Smithsonian Air and Space Museum
Anagrammed Hobbies
From "C" to "X"
U.S. Presidents
Who's in Charge?
100

In the 1960s, the rocket-powered North American X-15 went higher and faster than any other aircraft in history with eight pilots who flew it to the fringes of space earning designation as these



Astronauts

100

Not just for grannies these days; 

TINT KING



Knitting



100

An extremely talkative person who goes on & on as if they have no idea they are droning along on & on & on



A chatterbox



100

He’s the only president who never lived in the White House



George Washington



100

Gynarchy



A woman



200

There was room for two men--Frank Borman and James Lovell in the capsule used for their 2-week-long 1965 orbital mission in this program



The Gemini program



200

Get behind the wheel: 

TRY POET



Pottery



200

Synonyms for this word include apex, summit, and acme



The climax



200

Andrew Johnson worked as one of these in his youth and even as president may have made his own suits



Tailor

200

Gerontocracy



The elderly

300

Known as “the couch”, the seat inside Friendship 7 was custom-made to fit this Project Mercury pilot and future U.S. Senator



John Glenn



300

It’s what you yeast expect:

GRIN WEB



Brewing



300

Among its meanings are intricate, a group of related buildings and some type of emotional problem



Complex



300

This 20th century president’s middle initial “S” didn’t stand for anything specific



Truman



300

Anarchy

No one


400

Though it wasn’t quite ready for combat in WWII, the Bell Airacomet first flew in 1942, making it the first American plane to use this then-emerging technology



Jet propulsion



400

Watch the fishies:

NON RISK GEL



Snorkeling



400

It’s an ancient manuscript that is the earliest form of a book; there is a Madrid one and a Dresden one



A codex



400

Zachary Taylor was an army general and hero of this war that gained Texas and California for the United States



Mexican-American War



400

Mesocracy (this class)

The middle class

500

Appropriately, “Little Stinker”, a nimble Pitts Special S1C, hangs upside down; in the 1940s and ‘50s, pioneering daredevil Betty Skelton flew it to win titles in this spectacular stunt flying



Aerobatics



500

Don’t tell David:

CLIP STUNG



Sculpting



500

It’s the diacritical mark seen here over this letter: â



Circumflex



500

The 400,000+ men and women buried at Arlington include two U.S. presidents, John F. Kennedy and this president, who also served as chief justice



Taft



500

Ergatocracy

The workers

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