History
Ballet
Biology
Fruits & Vegetables
Novelists
400

In 1991 B.C. Amenemhet, a former vizier, founded this country's 12th dynasty

Egypt

400

"Homage to the Queen", a tribute to her, premiered on her coronation day in 1953

Elizabeth II

400

Unlike most birds, ratites like the ostrich can't do this

Fly

400

The summer varieties of this gourd-like vegetable are eaten green; the winter ones, ripe

Squash

400

This novelist's youthful voyages provided the basis for such works as "Lord Jim" & "Typhoon"

Conrad

800

Because his proposals for constitutional change were defeated, this French president resigned in 1969

Charles de Gaulle

800

This dancer choreographed a new version of "The Nutcracker" in 1976, a "Turning Point" in his career

Baryshnikov

800

Associated with this sense, the olfactory lobe is better developed in most vertebrates than in man

Smell

800

This fruit with many seeds is grown on the Punica granatum tree

A Pomegranate 

800

He dictated his last novel, "The Brothers Karamazov", to his wife who took it down in shorthand

Dostoevsky

1200

In 1919 this national assembly met in this city & formed a new German republic

Weimar

1200

The School of American Ballet is the official school of this major metropolitan ballet company

New York (City Ballet)

1200

Renin, an enzyme that breaks down protein, is secreted by cells in this organ

The kidney

1200

Poi, a luau treat, is made from these mashed roots

Taro

1200

This Scottish novelist is buried at the summit of Mt. Vaea on Upolu, an island of Western Samoa

Robert Louis Stevenson

1600

The parents of this Peruvian president immigrated from Japan 4 years prior to his birth

Fujimori

1600

This Spanish seducer is attacked by furies at the end of a 1936 ballet

Don Juan

1600

Common "colorful" term for the erythrocytes, which transport oxygen around the body

The red blood cells 

1600

A greengage is a plum & a greening is this fruit

An apple

1600

This novelist's nonfiction book "Miami and the Siege of Chicago" was about the 1968 political conventions

Norman Mailer

2000

About 3000 B.S. the Sumerians invented this writing system which used triangular marks

Cuneiform

2000

First performed in 1905, this very short solo ballet depicts the last minutes in the life of a bird

The Dying Swan

2000

This nucleic acid occurs in 3 forms: messenger, ribosomal & transfer

RNA
2000

This somewhat coarse root vegetable is also called a swede or a Swedish turnip

A rutabaga

2000

He followed his first novel, "Appointment in Samarra", with "BUtterfield 8"

John O'Hara