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a

  1. Hasdrubal Barca [1]
  2. The House of the Spirits [2]
  3. La Casa de los Spiritos [3]
  4. Johannes Brahms [4]
  5. [[Lebanon [or Al Jumhuriyah al Lubnaniyah]]] [5]
  6. August Strindberg [6]
  7. Pictures at an Exhibition [7]
  8. Pauli exclusion principle [8]
  9. Thorstein Veblen [9]
  10. Arby's [10]
  11. Social Security Act [11]
  12. Felipe de Jesus Calderón Hinojosa [12]
  13. Velociraptor [13]
  14. circumcision [14]
  15. imperialism [15]
  16. Brown Dwarfs [16]
  17. the Children's Crusades [17]
  18. Babbitt [18]
  19. Quicksort [19]
  20. [[alkenes [accept olefin]]] [20]
  21. Abraham Lincoln [21]
  22. First man [22]
  23. equivalents, prompt on "first human [23]
  24. Elizabeth Kübler-Ross [24]
  25. bargaining [25]
  26. On Death and Dying [26]
  27. yang [27]
  28. Legalism [28]
  29. Contention of a Hundred Schools of Thought [29]
  30. My Super Sweet 16 [30]
  31. [[quinceañeras [or quince]] [31]
  32. Quince Años] [32]
  33. [[Hilary Duff [prompt on partial answer]]] [33]
  34. [[]] [34]
  35. Mugwumps [35]
  36. Half-Breeds [36]
  37. Copperheads [37]
  38. A Raisin in the Sun [38]
  39. Lorraine Hansberry [39]
  40. The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window [40]
  41. René Magritte [41]
  42. Time Transfixed [42]
  43. The Treachery of Images [43]
  44. The Perfidy of Images [44]
  45. La Trahison des Images [45]
  46. Obsidian [46]
  47. Basalt [47]
  48. Dolomite [48]
  49. Barents Sea [49]
  50. Kara Sea [50]
  51. Laptev Sea [51]
  52. homeostasis [52]
  53. glucagon [53]
  54. oxytocin [54]
  55. Dover Beach [55]
  56. Matthew Arnold [56]
  57. The Scholar-Gypsy [57]
  58. Redox [58]
  59. Oxidation-Reduction [59]
  60. disproportionation [60]
  61. aluminum [61]
  62. Rama [62]
  63. Vamana [63]
  64. Kalki [64]
  65. Fermat's Principle [65]
  66. [[Fresnel [Fre-NELL] lens]] [66]
  67. Snell's Law [67]
  68. [[Uruk [do not accept]] [68]
  69. prompt on Ur] [69]
  70. Kish [70]
  71. Akkadians [71]
  72. Kurt Vonnegut [72]
  73. Cat's Cradle [73]
  74. Ice-nine [74]
  75. Maginot Line [75]
  76. [[Siegfried Line [or the West Wall]]] [76]
  77. Finland [77]
  78. Captain Nemo [78]
  79. Jules Verne [79]
  80. Journey to the Center of the Earth [80]
  81. Voyage au centre de la terre [81]
  82. Law of Large Numbers [82]
  83. Central Limit Theorem [83]
  84. [[Bayes' Theorem [or Law]] [84]
  85. Rule] [85]
  86. Orphée aux enfers (Orpheus in the Underworld [86]
  87. Les Contes d'Hoffmann (The Tales of Hoffman [87]
  88. La Belle Helene (The Fair Helen [88]
  89. equivalent translations of "Belle [89]
  90. Mau Mau rebellion [90]
  91. [[Jomo Kenyatta [or Kamau Ngengi]]] [91]
  92. [[Kikuyu [or Giguyu]] [92]
  93. Gekoyo [93]
  94. Agekoyo] [94]
  95. William Golding [95]
  96. Chiang Kai-Shek [96]
  97. Jiang Jieshi [97]
  98. [[DeBroglie waves [prompt on 'matter waves]] [98]
  99. particle waves'] [99]
  100. Carl Jung [100]

b

  1. Battle of Tippecanoe [101]
  2. I Kings (prompt on Kings, do not prompt on II Kings [102]
  3. Gibbs Free Energy [103]
  4. The Mikado [104]
  5. Little Miss Sunshine [105]
  6. operons [106]
  7. Federico Garcia Lorca [107]
  8. liquid crystals [108]
  9. Vincenzo Bellini [109]
  10. Completeness [110]
  11. Seafloor Spreading [111]
  12. Watson and the Shark [112]
  13. A Farewell to Arms [113]
  14. Ben Jonson [114]
  15. Apology [115]
  16. Apologia [116]
  17. Aethelred IIs [117]
  18. John Paul Jones [118]
  19. Helvetii [119]
  20. Vercingetorix [120]
  21. Alesia [121]
  22. [[Time of Troubles [or Smutnoye Vreymya]]] [122]
  23. Dmitry [123]
  24. Fyodor [124]
  25. John Millington Synge [125]
  26. The Playboy of the Western World [126]
  27. Henrik Ibsen [127]
  28. Chris Berman [128]
  29. Marv Albert [129]
  30. Who wants to sex Mutombo? [130]
  31. Carnival of the Animals [131]
  32. Le Carnaval des Animaux [132]
  33. Danse Macabre, Op. 40 [133]
  34. Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso [134]
  35. Introduction et Rondo Capriccioso [135]
  36. some things about a phylum of animals, FTPE [136]
  37. [[Echinodermata [accept Echinoderms]]] [137]
  38. deuterostomes [138]
  39. Asteroidea [139]
  40. Max Ernst [140]
  41. Salvador Dali [141]
  42. The Persistence of Memory [142]
  43. Sturm und Drang [143]
  44. The Robbers [144]
  45. Die Rauber [145]
  46. Friedrich von Schiller [146]
  47. Midway [147]
  48. Yorktown [148]
  49. Raymond Ames Spruance [149]
  50. Finn McCool [150]
  51. derivatives [151]
  52. Salmon of Knowledge [152]
  53. Salmon of Wisdom or Bradán Feasa [153]
  54. Fenian Cycle [154]
  55. Akutagawa Ryunosuke [155]
  56. Rashomon [156]
  57. In a Grove [157]
  58. Yabu no naka [158]
  59. [[Diels-Alder reaction [5,5] Give the general terms for the two reactants in the Diels-Alder reaction. One has multiple double bonds, while the other means "lover" of the first one. ANSWERS: conjugated diene AND dienophile]] [159]
  60. conjugated diene AND dienophile [160]
  61. pericyclic reaction [161]
  62. simple harmonic motion [162]
  63. Critical Damping [163]
  64. Resonance [164]
  65. Portnoy's Complaint [165]
  66. Nathan Zuckerman [166]
  67. either [167]
  68. The Human Stain [168]
  69. Nehemiah [169]
  70. Ezekiel [170]
  71. Joshua [171]
  72. Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy [172]
  73. Teapot Dome Scandal [173]
  74. Whiskey Ring [174]
  75. Crassulacean Acid Metabolism [175]
  76. CAM [176]
  77. C4 plants [177]
  78. photorespiration [178]
  79. Columbia River [179]
  80. Willamette River [180]
  81. Spokane River [181]
  82. Firewire [182]
  83. iLink [183]
  84. floating point [184]
  85. [[power lines [accept reasonable equivalents]]] [185]
  86. Noam Chomsky [186]
  87. transformational-generative grammars [187]
  88. Syntactic Structures [188]
  89. Cain [189]
  90. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe [190]
  91. [[the Armenian genocide [or Medz Yeghern; if some moronic Turkish nationalist gives an answer like "the random deaths of a lot of Armenians that Turkey wasn't responsible for," you can prompt him, but he's not right until he says the word genocide]]] [191]
  92. like "the random deaths of a lot of Armenians that Turkey wasn't responsible for," you can prompt him, but he's not right until he says the word genocide] [192]
  93. Bernhard Riemann [193]
  94. Yukio Mishima [194]
  95. Edvard Grieg [195]
  96. Pressure [196]
  97. Henry Clay [197]
  98. Atlantis [198]
  99. Friedrich August von Hayek [199]
  100. Ivanhoe [200]

c

  1. David Hume [201]
  2. Battle of Lepanto [202]
  3. Interferons [203]
  4. Liberal Party [204]
  5. Brownian Motion [205]
  6. Parthenogenesis [206]
  7. Gunther Wilhelm Grass [207]
  8. Their Eyes Were Watching God [208]
  9. Madonna with the Long Neck [209]
  10. Madonna of the Long Neck or Madonna del Cullo Longo [210]
  11. Orion [211]
  12. Cesar Cui [212]
  13. Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov [213]
  14. Mily Balakirev [214]
  15. War of the Spanish Succession [215]
  16. Battle of Blenheim [216]
  17. Peace/Treaty of Utrecht [217]
  18. Sylvia Plath [218]
  19. Esther Greenwood (Accept either name [219]
  20. Edward James "Ted" Hughes [220]
  21. Monoid [221]
  22. Group [222]
  23. Abelian group [223]
  24. Garden State [224]
  25. The Last Kiss [225]
  26. Scrubs [226]
  27. Tobit [227]
  28. Tobias [228]
  29. Asmodeus [229]
  30. Solomon Asch [230]
  31. Stanley Milgram [231]
  32. Philip Zimbardo [232]
  33. [[Heat Capacity [do not accept 'Specific heat capacity]] [233]
  34. specific heat'] [234]
  35. Helmholtz Free Energy [235]
  36. Partition function [236]
  37. [[Ambrose Bierce [10]This 1911 book lampooning cant and political-doubletalk contains entries for such words as "Clarionet" and "Wife." ANSWER: Devil's Dictionary [10]A speculation on the nature of intelligence and life, it describes a chess-playing robot that murders its creator. ANSWER: Moxon's Master]] [237]
  38. [[Devil's Dictionary [10]A speculation on the nature of intelligence and life, it describes a chess-playing robot that murders its creator. ANSWER: Moxon's Master]] [238]
  39. Moxon's Master [239]
  40. Ghent Altarpiece [240]
  41. The Arnolfini Wedding (Accept anything including Arnolfini [241]
  42. Man in a Red Turban [242]
  43. Václav Havel [243]
  44. Eugène Ionesco [244]
  45. Jean Genet [245]
  46. Tiamat [246]
  47. Marduk [247]
  48. Ereshkigal [248]
  49. Irkalla [249]
  50. Flowers of Evil [250]
  51. Le Fleurs du Mal [251]
  52. Charles Baudelaire [252]
  53. Spleen and Ideal [253]
  54. Spleen et ideal [254]
  55. infrared spectroscopy [255]
  56. IR spectroscopy [256]
  57. mass spectrometry [257]
  58. mass spectroscopy [258]
  59. alcohol [259]
  60. hydroxyl [260]
  61. Lee Harvey Oswald [261]
  62. John Connally [262]
  63. Edwin Walker [263]
  64. [[Euripides [10] This author recounted Theseus's abduction of Helen, along with some more historically sound information, in his Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans, also known as Parallel Lives. ANSWER: Plutarch [10] This Sophist, the title character of a Platonic dialogue on rhetoric, wrote "The Encomium of Helen," which argues that Helen should not be blamed since she was either taken by force]] [264]
  65. seduced. ANSWER: Gorgias [265]
  66. [[Plutarch [10] This Sophist, the title character of a Platonic dialogue on rhetoric, wrote "The Encomium of Helen," which argues that Helen should not be blamed since she was either taken by force]] [266]
  67. seduced. ANSWER: Gorgias [267]
  68. Gorgias [268]
  69. stratosphere [269]
  70. troposphere [270]
  71. exosphere [271]
  72. Pol Pot [272]
  73. Khmer Rouges [273]
  74. Preah Bat Samdech Preah Norodom Sihanouk [274]
  75. Lisbon [275]
  76. House of Braganza [276]
  77. António de Oliveira Salazar [277]
  78. [[skeletal [prompt on 'voluntary'] AND cardiac]] [278]
  79. myosin [279]
  80. sarcomere [280]
  81. David Cross [281]
  82. Eudora Welty [282]
  83. Carl Maria von Weber [283]
  84. Harold Pinter [284]
  85. [[Cnidaria [prompt on "Coelenterata" before that is read]]] [285]
  86. the Whiskey Rebellion [286]
  87. Savannah, Georgia [287]
  88. cyclotron [288]
  89. the Ancient Mariner [289]
  90. Alcestis [290]
  91. Chamberlain [291]
  92. Micas [292]
  93. Art Deco [293]
  94. [[Hammurabi's Code [accept clear equivalents; accept the literal translation of "dinat mišarim, Verdicts of the Just Order]]] [294]
  95. Peter Debye [295]
  96. [[Compromise of 1850 [or the Omnibus Bill; don't accept]] [296]
  97. prompt on Fugitive Slave Law [297]
  98. any other components since the first sentence applies only to the whole thing] [298]
  99. Democritus [299]
  100. Traveling Salesman problem [300]

d

  1. Jan Vermeer [301]
  2. Emile Zola [302]
  3. Anomie [303]
  4. Jean Anouilh (pronounced "On-wee [304]
  5. Becket [305]
  6. Antigone [306]
  7. swastika [307]
  8. ankh [308]
  9. haykal [309]
  10. Ivan Turgenev [310]
  11. Fathers and Sons [311]
  12. superfluous man [312]
  13. Frank Miller [313]
  14. [[Martha Washington [accept either]] [314]
  15. both names] [315]
  16. The Dark Knight Returns [316]
  17. [[Great Trek [or Groot Trek]]] [317]
  18. Battle of Blood River [318]
  19. Battle of Isandlwana [319]
  20. Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus [320]
  21. Flavius Julius Valens [321]
  22. [[Antoninus Pius [or Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius]] [322]
  23. Titus Aurelius Fulvius Boionius Arrius Antoninus] [323]
  24. Viscosity [324]
  25. Newtonian [325]
  26. [[Jean-Louis-Marie Poiseuille [pwah-SAY...I think]]] [326]
  27. Jude the Obscure [327]
  28. Thomas Hardy [328]
  29. Arabella Donn (either is acceptable [329]
  30. Porgy and Bess [330]
  31. Leo Delibes [331]
  32. Spain [332]
  33. Indo-European [333]
  34. Grimm's Law [334]
  35. Great Vowel Shift [335]
  36. tannins [336]
  37. free radicals [337]
  38. superoxide [338]
  39. Titan [339]
  40. Cassini Division [340]
  41. Gap [341]
  42. Pan [342]
  43. Camille Pissaro [343]
  44. Poinctillism [344]
  45. Divisionism [345]
  46. Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot [346]
  47. Brahma [347]
  48. Sarasvati [348]
  49. Savitri [349]
  50. Vedas [350]
  51. histidine [351]
  52. Ames test [352]
  53. zinc [353]
  54. George Frost Kennan [354]
  55. X" article [355]
  56. the Long Telegram [356]
  57. The Maltese Falcon [357]
  58. In Cold Blood [358]
  59. The Big Sleep [359]
  60. axon [360]
  61. myelin [361]
  62. oligodendrocytes [362]
  63. [[Henry I [or Henry Beauclerc]] [363]
  64. Henry the Good Scholar; prompt on Henry] [364]
  65. Anselm of Canterbury [365]
  66. Stephen of Blois [366]
  67. photosphere [367]
  68. granules [368]
  69. granulation [369]
  70. sunspots [370]
  71. [[Songhai Empire [or Songhay]]] [371]
  72. Anton Chekhov [372]
  73. [[Australopithecus [accept Australopiths]] [373]
  74. Australopithecines; prompt on 'hominids [374]
  75. hominins' before "genus"] [375]
  76. pulsars [376]
  77. To His Coy Mistress [377]
  78. [[Otto I [or Otto the Great]]] [378]
  79. Keane [379]
  80. Commander Keen [380]
  81. Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star [381]
  82. Ah ! vous dirai-je, Maman" before "expresses curiosity… [382]
  83. The Piano Lesson [383]
  84. [[Calvin-Benson Cycle [prompt on Dark Reactions]] [384]
  85. Carbon Reactions] [385]
  86. George Berkeley [386]
  87. Grignard reagents [387]
  88. Carlos Fuentes [388]
  89. Albany Congress [389]
  90. inductance [390]
  91. [[Mass [accept Ordinary Mass b/c the works are all more]] [391]
  92. less Ordinaries] [392]
  93. [[ng contest with the wise giant Vafthrudnir to learn of his fate. More famously, he gained wisdom by piercing himself with his spear Gugnir and hanging from Yggdrasil for nine days, and sacrificing one eye for a drink from Mimir's well. Also the possessor of the eight legged horse Sleipnir and the ravens Hugin and Munin, FTP name this deity destined to be eaten by Fenrir at Ragnarok, the chief god of the Norse pantheon. ANSWER: Odin [or Wotan]] [393]
  94. Wodan] [394]
  95. [[Odin [or Wotan]] [395]
  96. Wodan] [396]
  97. Sir Robert Peel [397]
  98. [[The Night Watch [accept "Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq and Lietuenant Willem van Ruytenburch" before it's read]]] [398]
  99. Red River [399]
  100. [[Essays [or Essais] ACF Fall 2006 Bonuses by Matt Keller]] [400]

