| 
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "The tribe... was a mighty people, called the 'Mahicanni,' or, more commonly, the 'Mohicans'" | 
    (James Fenimore) Cooper
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This New Orleans venue reopened Sept. 25, 2006 | 
    the Superdome
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Large specimens of this marsupial can leap over barriers 6 feet high | 
    kangaroos
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    Adam Ant: "Goody ____ Shoes" | 
    Two
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Pierre Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais, presided over the trial of this woman who went up in smoke May 30, 1431 | 
    Joan of Arc
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In Olympic gymnastic events, it precedes "all-around men" & "all-around women" | 
    (Alex: And the 10-letter word is [*].)
  individual
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "Those awful young women capering at the hotel-door, they are the real little Daisy Millers that were" | 
    (Henry) James
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This Wisconsin city claims to have built the USA's only granite dome | 
    (Alison: What is Milwaukee?) (Alex: No, sorry, it's the state capital, [*].)
  Madison
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | One of the N.Y. Times' headlines on this landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision was "Cardinals Shocked" | 
    Roe v. Wade
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    Steely Dan: "Hey ____" | 
    (Alison: What is Sixteen?) ... (Alex: You missed it by three.  "Hey [*]".)
  Nineteen
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Nicholas Ridley, who supported Lady Jane Grey, got burned when this "Bloody" British queen took the throne | 
    Mary
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "'Jude the Obscure' is simply an endeavour to give shape... to a series of... personal impressions" | 
    (Alex: [*] is the author.)
  Thomas Hardy
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This sacred structure dates from the late 600s A.D. | 
    the Dome of the Rock
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Because of the way he became president, John Tyler's opponents nicknamed him "His" this | 
    "Accidency"
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    T-Pain featuring Wiz Khalifa & Lily Allen: "____ O'Clock" | 
    (Ashok: [*]--what is [*]?)
  5
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | William Tyndale, who completed his English translation of this in 1525, was burned in Brussels in 1536 | 
    (Michele: What is the Bible?) (Alex: Be more specific.) (Michele: What is the Bible in English?) (Ashok: What is the translation of the Vulgate?) (Alison: What is the King James Bible?)
  the New Testament
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This "botanical" interchange is where 2 highways meet | 
    a cloverleaf
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "Some of the characters in these pages are chosen from the most criminal and degraded... Sikes is a thief" | 
    Charles Dickens
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Syracuse Univ.'s domed stadium is named for this air-conditioning company that paid $2.75 million for the rights | 
    (the) Carrier (Corporation)
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 2011 bell ringers for this charity started accepting digital donations to its red kettle | 
    the Salvation Army
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    Public Enemy: "____ Is A Joke" | 
    911
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1612 Edward Wightman became the last person to be burned in England as this religious criminal | 
    a heretic
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | The gangster who actually moves his finger to carry out a hit while the guy who planned it might be elsewhere | 
    a triggerman
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "Erewhon is pronounced as a word of three syllables, all short" | 
    (Michele: Who is Thomas More?)
  Samuel Butler
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | The structure seen here, in this city, is technically not a dome since it uses masts & cables for support | 
    (Michele: POTPOURRI for $12,000, please.) (Alex: $1,200.) (Michele: $1,200, yeah.)
  London
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | After Elizabeth's death in 1603, the crown passed to King James, the first of this royal house to rule England | 
    (Alex: [*] is the house.)
  Stuart
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    The Proclaimers: "I'm Gonna Be (____ Miles)" | 
    500
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | France's Philip IV--known as "The Fair"--had Jacques de Molay, the last grand master of this order, burned in 1314 | 
    the Knights Templar
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This term for a shabbily clothed, dirty child is the name of a demon in the poem "Piers Plowman" | 
    ragamuffin
 
  | 
   
 
     |