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    | Method of fishing in which a lure or bait is pulled behind a boat at various speeds | trawling 
 
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    | "A Study in Scarlet" was this famous sleuth's 1st published adventure | (Avrom: Who is Sherylock Holmes?) (Alex: We can't accept it.)
 
 Sherlock Holmes
 
 
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    | Only president inaugurated on April 30; this year marked the 200th anniversary of that event | George Washington 
 
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    | At the end of this fairy tale opera, the witch's gingerbread victims turn back into children | "Hansel and Gretel" 
 
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    | Guinness says the largest one of these was made by an abalone & is 349.41 carats | pearl 
 
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    | The Vikings referred to this side of a ship as "stjornbordi" | starboard 
 
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    | London landmark named for Lord Nelson's 1805 naval victory | Trafalgar Square 
 
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    | This Defoe character spent 28 yrs., 2 mo. & 19 days on an unknown island off the coast of South America | Robinson Crusoe 
 
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    | His mother was the former Phoebe Millard | Millard Fillmore 
 
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    | This Verdi opera was commissioned by Ismail Pasha, khedive of Egypt, & premiered in Cairo in 1871 | (Alex: Minute to go in the round.) 
 "Aida"
 
 
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    | The peridot, also known as precious olivine, is almost always this color | green 
 
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    | Noticing steamy hot springs, Iceland's 1st settler gave this city its name which means "smoke bay" | Reykjavik 
 
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    | It's often called the windpipe | trachea 
 
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    | This Calcutta-born English novelist not only wrote "Vanity Fair", he illustrated it as well | William (Makepeace) Thackeray 
 
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    | Richard Nixon in the election of 1972 & Ronald Reagan in 1984 each carried this number of states | 49 
 
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    | When this man managed the Metropolitan Opera, he fired Maria Callas & wouldn't hire Beverly Sills | Rudolf Bing 
 
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    | The Hope Diamond was cut from a larger diamond that was part of this country's crown jewels, stolen in 1792 | (Avrom: What is India?) (Tom: What is England?)
 
 France
 
 
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    | Viking ships had sails made of linen or this coarse woven fabric | (Avrom: What is burlap?) 
 wool
 
 
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    | Not all of these medieval poet musicians were strolling; some were attached to a court | troubadours 
 
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    | This Dickens hero quits his job as a tutor, takes the half-wit Smike with him & becomes an actor | Nicholas Nickleby 
 
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    | As gov. of Mass., he called out the National Guard when Boston police went on strike in 1919 | Calvin Coolidge 
 
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    | This composer of "Babes in Toyland" also wrote the operas "Madeleine" & "Natoma" & helped found ASCAP | Victor Herbert 
 
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    | This gemstone gets its beautiful deep blue color from a rare mineral called lazurite | lapis lazuli 
 
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    | The Vikings were the 1st to use this type of trial for settling lawsuits | [end-of-round sounds] 
 by jury
 
 
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    | Maharishi Mahesh Yogi founded this movement that uses a Sanskrit mantra to find deeper consciousness | Transcendental Meditation 
 
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    | In her novel, two sisters, Elinor & Marianne Dashwood, represent "Sense & Sensibility" | Jane Austen 
 
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    | He was the 8th president & the first born in the United States | (Avrom: Who was John Quincy Adams?) 
 Martin Van Buren
 
 
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    | The diamond known as the "Star of" this continent is set in the British royal scepter | (Elizabeth: What is India?) 
 Africa
 
 
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