e

  1. [[ideal gas law [10] This equation of state improved on the ideal gas law by adding an attraction parameter to pressure and subtracting a repulsion parameter from volume. ANSWER: Van der Waals Equation [10] This other two parameter equation of state is usually more accurate than the Van der Waals equation, though it does not do well with liquids. It has a more complex correction for attractive forces than Van der Waals. ANSWER: Redlich-Kwong Equation]] [401]
  2. [[Van der Waals Equation [10] This other two parameter equation of state is usually more accurate than the Van der Waals equation, though it does not do well with liquids. It has a more complex correction for attractive forces than Van der Waals. ANSWER: Redlich-Kwong Equation]] [402]
  3. Redlich-Kwong Equation [403]
  4. [[Specie Circular [10] The issue of the Specie Circular was one cause of this economic depression that saw the failure of over a third of the existing banks and record unemployment levels. ANSWER: Panic of 1837 [10] Another contributor to the Panic of 1837 was Jackson's refusal to renew the charter of this institution, headed by Nicholas Biddle. ANSWER: Second Bank of the United States]] [404]
  5. [[Panic of 1837 [10] Another contributor to the Panic of 1837 was Jackson's refusal to renew the charter of this institution, headed by Nicholas Biddle. ANSWER: Second Bank of the United States]] [405]
  6. Second Bank of the United States [406]
  7. [[lithosphere [10] This boundary between the crust and mantle, first discovered due to an increase in the speed of P waves at its location, is located within the lithosphere. ANSWER: Mohorovicic Discontinuity [10] Comprising the rest of the upper mantle below the lithosphere, this layer is less dense and more plastic, and it passes seismic waves relatively slowly. ANSWER: asthenosphere]] [407]
  8. [[Mohorovicic Discontinuity [10] Comprising the rest of the upper mantle below the lithosphere, this layer is less dense and more plastic, and it passes seismic waves relatively slowly. ANSWER: asthenosphere]] [408]
  9. asthenosphere [409]
  10. [[Piso's Conspiracy [or Pisan conspiracy] [10] Piso's Conspiracy was directed against this fifth emperor, who supposedly played his fiddle while Rome burned. ANSWER: Nero Claudius Caesar Augusts Germanicus [or Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus] [10] Nero also put down the revolt of this queen of the Iceni people in Brittania, who was pretty pissed off after Roman soldiers raped her daughters, so she led the destruction of Colchester, London, and St. Albans. ANSWER: Boudica [or Boadicea]] [410]
  11. Bonduca [411]
  12. Buduica] [412]
  13. [[Nero Claudius Caesar Augusts Germanicus [or Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus] [10] Nero also put down the revolt of this queen of the Iceni people in Brittania, who was pretty pissed off after Roman soldiers raped her daughters, so she led the destruction of Colchester, London, and St. Albans. ANSWER: Boudica [or Boadicea]] [413]
  14. Bonduca [414]
  15. Buduica] [415]
  16. [[Boudica [or Boadicea]] [416]
  17. Bonduca [417]
  18. Buduica] [418]
  19. [[Michael Barrett (Cubs) and A.J. Pierzyski (White Sox) [10] Pierzynski's manager, this White Sox skipper, often got embroiled for his comments, especially after two separate incidents where he yelled at his pitchers for not hitting opposing batters and when he used a homophobic slur against Jay Mariotti. ANSWER: Ozzie Guillen [10] This younger brother and, according to wordupthome.com, partner in crime of Detroit slugger Dmitri got himself a 50 game suspension by throwing a bat at an umpire while playing for AAA Durham. He got beaned in his first major league at bat for Tampa Bay in August, but hit a home run two at-bats later. ANSWER: Delmon Young [prompt on partial answer]]] [419]
  20. [[Ozzie Guillen [10] This younger brother and, according to wordupthome.com, partner in crime of Detroit slugger Dmitri got himself a 50 game suspension by throwing a bat at an umpire while playing for AAA Durham. He got beaned in his first major league at bat for Tampa Bay in August, but hit a home run two at-bats later. ANSWER: Delmon Young [prompt on partial answer]]] [420]
  21. [[Delmon Young [prompt on partial answer]]] [421]
  22. [[]] [422]
  23. [[Charles XII [or Carl XII] of Sweden and Peter I [or Peter the Great] of Russia [10] For 10, with the help of a driving snowstorm, Charles XII and his Swedes scored an earlier victory in the war at this November, 1700 battle in what is now Estonia. The loss prompted Peter to modernize the Russian army. ANSWER: Battle of Narva]] [423]
  24. Battle of Narva [424]
  25. Cousin Bette [425]
  26. [[La Cousine Bette [10] Along with novels like The Wild Ass's Skin and Eugenie Grandet, Cousin Bette is part of this man's Human Comedy. ANSWER: Honore de Balzac [10] This novel by Balzac concerns a retired Vermicelli manufacturer living at the pension of Madame Vauquer in Paris. His daughter Anastasie is the initial object of Eugene de Rastignac's attention, but he later becomes her sister Delphine's lover. ANSWER: Pere Goirot]] [426]
  27. Father Goirot [427]
  28. [[Honore de Balzac [10] This novel by Balzac concerns a retired Vermicelli manufacturer living at the pension of Madame Vauquer in Paris. His daughter Anastasie is the initial object of Eugene de Rastignac's attention, but he later becomes her sister Delphine's lover. ANSWER: Pere Goirot]] [428]
  29. Father Goirot [429]
  30. Pere Goirot [430]
  31. Father Goirot [431]
  32. [[Joseph Smith [10] Joseph Smith's translation of the gold plates became the basis of this church. ANSWER: Mormon [or LDS]] [432]
  33. [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints] [10] This angel, the son of Mormon, appeared to Joseph Smith and told him the location of the golden plates. ANSWER: Moroni]] [433]
  34. [[Mormon [or LDS]] [434]
  35. [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints] [10] This angel, the son of Mormon, appeared to Joseph Smith and told him the location of the golden plates. ANSWER: Moroni]] [435]
  36. Moroni [436]
  37. [[The Tenth Muse, Lately Sprung up in America, etc. [10] This author wrote The Tenth Muse, as well as the autobiographical Religious Experiences. ANSWER: Anne Bradstreet [10] This Confessional poet used Anne as a character in his Homage to Mistress Bradstreet. He may be better known for his collection The Dream Songs and for committing suicide by jumping into the Mississippi River. ANSWER: John Berryman]] [437]
  38. [[Anne Bradstreet [10] This Confessional poet used Anne as a character in his Homage to Mistress Bradstreet. He may be better known for his collection The Dream Songs and for committing suicide by jumping into the Mississippi River. ANSWER: John Berryman]] [438]
  39. John Berryman [439]
  40. [[founder effect [10] If the new population gets geographically cut off from the old population, the founder effect can contribute to this form of speciation. ANSWER: allopatric [10] As opposed to allopatric, sympatric speciation occurs without a geographic barrier. This term for increasing chromosome number, common in plants, is the dominant form of sympatric speciation. ANSWER: polyploidy]] [440]
  41. [[allopatric [10] As opposed to allopatric, sympatric speciation occurs without a geographic barrier. This term for increasing chromosome number, common in plants, is the dominant form of sympatric speciation. ANSWER: polyploidy]] [441]
  42. polyploidy [442]
  43. [[Oath of the Horatii [10] In yet another sad scene, the title character points to the sky as he reaches for a bowl and his supporters look on in anguish. ANSWER: The Death of Socrates [10] The European craze for Greek attire was partly inspired by this David painting featuring a woman reclining in a gown, looking over her right shoulder. ANSWER: Portrait of Madame Récamier]] [443]
  44. [[The Death of Socrates [10] The European craze for Greek attire was partly inspired by this David painting featuring a woman reclining in a gown, looking over her right shoulder. ANSWER: Portrait of Madame Récamier]] [444]
  45. Portrait of Madame Récamier [445]
  46. [[Mount Elbrus [10] Mount Elbrus is also the highest point of these mountains, dividing Europe and Asia between the Black and Caspian Seas. ANSWER: Caucasus Mts [10] The Caucasus Mountains are generally considered to run from the Caucasian Isthmus, between the Black Sea and Sea of Azov, southeast-ward to this oil-rich city on the Caspian Sea, also the capital of Azerbaijan. ANSWER: Baku [or Baki if you're from there]]] [446]
  47. [[Caucasus Mts [10] The Caucasus Mountains are generally considered to run from the Caucasian Isthmus, between the Black Sea and Sea of Azov, southeast-ward to this oil-rich city on the Caspian Sea, also the capital of Azerbaijan. ANSWER: Baku [or Baki if you're from there]]] [447]
  48. [[Baku [or Baki if you're from there]]] [448]
  49. [[Clayton-Bulwer Treaty [5,5] John Hay negotiated later treaties dealing with the Panama Canal with three people: a British ambassador, a Colombian foreign minister, and a Frenchman acting on the behalf of a newly independent Panama. Name any two for 5 points each. ANSWER: Lord Pauncefote, Tomas Herran,]] [449]
  50. [[Phillipe-Jean Bunau-Varilla [10] When the US began construction on the canal in 1904, it bought the assets from the company formed by this man, who led the construction of the Suez Canal and made an ill-fated attempt at the Panama Canal ending in 1889. ANSWER: Ferdinand de Lesseps]] [450]
  51. Lord Pauncefote, Tomas Herran, [451]
  52. [[Phillipe-Jean Bunau-Varilla [10] When the US began construction on the canal in 1904, it bought the assets from the company formed by this man, who led the construction of the Suez Canal and made an ill-fated attempt at the Panama Canal ending in 1889. ANSWER: Ferdinand de Lesseps]] [452]
  53. Ferdinand de Lesseps [453]
  54. [[degrees of freedom [10] The shape of this distribution, a special case of the gamma distribution, is determined solely by the degrees of freedom. It is often used for testing goodness of fit and for testing for independence in a contingency table. ANSWER: chi-square distribution [χ2] [10] In a 6 by 4 contingency table, a chi-square test would have this many degrees of freedom. ANSWER: 15 (5 x 3]] [454]
  55. [[chi-square distribution [χ2] [10] In a 6 by 4 contingency table, a chi-square test would have this many degrees of freedom. ANSWER: 15 (5 x 3]] [455]
  56. 15 (5 x 3 [456]
  57. [[The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon [10] In the Sketchbook, both "Rip van Winkle" and the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow" are purportedly written by this character that Washington Irving created. He is also credited with Irving's History of New York. ANSWER: Dietrich Knickerbocker [10] Among Irving's many biographies was one on the life of this religious figure and his successors. It was inspired by Irving's travels in Spain. ANSWER: Mohammed]] [457]
  58. [[Dietrich Knickerbocker [10] Among Irving's many biographies was one on the life of this religious figure and his successors. It was inspired by Irving's travels in Spain. ANSWER: Mohammed]] [458]
  59. Mohammed [459]
  60. [[diffraction [10] Based on diffraction patterns determined by lens diameter and wavelength of light, this term describes the minimum angular separation needed to resolve two objects. ANSWER: Rayleigh criterion [or Rayleigh limit] [10] This type of diffraction occurs when the source is far from the diffracting object, allowing a parallel beam approximation. Its namesake also discovered some dark lines in the spectrum of the sun. ANSWER: Fraunhofer]] [460]
  61. [[Rayleigh criterion [or Rayleigh limit] [10] This type of diffraction occurs when the source is far from the diffracting object, allowing a parallel beam approximation. Its namesake also discovered some dark lines in the spectrum of the sun. ANSWER: Fraunhofer]] [461]
  62. Fraunhofer [462]
  63. [[Cynics [10] This man is generally considered the founder of the Cynics. He was a companion of Socrates and taught at the Cynosarges. ANSWER: Antisthenes [10] Perhaps the most famous Cynic was this student of Antisthenes. A "Socrates gone mad," he famously resided in a tub. It is unclear whether he actually used a lantern in day to search for honest men]] [463]
  64. was captured by pirates. ANSWER: Diogenes of Sinope [464]
  65. [[Antisthenes [10] Perhaps the most famous Cynic was this student of Antisthenes. A "Socrates gone mad," he famously resided in a tub. It is unclear whether he actually used a lantern in day to search for honest men]] [465]
  66. was captured by pirates. ANSWER: Diogenes of Sinope [466]
  67. Diogenes of Sinope [467]
  68. [[Donatello [or Donato di Niccolo Bardi] [10] Donatello is best remembered today for a bronze statue of this Biblical figure standing over his defeated opponent's severed head. ANSWER: David [10] This statue, featuring a man in a Contrapposto pose holding a book, was designed by Donatello to look good in its niche in Orsanmichele even though it may seem out of proportion without the niche. ANSWER: Saint Mark]] [468]
  69. [[David [10] This statue, featuring a man in a Contrapposto pose holding a book, was designed by Donatello to look good in its niche in Orsanmichele even though it may seem out of proportion without the niche. ANSWER: Saint Mark]] [469]
  70. Saint Mark [470]
  71. [[Geoffrey Chaucer [10] One of Geoffrey Chaucer's works berated was his translation of this long French poem by Guillame de Lorris and Jean de Meun, in which the hero is obstructed by Danger, Shame, and Slander in pursuit of the title object. ANSWER: "Romance of the Rose" [or Roman de la Rose; accept Romaunt of the Rose] [10] The other work berated was this Chaucer story about a Trojan prince who loves the daughter of the prophet Calchas. After spending the night together, though, his lover cheats on him with Diomedes. Shakespeare wrote a play about this same subject as well. ANSWER: "Troilus and Criseyde]] [471]
  72. [[Romance of the Rose" [or Roman de la Rose; accept Romaunt of the Rose] [10] The other work berated was this Chaucer story about a Trojan prince who loves the daughter of the prophet Calchas. After spending the night together, though, his lover cheats on him with Diomedes. Shakespeare wrote a play about this same subject as well. ANSWER: "Troilus and Criseyde]] [472]
  73. Troilus and Criseyde [473]
  74. [[Gestalt [10] This Czech psychologist got the ball rolling for Gestalt with the publication of "Experimental Studies of the Perception of Movement." Along with Koffka and Köhler, he led the development of the school. ANSWER: Max Wertheimer [10] Wertheimer is best known for the development of this principle, named for a Greek letter, which describes how showing a viewer successive still images can sometimes result in a perception of motion. ANSWER: Phi phenomenon]] [474]
  75. [[Max Wertheimer [10] Wertheimer is best known for the development of this principle, named for a Greek letter, which describes how showing a viewer successive still images can sometimes result in a perception of motion. ANSWER: Phi phenomenon]] [475]
  76. Phi phenomenon [476]
  77. Hermann) Emil Fischer [477]
  78. Ravenna [478]
  79. is only twice, when the number of cannonballs is either 1 [479]
  80. 4900. Lagrange proved that every positive integer can be expressed as the sum of four of these numbers, and the zeta function of two is defined as the sum of their reciprocals. They are always congruent to zero [480]
  81. one modulo four, and their last digit is always 1, 4, 9, 6, [481]
  82. 5. FTP, identify these numbers which are formed by raising an integer to the second power [482]
  83. Square numbers [483]
  84. Squares [484]
  85. I(eoh) M(ing) Pei [485]
  86. Australian Aborigines [486]
  87. Ghana [487]
  88. Gulliver's Travels [488]
  89. [[peptidoglycan [do NOT prompt on]] [489]
  90. accept 'proteoglycan'] [490]
  91. [[Peterloo Massacre [or massacre of St. Peter's Field]]] [491]
  92. Portrait of a Lady [492]
  93. Pravda [493]
  94. Thorstein Veblen [494]
  95. Jorge Luis Borges [495]
  96. [[Darwin's finches [accept Galapagos finches before 'Galapagos']]] [496]
  97. James Whistler [497]
  98. Second Law of Thermodynamics [498]
  99. [[Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address [prompt on partial answer]]] [499]
  100. [[]] [500]

