national park |
Carlsbad Caverns
|
|
|
The title locale where Irma's lover is shot in Genet's play or where the audience might sit to see it |
The Balcony
|
|
|
Large comets often travel through space within a cloud of this gas |
hydrogen
|
|
|
"The Father of the Blues" |
W.C. Handy
|
|
|
Ibn Battutah, a Moroccan, explored Russia & later went to this fabled Mali city in 1353 |
Timbuktu
|
|
|
This pear-shaped instrument, whose name means "small lute", is a bluegrass band standard |
mandolin
|
|
|
The state's first railroad, it was completed in 1879 & ran from Kansas to New Mexico |
Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe
|
|
|
"Another Part of the Forest" is a prequel to this Lillian Hellman play |
(Archie: I'm sorry, I can't think of anything.)
The Little Foxes
|
|
|
In 1973 Skylab astronauts had a chance to study this comet, which appears every 75,000 years |
Kohoutek
|
|
|
"The Father of the American Revolution", he organized the Boston Tea Party |
Samuel Adams
|
|