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  | THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT MARIE ANTOINETTE |  
   
 
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    | Only 7 of her 1,775 poems were published during her lifetime | 
    Emily Dickinson
 
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    | In 1960 this magazine opened its first Key Club in Chicago | 
    Playboy
 
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    | The American she called "L'Ambassadeur Electrique" | 
    (Gregg: Who is Thomas Jefferson?)
  Benjamin Franklin
 
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    | She made her film debut in "The Way West" in 1967, the year she flew across TV screens as "The Flying Nun" | 
    (Gregg: Who is Sally Fields?)
  Sally Field
 
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    | The soil & landfill types of this machine are larger than the type that squishes trash into bundles | 
    Compactor
 
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    | King Arthur's furniture listed at the beginning of a book | 
    Round table of contents
 
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    | She's won 2 Grammys for albums of her poetry, "On the Pulse of Morning" & "Phenomenal Woman" | 
    Maya Angelou
 
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    | This company added a remote keyless entry system to its 1996 Miata M edition | 
    Mazda
 
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    | James Earl Jones' film career was launched with this 1964 classic seen here: | 
    Dr. Strangelove
 
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    | It means to dig soil from the bottom of a body of water; or the machine that does it | 
    Dredge
 
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    | Country music "Ropin' The Wind" singer's line of classic suits | 
    Garth Brooks Brothers
 
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    | Her husband Ted Hughes edited her posthumously published "Collected Poems" | 
    Sylvia Plath
 
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    | On a music score, it's the set of sharp &/or flat signs that follow the clef | 
    Key signature
 
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    | The capital city where she was born | 
    Vienna
 
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    | Lynn Redgrave debuted in this bawdy Albert Finney romp that won the 1963 Best Picture Oscar | 
    Tom Jones
 
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    | By definition it's a machine that gives a surface an even degree of slope | 
    Grader
 
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    | E.T.'s yearning spoken desire to dial up Tim Allen's TV show | 
    Phone Home Improvement
 
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    | This British poet spent the last 15 years of her life, 1847-1861, at Casa Guidi, her villa in Florence, Italy | 
    Elizabeth Barrett Browning
 
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    | If you read our credits you know this post on our crew is filled by Luke Lima | 
    Key grip
 
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    | Her great-niece who married Napoleon | 
    (Gregg: Who was Josephine?)
  Marie Louise
 
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    | No bones about it: this "Star Trek" actor made his film debut in the 1947 thriller "Fear in the Night" | 
    DeForest Kelley
 
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    | The machine seen here, or a nasty wrestling move: | 
    Piledriver
 
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    | "Portrait of a Lady" author who prefers his martinis shaken, not stirred | 
    Henry James Bond
 
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    | This leader of the Imagist school was the sister of the famous astronomer who predicted the existence of Pluto | 
    (Gregg: Who was Marie Curie?)
  Amy Lowell
 
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    | This Ken Follett novel was about a WWII code based on a Daphne du Maurier novel | 
    (Gregg: What is The Omega Key?)
  The Key to Rebecca
 
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    | Her empress mother | 
    Maria Theresa
 
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    | The folks in Fargo know she married Joel Coen, who directed her first film, "Blood Simple" | 
    Frances McDormand
 
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    | "Dorsal" term for a tractor having an attached bucket used for excavating | 
    Backhoe
 
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    | Old West outlaw who wrote a biography of Dr. Johnson | 
    Jesse James Boswell
 
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