f

  1. Henri Matisse [501]
  2. Colorado [502]
  3. Wilfred Owen [503]
  4. [[bipolar disorder [accept manic depression before it is mentioned]]] [504]
  5. [[Fort Sumter[10] This man commanded the CSA to victory at Fort Sumter over the Union, and later, with the help of Joseph Johnston, commanded the CSA to another victory at the First Battle of Bull Run. ANSWER: P.G.T. Beauregard[10] This fortification on Morris Island that covered the southern approach to Charleston harbor was attacked in July of 1863 by the Union, and resulted in the death of Robert Gould Shaw. ANSWER: Fort]] [505]
  6. Battery) Wagner [506]
  7. [[P.G.T. Beauregard[10] This fortification on Morris Island that covered the southern approach to Charleston harbor was attacked in July of 1863 by the Union, and resulted in the death of Robert Gould Shaw. ANSWER: Fort]] [507]
  8. Battery) Wagner [508]
  9. Fort [509]
  10. Battery) Wagner [510]
  11. Greedy algorithms [511]
  12. Divide and Conquer [512]
  13. Dynamic Programming [513]
  14. Dr. Faustus [514]
  15. Christopher Marlowe [515]
  16. Helen of Troy [516]
  17. Kirchoff's circuit rules [517]
  18. diode [518]
  19. Norton's theorem [519]
  20. Frasier [520]
  21. Grey's Anatomy [521]
  22. Life As We Know It [522]
  23. al-hajj [523]
  24. Sir Richard Francis Burton [524]
  25. Timbuktu [525]
  26. Mapp v. Ohio [526]
  27. [[exclusionary principle [or rule]]] [527]
  28. 4th Amendment [528]
  29. Candide [529]
  30. Cunegonde [530]
  31. Cacambo [531]
  32. Villa Real de la Santa Fé de San Francisco de Asis [532]
  33. the Pueblo Revolt [533]
  34. Zebulon Montgomery Pike [534]
  35. Huey Long [535]
  36. [[Secretary of the Navy [or Naval Secretary]]] [536]
  37. Herbert Clark Hoover [537]
  38. Auguste Rodin [538]
  39. The Burghers of Calais (Les Bourgeois de Calais [539]
  40. Age of Bronze (L'Age d'Airain [540]
  41. titration [541]
  42. azeotrope [542]
  43. gas-liquid chromatography [543]
  44. Symphonie Fantastique [544]
  45. Fantastic Symphony [545]
  46. Songe d'un nuit de sabbat [546]
  47. Dream of a Witches' Sabbath [547]
  48. Un Bal [548]
  49. A Ball [549]
  50. Meyer Wolfshiem [550]
  51. either [551]
  52. The Great Gatsby [552]
  53. Myrtle Wilson [553]
  54. either [554]
  55. Gleipnir [555]
  56. Tyr [556]
  57. Garm [557]
  58. Jonah [558]
  59. Nineveh [559]
  60. Nahum [560]
  61. Local Group [561]
  62. Large and Small Magellanic Clouds [562]
  63. Virgo Supercluster [563]
  64. tryptophan [564]
  65. leucine [565]
  66. arginine [566]
  67. Battle of Bosworth Field [567]
  68. Battle of Tewkesbury [568]
  69. Battle of Barnet [569]
  70. Because I Could Not Stop for Death [570]
  71. Emily Dickinson [571]
  72. a fly [572]
  73. [[white dwarf stars [or white dwarves]]] [573]
  74. [[the Second Anglo-Boer War [prompt on South African War]]] [574]
  75. [[NBA Jam [do not accept]] [575]
  76. prompt on NBA Jam: Tournament Edition [576]
  77. any other superfluous information; only the unadorned NBA Jam was released in 1993 and is the first of the series] [577]
  78. Charles-Augustin de Coulomb [578]
  79. MacBeth [579]
  80. Guernica [580]
  81. Ferdinand-Eugène-Victor Delacroix [581]
  82. [[Henry VII Tudor of England [prompt on Henry Tudor]] [582]
  83. Henry, Earl of Richmond] [583]
  84. [[Jorge Mario Pedro Vargas Llosa [YO-suh] (prompt on partial last name]] [584]
  85. [[Tristan [or Tristram]] [585]
  86. Tristrem] [586]
  87. Frank Norris [587]
  88. [[tyrosine [accept Y before it's mentioned]]] [588]
  89. to each, then addressing these objections with a paragraph beginning "I say…" This theological text was completed with the addition of a Supplementum tertia partis by Peter of Auvergne [589]
  90. Henry of Gorkum after its author experienced an ecstasy while saying mass in 1273. FTP, name this Aristotelian Christian work of Scholastic thought; the best-known work of Thomas Aquinas [590]
  91. [[Summa theologiae [or Summa Theologica]]] [591]
  92. the Battle of Guadalcanal [592]
  93. [[Symphony No. 9 in D minor ("Choral"), Op. 125 [accept any underlined part; accept Op. 125 before it's mentioned and prompt on it afterwards]]] [593]
  94. [[the ordinary Bessel functions of the first kind [prompt on J]]] [594]
  95. Samuel Taylor Coleridge [595]
  96. the North Sea [596]
  97. ethers [597]
  98. [[the Federative Republic of Brazil [or República Federativa do Brasil]]] [598]
  99. Weber [599]
  100. polymerization [600]

g

  1. copolymers [601]
  2. Ziegler-Natta catalysts [602]
  3. [[Japan [or Nihon]] [603]
  4. Nippon] [604]
  5. [[Oda Nobunaga [accept either]] [605]
  6. both names [606]
  7. Kichihoshi [607]
  8. Saburo] [608]
  9. daimyo [609]
  10. Metallica [610]
  11. Clifford Lee Burton [611]
  12. [[Anesthesia: Pulling Teeth" [accept Pulling Teeth]]] [612]
  13. [[‘Abbasid Dynasty [or ‘Abbasid Caliphate]] [613]
  14. ‘Abbasids etc.; prompt on Baghdad Caliphate] [614]
  15. Baghdad [615]
  16. [[Seljuqs [or Seljuks]]] [616]
  17. [[Kawabata Yasunari [10] A married couple robs a McDonald's of 30 Big Macs in the short story "The Second Bakery Attack", which can be found in this collection, whose title story details the disappearance of a pachyderm. ANSWER: The Elephant Vanishes [10] This groundbreaking author of The Elephant Vanishes likes to write about cats and prostitutes in works such as The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle and Kafka on the Shore. ANSWER: Murakami Haruki]] [617]
  18. [[The Elephant Vanishes [10] This groundbreaking author of The Elephant Vanishes likes to write about cats and prostitutes in works such as The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle and Kafka on the Shore. ANSWER: Murakami Haruki]] [618]
  19. Murakami Haruki [619]
  20. cyclic adenosine monophosphate [620]
  21. adenosine triphosphate [621]
  22. phosphodiesterase [622]
  23. [[Hiëronymus Bosch [or Jheronimus Bos]] [623]
  24. Jerome Van Aeken [624]
  25. Jerome Van Aquen [625]
  26. Jerome Van Aken [626]
  27. Jeroen Anthoniszoon] [627]
  28. Peter Paul Rubens [628]
  29. James Abbott McNeill Whistler [629]
  30. Ordinary Differential Equations [630]
  31. Laplace transform [631]
  32. Dirac delta function [632]
  33. the Tenure of Office Act of 1867 [633]
  34. [[Andrew Johnson [prompt on Johnson]]] [634]
  35. Salmon Portland Chase [635]
  36. [[Phoebus Apollo [accept either underlined part]]] [636]
  37. [[Athens [or Athínai]] [637]
  38. Athenai] [638]
  39. Ion [639]
  40. sonnets [640]
  41. [[Sir Thomas Wyat [or Sir Thomas Wyatt] [10] Sonnets by this man, titled by their first line, include "Let me not to the marriage of two minds" and "When I do count the clock that tells the time" along with #18, "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?]] [641]
  42. William Shakespeare [642]
  43. the Pritzker Architecture Prize [643]
  44. [[Frank Owen Gehry [or Frank Owen Goldberg]]] [644]
  45. Renzo Piano [645]
  46. [[the dharma [or dhamma]]] [646]
  47. [[the Three Jewels [or Triratna]] [647]
  48. Ti-ratana; prompt on Threefold Refuge] [648]
  49. Zen Buddhism [649]
  50. Hans Castorp [650]
  51. [[either) [10] Hans Castorp is the protagonist of what Thomas Mann novel, named for the landform on which Berghof sits?]] [651]
  52. The Magic Mountain [652]
  53. [[Der Zauberberg [10]) Hans originally travels to Berghof to visit this cousin of his, a soldier who loves Marusja from afar and prematurely leaves the Sanatorium, only to return later to die]] [653]
  54. Joachim Ziemssen [654]
  55. market failures [655]
  56. [[an externality [or externalities]]] [656]
  57. Coase's theorem [657]
  58. Republic of Zimbabwe [658]
  59. Harare [659]
  60. the Limpopo River [660]
  61. Aldous Huxley [661]
  62. [[Crome Yellow [10] Huxley is best known for this dystopian novel starring Bernard Marx in which humans are divided according to Greek letters]] [662]
  63. Brave New World [663]
  64. the first law of thermodynamics [664]
  65. [[the unsteady heat diffusion equation [or unsteady heat conduction equation; prompt on diffusion equation]]] [665]
  66. Fourier's law of heat conduction [666]
  67. Marcus Licinius Crassus [667]
  68. Battle of Pharsalus [668]
  69. Parthian(s) Empire [669]
  70. Edgar Allen Poe (10) This American is known for such stories as "A Good Man is Hard to Find," "The Enduring Chill" and "Revelation," the latter two of which are to be found in Everything That Rises Must Converge [670]
  71. Mary Flannery O'Connor (10) This Frenchman's love for writing stories was bounded only by his love for whoring. He is the author of such classics as "Mademoiselle Fifi," "The Piece of String," "Ball of Fat," and "The Necklace [671]
  72. Henri-René-Albert-Guy de Maupassant [672]
  73. John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie [673]
  74. [[morality [accept moral development]] [674]
  75. morals] [675]
  76. The Chambered Nautilus [676]
  77. [[Guy Fawkes [or Guido Fawkes]]] [677]
  78. suras [678]
  79. Antonín DvoÅ™ák [679]
  80. Bay of Pigs [680]
  81. Playa Girón [681]
  82. Jeremy Bentham [682]
  83. surface tension [683]
  84. Winfield Scott [684]
  85. Michael Faraday [685]
  86. [[the Green Monster [prompt on the left field wall at Fenway Park; prompt on partial answer]]] [686]
  87. [[]] [687]
  88. V.S. Naipaul [688]
  89. stem cells [689]
  90. Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio [690]
  91. Titus Andronicus [691]
  92. the Ming dynasty [692]
  93. Henry Fielding [693]
  94. Fragile X Syndrome [694]
  95. [[Alexander I Pavlovich [prompt on Alexander]]] [695]
  96. [[buckminsterfullerenes [or 'bucky balls']]] [696]
  97. below] [697]
  98. Schenck v. United States [698]
  99. Escobedo v. Illinois [699]
  100. [[Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey [accept Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania]]] [700]

h

  1. Cheers [701]
  2. The Mary Tyler Moore Show [702]
  3. The Jeffersons [703]
  4. blackbody [704]
  5. Planck's Formula [705]
  6. Law, etc [706]
  7. cosmic microwave background radiation [707]
  8. On the Road [708]
  9. Jack Kerouac [709]
  10. The Dharma Bums [710]
  11. Fujita scale [711]
  12. Beaufort scale [712]
  13. Mercalli scale [713]
  14. monopolistic competition [714]
  15. perfect competition [715]
  16. pure competition [716]
  17. Monopsony [717]
  18. Tweedledum and Tweedledee [718]
  19. Red Queen [719]
  20. Dinah [720]
  21. Camden [721]
  22. Kings Mountain [722]
  23. Brandywine [723]
  24. The Threepenny Opera [724]
  25. The Private Life of the Master Race [725]
  26. The Good Woman of Setzuan [726]
  27. Uffizi Palace [727]
  28. Palazzo degli Uffizi [728]
  29. Giorgio Vasari [729]
  30. Pope Paul III [730]
  31. Alessandro Farnese [731]
  32. Mullerian mimicry [732]
  33. Aggressive mimicry [733]
  34. Batesian mimicry [734]
  35. Orange River [735]
  36. Mt. Kilimanjaro [736]
  37. Blue Nile [737]
  38. Abay [738]
  39. al-bahr al-Azraq [739]
  40. an-Nil al-Azraq [740]
  41. Vidkun Quisling [741]
  42. Ion Antonescu [742]
  43. Arthur Seyss-Inquart [743]
  44. La Boheme [744]
  45. Fidelio [745]
  46. The Elixir of Love [746]
  47. electronegativity [747]
  48. Mulliken scale [748]
  49. Pauling [749]
  50. rarefactions [750]
  51. timbre [751]
  52. standing wave [752]
  53. Henry James [753]
  54. Washington Square [754]
  55. The Spoils of Poynton [755]
  56. Hagia Sophia [756]
  57. [[Mehmed II [or Mehmed the Conqueror; prompt on partial answer]]] [757]
  58. [[]] [758]
  59. [[Paleologus [or Paleologi]]] [759]
  60. Excalibur [760]
  61. Caliburn [761]
  62. Caledfwlch [762]
  63. Hrunting [763]
  64. Durandal [764]
  65. Durlindana [765]
  66. Arianism [766]
  67. Monophysitism [767]
  68. Donatism [768]
  69. John) Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum [769]
  70. Cassandra [770]
  71. Arsenic [771]
  72. [[Crab Nebula [accept M1 before "first" is read]]] [772]
  73. [[Date Rape" [prompt on partial answer]]] [773]
  74. [[]] [774]
  75. [[Isak Dinesen [or Karen von Blixen-Finecke]]] [775]
  76. histones [776]
  77. [[donkeys [accept asses]]] [777]
  78. Confucianism [778]
  79. Kong jiao [779]
  80. Erik Erikson [780]
  81. F. Scott Fitzgerald [781]
  82. [[Vlad the Impaler [accept Vlad III; accept Vlad Dracula; accept Vlad Tepes; prompt on Vlad; do not accept Vlad Dracul]]] [782]
  83. David Glasgow Farragut [783]
  84. The Satanic Verses [784]
  85. Operation Market Garden [785]
  86. [[ferromagnetism [accept word forms]]] [786]
  87. saxophone [787]
  88. Kurt Gödel [788]
  89. Sir Philip Sidney [789]
  90. The Rivals [790]
  91. [[Malcolm X [accept Malcolm Little; accept El Hajj Malik El-Shabazz]]] [791]
  92. crystal lattice [792]
  93. Hess's Law [793]
  94. face-centered cubic [794]
  95. FCC [795]
  96. Russo-Japanese War [796]
  97. Mukden [797]
  98. Battle of Tsushima Straits [798]
  99. van der Waals forces [799]
  100. [[London dispersion [accept either]]] [800]

