|
|
|
|
|
|
|
After meeting this rival liberator in 1822, San Martin left South America |
Simon Bolivar
|
|
|
His son, Nanki-Poo, poses as a minstrel & later weds Yum-Yum |
The Mikado
|
|
|
A unit of wave frequency defined as 1 cycle per second, or a car rental company |
Hertz
|
|
|
A recent show of her works at the Whitney Museum included bronzes of her art made before she was Mrs. John Lennon |
Yoko Ono
|
|
|
The city's planner, Pierre L' Enfant, called this hill "A pedestal waiting for a monument" |
Capitol Hill
|
|
|
"Theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do and die" is from this Tennyson poem |
"Charge of the Light Brigade"
|
|
|
In 1616 Dutch explorer Willem Schouten rounded this cape that he named for his home town |
Cape Horn
|
|
|
In "The Ring of the Nibelung", Siegfried braved a ring of fire to save this goddess |
Brunhilde
|
|
|
While processing pitchblende, a uranium ore, Marie & Pierre Curie & G. DeMont discovered this element |
Radium
|
|
|
Back in 1961 his "Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer" brought a record price of $2.3 million |
Rembrandt
|
|
|
This little park, named for a French nobleman, faces the White House across Pennsylvania Ave. |
Lafayette Park/Square
|
|
|
The 1956 novel "Compulsion" was based on the story of this duo defended by Darrow |
(T: Who are Sacco & Vanzetti?)
Leopold & Loeb
|
|
|
The United Kingdom of Great Britain & Ireland was established on the first day of this century |
19th Century
|
|
|
He was the crippled 12-year-old title character in the first opera written for television |
Amahl
|
|
|
The curved path along which a planet travels under the influence of a gravitational field |
Orbit
|
|
|
Jean Arp coined this term to describe the non-mobile works of Alexander Calder |
Stabiles
|
|
|
The National Zoological park is a unit of this |
Smithsonian Institution
|
|
|
Chingachgook became the last of the Mohicans when this man, his son, died |
Uncas
|
|
|
In 1901 the U.S. made this island a virtual protectorate |
(Mike: What is Puerto Rico?)
Cuba
|
|
|
They were the son & daughter of Peter, a poor broom maker & his wife, Gertrude |
Hansel & Gretel
|
|
|
Speaking of this device, Archimedes said, "Give me a place to stand on, and I will move the Earth." |
Fulcrum & Lever
|
|
|
One of Goya's works depicts this father of Jupiter "devouring his children" |
(Mark: Who is Titan?) (Mike: Who is Cronus?)
Saturn
|
|
|
The basement of this building at 511 10th St. NW houses a museum of Lincoln memorabilia |
Ford's Theater
|
|
|
This Oliver Goldsmith play is subtitled "The Mistakes of the Night" |
"She Stoops to Conquer"
|
|
|
After this mutiny failed in 1858, the last Mogul emperor of India was exiled to Burma |
Sepoy Rebellion
|
|
|
At the end of "I Pagliacci", this clown stabs his wife, Nedda, & her lover, Silvio |
Canio
|
|
|
The measure of a body's inertia is technically known as this |
(Mike: What is drag?)
Mass
|
|
|
Also known as "Beaubourg", the Paris Center for the Contemporary Art is named after this French president |
(Mark: What is the Mitterrand Centre?)
Georges Pompidou
|
|
|
Massachusetts Avenue is noted for more of them than any other street |
Embassies
|
|
|
He wrote "Penrod", "Penrod and Son" & "Penrod Jashber" |
Booth Tarkington
|
|