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    | 12 avenues radiate from Place Charles de Gaulle in this city | Paris 
 
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    | This Florida-born women's great who retired in 1989 wrote the World Book Encyclopedia article on tennis | Chris Evert 
 
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    | Probably the biggest big game the Clovis culture went after 11,200 years ago, it was woolly | mammoth 
 
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    | 3M's Richard Drew invented it in 1930 to have something to seal the cellophane of food products | Scotch tape 
 
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    | Long, flat-bottomed & painted a somber black, they're the traditional taxis of Venice | gondolas 
 
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    | In the familiar jokes, it precedes "Who's there?" | knock knock 
 
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    | Bridges crossing the Nile River in this capital include El Gama'a & El Giza | Cairo 
 
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    | In 1984 this quarterback became the first Boston College player to win the Heisman Trophy | Doug Flutie 
 
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    | The Folsom culture about 10,900 years ago had a fluted type of this weapon & a "thrower" for it | a spear 
 
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    | Newsweek reports Westinghouse made one in 1952 that played "How Dry I Am" at the end of each cycle | a clothes dryer 
 
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    | In 1980 the U.S. government loaned this auto company $1.5 billion; the loans were repaid within 3 years | Chrysler 
 
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    | It's a sailor's way of saying to a superior "I understand & will obey" | aye-aye 
 
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    | Haiphong near the Gulf of Tonkin serves as this city's main port | (Susan: What is Saigon?) 
 Hanoi
 
 
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    | Babe Ruth's father once operated a saloon on what is now center field in this Baltimore ballpark | Oriole Park at Camden Yards 
 
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    | The Anasazi, a word from this Indian language for "ancient ones", lived in what's now the 4 Corners area | Navajo 
 
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    | In 1939 the Hydra-Matic system made this automatic in the Oldsmobile | a transmission 
 
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    | This U.S. city has more miles of subway than any other subway system in the Western Hemisphere | New York City 
 
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    | This full, loose women's garment with a bright print is traditional attire in Hawaii | a muumuu 
 
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    | The ancient Greeks called this Jordanian capital Philadelphia | Amman 
 
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    | In the 1997 Belmont Stakes, Touch Gold dashed this "charmed" horse's Triple Crown bid | (William: What is Cigar?) 
 Silver Charm
 
 
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    | The Adena-Hopewell culture in the Ohio area was known for building these, both the burial & effigy types | mounds 
 
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    | In 1983 the first U.S. commercial call on one of these was from Chicago to a descendant of Bell in Germany | (William: What is a video phone?) 
 a cellular phone
 
 
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    | In Britain, it's a kitchen on a ship's deck; in the U.S., it's traditionally the last car on a freight train | (Susan: What is a galley?) 
 a caboose
 
 
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    | It's a hand-beaten drum used by American Indians | a tom-tom 
 
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    | In 1809 one of the first revolts for independence in Latin America broke out in this Ecuadoran capital | Quito 
 
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    | National Hockey League team whose logo is seen here: | [Knife through a "B"] 
 the Buffalo Sabres
 
 
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    | Warriors of this Yucatan civilization battle in the computer-enhanced mural seen here: | (William: Who are the Aztecs?) 
 the Mayans
 
 
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    | They were invented in 1947 & by the 1990s millions were being placed on a single chip | (Blaine: What is an integrated circuit?) (William: What is a microprocessor?)
 
 transistors
 
 
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    | When it opened, it cut the distance from London to Bombay by 5,100 miles | the Suez Canal 
 
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    | He's Barney & Betty Rubble's noisy son | (Alex: We have about a minute to go.) 
 Bamm-Bamm
 
 
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