i

  1. [[induced dipole [prompt on ‘ion-dipole']]] [801]
  2. gravity [802]
  3. gravitational force [803]
  4. Gluons [804]
  5. [[antiup-antiup-antidown [accept in any order]]] [805]
  6. Heimdall [806]
  7. Fimbulwinter [807]
  8. Einherjar [808]
  9. Of Mice and Men [809]
  10. The Pearl [810]
  11. Tortilla Flat [811]
  12. ribosome [812]
  13. Nucleolus [813]
  14. Shine-Dalgarno sequence [814]
  15. Hakeem Olajuwon [815]
  16. John Starks [816]
  17. [[Orenthal James Simpson [accept O.J.; accept The Juice; accept Orenthal The Bus Driving Murderer]]] [817]
  18. [[Midaq Alley [or Zuqaq al-Midaqq]]] [818]
  19. Naguib Mahfouz [819]
  20. Anwar al-Sadat [820]
  21. Louis Sullivan [821]
  22. Wainwright Building [822]
  23. Auditorium Building [823]
  24. The History of the Standard Oil Company [824]
  25. John Davison Rockefeller [825]
  26. vertical integration [826]
  27. Stephen Crane [827]
  28. Iago [828]
  29. Grendel [829]
  30. Paul Dukas [830]
  31. The Sorcerer's Apprentice [831]
  32. L'apprenti sorcier [832]
  33. Yen Sid [833]
  34. cost-push inflation [834]
  35. stagflation [835]
  36. deadweight loss [836]
  37. [[The Joke [or Zert]]] [837]
  38. Milan Kundera [838]
  39. [[The Unbearable Lightness of Being [or Nesnesitelná lehkost bytí]]] [839]
  40. Douglas MacArthur [840]
  41. Matthew Bunker Ridgway [841]
  42. Panmunjom [842]
  43. encryption [843]
  44. RSA encryption [844]
  45. Secure Sockets Layer [845]
  46. [[Harald I [or Harald Fairhair]] [846]
  47. Harald Finehair [847]
  48. Harald HÃ¥rfager [848]
  49. Harald Hárfagri; prompt on Harald] [849]
  50. berserkers [850]
  51. [[Snorri [or Snorri Sturluson]]] [851]
  52. Meditations [852]
  53. Cato the Younger [853]
  54. Epictetus [854]
  55. Rhône River [855]
  56. Glacier [856]
  57. the Dammastock [857]
  58. Elizabeth Barrett Browning [858]
  59. [[Oliver Twist [accept either]]] [859]
  60. €The Chimney Sweeper [860]
  61. Maury Povich [861]
  62. selection sort [862]
  63. Richard Strauss [863]
  64. Battle of Actium [864]
  65. Eugene Gladstone O'Neill [865]
  66. Sixteenth Amendment [866]
  67. Walther Nernst [867]
  68. David Copperfield [868]
  69. Lucius Aennaeus Seneca [869]
  70. The Gross Clinic [870]
  71. [[Gaspee Affair [or Gaspee incident, burning of the Gaspee, etc]]] [871]
  72. Lolita [872]
  73. Dolores Haze) (The update refers to Pia Pera's Lo's Diary [873]
  74. Tao Te Ching [874]
  75. equivalents such as The Way of Life, The Book of the Way, etc [875]
  76. Ferdinand de Saussure [876]
  77. The Rape of the Lock [877]
  78. [[acetone [accept dimethyl ketone]] [878]
  79. 2-propanone] [879]
  80. Albrecht Dürer [880]
  81. fluid mosaic model [881]
  82. Hudson River [882]
  83. [[Menkheperre Thutmose III [accept Tuthmosis III]] [883]
  84. Thothmes III; prompt on partial answer] [884]
  85. [[]] [885]
  86. Hooke's Law [886]
  87. Discourse on Method [887]
  88. Discours de la méthode [888]
  89. Emile: Or on Education [889]
  90. Émile, ou De l'éducation [890]
  91. Creative Evolution [891]
  92. Évolution créatrice [892]
  93. Sense and Sensibility [893]
  94. Northanger Abbey [894]
  95. Mansfield Park [895]
  96. [[SN2 [or bimolecular nucleophilic substitution]] [896]
  97. in any order)] [897]
  98. alkyl halide [898]
  99. amines [899]
  100. The Damnation of Faust [900]

j

  1. La damnation de Faust [901]
  2. Franz Liszt [902]
  3. Doctor Atomic [903]
  4. proportional representation [904]
  5. first past the post [905]
  6. Baker v. Carr [906]
  7. Ile de la Reunion [907]
  8. Corsica [908]
  9. New Caledonia [909]
  10. New York Minute [910]
  11. [[Valeri Bure [prompt on Bure]]] [911]
  12. Pants-Off Dance Off [912]
  13. The Sorrows of Young Werther [913]
  14. Die Leiden des Jungen Werthers [914]
  15. Les Miserables [915]
  16. The Dead [916]
  17. Thomas Young [917]
  18. [[Michelson-Morley experiment [accept either order, prompt on only one name]]] [918]
  19. Shoemaker-Levy 9 [919]
  20. Justinian I [920]
  21. [[Clovis I [or Chlodowech]] [921]
  22. Chlodwig] [922]
  23. [[Basil I, the Macedonian [prompt on Basil; do not accept Basil the Bulgar Slayer]] [923]
  24. any other names for Basil II] [924]
  25. Yggdrasil [925]
  26. Surt [926]
  27. Muspellheim [927]
  28. James D. Watson and Francis Crick [928]
  29. Maurice Wilkins [929]
  30. Oswald Avery [930]
  31. Samuel Beckett [931]
  32. Krapp [932]
  33. Waiting for Godot [933]
  34. En attendant Godot [934]
  35. determinant [935]
  36. Carl Friedrich Gauss [936]
  37. cofactors [937]
  38. Pottawatomie Creek [938]
  39. Osawatomie [939]
  40. The Battle Hymn of the Republic [940]
  41. [[Arthur Wellesley [or the Duke of Wellington]]] [941]
  42. Battle of Waterloo [942]
  43. Battle of Wavre [943]
  44. All's Well That Ends Well [944]
  45. [[Hamlet" [10] Geoffrey Chaucer's "Knight's Tale" is the primary source upon which this drama is based. Shakespeare wrote the first and last acts of this collaboration with John Fletcher. ANSWER: "Two Noble Kinsmen]] [945]
  46. Two Noble Kinsmen [946]
  47. Tomás Estrada Palma [947]
  48. William Howard Taft [948]
  49. Fulgencio Batista y Zalvidar [949]
  50. Water Lilies [950]
  51. Claude Monet [951]
  52. Cathedral Notre-Dame de Rouen [952]
  53. Rouen Cathedral [953]
  54. pyruvate [954]
  55. gluconeogenesis [955]
  56. biotin [956]
  57. Edvard Munch [957]
  58. Athol Fugard [958]
  59. Archimedes [959]
  60. [[the Sapir-Whorf-Korzybski hypothesis [accept the Whorfian hypothesis; prompt on Sapir hypothesis; prompt on "principle of linguistic relativity]] [960]
  61. equivalents] [961]
  62. DNA ligase [962]
  63. Henry Valentine Miller [963]
  64. [[The Scarlet Witch [or Wanda Maximoff; prompt on Maximoff; prompt on Gypsy Witch; prompt on Wanda Frank; prompt on Wanda Magnus; prompt on Ana Maximoff]]] [964]
  65. [[The Four Seasons [or Le Quattro Stagioni; accept The Contest Between Harmony and Invention]] [965]
  66. Il Cimento dell'Armonia e dell'inventione before "larger work" is read; accept "L'autunno [966]
  67. Autumn before "louder than the plucked strings" is read; do not accept individual movement names after that point since information about multiple movements has been given] [967]
  68. [[Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina [or Bosna i Hercegovina]]] [968]
  69. birds [969]
  70. [[fasting [accept obvious equivalents]]] [970]
  71. Donner [971]
  72. surface tension [972]
  73. Easter Rising/Rebellion [973]
  74. [[Six Characters in Search of an Author [or Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore: Commedia da fare]]] [974]
  75. Adonis [975]
  76. superstring theory [976]
  77. Scott Joplin [977]
  78. Karl Marx [978]
  79. the Crusader states [979]
  80. Tammany Hall [980]
  81. [[Israel Potter [first]] [981]
  82. last name [982]
  83. both is acceptable] [983]
  84. [[Don Benito Cereno [accept Benito]]] [984]
  85. Captain Ahab [985]
  86. [[the October Manifesto [or Oktyabrsky Manifest]]] [986]
  87. [[Nicholas II [prompt on partial answer]]] [987]
  88. [[]] [988]
  89. Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky [989]
  90. right atrium [990]
  91. pericardium [991]
  92. bundle of His [992]
  93. Mars, the Bringer of War [993]
  94. Gustav(us) Theodore von Holst [994]
  95. Savitri [995]
  96. Maui [996]
  97. Hina [997]
  98. the North Island of New Zealand [998]
  99. [[Masaccio [or Tommaso Di Giovanni Di Simone Guidi]]] [999]
  100. Filippo Brunelleschi [1,000]

k

  1. Brancacci Chapel [1,001]
  2. [[Robert Todd Lincoln [prompt on Lincoln]]] [1,002]
  3. Chester Alan Arthur [1,003]
  4. Pendleton Civil Service Act [1,004]
  5. [[Republic of Uzbekistan [or Uzbekistan Respublikasi]]] [1,005]
  6. [[Andijan [or Andijon]] [1,006]
  7. Andizhan [1,007]
  8. Andizan] [1,008]
  9. Islam Karimov [1,009]
  10. [[Theravada [or Hinayana]]] [1,010]
  11. [[arhat [or arahant]]] [1,011]
  12. [[Sri Lanka [or Shri Lamka Prajatantrika Samajaya di Janarajaya/Ilankai Jananayaka]] [1,012]
  13. Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka [1,013]
  14. Choshalichak Kutiyarachu [1,014]
  15. Ilankai] [1,015]
  16. Quantum ElectroDynamics [1,016]
  17. simple harmonic oscillator [1,017]
  18. renormalizable [1,018]
  19. William Blake [1,019]
  20. Songs of Innocence [1,020]
  21. America: A Prophecy [1,021]
  22. Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [1,022]
  23. Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty [1,023]
  24. Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty [1,024]
  25. [[Yangon [or Rangoon]]] [1,025]
  26. Mandalay [1,026]
  27. [[Irrawaddy River [or Ayeyarwady River]]] [1,027]
  28. Hua Guofeng [1,028]
  29. [[the Gang of Four [or Sirenbang]]] [1,029]
  30. the Great Leap Forward [1,030]
  31. chlorophylls [1,031]
  32. carotenoids [1,032]
  33. rhodopsin [1,033]
  34. [[Moliere [or Jean-Baptiste Poquelin]]] [1,034]
  35. [[The Miser [or L'Avare]]] [1,035]
  36. [[The School for Wives [or L'Ecole des Femmes]]] [1,036]
  37. Vyasa [1,037]
  38. the Bhagavadgita [1,038]
  39. Arjuna [1,039]
  40. Hume's fork [1,040]
  41. [[Buridan's ass [or Buridan's dog]]] [1,041]
  42. Occam's razor [1,042]
  43. triple point [1,043]
  44. supercritical fluid [1,044]
  45. eutectic point [1,045]
  46. John Peter Zenger [1,046]
  47. Jerry Laymon Falwell [1,047]
  48. L.B. Sullivan [1,048]
  49. [[The Battleship Potemkin [or Bronenosets Potyomkin]]] [1,049]
  50. Volga Volga [1,050]
  51. Solaris [1,051]
  52. Chinua Achebe [1,052]
  53. [[Gaius Sempronius Gracchus [prompt on Gracchus; accept C. Gracchus]]] [1,053]
  54. Shays's Rebellion [1,054]
  55. Addis Abbaba [1,055]
  56. Holograms [1,056]
  57. [[the Shredder [accept Oroku]] [1,057]
  58. Oroku Saki before it is read] [1,058]
  59. Sickle Cell Disease [1,059]
  60. Anemia [1,060]
  61. Bernoulli's equation [1,061]
  62. principle [1,062]
  63. Death of a Salesman [1,063]
  64. [[Teutonic Knights [or Teutonic Order]] [1,064]
  65. House of the Hospitalers of Saint Mary of the Teutons in Jerusalem [1,065]
  66. Deutscher Ritter Orden [1,066]
  67. Haus der Ritter des Hospitals Sankt Marien der Deutschen zu Jerusalem [1,067]
  68. Domus Sanctae Mariae Theutonicorum in Jerusalem; do not accept Knights Hospitalers] [1,068]
  69. Deborah [1,069]
  70. George Orwell [1,070]
  71. Margaret Mead [1,071]
  72. Silas Marner [1,072]
  73. Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram [1,073]
  74. Death in Venice [1,074]
  75. Der Tod in Venedig [1,075]
  76. Dave Brubeck [1,076]
  77. Jacobus H. van't Hoff [1,077]
  78. Third Crusade [1,078]
  79. Venus of Urbino [1,079]
  80. Hittites [1,080]
  81. Percy Shelley [1,081]
  82. George Gordon, Lord Byron (also accept just George Gordon [1,082]
  83. Mary Shelley [1,083]
  84. Thoth [1,084]
  85. Set [1,085]
  86. Seth [1,086]
  87. Osiris [1,087]
  88. [[Ching [or Manchu]]] [1,088]
  89. [[First Opium War [prompt on Opium Wars]]] [1,089]
  90. [[White Lotus Society [or Pai lien chiao]]] [1,090]
  91. The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion [1,091]
  92. Basel [1,092]
  93. [[Napoleon III [or Charles-Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte; prompt on Napoleon; prompt on Louis; do not accept Louis-Philippe; do not accept Napoleon Bonaparte]]] [1,093]
  94. Insight.com Bowl [1,094]
  95. Capital One Bowl [1,095]
  96. Tostitos Fiesta Bowl [1,096]
  97. Johann Sebastian Bach [1,097]
  98. Claudio Monteverdi [1,098]
  99. Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina [1,099]
  100. Curl [1,100]

