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    | In an 1870s ballet, Prince Siegfried falls in love with one of these graceful birds | 
    Swan
 
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    | The storming of this prison in 1789 is one of the most famous events of the French Revolution | 
    Bastille
 
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    | Hieronymus Bosch's "Garden of Earthly Delights" is one of the delightful paintings at this Spanish museum | 
    The Prado
 
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    | Hepatitis & cirrhosis are diseases of this organ | 
    Liver
 
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    | Oxford graduate Hugh Grant played a student at this other British university in the coming-of-age film "Maurice" | 
    Cambridge
 
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    | Esperanto adverbs generally end in "E"; these words, like bela for "beautiful", in "A" | 
    Adjectives
 
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    | This singer took "Oh, Pretty Woman" to No. 1 in 1964 | 
    Roy Orbison
 
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    | This German earned the nickname "The Desert Fox" while commanding the Afrika Korps in WWII | 
    Erwin Rommel
 
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    | A Tokyo museum dedicated to this Beatle opened Oct. 9, 2000, which would have been his 60th birthday | 
    John Lennon
 
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    | The tympanic membrane is another name for this body part | 
    Eardrum
 
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    | Traditionally, the ballet "Suite en Blanc" is performed without scenery, in costumes of this color | 
    White
 
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    | A fine restoracio might insist you wear a kravat, which is this | 
    Tie
 
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    | This composer of the opera "Siegfried" also named his son Siegfried | 
    (Alex: Ott, with a voice like yours, you should be singing Wagner!)
  Richard Wagner
 
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    | Even though it's been "found", this Peruvian ruin, seen here, is still called "The Lost City of the Incas" | 
    Machu Picchu
 
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    | Seen here, Manet's painting of "Nana" hangs in the Kunshalle, a great museum in this seaport of northern Germany | 
    Hamburg
 
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    | When the intestine bulges into the groin muscles, it's the inguinal type of this | 
    Hernia
 
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    | Puerto Ricans eat mofongo, a mashed plantain dish that gets its strong flavor from cloves of this | 
    Garlic
 
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    | Dudek is 20; ducent is this many | 
    200
 
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    | Before he became the "King of the Cowboys" on film, he formed the Sons of the Pioneers singing group | 
    Roy Rogers
 
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    | As queen of the Netherlands during WWI, she helped maintain Dutch neutrality | 
    (Robin: Who was Juliana?)
  Wilhelmina
 
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    | We wonder what they sell in the gift shop of the Opium House Museum in Sop Ruak, this nation's Golden Triangle | 
    (Alex: Ott, I love your voice!) (Ott: Thanks!)
  Thailand
 
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    | A deficiency of vitamin D is a common cause of this disease that causes bone deformities like bowed legs | 
    rickets
 
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    | It's the official language of Bahrain | 
    Arabic
 
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    | Arbaro is this type of place as in Longfellow's "Jen la Arbaro Pratempa" | 
    Forest/woods
 
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    | In a Sir Walter Scott novel, this title character is an outlaw of the MacGregor clan | 
    Rob Roy
 
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    | This "Magnificent" sultan, seen here, was the 10th ruler of the Ottoman Empire | 
    Suleiman
 
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    | The central gallery of this French museum, once a train station, is seen here | 
    Musee d'Orsay
 
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    | Alexia is word blindness; this is a reading disability in which letters are reversed &/or transposed | 
    (Alex: Robin, well done!  Hate to slow you down, but we have to take a break.)
  Dyslexia
 
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    | This 19th C. Norwegian wrote incidental music for Bjornstjerne Bjornson's play "Sigurd Jorsalfar" | 
    Edvard Grieg
 
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    | Originally the pseudonym of the language's creator, Esperanto means "one who" does this | 
    Hopes
 
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