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    | While Louis VII of France was off on one of these, Suger the Abbot of St. Denis ran the country in his stead | Crusades 
 
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    | Method actors know Konstantin Stanislavsky opened his influential theater in this capital city in 1898 | Moscow 
 
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    | Joseph Juneau helped found Juneau, Alaska & Solomon Juneau founded this Wisconsin city known for beer | Milwaukee 
 
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    | In the 1997-98 school year 365,000 students were subjected to this corporal punishment still legal in 23 states | paddling/spanking 
 
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    | She fed her many children "broth without any bread" | The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe 
 
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    | A religious grouping, or the monetary value of a bill | denomination 
 
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    | This group was expelled from England in 1290, Spain in 1492, Portugal in 1497 & France in 1182, 1306 & 1394 | the Jews 
 
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    | [Video clue with picture of Helen Hayes] | ------------------------------------- 
 
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    | Lubbock in this state was named for Thomas S. Lubbock, a Civil War Ranger | Texas 
 
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    | More first ladies' first names have begun with this vowel than any other letter | (Amanda: What is A?) 
 E (10)
 
 
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    | After his fall, up he got "and off did trot as fast as he could caper" | (Todd: Who is...) 
 Jack (of "Jack and Jill")
 
 
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    | (Dr. Joyce Brothers gives the clue)  This 12-letter word, also called shacking up, isn't the same as marriage -- marriage can lead to more intimacy | cohabitation 
 
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    | A leather made in Britain was called cordwain & by extension, cordwainers came to be people who made these | shoes 
 
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    | This famous New York dance company is abbreviated the ABT | American Ballet Theatre 
 
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    | Brooklyn, NYC's most populous borough, was named for Breuekelen, a village in this country | The Netherlands/Holland 
 
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    | This swift type of ship came from the way it used to cut through the miles | clipper ship 
 
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    | He "brought back the tarts and vowed he'd steal no more" | The Knave of Hearts 
 
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    | Someone whose task is to reeducate a former cult member | (James: What is...) 
 deprogrammer
 
 
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    | Among the families claiming the throne of Scotland in the 1290s was this one led by Robert I | (James: Who is -----?) 
 the Bruce
 
 
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    | (Hi, I'm Nathan Lane)  I won the 1996 Tony, Drama Desk & Outer Critics Circle Awards for my role as Pseudolus in this Broadway musical classic | A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 
 
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    | Neil Simon might know Jefferson Davis made his home in this Mississippi town known for its "blues", not grays | Biloxi 
 
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    | In 1941 over 500,000 Soviet troops were captured along with this capital of the Ukraine | Kiev 
 
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    | It's your condition if you have great admiration for Paris, Flaubert, Beaujolais, etc. | (Todd: What is...[no response].) 
 Francophilia
 
 
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    | After a hard day of conquering, Mehmed II, leader of this empire, probably liked to put his feet up & relax | Ottoman Empire 
 
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    | This "searching" play from 1921 introduced Pirandello's concept of "theater within the theater" | Six Characters in Search of an Author 
 
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    | Thomaston in this "Constitution State" was named for clockmaker Seth Thomas | Connecticut 
 
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    | 2 of the men used as models for this 1913 U.S. coin were named John Big Tail & Crow Tails | Indian Head (Buffalo) Nickel 
 
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    | From the Latin for "to correct", it's an adjective for someone who can't be corrected or reformed | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 incorrigible
 
 
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