l

  1. Stokes' Theorem [1,101]
  2. [[Laplacian [accept Laplace operator]]] [1,102]
  3. linked list [1,103]
  4. queue [1,104]
  5. stack [1,105]
  6. A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings [1,106]
  7. Un señor muy viejo con unas alas enormes [1,107]
  8. Gabriel Garcia Marquez [1,108]
  9. One Hundred Years of Solitude [1,109]
  10. Cien Anos de Soledad [1,110]
  11. cytoskeleton [1,111]
  12. [[actin [5,5] Another component of the cytoskeleton, microtubles, form these two specialized structures that push]] [1,112]
  13. pull cells through an aqueous environment. They are distinguished by their size and number, but both are powered by the motor protein dynein [1,113]
  14. cilia AND flagella [1,114]
  15. Lysistrata [1,115]
  16. Lysistrate [1,116]
  17. The Wasps [1,117]
  18. Sphekes [1,118]
  19. The Frogs [1,119]
  20. Batrachoi [1,120]
  21. Chicago Democratic National Convention [1,121]
  22. [[Abbott "Abbie" Hoffman [or Barry Freed]]] [1,122]
  23. William Moses Kunstler [1,123]
  24. Dylan Thomas [1,124]
  25. Do not go gentle into that good night [1,125]
  26. And death shall have no dominion [1,126]
  27. Lorenz Curve [1,127]
  28. Gini Coefficient [1,128]
  29. Gini Index [1,129]
  30. Robin Hood Index [1,130]
  31. Hoover Index [1,131]
  32. diffusion [1,132]
  33. Thomas Graham [1,133]
  34. Fick's (First) Law [1,134]
  35. Lilith [1,135]
  36. Bathsheba [1,136]
  37. Jezebel [1,137]
  38. [[Palmer Raids [prompt on Red Scare]]] [1,138]
  39. Espionage Act of 1917 [1,139]
  40. [[My Disillusionment in Russia [or My Two Years in Russia]]] [1,140]
  41. Bauhaus [1,141]
  42. Walter Gropius [1,142]
  43. Hannes Meyer [1,143]
  44. [[Herbert Spencer [10] Spencer's best known work is this one, in which he contrasted the sociological classification of military and industrial societies, as well as developed his idea of "individuation" as it related to social evolution. ANSWER: Social Statics [10] Spencer was supported by this intellectual, who is credited with coining the term "agnostic," and is known as "Darwin's Bulldog" for his defense of evolution. He is also the grandfather of a famous writer. ANSWER: Thomas H. Huxley]] [1,144]
  45. [[Social Statics [10] Spencer was supported by this intellectual, who is credited with coining the term "agnostic," and is known as "Darwin's Bulldog" for his defense of evolution. He is also the grandfather of a famous writer. ANSWER: Thomas H. Huxley]] [1,145]
  46. Thomas H. Huxley [1,146]
  47. conductivity [1,147]
  48. reactance [1,148]
  49. impedance [1,149]
  50. [[Church-Turing Thesis [accept in either order; prompt on only a single name]]] [1,150]
  51. [[British Virgin Islands [prompt on partial answer]]] [1,151]
  52. [[]] [1,152]
  53. Edmund Burke [1,153]
  54. D(avid) H(erbert) Lawrence [1,154]
  55. Phillips curve [1,155]
  56. West Side Story [1,156]
  57. Balder [1,157]
  58. The Luncheon on the Grass (also accept Déjeuner sur l'herbe [1,158]
  59. The Red and the Black (accept: Le Rouge et le Noir, The Scarlet and the Black [1,159]
  60. Malaria [1,160]
  61. Salome [1,161]
  62. Richard "Kinky" Friedman [1,162]
  63. Oliver Goldsmith [1,163]
  64. Neutrinos [1,164]
  65. Demosthenes [1,165]
  66. William Cullen Bryant [1,166]
  67. [[carboxylic acids [prompt on just 'acid']]] [1,167]
  68. [[Ghana Empire [accept Wagadou before it is read]]] [1,168]
  69. piezoelectricity [1,169]
  70. piezoelectric effect [1,170]
  71. [[Tamerlane [accept Timur-e Lang, accept Timurlank; Timur the Lame, Tamburlaine, and other reasonably close pronounciations]]] [1,171]
  72. The Last Supper [1,172]
  73. [[Night Watch [10] Beneath some exiting ominous clouds, Rotterdam Gate and a group of people near a tow barge on the shore can be seen in this painting of Jan Veermer's hometown. ANSWER: View of Delft [10] Unlike the Dresden variation, the Detroit variation of this Jacob van Ruisdael landscape features two figures and a rainbow near the leafless beech tree and three white tombs. ANSWER: The Jewish Cemetery]] [1,173]
  74. [[View of Delft [10] Unlike the Dresden variation, the Detroit variation of this Jacob van Ruisdael landscape features two figures and a rainbow near the leafless beech tree and three white tombs. ANSWER: The Jewish Cemetery]] [1,174]
  75. The Jewish Cemetery [1,175]
  76. George Eliot [1,176]
  77. [[Mary Ann Evans [10] In one plot of this George Eliot work, Doctor Tertius Lydgate attempts to help the poor, but fails, just as Dorothea Brooke failed to learn from her first husband, the elderly Reverend Edward Casaubon. ANSWER: Middlemarch [10] This title character in an Eliot novel is a watchmaker who accidently kills a constable. He is pardoned by the pleas from Esther Lyon, who falls in love with this "radical" character, and not Harold Transome. ANSWER: Felix Holt]] [1,177]
  78. [[Middlemarch [10] This title character in an Eliot novel is a watchmaker who accidently kills a constable. He is pardoned by the pleas from Esther Lyon, who falls in love with this "radical" character, and not Harold Transome. ANSWER: Felix Holt]] [1,178]
  79. Felix Holt [1,179]
  80. Ganymede [1,180]
  81. [[Charon [5,5] Strangely enough, dwarf planet Pluto is now known to have two other moons. Name them for 5 each]] [1,181]
  82. Nix AND Hydra [1,182]
  83. Antoine Lavoisier [1,183]
  84. Arrhenius [1,184]
  85. Brønsted-Lowry [1,185]
  86. Lorentz Transformation [1,186]
  87. special relativity [1,187]
  88. [[length contraction [accept Lorentz contraction]]] [1,188]
  89. The Castle [1,189]
  90. Amerika [1,190]
  91. A Hunger Artist [1,191]
  92. Maurice Clarett [1,192]
  93. Woody Hayes [1,193]
  94. Santonio Holmes [1,194]
  95. The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky [1,195]
  96. The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg [1,196]
  97. To Build a Fire [1,197]
  98. Kleptomania [1,198]
  99. Munchausen Syndrome [1,199]
  100. Dissociative identity Disorder [1,200]

m

  1. Ludwig Wittgenstein [1,201]
  2. Logical Positivism [1,202]
  3. Rudolf Carnap [1,203]
  4. Visigoths [1,204]
  5. Vandals [1,205]
  6. Ostrogoths [1,206]
  7. Edward Hopper [1,207]
  8. Nighthawks [1,208]
  9. Chop Suey [1,209]
  10. Dred Scott v. Sandford [1,210]
  11. Korematsu v. United States [1,211]
  12. Gitlow v. New York [1,212]
  13. Topology [1,213]
  14. Metric space [1,214]
  15. Norms [1,215]
  16. Franz Josef Haydn [1,216]
  17. Lorenzo da Ponte [1,217]
  18. Antonio Salieri [1,218]
  19. Kenzaburo Oe [1,219]
  20. Lady Murasaki Shikibu [1,220]
  21. Junichiro Tanizaki [1,221]
  22. Leviathan [1,222]
  23. Thomas Hobbes [1,223]
  24. Of Man [1,224]
  25. thyroid [1,225]
  26. goiter [1,226]
  27. Graves' disease [1,227]
  28. [[First Great Awakening [prompt on partial answer]]] [1,228]
  29. [[]] [1,229]
  30. Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God [1,230]
  31. New Lights [1,231]
  32. Sidney Carton [1,232]
  33. Lucie Manette [1,233]
  34. either [1,234]
  35. Charles Evremonde [1,235]
  36. William Hogarth [1,236]
  37. the Black Hawk War [1,237]
  38. The Wire [1,238]
  39. Domesday Book [1,239]
  40. Jules-Henri Poincaré [1,240]
  41. Gresham's Law [1,241]
  42. [[Côte d'Ivoire [or Ivory Coast]]] [1,242]
  43. Tartuffe [1,243]
  44. William Wordsworth [1,244]
  45. Heisenberg uncertainty principle [1,245]
  46. Daphne [1,246]
  47. Franz Schubert [1,247]
  48. [[E2 [accept bimolecular elimination (either order)]]] [1,248]
  49. Herzog [1,249]
  50. Leo Tolstoy [1,250]
  51. Venus [1,251]
  52. Boston [1,252]
  53. [[apoptosis [prompt on 'programmed cell death' before it is read]]] [1,253]
  54. Jainism [1,254]
  55. Charles Stuart Parnell [1,255]
  56. Christina's World [1,256]
  57. Torquato Tasso [1,257]
  58. Lodovico Ariosto [1,258]
  59. Luigi Pulci [1,259]
  60. Thomas Cranmer [1,260]
  61. Thomas Wolsey [1,261]
  62. Hugh Latimer [1,262]
  63. buffer solutions [1,263]
  64. Henderson-Hasselbalch equation [1,264]
  65. carbonic anhydrase [1,265]
  66. Fear and Trembling [1,266]
  67. Soren Kierkegaard [1,267]
  68. Jacques Derrida [1,268]
  69. The Death of the Hired Man [1,269]
  70. Robert Frost [1,270]
  71. The Oven Bird [1,271]
  72. Ruth Fulton Benedict [1,272]
  73. Patterns of Culture [1,273]
  74. Franz Boas [1,274]
  75. The Heart of the Matter [1,275]
  76. Graham Greene [1,276]
  77. The Quiet American [1,277]
  78. magma [1,278]
  79. Bowen's Reaction Series [1,279]
  80. mafic [1,280]
  81. below] [1,281]
  82. Griswold v. Connecticut [1,282]
  83. [[Bowers v. Hardwick [accept Hardwick]]] [1,283]
  84. Lawrence v. Texas [1,284]
  85. Higgs field [1,285]
  86. [[spontaneous symmetry breaking [5,5] Part of the evidence for spontaneous symmetry breaking is that these two bosons, mediators of the weak force, have mass, but the photon does not. One has plus and minus varieties]] [1,286]
  87. W and Z [1,287]
  88. Menander [1,288]
  89. Dyskolos or The Bad-Tempered Man or The Grouch [1,289]
  90. English-language equivalents [1,290]
  91. Samos [1,291]
  92. Titus Flavius Vespasianus [1,292]
  93. Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus [1,293]
  94. Germanicus Julius Caesar [1,294]
  95. Mike James [1,295]
  96. Ben Wallace [1,296]
  97. Corliss Williamson [1,297]
  98. Grant Wood [1,298]
  99. Daughters of Revolution [1,299]
  100. Daughters of the Revolution [1,300]

n

  1. American Gothic [1,301]
  2. Lesser Antilles (prompt on "Antilles [1,302]
  3. Barbuda [1,303]
  4. Martinique [1,304]
  5. Fourier transform [1,305]
  6. histogram [1,306]
  7. morphological [1,307]
  8. Sekigahara [1,308]
  9. [[Tokugawa Ieyasu [accept either name]] [1,309]
  10. both in any order] [1,310]
  11. Toyotomi Hideyoshi [1,311]
  12. Das Rheingold [1,312]
  13. The Rhinegold [1,313]
  14. Lohengrin [1,314]
  15. Rienzi [1,315]
  16. this stuff about an organ FTPE [1,316]
  17. Spleen [1,317]
  18. Erythrocytes [1,318]
  19. Bilirubin [1,319]
  20. [[Amaterasu [10] This Shinto god of storms was the brother of Amaterasu whose noisiness prompted her to hole up in a cave. ANSWER: Susanowo]] [1,320]
  21. [[Susanowa [10] This son of Susanowo ruled the earth until he was supplanted by Amaterasu's grandson Ninigi. Afterwards, he went to the underworld and won Susanowo's celebrated "grass cutting sword." ANSWER: Okuni-Nushi]] [1,321]
  22. Susanowo [1,322]
  23. [[Susanowa [10] This son of Susanowo ruled the earth until he was supplanted by Amaterasu's grandson Ninigi. Afterwards, he went to the underworld and won Susanowo's celebrated "grass cutting sword." ANSWER: Okuni-Nushi]] [1,323]
  24. Okuni-Nushi [1,324]
  25. Immaculate Conception [1,325]
  26. Ivan IV [1,326]
  27. Ivan the Terrible [1,327]
  28. Ivan Groznyi [1,328]
  29. Critique of Pure Reason [1,329]
  30. Kritik der reinen Vernunft [1,330]
  31. Vanity Fair [1,331]
  32. [[Electro [accept Maxwell Dillon before it is reads]]] [1,332]
  33. The Count of Monte Cristo [1,333]
  34. Le Comte de Monte Cristo [1,334]
  35. John Donne [1,335]
  36. [[dicotyledons [do not accept 'eudicots']]] [1,336]
  37. Yitzhak Rabin [1,337]
  38. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington [1,338]
  39. Peace/Treaty of Westphalia [1,339]
  40. Francisco Pizarro [1,340]
  41. De Stijl (prompt on Neoplasticism [1,341]
  42. hydrogen bonds [1,342]
  43. Elizabeth (I [1,343]
  44. calcium [1,344]
  45. Fermat numbers [1,345]
  46. Jackson Pollock [1,346]
  47. morphemes [1,347]
  48. Nikolai Gogol [1,348]
  49. [[Lagrange points [or Lagrangian points]]] [1,349]
  50. Behaviorism [1,350]
  51. [[The Little Albert Experiment [accept Baby Albert]]] [1,351]
  52. classical conditioning [1,352]
  53. Bender Bending Rodriguez [1,353]
  54. [[General Major Webelo Zapp Brannigan [accept Zapp] [10] This champion of the Madison Cube Garden pet show stars on America' most popular television program, which consists of him staring into the camera while the "angry machine" noise plays and his eyes display mind-controlling patterns]] [1,354]
  55. the Hypno Toad [1,355]
  56. Notes From The Underground [1,356]
  57. Letters from the Underworld [1,357]
  58. Zapiski iz podpolya [1,358]
  59. The Brothers Karamazov [1,359]
  60. Bratya Karamazovy [1,360]
  61. The Idiot [1,361]
  62. Victoria Falls [1,362]
  63. Iguaçu Falls [1,363]
  64. Angel Falls [1,364]
  65. [[King Philip [or Metacomet]]] [1,365]
  66. [[Iroquois Confederacy [prompt on Five Nations; prompt on Six Nations]]] [1,366]
  67. Lord John Murray Dunmore, 4th Earl of Dunmore, Viscount Of Fincastle, Lord Murray Of Blair, Moulin, And Tillemot [1,367]
  68. Dubliners (note: do not accept The Dubliners [1,368]
  69. James Joyce [1,369]
  70. The Dead [1,370]
  71. Birch reduction [1,371]
  72. benzene [1,372]
  73. Friedel-Crafts alkylation [1,373]
  74. Thor [1,374]
  75. Mjolnir [1,375]
  76. Megingjord [1,376]
  77. The Night of the Iguana [1,377]
  78. Tennesee Williams [1,378]
  79. The Glass Menagerie [1,379]
  80. Solon [1,380]
  81. Cleon [1,381]
  82. Peisistratus [1,382]
  83. Mie scattering [1,383]
  84. Raleigh scattering [1,384]
  85. Compton scattering [1,385]
  86. electrophoresis [1,386]
  87. antibodies [1,387]
  88. [[Western blot [also accept immunoblot]]] [1,388]
  89. John Rawls [1,389]
  90. Robert Nozick [1,390]
  91. social contract [1,391]
  92. the Great Society [1,392]
  93. Voting Rights Act of 1965 [1,393]
  94. John William Gardner [1,394]
  95. Identity [1,395]
  96. transpose [1,396]
  97. Hermitian [1,397]
  98. [[Berlin Wall [or Berliner Mauer]]] [1,398]
  99. [[Kristallnacht [or Night of the Broken Glass; prompt on November Pogroms]]] [1,399]
  100. Beer Hall Putsch [1,400]

