|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Chukchi tribe is known for raising this dog breed |
huskies
|
|
|
This conqueror's father, the Duke of Normandy, was known as Robert the Devil |
William the Conqueror
|
|
|
The 1st of these instruments used to listen to internal body sounds was made by Rene Laennec c. 1815 |
a stethoscope
|
|
|
Groomed for public office by his father, he became Chicago's mayor in 1989 |
(Bev: Who is Daley?) (Alex: Be more specific.)
Richard (M.) Daley
|
|
|
Like Billy Pilgrim, hero of "Slaughterhouse-Five", he was at the destruction of Dresden |
(Kurt) Vonnegut
|
|
|
A judge who hands out the maximum sentence to a lawbreaker is said to have done this |
throw the book at him
|
|
|
At age 17 this "White Fang" author headed to Japan & Siberia to hunt seals |
Jack London
|
|
|
Maria Nagoi, the seventh & last wife of this dreadful czar, oulived him |
Ivan the Terrible
|
|
|
In 1906 this organization established a bureau to investigate quackery & charlatanry |
the AMA (the American Medical Association)
|
|
|
In 1991 Edwin Edwards, a 3-term governor of this state, beat David Duke to return to office |
Louisiana
|
|
|
He wrote "The Thin Man" at a hotel managed by author Nathanael West |
Dashiell Hammett
|
|
|
Some men keep one of these "small" items containing the phone numbers & addresses of available women |
(Bev: What's a black book?) (Alex: Be more specific.) ... (Alex: Mine was very small, by the way.)
a little black book
|
|
|
This Karamazov creator was once exiled to Siberia |
Dostoyevsky
|
|
|
Mongol who reportedly said, "A man's highest joy in life is to break his enemies" |
Genghis Khan
|
|
|
Also called Bright's disease, acute nephritis is a disease that affects this organ |
the kidney
|
|
|
In 1982, with no previous political experience, he won the Nebraska governorship |
Bob Kerrey
|
|
|
The original first name of this author of "Riders of the Purple Sage" was Pearl |
Zane Grey
|
|
|
In April 1926 "Lolly Willowes, or the Loving Huntsman" became its first selection |
the Book of the Month Club
|
|
|
This lake is about the size of Belgium |
Baikal
|
|
|
Justinian I, who ruled this empire in the 6th century, married an actress with a dubious past |
(Pamela: What is the Roman Empire?) ... (Alex: Yes, the [**]. When people say the Roman Empire, we assume they mean the traditional Roman Empire.)
the Byzantine Empire (the Eastern Roman Empire)
|
|
|
This Baltimore university's hospital opened in 1889 & its medical school, 4 years later |
Johns Hopkins
|
|
|
This Democrat died in 1925, less than a week after winning the Scopes "Monkey Trial" |
(Pamela: Who is Darwin?)
William Jennings Bryan
|
|
|
William Carlos Williams wrote an introduction to his 1956 collection "Howl and Other Poems" |
(Allen) Ginsberg
|
|
|
Also known by this title, the "I Ching" is one of the central texts of Confucianism |
Book of Changes
|
|
|
Until 1984 it was the only thoroughfare from one end of Siberia to the other |
the Trans-Siberian Railroad
|
|
|
This Dutch governor of New Netherland had a wooden leg decorated with silver bands |
Peter Stuyvesant
|
|
|
This ancient Greek physician first described the action of muscles in respiration |
(Bev: Who is Hippocrates?) (Pamela: Who is Aesculapius?)
Galen
|
|
|
In 1977, after 16 years as Senate majority leader, this Montana Democrat became ambassador to Japan |
(Mike) Mansfield
|
|
|
Like Oskar, hero of "The Tin Drum", this author was born in Danzig |
Gunter Grass
|
|
|
The first edition of this liturgy of the Church of England was published in 1549 |
(Mary: What is the English [*]?)
The Book of Common Prayer
|
|