|
|
|
|
|
|
|
After Mr. Hyde kills a member of Parliament, he reveals the secret of his dual identity to a friend |
Dr. Jekyll
|
|
|
A small New England-style home with a gabled roof, named for a Massachusetts peninsula |
Cape Cod
|
|
|
A beaver slaps this body part on the water to warn other beavers of danger |
a tail
|
|
|
This singer popularized not only the twist but also the fly & the limbo |
Chubby Checker
|
|
|
Due to a scandal, Sosuke Uno lost his job as this country's prime minister |
Japan
|
|
|
Born in New Orleans in 1911, she became the most famous gospel singer of her time |
Mahalia Jackson
|
|
|
The vicious Mordaunt beheads King Charles I in "Twenty Years After", Dumas' sequel to this |
(Tom: What is The Count of Monte Cristo?)
The Three Musketeers
|
|
|
Bats & bells both hang in this upper story of a church tower |
belfry
|
|
|
Beavers build these dome-shaped homes in the water but the living chambers are above the water |
(Roz: What are dams?)
lodges
|
|
|
Title dance you'd do to the following music: |
the (Pennsylvania) polka
|
|
|
Before her death in 1978, this Israeli said, "I forbid any eulogies or anything named for me" |
Golda Meir
|
|
|
In 1990 he was elected a shadow U.S. senator to lobby for D.C. statehood |
Jesse Jackson
|
|
|
Wang Lung has a concubine named Lotus & a pretty slave named Pear Blossom in this Pearl Buck novel |
The Good Earth
|
|
|
These accessories can be bulls-eye, bow or bay |
window
|
|
|
There are more beavers in these 2 countries than anywhere else in the world |
the United States & Canada
|
|
|
Name for the heavy shoes used to hammer out its heavy rhythm, it was a forerunner of tap dancing |
clog dancing
|
|
|
This debonair Canadian, a former P.M., has written several books, including "Two Innocents in Red China" |
Pierre Trudeau
|
|
|
She could have been our first bigamist first lady but she died before her husband took office |
Rachel Jackson (Mrs. Andrew Jackson)
|
|
|
Budgie, the title character of children's books writen by the Duchess of York, is one of these |
a helicopter
|
|
|
The gothic style began in this country in the 12th century |
France
|
|
|
When "Beavers", an IMAX film opened at the Science Museum of Virginia this TV actor came to promote it |
(Michael: Who is, um... um, Jerry Matson?)
Jerry Mathers
|
|
|
Some believe this fast Italian dance derived from mad movement caused by a tarantula's bite |
the tarantella
|
|
|
In 1961 the Vatican excommunicated this Haitian president for harassing the clergy |
Duvalier
|
|
|
She often acts with her husband Eli Wallach |
Anne Jackson
|
|
|
Clyde is sentenced to death after the pregnant Roberta drowns in this T. Dreiser novel |
An American Tragedy
|
|
|
Architect who observed, "No house should be on any hill but of the hill" |
Frank Lloyd Wright
|
|
|
The capybara is the only member of this mammal group that's larger than the beaver |
rodents
|
|
|
In ballet the French name for a dance that takes two to do |
a pas de deux
|
|
|
In 1905 Prince Carl of Denmark was elected king of this Scandinavian country |
(Roz: What is Sweden?) ... (Alex: He became King Haakon of [*].)
Norway
|
|
|
In 1957 this macabre female author wrote humorously about raising children in "Raising Demons" |
Shirley Jackson
|
|