o

  1. Madame Butterfly [1,401]
  2. Giacomo Puccini [1,402]
  3. La Scala [1,403]
  4. Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird [1,404]
  5. The Emperor of Ice Cream [1,405]
  6. Harmonium [1,406]
  7. Phidias [1,407]
  8. Pheidias; accept equivalents [1,408]
  9. Praxiteles [1,409]
  10. Callicrates [1,410]
  11. photoelectric effect [1,411]
  12. Heinrich Hertz [1,412]
  13. Work Function [1,413]
  14. Gaius Julius Caesar [1,414]
  15. Fields [1,415]
  16. John Henry [1,416]
  17. The Last of the Mohicans [1,417]
  18. Crazy [1,418]
  19. vitamin C [1,419]
  20. ascorbic acid [1,420]
  21. The Birth of Venus [1,421]
  22. The Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samurai [1,422]
  23. Bronislaw Malinowski [1,423]
  24. Boston Massacre [1,424]
  25. [[Edgeworth-Kuiper Belt [prompt on ‘trans-Neptunian objects]] [1,425]
  26. similar before ‘Neptune'] [1,426]
  27. Manitoba [1,427]
  28. Pablo Neruda [1,428]
  29. Juliet Capulet [1,429]
  30. Bertrand Russell [1,430]
  31. Wolff-Kishner reduction [1,431]
  32. Job [1,432]
  33. Frankenstein [1,433]
  34. [[bipolar junction transistor [accept BJT]]] [1,434]
  35. [[John Quincy Adams [prompt on Adams]]] [1,435]
  36. Shang Dynasty [1,436]
  37. ligand [1,437]
  38. chelate [1,438]
  39. porphyrins [1,439]
  40. Subhas Chandra Bose [1,440]
  41. [[Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma [or Pyidaungzu Myanma Naingngandaw]] [1,441]
  42. Union of Myanmar] [1,442]
  43. Sukarno [1,443]
  44. Multiplier Effect [1,444]
  45. Liquidity Trap [1,445]
  46. John Maynard Keynes [1,446]
  47. The Age of Innocence [1,447]
  48. Edith Wharton [1,448]
  49. Countess Ellen Olenska [1,449]
  50. either) [1,450]
  51. Dune II [1,451]
  52. Doom [1,452]
  53. EverQuest [1,453]
  54. thorax [1,454]
  55. chitin [1,455]
  56. Malpighian tubules [1,456]
  57. tubes [1,457]
  58. Guru Nanak [1,458]
  59. Adi Granth (also accept Guru Granth Sahib [1,459]
  60. Gobind Singh (also accept Gobind Rai [1,460]
  61. Govind Singh [1,461]
  62. Pericles [1,462]
  63. Alcibiades [1,463]
  64. Demosthenes [1,464]
  65. Richard Wright [1,465]
  66. August Wilson [1,466]
  67. Frederick August Kittel [1,467]
  68. James Baldwin [1,468]
  69. cloud chamber [1,469]
  70. silicon [1,470]
  71. [[scintillation detector [accept word forms]]] [1,471]
  72. [[Kuril islands [or Kurilskiye Ostrova]] [1,472]
  73. [[Chishima-retto] [10] The Kuril islands separate the Pacific from this body of water, whose other extremes are defined by Cape Lazarev, the mouth of the Penzhina, the Kamchatka, and Sakhalin. Shantar, Zavyalov, Yam, and Tyuleny islands are found within this body that receives the Tugur and Amur rivers. ANSWER: Sea of Okhotsk [or Okhotskoye More]] [1,473]
  74. [[Ochotskoje More] [10] The East China Sea and the Philippine Sea are separated by this nearby archipelago, containing fifty-five islands divided into the Amami, Okinawa, and Sakishima groups, which host an American military base at Naha and is part of Japan. ANSWER: Ryukyu islands [or Nansei Islands]] [1,474]
  75. Ryukyu-Shoto [1,475]
  76. Nansei-Shoto [1,476]
  77. Ryukyuan Okinawa] [1,477]
  78. [[Sea of Okhotsk [or Okhotskoye More]] [1,478]
  79. [[Ochotskoje More] [10] The East China Sea and the Philippine Sea are separated by this nearby archipelago, containing fifty-five islands divided into the Amami, Okinawa, and Sakishima groups, which host an American military base at Naha and is part of Japan. ANSWER: Ryukyu islands [or Nansei Islands]] [1,479]
  80. Ryukyu-Shoto [1,480]
  81. Nansei-Shoto [1,481]
  82. Ryukyuan Okinawa] [1,482]
  83. [[Ryukyu islands [or Nansei Islands]] [1,483]
  84. Ryukyu-Shoto [1,484]
  85. Nansei-Shoto [1,485]
  86. Ryukyuan Okinawa] [1,486]
  87. continuum hypothesis [1,487]
  88. Goldbach conjecture [1,488]
  89. Diophantine equations [1,489]
  90. Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro [1,490]
  91. Eclogues [1,491]
  92. Georgics [1,492]
  93. Eroica [1,493]
  94. Titan [1,494]
  95. Gustav Mahler [1,495]
  96. [[Shiloh [accept Pittsburg Landing from unreformed Southerners]]] [1,496]
  97. Fredricksburg [1,497]
  98. Five Forks [1,498]
  99. Stymphalian birds [1,499]
  100. Nemean lion [1,500]

p

  1. Eurystheus [1,501]
  2. Blanche of Castile [1,502]
  3. [[Eleanor of Aquitaine [or Eleanor of Guyenne]]] [1,503]
  4. [[Louis IX [prompt on Saint Louis]]] [1,504]
  5. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky [1,505]
  6. Von Rothbart [1,506]
  7. Bolshoi [1,507]
  8. Rasselas [1,508]
  9. Samuel Johnson [1,509]
  10. Jane Eyre [1,510]
  11. Perl [1,511]
  12. hash [1,512]
  13. associative array [1,513]
  14. regular expressions [1,514]
  15. REs [1,515]
  16. Constantin Brancusi [1,516]
  17. Republic of Paraguay [1,517]
  18. John Dryden [1,518]
  19. Ode to a Nightingale [1,519]
  20. Meiji Tenno Mutsuhito [1,520]
  21. Meiji Era or Restoration or Period [1,521]
  22. David Hilbert [1,522]
  23. moon [1,523]
  24. [[Girondins [or Girondists; accept Brissotins before "Brissot" is read] Its Cogge ships helped it gain power in the region, and by 1300 it had established]] [1,524]
  25. Ahura Mazda [1,525]
  26. Ormazdh before mentioned [1,526]
  27. [[Hanseatic League [or Hansa]]] [1,527]
  28. Gustav Courbet [1,528]
  29. Physiocrats [1,529]
  30. Ezra Pound [1,530]
  31. The Lottery [1,531]
  32. angular momentum [1,532]
  33. Johann Sebastian Bach [1,533]
  34. superconductor [1,534]
  35. XYZ affair [1,535]
  36. Steppenwolf [1,536]
  37. vapor pressure [1,537]
  38. Human Immunodeficiency Virus [1,538]
  39. Cepheid variable stars [1,539]
  40. Henrietta Leavitt [1,540]
  41. Andromeda galaxy [1,541]
  42. Thomas Gainsborough [1,542]
  43. Sir Joshua Reynolds [1,543]
  44. Sarah Siddons [1,544]
  45. hadith [1,545]
  46. sunna [1,546]
  47. Jerusalem [1,547]
  48. Aisha [1,548]
  49. [[100 meters [or 100 meter dash; do not accept 100 meter hurdles]] [1,549]
  50. 100 yard anything] [1,550]
  51. Tim Montgomery [1,551]
  52. Donovan Bailey [1,552]
  53. Jean Piaget [1,553]
  54. conservation [1,554]
  55. egocentric [1,555]
  56. Mauryan Empire [1,556]
  57. Ashoka [1,557]
  58. Kalinga [1,558]
  59. Jozef Klemens Pilsudski [1,559]
  60. Lech Walesa [1,560]
  61. [[Independent Self-Governing Trade Union Solidarity [or Niezalezny Samorzad Zwiazków Zawodowych Solidarnosc]]] [1,561]
  62. Gregorian chant [1,562]
  63. motet [1,563]
  64. Giovanni da Palestrina [1,564]
  65. ethane [1,565]
  66. Newman projection [1,566]
  67. eclipsed conformation [1,567]
  68. Oloudah Equiano [1,568]
  69. Mary Rowlandson [1,569]
  70. Benjamin Franklin [1,570]
  71. Uluru [1,571]
  72. Ayers Rock [1,572]
  73. Bass Strait [1,573]
  74. Nullarbor Plain [1,574]
  75. [[Powhatan [or Wahunsonacock]]] [1,575]
  76. [[Navigation Acts [or Acts of Trade and Navigation]]] [1,576]
  77. William Berkeley [1,577]
  78. Jose Julian Marti [1,578]
  79. Heinrich Heine [1,579]
  80. Vladimir Pushkin [1,580]
  81. Pascal's principle [1,581]
  82. Reynolds number [1,582]
  83. Navier-Stokes equations [1,583]
  84. Nathaniel Hawthorne [1,584]
  85. Rappaccinni's Daughter [1,585]
  86. The Blithedale Romance [1,586]
  87. Corn Laws [1,587]
  88. John Bright [1,588]
  89. [[Great Reform Bill [or First Reform Bill]] [1,589]
  90. 1832 Reform Bill; prompt on Reform Bill] [1,590]
  91. boar [1,591]
  92. Atalanta [1,592]
  93. Meleager [1,593]
  94. Taylor series [1,594]
  95. Maclaurin series [1,595]
  96. sin(x [1,596]
  97. xylem [1,597]
  98. cambium [1,598]
  99. [[stomata [accept stoma]]] [1,599]
  100. Jean Racine [1,600]

q

  1. Phedre [1,601]
  2. Athalie [1,602]
  3. G Proteins [1,603]
  4. [[Realism [accept Neorealism]] [1,604]
  5. Structural Realism before ‘Neibuhr'] [1,605]
  6. Beauty and the Beast [1,606]
  7. [[Chief Noah Seattle [or Seeatla]]] [1,607]
  8. Joseph Conrad [1,608]
  9. Georges Bizet [1,609]
  10. Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde [1,610]
  11. magnetic field [1,611]
  12. Jamaica [1,612]
  13. Gian Lorenzo Bernini [1,613]
  14. Michel Foucault [1,614]
  15. Sancho and/or Panza [1,615]
  16. Raman effect [1,616]
  17. scattering [1,617]
  18. Cambrian Period [1,618]
  19. Unfinished Symphonies [1,619]
  20. [[Girolamo/Jerome/Hieronymous Savonarola [do not accept Jordan Boyd-Graber]]] [1,620]
  21. Thomas Pynchon [1,621]
  22. Prague Spring [1,622]
  23. Ganesha [1,623]
  24. Ganesa, Ganesh, or Ganapati [1,624]
  25. Leonhard Euler [1,625]
  26. [[Avogadro's number [accept Avogadro's constant; prompt on the numerical answer]]] [1,626]
  27. [[]] [1,627]
  28. Oberon (also accept The Elf King's Oath [1,628]
  29. The Fairy-Queen C) Felix Mendelssohn's incidental music for this play includes the ubiquitous "Wedding March [1,629]
  30. A Midsummer Night's Dream [1,630]
  31. Sarpedon [1,631]
  32. Dolon [1,632]
  33. Hector [1,633]
  34. General Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte [1,634]
  35. Salvador Allende Gossens [1,635]
  36. Operation Condor [1,636]
  37. Parsec [1,637]
  38. [[quasar [or Quasi-stellar radio source]]] [1,638]
  39. Hubble's Law [1,639]
  40. Feynman Diagrams [1,640]
  41. fine structure constant [1,641]
  42. gyromagnetic ratio [1,642]
  43. Nuremberg trials [1,643]
  44. William Frick [1,644]
  45. Rudolph Hess [1,645]
  46. Toluene [1,646]
  47. Palladium [1,647]
  48. ester [1,648]
  49. Euclid [1,649]
  50. Dirichlet's Theorem [1,650]
  51. G. H. Hardy [1,651]
  52. [[Annabel Lee [10] Annabel Lee is a work by this poet who also wrote The Bells and The Raven. ANSWER: Edgar Allen Poe [10] In this poem, set in "a strange city lying alone" where "death has reared himself a throne," Poe mentions the end of days, when "the waves have now a redder glow." ANSWER: "The City in the Sea]] [1,652]
  53. [[Edgar Allen Poe [10] In this poem, set in "a strange city lying alone" where "death has reared himself a throne," Poe mentions the end of days, when "the waves have now a redder glow." ANSWER: "The City in the Sea]] [1,653]
  54. The City in the Sea [1,654]
  55. Criton [1,655]
  56. The Symposium [1,656]
  57. The Sophist [1,657]
  58. Antidiuretic hormone [1,658]
  59. vasopressin [1,659]
  60. nephron [1,660]
  61. aquaporin-2 [1,661]
  62. Marc Antony and Cleopatra (The title of the play is Antony and Cleopatra [1,662]
  63. Enobarbus [1,663]
  64. Caesar and Cleopatra [1,664]
  65. Chechnya [1,665]
  66. Beslan [1,666]
  67. Kalmykia [1,667]
  68. Battle of Chaeronea [1,668]
  69. the Sacred Band [1,669]
  70. Philip II of Macedon [1,670]
  71. Lucia di Lammermoor [1,671]
  72. Gaetano Donizetti [1,672]
  73. Enrico Ashton [1,673]
  74. Pindar [1,674]
  75. Alexander the Great (Accept Alexander III [1,675]
  76. Thebes [1,676]
  77. [[Theodore Roosevelt [prompt on partial answer]]] [1,677]
  78. [[]] [1,678]
  79. John Bell [1,679]
  80. Norman Mattoon Thomas [1,680]
  81. Stephen Crane [1,681]
  82. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets [1,682]
  83. The Red Badge of Courage [1,683]
  84. Jean-Baptiste Say [1,684]
  85. Vilifredo Pareto [1,685]
  86. Laffer curve [1,686]
  87. The Name of the Rose [1,687]
  88. Umberto Eco [1,688]
  89. Foucault's Pendulum [1,689]
  90. [[the Golden Hind [accept The Pelican before it is read]]] [1,690]
  91. conjugation [1,691]
  92. Wittig reaction [1,692]
  93. [[National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 [or National Recovery Administration]] [1,693]
  94. N(I)RA] [1,694]
  95. Game 6 of the World Series [1,695]
  96. kernel [1,696]
  97. Mark Twain [1,697]
  98. Samuel Clemens [1,698]
  99. Martin Luther [1,699]
  100. Francisco de Goya [1,700]

