NATIONAL LANDMARKS
BIOLOGY
3-LETTER WORDS
BROADWAY
NAME THE DECADE
100

She came from France to harbor America's freedom

the Statue of Liberty

100

Genus Rana; frequent victim of biology class dissections

a frog

100

A fedora, homburg or derby

a hat

100

4-letter play about 9-lived creatures

Cats

100

Castro overthrows Batista

the 1950s

200

When he was home, George Washington slept here

Mount Vernon

200

L.B.J.'s hound dog or Darwin's ship

the Beagle

200

Quixote or Drysdale

a Don

200

"The avenue we're taken to" in this long-running toe-tapper

42nd Street

200

U.S. Social Security becomes law

the 1930s

300

The cornerstone of Massachusetts, it bears the date 1620

Plymouth Rock

300

The basic unit of life; 3 billion die every minute in your body

cells

300

Opposite of flow, tides do it

ebb

300

Nickname of the American Theatre Wing's Antoinette Perry Award

the Tony

300

The man seen here gets a hero's welcome, including several parades


the 1960s

John Glenn

400

Site where John Hancock signed his "John Hancock"

Independence Hall

400

It puts the green in greenery

chlorophyll

400

Where things are nipped in, or Lou's partner

bud

400

2-time Academy Award winner who reprised "Little Foxes" in 1980

Elizabeth Taylor

400

France's king & queen make a royal visit to the guillotine

the 1790s

500

D.C. building shaken by November '83 bomb blast

the Capitol

500

In evolutionary biology, this organelle is thought to have existed as its own organism because it contain its own unique set of DNA.

Hint: provides energy for the cell

Mitochondria

500

Some people have a quick one, which beats a ½ one

wit

500

100s of former cast members appeared onstage when it became longest-running show

A Chorus Line

500

The Gallipoli campaign results in half a million casualties

the 1910s

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