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    | Orchestra section with the name of an alloy | 
    the brass
 
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    | In August 1578 this English navigator sailed around Cape Horn | 
    Drake
 
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    | Legal term for the burning of a building with malicious or criminal intent | 
    arson
 
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    | In a 1960 comedy, a bumbling Jerry Lewis has this title job at the Fontainebleau Hotel | 
    (Tom: Um, um, what is the, um...?) (Alex: Ohh, you drew a blank.)
  The Bellboy
 
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    | Temporary loss of electricity | 
    a power outage
 
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    | There's a special case, seen here, for this item used on the podium | 
    (Chacko: What's a conducting staff?) (Alex: A conducting staff.  No.)
  a baton
 
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    | Willem Schouten, who rounded the Horn, named it after his birthplace in this country | 
    Holland
 
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    | The long symbolic history of the pentacle includes representing Jesus' five of these | 
    (Tom: Um, what are nails?)
  wounds (or stigmata)
 
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    | In 59 A.D. this Roman emperor went too far & had his mom Agrippina murdered | 
    (Eugene: She deserved it.  Who was [*]?) [Much audience laughter] (Alex: [Laughing] Ho ho ho!  Editorializing on Jeopardy! anew, and the first!)
  Nero
 
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    | He made us laugh as "Tommy Boy", the dimwitted heir to an auto parts factory | 
    Chris Farley
 
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    | Children's game of giving letters & receiving kisses in return | 
    post office
 
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    | For much of the 20th c., Gregor Piatigorsky was regarded as the world's second-greatest virtuoso on this instrument | 
    (Tom: What is the violin?) (Alex: Ahhh, no.  Pablo Casals was No. 1.  He was No. 2 on [*].)
  the cello
 
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    | In the 1830s this British ship visited the Patagonian Coast & the Falkland Islands & made a passage around Cape Horn | 
    the Beagle
 
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    | This system for informing people about abductions is named for an unfortunate 9-year-old | 
    (Eugene: [Sighs, shakes head] Who is...  Brain freeze...) (Alex: Say something.) (Eugene: Who is... Cameron Burns?  Uh, no.) (Alex: No.  [*].  It's very successful here in California.  The [*] system.  All right, no money, but it's still early.)
  Amber Alert
 
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    | John Belushi played this most notorious Delta in "Animal House" | 
    Bluto
 
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    | Of the genus Rhus, it'll give you a rash if touched | 
    poison oak
 
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    | It was invented in the 18th century, & in the 19th Monsieur Sax developed it into the saxophone | 
    a (bass) clarinet
 
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    | In 1910 he said he was sailing from Norway to the Arctic Ocean via Cape Horn, but he was really headed to the South Pole | 
    (Tom: Who was Admundsen?) (Alex: Yes--say it again?) (Tom: Admundsen?) (Alex: No.)
  Amundsen
 
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    | Delta, Alitalia & KLM are part of this "Team", whose symbol is seen here | 
    (Chacko: What is the Star Alliance?)
  SkyTeam
 
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    | In WWII he headed the Gestapo in Lyons, France; in January 1983 he was arrested in South America | 
    (Chacko: [Shaking head no] Who was Goebbels?)
  Klaus Barbie
 
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    | Luckily, Jim Carrey gave a more dastardly turn as this evil relative in "A Series of Unfortunate Events" | 
    (Tom: Uh, who was Otto?)
  Uncle (or Count) Olaf
 
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    | A drink of raw egg, Worcestershire sauce, salt & pepper, taken as a hangover cure | 
    a prairie oyster
 
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    | A gold "concert grand pedal" one of these instruments from Lyon & Healy costs $42,000 | 
    (Chacko: What is a piano?)
  a harp
 
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    | This British naval captain "Endeavour"ed to sail around the Horn--& did in 1769 | 
    Cook
 
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    | Assassinated by a naval officer in 1628, English nobleman George Villiers was the first duke of this "palatial" title | 
    the Duke of Buckingham
 
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    | This comic's "Rush Hour" character was billed as "The Biggest Mouth in the West" | 
    Chris Tucker
 
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    | A time for the media to take pictures of a politician doing something newsworthy | 
    a photo opportunity
 
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