r

  1. Nigeria [1,701]
  2. Albert Camus [1,702]
  3. James Clerk Maxwell [1,703]
  4. secession [1,704]
  5. word forms and synonyms, accept Alaskan Secession before "Siskiyou" is read] [1,705]
  6. Bay of Fundy [1,706]
  7. John Milton [1,707]
  8. Minos [1,708]
  9. Mohs hardness scale [1,709]
  10. St. Catherine [1,710]
  11. The Satyricon [1,711]
  12. Sergei Vassilyevich Rachmaninov [1,712]
  13. Rachmaninoff [1,713]
  14. demand [1,714]
  15. Allen Ginsberg [1,715]
  16. Kaddish [1,716]
  17. The Fall of America [1,717]
  18. Minuet [1,718]
  19. Waltz [1,719]
  20. Mazurka [1,720]
  21. [[integration [accept word forms]]] [1,721]
  22. integration by parts [1,722]
  23. fundamental theorem of calculus [1,723]
  24. La Vendée [1,724]
  25. La Fronde [1,725]
  26. La Jacquerie [1,726]
  27. equilibrium constant [1,727]
  28. law of mass action [1,728]
  29. Le Chatelier's Principle [1,729]
  30. some stuff about spreading out government FTPE: [1,730]
  31. South Africa [1,731]
  32. Valparaiso [1,732]
  33. Dar es Salaam [1,733]
  34. A Christmas Carol [1,734]
  35. Ebenezer Scrooge [1,735]
  36. Bob Cratchit [1,736]
  37. either [1,737]
  38. Navajo [1,738]
  39. Aztec [1,739]
  40. Tezcatlipoca [1,740]
  41. planet [1,741]
  42. Eris [1,742]
  43. Ceres [1,743]
  44. deus ex machina [1,744]
  45. Dodgeball [1,745]
  46. Lost [1,746]
  47. alveoli [1,747]
  48. [[emphysema [prompt on 'chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]] [1,748]
  49. COPD'] [1,749]
  50. hypoxia [1,750]
  51. normal force [1,751]
  52. 4 km/hr [1,752]
  53. perfectly inelastic collision [1,753]
  54. Knossos [1,754]
  55. Arthur Evans [1,755]
  56. Linear B [1,756]
  57. [[Alain Resnais [ren-NE]]] [1,757]
  58. Vincent van Gogh [1,758]
  59. George Gershwin [1,759]
  60. Connecticut [1,760]
  61. Judiciary Act of 1789 [1,761]
  62. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court [1,762]
  63. for ACF Fall, regardless of how many high schoolers have read his story. FTPE: [1,763]
  64. Rodion [1,764]
  65. Rodya) Romanovich Raskolnikov [1,765]
  66. Crime and Punishment [1,766]
  67. Prestupleniye i nakazaniye [1,767]
  68. St. Petersburg [1,768]
  69. The Outcasts of Poker Flat [1,769]
  70. Bret Harte [1,770]
  71. The Luck of Roaring Camp [1,771]
  72. Glorious Revolution [1,772]
  73. [[James II [prompt on partial answer]]] [1,773]
  74. [[]] [1,774]
  75. Act of Settlement [1,775]
  76. Jean-Paul Sartre [1,776]
  77. Nausea [1,777]
  78. Maurice Merleau-Ponty [1,778]
  79. Pierre Gustave Toutant de Beauregard [1,779]
  80. Jubal Early [1,780]
  81. James Longstreet [1,781]
  82. antibody [1,782]
  83. immunoglobulin [1,783]
  84. Grover Cleveland [1,784]
  85. the Grecian Urn [1,785]
  86. Ode on a Grecian Urn [1,786]
  87. Stagecoach [1,787]
  88. Midgard Serpent [1,788]
  89. Midgardsorm [1,789]
  90. Jormungand [1,790]
  91. SN2 [1,791]
  92. substitution nucleophilic second order [1,792]
  93. bimolecular nucleophilic substitution [1,793]
  94. apartheid [1,794]
  95. A Doll's House [1,795]
  96. A Dollhouse [1,796]
  97. Leonardo da Vinci [1,797]
  98. either name [1,798]
  99. Thomas Hobbes [1,799]
  100. Louis Victor de Broglie [1,800]

s

  1. Peace of Augsburg [1,801]
  2. Treaty of Augsburg [1,802]
  3. Virginia Woolf [1,803]
  4. Brandenburg Concertos (only need "Brandenburg" after concertos are mentioned [1,804]
  5. transubstantiation [1,805]
  6. Tokugawa Shogunate or Tokugawa bakufu [1,806]
  7. Edo Period before it is mentioned [1,807]
  8. Mercury [1,808]
  9. Prometheus Bound [1,809]
  10. Bill Laimbeer [1,810]
  11. Adlai Ewing Stevenson [1,811]
  12. Carl Gustav Jung [1,812]
  13. Barium [1,813]
  14. Diedrich Knickerbocker [1,814]
  15. Kyrgyzstan [1,815]
  16. The Red Hot Chili Peppers [1,816]
  17. yamaka [1,817]
  18. yarmulke [1,818]
  19. kippot [1,819]
  20. kippah (10) This term refers to a long garment used primarily by Muslim women to conceal their bodies with only a grid to see through, [1,820]
  21. [[a mask used to conceal a woman's face. Answer: burqa [boor-ka]]] [1,821]
  22. [[burqa [boor-ka]]] [1,822]
  23. biretta [1,823]
  24. Emma Woodhouse [1,824]
  25. [[either name) B. (10) Name the author of Emma, which she wrote after completing Pride and Prejudice. Answer: Jane Austen C. (10) Harriet's third crush is for this gentleman and long-time friend of Emma, but in a typical Austen ending our girl Emma gets her man]] [1,825]
  26. Jane Austen C. (10) Harriet's third crush is for this gentleman and long-time friend of Emma, but in a typical Austen ending our girl Emma gets her man [1,826]
  27. Mr. Knightley [1,827]
  28. Crustacea [1,828]
  29. crustaceans B. (10) Appearing and becoming extinct during the Paleozoic era, this phylum of three-lobed arthropods had uniform segmentation and compound eyes. Answer: Trilobita [1,829]
  30. trilobites C. (10) Having jawlike mandibles, this phylum of myriapod centipedes and millipedes has unbranched appendages and tracheal oxygen exchange systems. Answer: Uniramia [1,830]
  31. unirames [1,831]
  32. Trilobita [1,832]
  33. trilobites C. (10) Having jawlike mandibles, this phylum of myriapod centipedes and millipedes has unbranched appendages and tracheal oxygen exchange systems. Answer: Uniramia [1,833]
  34. unirames [1,834]
  35. Uniramia [1,835]
  36. unirames [1,836]
  37. [[Philippi B. (10) At this September 31 BCE naval contest, Octavian, with the help of Marcus Agrippa, decisively defeated the forces of Antony and Cleopatra paving the way for his assumption of imperial power. Answer: Actium C. (10) The greatest disaster of Augustus' reign was perhaps this 9 CE battle in which three Roman legions under Quinctilius Varus were slaughtered by Germans led by Ariminius. Answer: Teutoburg Forest]] [1,837]
  38. Teutoborger Wald [1,838]
  39. Actium C. (10) The greatest disaster of Augustus' reign was perhaps this 9 CE battle in which three Roman legions under Quinctilius Varus were slaughtered by Germans led by Ariminius. Answer: Teutoburg Forest [1,839]
  40. Teutoborger Wald [1,840]
  41. Teutoburg Forest [1,841]
  42. Teutoborger Wald [1,842]
  43. [[I Pagliacci [pal-ee-OTCH-ee] B. (10) Name the composer of I Pagliacci. Along with the works of Pietro Mascagni, his operas are considered the hallmark of the Italian verismo style of the late 19th-century]] [1,843]
  44. [[Ruggero Leoncavallo C. (10) Leoncavallo wrote the first version of the libretto for this man's Manon Lescaut, prompting a lifelong dislike between the two men. Leoncavallo also attempted to produce his own setting of La Boheme, but this man's version was much better received. Answer: Giacomo Puccini]] [1,844]
  45. Giacomo Puccini [1,845]
  46. [[Norman Mailer B. (10) Norman Mailer might be best known for this dark novel set in the Pacific theater of WWII. Its central plot thread focuses on the conflict between Sergeant Croft and Lieutenant Hearn. Answer: The Naked and the Dead C. (10) In 1969 Mailer ran unsuccessfully for this office, whose past holders include the goofy Ed Koch. Answer: Mayor of New York (prompt on "mayor]] [1,846]
  47. [[The Naked and the Dead C. (10) In 1969 Mailer ran unsuccessfully for this office, whose past holders include the goofy Ed Koch. Answer: Mayor of New York (prompt on "mayor]] [1,847]
  48. Mayor of New York (prompt on "mayor [1,848]
  49. [[standard state B. (10) Zero for elements in their most stable forms, this is the heat given off when a mole of a compound is formed from its constituent elements in standard condition. Answer: standard molar enthalpy of formation C. (10) This German physicist formulated a law stating that the difference between enthalpies of reaction at temperatures T_1 and T_2 is equal to the difference in enthalpies of heating the products and reactants from T_1 to T_2. He also has namesake loop and junction rules useful in solving circuit problems. Answer: Gustav Kirchhoff]] [1,849]
  50. [[standard molar enthalpy of formation C. (10) This German physicist formulated a law stating that the difference between enthalpies of reaction at temperatures T_1 and T_2 is equal to the difference in enthalpies of heating the products and reactants from T_1 to T_2. He also has namesake loop and junction rules useful in solving circuit problems. Answer: Gustav Kirchhoff]] [1,850]
  51. Gustav Kirchhoff [1,851]
  52. [[James II B. (10) The elder of the two "Princes in the Tower" this young man, who only reigned for several months, was imprisoned and probably killed by his regent and uncle Richard III. Answer: Edward V C. (10) This man succeeded his father George V but reigned for less than year, abdicating the throne so he could marry Wallis Warfield Simpson. Answer: Edward VIII]] [1,852]
  53. [[Edward V C. (10) This man succeeded his father George V but reigned for less than year, abdicating the throne so he could marry Wallis Warfield Simpson. Answer: Edward VIII]] [1,853]
  54. Edward VIII [1,854]
  55. [[Vinson Massif B. (10) Both a sea and an enormous Ice Shelf located in the Antarctic region are named for this Antarctic explorer who sighted them in 1841 while commanding the ships Erebus and Terror. Answer: James Clark Ross C. (10) The Antarctic Peninsula encloses the Filchner Ice Shelf and this sea, named for the explorer who entered it in 1823. Answer: Weddell Sea]] [1,855]
  56. James Clark Ross C. (10) The Antarctic Peninsula encloses the Filchner Ice Shelf and this sea, named for the explorer who entered it in 1823. Answer: Weddell Sea [1,856]
  57. Weddell Sea [1,857]
  58. [[indifference curve B. (10) Derived from data in the United Kingdom from 1860 to 1910, this curve named for a New Zealander illustrated a fictitious relationship between unemployment and inflation. American economists later rejected its validity. Answer: Phillips curve C. (10) A graph of tax rate vs. tax revenue, it was shown to a Reagan aide on a napkin and became the basis of supply-side economics. Application of it resulted in a horrible recession. Answer: Laffer curve]] [1,858]
  59. [[Phillips curve C. (10) A graph of tax rate vs. tax revenue, it was shown to a Reagan aide on a napkin and became the basis of supply-side economics. Application of it resulted in a horrible recession. Answer: Laffer curve]] [1,859]
  60. Laffer curve [1,860]
  61. Paradise Lost B. (10) In this tragedy, the titular hero is imprisoned and is visited first by his father Manoa, who leaves in an attempt to procure the hero's ransom, then by his wife who had betrayed him [1,861]
  62. [[Samson Agonistes C. (10) In this work published in pamphlet form in 1644, Milton defends the freedom of the press and calls for the revocation of Parliament's Licensing Order of June 16, 1643, which created official censors to bring publishing under government control]] [1,862]
  63. Areopagitica [1,863]
  64. [[event horizon B. (10) The distance of the event horizon from the singularity is named for this scientist. Answer: Karl Schwarzschild C. (10) Rotating black holes have two horizons and a static limit at which every particle must rotate with the hole. The region between the static limit and the outer horizon is known as this. Answer: ergosphere]] [1,864]
  65. [[Karl Schwarzschild C. (10) Rotating black holes have two horizons and a static limit at which every particle must rotate with the hole. The region between the static limit and the outer horizon is known as this. Answer: ergosphere]] [1,865]
  66. ergosphere [1,866]
  67. Nicholas II B. (10) Leon Trotsky negotiated this March 1918 treaty with the Central Powers, but Russia and Gemany were forced to renounce it after the general armistice in November of that year [1,867]
  68. Treaty of Brest-Litvosk C. (10) Led by Georgi Plekhanov, this Socialist group opposed the October Revolution of 1917 and participated in the short lived Constituent Assembly in January 1918, but it would be completely suppressed by 1921 [1,868]
  69. Mensheviks [1,869]
  70. Menelaus B. (5) Neoptolemus [1,870]
  71. [[Achilles C. (5) Telemachus Answer: Odysseus D. (10) Polydorus and Polyxena Answer: Priam]] [1,871]
  72. [[Odysseus D. (10) Polydorus and Polyxena Answer: Priam]] [1,872]
  73. Priam [1,873]
  74. [[Dante Gabriel Rossetti B. (10) Dante Gabriel Rossetti is considered the founder and preeminent member of this English artistic group, whose other members included Edward Burne-Jones and William Holman Hunt. Answer: Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood]] [1,874]
  75. [[PRB C. (10) Among the most vocal defenders of the Pre-Raphaelites was this art critic, who more vigorously defended J.M.W. Turner in portions of his Modern Painters. Answer: John Ruskin]] [1,875]
  76. Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood [1,876]
  77. [[PRB C. (10) Among the most vocal defenders of the Pre-Raphaelites was this art critic, who more vigorously defended J.M.W. Turner in portions of his Modern Painters. Answer: John Ruskin]] [1,877]
  78. John Ruskin [1,878]
  79. Voltaire [1,879]
  80. [[Francois Marie Arouet) B. (10) It was at his estate at Ferney that Voltaire penned this masterful satire on the "philosophies of Leibniz," featuring such characters as Cunegonde and Dr. Pangloss. Answer: Candide C. (10) On the instigation of Jean d'Alembert, Voltaire penned an article on Geneva for this man's Encyclopedie. This man's own literary works include Rameau's Nephew and Jacques the Fatalist. Answer: Denis Diderot]] [1,880]
  81. [[Candide C. (10) On the instigation of Jean d'Alembert, Voltaire penned an article on Geneva for this man's Encyclopedie. This man's own literary works include Rameau's Nephew and Jacques the Fatalist. Answer: Denis Diderot]] [1,881]
  82. Denis Diderot [1,882]
  83. [[B6 B. (10) Maintaining mucous membranes and respiratory proteins, its deficiency causes sensitivity to light and skin lesions. It is also known as riboflavin. Answer: B2 C. (10) Made from tryptophan, its deficiency causes pellagra, which results in swollen tongue, confusion, irritability, and depression. It is also known as niacin. Answer: B3]] [1,883]
  84. B2 C. (10) Made from tryptophan, its deficiency causes pellagra, which results in swollen tongue, confusion, irritability, and depression. It is also known as niacin. Answer: B3 [1,884]
  85. B3 [1,885]
  86. [[Stephen Douglas B. (10) He served as attorney general under William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, and Millard Fillmore, but it was as a senator from Kentucky that he offered up a last-ditch compromise to avert war. Answer: John Jordan Crittenden C. (10) He was the senior Union general at the beginning of the war, but was too fat to mount his own horse. In 1852 he had run as the Whig candidate for president after making his name in the assault on Veracruz in the Mexican-American War. Answer: Winfield Scott]] [1,886]
  87. [[John Jordan Crittenden C. (10) He was the senior Union general at the beginning of the war, but was too fat to mount his own horse. In 1852 he had run as the Whig candidate for president after making his name in the assault on Veracruz in the Mexican-American War. Answer: Winfield Scott]] [1,887]
  88. Winfield Scott [1,888]
  89. [[Fear and Trembling B. (10) Subtitled "Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future" this Nietzsche work contains 296 aphorisms grouped in nine chapters. Answer: Beyond Good and Evil C. (10) This 1818 Arthur Schopenhauer work is divided into four books, the last of which considers the ethical implications of the affirmation and denial of the will to life. Answer: The World as Will and Idea]] [1,889]
  90. The World as Will and Representation [1,890]
  91. [[Beyond Good and Evil C. (10) This 1818 Arthur Schopenhauer work is divided into four books, the last of which considers the ethical implications of the affirmation and denial of the will to life. Answer: The World as Will and Idea]] [1,891]
  92. The World as Will and Representation [1,892]
  93. The World as Will and Idea [1,893]
  94. The World as Will and Representation [1,894]
  95. [[Dave Brubeck quartet B. (10) The compelling "Mission Impossible" theme was written by this man, who also scored Cool Hand Luke and Dirty Harry. Answer: Lalo Schifrin C. The song "Everything's Alright," with Tim-Rice-penned lyrics beginning "Try not to get worried / Try not to hold onto / Problems that upset you, oh," comes from this musical. Answer: Jesus Christ Superstar]] [1,895]
  96. Lalo Schifrin C. The song "Everything's Alright," with Tim-Rice-penned lyrics beginning "Try not to get worried / Try not to hold onto / Problems that upset you, oh," comes from this musical. Answer: Jesus Christ Superstar [1,896]
  97. Jesus Christ Superstar [1,897]
  98. [[Council of Constance B. (10) This Czech reformer, a professor at the University of Prague who adopted many of Wycliffe's ideas, was burned at the stake at the Council of Constance. Answer: Jan Hus C. (10) Preceding the Council of Constance was this 1409 council which declared both reigning popes deposed and elected Alexander V. But since the two refused to step down there were now three popes. Answer: Council of Pisa]] [1,898]
  99. Jan Hus C. (10) Preceding the Council of Constance was this 1409 council which declared both reigning popes deposed and elected Alexander V. But since the two refused to step down there were now three popes. Answer: Council of Pisa [1,899]
  100. Council of Pisa [1,900]

