"F" STOP
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAPS
PRIME TIME SPIN-OFFS
QUOTABLE NOTABLES
PETS
200
'Proverbially, sometimes you can't see it for the trees'
the forest
200
'In 1969, National Geographic published a Moon map; here's this calm lunar feature'
the Sea of Tranquility
200
'"Tabitha"'
Bewitched
200
'With more than 70 million living with American households, this is the most common house pet in the U.S.'
a cat
400
'Don't worry, these raised bars on the neck of a guitar are here to help make the sounds of different notes'
frets
400
'A 1957 Europe map had an inset showing countries that were this and non-this'
Communist
400
'"Rhoda"'
The Mary Tyler Moore Show
400
'This type of parrot that bears the name of a South American river can get used to cooler temperatures'
an Amazon parrot
600
'Duende is the mysterious soul force at the heat of this Spanish dance form'
flamenco
600
'The 1922 Africa map differed from today's: notice French West Africa, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, and this Congo'
Belgian Congo
600
'"Knots Landing"'
Dallas
600
'One of the oldest domesticated dog breeds is the Saluki, the royal dog of this ancient people'
the Egyptians
800
'One of the principal offensive players on a soccer or hockey team'
a forward
800
'For the 200th anniversary of his birth, a 1932 issue had a map of his travels, including, of course, Virginia'
George Washington
800
'"Flo"'
Alice
800
'William Howard Taft was the last prez to have one of these grazing at the White House; her name was Pauline Wayne'
a cow
1000
'To apply nitrogen to the soil to aid plant growth'
to fertilize
1000
'A map of the Pacific Ocean goes from the Bering Sea down to this one off Australia'
the Tasman Sea
1000
'"Good Times"'
Maude
1000
'Often advertised in comic books, "sea" these are actually brine shrimp in suspended animation'
sea monkeys