THEY COME IN PAIRS
AMERICAN HISTORY
DESCRIBING THE LANDMARK
THE NAME DOESN'T MEAN ANYTHING
"GR"8 WORDS
(Ken: These are 8-letters words beginning with the letters "G-R".)
100

Before these were tiny headphones, the term referred to little shoots of young corn

Earbuds 

100

An 1882 Exclusion Act barred immigrants from this country, though many had built the Central Pacific Railroad

China 

100

Grass on the field, ivy on the walls; visitor Babe Ruth called his shot in its friendly confines; worth its weight in diamond

Wrigley Field 

100

George Eastman said the letter K "had been a favorite with me", thus he created this name for his camera out of thin air 

Kodak 
100

A tip 

Gratuity 


200

A 90-pack--that's 45 pairs!--of these from Bausch & Lomb should keep things clear for awhile

Contact lenses 

200

Before succeeding Thomas Jefferson as president, James Madison served for 8 years in TJ's Cabinet in this post

Secretary of State
200

8 total eyes, each about 11 feet wide; 4 noses, with one in particular about 21 feet; Midwest history

Mount Rushmore 
200

The name of this technology that allows local area networks to operate without wiring or cables just sounds cool--that's all

Wi-Fi 

200

Foliage used for decoration. (think of a well-maintained decorative garden)

Greenery 
300

Before cellphones, every kid wanted a pair of these rhyming handheld communication devices

walkie talkies 

300

This epidemic came to the U.S. in 1918 & spread rapidly in densely populated barracks, like at Fort Riley in Kansas

Spanish Flu 

300

Falsely named, as it's 3,000 x 1,650 feet; the eyes of the world looked on in 1989; Mao's still nearby

Tiananmen Square 
300

Originally, the cartons of this luxury ice cream featured a map of Denmark although its name wasn't Danish, it was made up

Hagen-dasz 
300

With Walt Disney's help, Roald Dahl published his first book in 1943, about these creatures who cause damage to aircraft

Gremlins 
400

When you roll these together they make snake eyes (object)

dice 

400

In 1916 this Mexican bandit & revolutionary attacked Columbus, New Mexico, killing 18 U.S. citizens

Pancho Villa 

400

Some people just lying around? Clement Attlee, Lord Kelvin & the very real Sir Peter Parker

Westminster Abbey 

400

In the mid-1990s Colombian Alberto Perez created this dance exercise class that uses Latin & world rhythms

Zumba 

400

It's the degree of inclination or the rate of ascent or descent of a highway

Gradient 
500

Up to 7 feet long, the traditional Alaskan type of these are great for walking on deep, dry powder in open country

Snowshoes

500

In the years before the Revolution, the colonies stayed in touch via the alliterative Committees of this

Correspondence 

500

The non-golden arch; sounds like... victory; let's stop by Charles de Gaulle's place

Arc de Triomphe 

500

Infomercials in the 1980s touted the quality of these kitchen knives with a "Japanese" name; they were actually made in Ohio

Ginsu

500

In "To Helen", Edgar Allan Poe wrote, "To the glory that was Greece, and the" this "that was Rome

Grandeur