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This play is part of Tennessee Williams' collection |
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"Seek" led to this phrase as a command for a dog to attack |
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This late '60s music & art fair in Bethel, New York lent its name to a Charles Schulz character |
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For that Oliver Hardy or Edward G. Robinson look, wear a wide one of these ending a mile north of the belt |
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The name of this Disney character can mean rundown or rinky-dink, as in "What kind of a ____ ____ outfit are you running?" |
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William Inge wants you to get on here |
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Its black granite walls list the names of more than 58,000 killed or missing in action |
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Pavilion comes from the Latin for this beautiful insect |
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Diabetics beware: the top-selling pop single of 1969 was this double-talk song from the Archies |
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Samuel Pepys' diary Nov. 2, 1663: a duke decides to start wearing this. Nov. 3: Sam gets his own hair cut so he can too |
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When hunting a wily suspect, detectives often play this type of game that mentions 2 creatures |
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You can "Chekhov" this 1904 play |
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Chamizal National Memorial, honoring a treaty that ended a U.S.-Mexican border dispute, is in this Texas border city |
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An old word for a bed's mosquito net gives us this term for a "roof" over a 4-post bed |
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In a 1701 portrait Louis XIV's shoes have red these alliterative items, but the "Great Male Renunciation" ended such foppery |
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Robert Burns' "best laid schemes" of this pair led to a Steinbeck title |
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Neil Simon wants us to feel the grass with this comedy |
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Federal Hall in this city commemorates the first seat of the U.S. Congress |
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The "pied" in "pied piper" meant he dressed in multicolored clothing, like this bird, "pie" for short |
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"We can't go on together" into the '70s, Elvis--your last No. 1 hit was this 1969 song |
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From around 1825 short pants called breeches were no longer worn by fashionable British men, only by these, such as footmen |
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Half of Gnarls Barkley, artist-producer Brian Burton goes by this name of a cartoon secret agent |
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David Mamet gives his 5 cents in this play |
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This British term for a police officer comes from an old word for the person in charge of horsey homes |
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Mind-expanding drugs influenced the name of this style of rock performed by the Grateful Dead & Jefferson Airplane |
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Shockingly casual in the 1780s, the gaulle was a simple, loose dress belted with this 4-letter item |
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"Knowing how to do" in French, this omnipresent cheese-stealing cartoon mouse was a thorn in Klondike Kat's side |
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