t

  1. 2nd Bank of the United States [1,901]
  2. C(live) S(taples) Lewis [1,902]
  3. electron transport chain [1,903]
  4. chemiosmosis prior to "succinate [1,904]
  5. Homicide: Life on the Street [1,905]
  6. Kali [1,906]
  7. Isabella of Castile [1,907]
  8. Isabella I [1,908]
  9. Isabella "The Catholic [1,909]
  10. Agamemnon [1,910]
  11. aromaticity [1,911]
  12. aromatic [1,912]
  13. comparative advantage [1,913]
  14. Claudio Monteverdi [1,914]
  15. W(illiam) E(dward) B(urghardt) Du Bois [1,915]
  16. John Greenleaf Whittier [1,916]
  17. Wheatstone bridge (only need the name after the end of the question [1,917]
  18. El Dorado [1,918]
  19. Manoa before "title [1,919]
  20. Jesus of Nazareth [1,920]
  21. Jesus Christ [1,921]
  22. Culloden Moor [1,922]
  23. Riders to the Sea [1,923]
  24. Bryophyta [1,924]
  25. bryophytes [1,925]
  26. the Parthenon [1,926]
  27. Emiliano Zapata [1,927]
  28. The Second Sex [1,928]
  29. Le Deuxieme Sex [1,929]
  30. Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier [1,930]
  31. Alan Stewart Paton [1,931]
  32. Hypatia [1,932]
  33. [[Euripides B. (10) Feodor Dostoevsky is the protagonist of this Nobel Laureate's The Master of Petersburg. His other works include Waiting for the Barbarians and Disgrace. Answer: J(ohn) M(ichael) Coetzee C. The Old Gringo by Carlos Fuentes deals with the fictional experiences of this writer of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" and The Devil's Dictionary in Pancho Villa's army. Answer: Ambrose (Gwinnett) Bierce]] [1,933]
  34. [[J(ohn) M(ichael) Coetzee C. The Old Gringo by Carlos Fuentes deals with the fictional experiences of this writer of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" and The Devil's Dictionary in Pancho Villa's army. Answer: Ambrose (Gwinnett) Bierce]] [1,934]
  35. Ambrose (Gwinnett) Bierce [1,935]
  36. [[Hagiography B. (10) The prototypical form of hagiography in the East was Athanasius's Life of this Egyptian desert hermit often credited with starting the monastic movement. Answer: Antony]] [1,936]
  37. [[Anthony C. (10) Another prolific writer of saint's lives was this early Medieval pope, who collected them in his Dialogues. He was the last of the four Western Doctors of the Church and the author of Pastoral Care. Answer: St. Gregory the Great]] [1,937]
  38. Gregory I [1,938]
  39. Antony [1,939]
  40. [[Anthony C. (10) Another prolific writer of saint's lives was this early Medieval pope, who collected them in his Dialogues. He was the last of the four Western Doctors of the Church and the author of Pastoral Care. Answer: St. Gregory the Great]] [1,940]
  41. Gregory I [1,941]
  42. St. Gregory the Great [1,942]
  43. Gregory I [1,943]
  44. [[buret B. (10) This is the specific place in a titration at which the amount of base in the solution exactly equals the amount of acid. Answer: equivalence]] [1,944]
  45. [[stoichiometric point C. (10) Incompatible with strong oxidizing agents, this indicator varies over the pH range 4.2 to 6.2, the latter at which it changes to yellow. Answer: methyl red]] [1,945]
  46. equivalence [1,946]
  47. [[stoichiometric point C. (10) Incompatible with strong oxidizing agents, this indicator varies over the pH range 4.2 to 6.2, the latter at which it changes to yellow. Answer: methyl red]] [1,947]
  48. methyl red [1,948]
  49. [[Duke Bluebeard's Castle B. (10) The title priestess incites a war after being left by her Roman lover Pollione but later sacrifices herself to try to save him in this Bellini opera. Answer: Norma C. (10) Based on a Debose Heyward novel and set in Catfish Row, this George Gershwin opera features the songs "Ain't Necessarily So" and "Summertime." Answer: Porgy and Bess]] [1,949]
  50. [[Norma C. (10) Based on a Debose Heyward novel and set in Catfish Row, this George Gershwin opera features the songs "Ain't Necessarily So" and "Summertime." Answer: Porgy and Bess]] [1,950]
  51. Porgy and Bess [1,951]
  52. Stoicism [1,952]
  53. [[Stoics B. (10) Arrian collected the writings and sayings of this former slave who became a notable Stoic philosopher in the late 1st and early 2nd centuries C.E. Answer: Epictetus C. (10) This Roman Emperor and Stoic is famous for his Meditations. Answer: Marcus Aurelius]] [1,953]
  54. [[Epictetus C. (10) This Roman Emperor and Stoic is famous for his Meditations. Answer: Marcus Aurelius]] [1,954]
  55. Marcus Aurelius [1,955]
  56. [[Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn B. (10) The ex-naval officer Buinovsky, the highly religious Alyosha, and Tiurin the leader of the 104th squad are characters in this short novel about the title character's life in a Siberian labor camp. Answer: One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. C. (10) A major theme in this novel is coming to terms with death. The protagonist Oleg Kostoglotov is a resident of the title institution which is representative of the Soviet State. Answer: Cancer Ward]] [1,956]
  57. [[One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. C. (10) A major theme in this novel is coming to terms with death. The protagonist Oleg Kostoglotov is a resident of the title institution which is representative of the Soviet State. Answer: Cancer Ward]] [1,957]
  58. Cancer Ward [1,958]
  59. [[John Smith B. (10) In 1612 this planter who later married Pocahontas brought a new strain of tobacco to Virginia from the West Indies jumpstarting its economy. Answer: John Rolfe C. (10) This man burned Jamestown in 1676 as part of a namesake rebellion against Governor William Berkeley which began with a disagreement over policies toward Native Americans. Answer: Nathaniel Bacon]] [1,959]
  60. [[John Rolfe C. (10) This man burned Jamestown in 1676 as part of a namesake rebellion against Governor William Berkeley which began with a disagreement over policies toward Native Americans. Answer: Nathaniel Bacon]] [1,960]
  61. Nathaniel Bacon [1,961]
  62. [[latissimus dorsi (prompt on "lats") B. (10) This large posterior muscle of the calf of the leg originates at the back of the femur and patella and, joining the soleus, is attached to the Achilles tendon at the heel. Answer: gastrocnemius C. (10) The vastus lateralis and the rectus femoris are two the muscles that make up this larger muscle]] [1,962]
  63. gastrocnemius C. (10) The vastus lateralis and the rectus femoris are two the muscles that make up this larger muscle [1,963]
  64. quadriceps femoris (prompt on "quads [1,964]
  65. [[Arnolfini Wedding or Arnolfini Marriage B. (10) This 1433 painting is believed to be a self-portrait because a figure wearing the titular headdress is present in other paintings like Madonna with Canon George van der Paele and the Arnolfini Wedding. Answer: Man in a Red Turban or Man With a Red Turban C. (10) Of the title characters in this painting, one is dressed in a red robe and holding forth her child to the other title character, a Burgundian VIP and right-hand man of Philip the Good. A large cityscape can be seen in the background. Answer: Virgin]] [1,965]
  66. Madonna) with Chancellor Rolin [1,966]
  67. [[Man in a Red Turban or Man With a Red Turban C. (10) Of the title characters in this painting, one is dressed in a red robe and holding forth her child to the other title character, a Burgundian VIP and right-hand man of Philip the Good. A large cityscape can be seen in the background. Answer: Virgin]] [1,967]
  68. Madonna) with Chancellor Rolin [1,968]
  69. Virgin [1,969]
  70. Madonna) with Chancellor Rolin [1,970]
  71. [[Johan Santana B. (10) Matt also selected this Texas Rangers first baseman who rewarded him with 38 homers, 112 RBIs and a .929 OPS. Answer: Mark Teixiera C. (10) After drafting the oft-injured Twins tandem of Matt LeCroy and Joe Mauer, Matt had to use this mediocre Cincinnati catcher who finished with 14 homers and 55 RBI for the last half of the season. Answer: Jason Larue]] [1,971]
  72. [[Mark Teixiera C. (10) After drafting the oft-injured Twins tandem of Matt LeCroy and Joe Mauer, Matt had to use this mediocre Cincinnati catcher who finished with 14 homers and 55 RBI for the last half of the season. Answer: Jason Larue]] [1,972]
  73. Jason Larue [1,973]
  74. [[Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard B. (10) This author of "The Descent of Odin" and "Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College" penned "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard." Answer: Thomas Gray. C (10) On his grand tour of Europe with Horace Walpole, Gray developed an avid taste for this tragedian, whose style he attempted to copy with Agrippina. This man's own dramas include Berenice and Phedre. Answer: Jean Racine]] [1,974]
  75. [[Thomas Gray. C (10) On his grand tour of Europe with Horace Walpole, Gray developed an avid taste for this tragedian, whose style he attempted to copy with Agrippina. This man's own dramas include Berenice and Phedre. Answer: Jean Racine]] [1,975]
  76. Jean Racine [1,976]
  77. [[Japan B. (10) This period of Japanese history, which began after the move to Kyoto from Nara, lasted from 794-1185. It saw the rise of the bushi warrior as well as such great literature as Sei Shonagan's Pillow Book. Answer: Heian Period C. (10) During the Muromachi period this clan held the shogunate. Members included Takauji and Yoshimitsu. Answer: Ashikaga]] [1,977]
  78. [[Heian Period C. (10) During the Muromachi period this clan held the shogunate. Members included Takauji and Yoshimitsu. Answer: Ashikaga]] [1,978]
  79. Ashikaga [1,979]
  80. [[Stokes law B. (10) Stokes law is an example of this type of process. It is defined in probability theory as a family of random variables indexed by some other set and having the property that for each finite subset of the index set, the collection of random variables thus indexed has a joint probability distribution Answer: stochastic process C. (10) Sir George Stokes gave his name to the kinematic form of this property in the cgs system. It is the property of a fluid that tends to prevent that fluid from flowing when subjected to an applied force. Answer: viscosity]] [1,980]
  81. stochastic process C. (10) Sir George Stokes gave his name to the kinematic form of this property in the cgs system. It is the property of a fluid that tends to prevent that fluid from flowing when subjected to an applied force. Answer: viscosity [1,981]
  82. viscosity [1,982]
  83. [[Jainism B. (10) This last of the tirthankaras, who lived in the 6th century BCE, is generally regarded as the founder of Jainism. Answer: Mahavira (also accept Vardhamana). C. (10) The Digambara sect of Jainism differs from the Svetambara sect primarily for this practice which has often gotten it associated with the gymnosophists of the Alexander story. Answer: Nudism]] [1,983]
  84. don't wear any clothes," etc.) [1,984]
  85. [[Mahavira (also accept Vardhamana). C. (10) The Digambara sect of Jainism differs from the Svetambara sect primarily for this practice which has often gotten it associated with the gymnosophists of the Alexander story. Answer: Nudism]] [1,985]
  86. don't wear any clothes," etc.) [1,986]
  87. Nudism [1,987]
  88. don't wear any clothes," etc.) [1,988]
  89. Ares B. (10) The Norse god of war, he lost a hand to Fenrir although it allowed him to chain the beast up. Eventually he killed the hell-hound Garm, who also killed this figure in their confrontation [1,989]
  90. Tyr [1,990]
  91. [[Tiu C. (10) Emerging fully armed from his mother Coatlicue this humming-bird god of war was the most prominent member of the Aztec pantheon. Answer: Huizilopoctli]] [1,991]
  92. Huizilopoctli [1,992]
  93. [[Job B. (10) This lyric poet and author of "Ars Poetica" wrote the verse drama J.B. which transplants the Job story to the twentieth century. Answer: Archibald MacLeish. C. (10) This poet of "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" and "Jerusalem" illustrated and published a version of the Book of Job. Answer: William Blake]] [1,993]
  94. [[Archibald MacLeish. C. (10) This poet of "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" and "Jerusalem" illustrated and published a version of the Book of Job. Answer: William Blake]] [1,994]
  95. William Blake [1,995]
  96. [[Great Society B. (10) As part of the "Great Society" Johnson passed an act which created this cabinet department which was headed by Robert Weaver, the first African American to serve in the cabinet. Answer: Department of Housing and Urban Development. C. (10) Johnson helped overcome filibuster attempts led by Richard Russell in getting this law passed. Among other things it made racial discrimination in public places illegal as well as providing for equal opportunity employment. Answer: Civil Rights Act of 1964]] [1,996]
  97. [[Department of Housing and Urban Development. C. (10) Johnson helped overcome filibuster attempts led by Richard Russell in getting this law passed. Among other things it made racial discrimination in public places illegal as well as providing for equal opportunity employment. Answer: Civil Rights Act of 1964]] [1,997]
  98. Civil Rights Act of 1964 [1,998]
  99. [[condensation reaction B. (10) In this type of condensation, two molecules of a carboxylic ester containing an alpha-hydrogen combine to give a beta-keto ester. Answer: Claisen condensation C. (10) Discovered by Alexander Borodin, this condensation can be acid-]] [1,999]
  100. base-catalyzed and produces either aldehydes [2,000]