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    | In 213 B.C., Ch'in Shih Huang-ti ordered all of these burned, except the ones in the imperial library | books 
 
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    | Antelope Island in this Utah lake is used as a refuge for bison | the Great Salt Lake 
 
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    | On the second Sunday in May, the French honor her with a holiday | Joan of Arc 
 
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    | When he left for his second voyage in September of 1493, he had a fleet of seventeen ships, fourteen more than his first trip | Christopher Columbus 
 
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    | They can be crew, knee, or bobby | socks 
 
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    | In F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel, Nick Carraway lives next door to this title character | the Great Gatsby 
 
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    | This pupil of Socrates went to Sicily to try to turn Dionysius into a philosopher king | Plato 
 
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    | Albuquerque, New Mexico lies on this 1885-mile long river | the Rio Grande 
 
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    | March 1st is the feast day of this patron saint of Wales | St. David 
 
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    | The Duque de Medina- Sidonia commanded this fleet in 1588 | the Spanish Armada 
 
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    | This Channel Island has a close-fitting knitted shirt or sweater named for it, in addition to a cow | Jersey 
 
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    | Part I of this Willa Cather novel is entitled "The Wild Land" | (Rachael: What is O Pioneer!?) ...
 (Alex: Plural.)
 
 O Pioneers!
 
 
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    | Tikal became an important ceremonial center of this civilization, prior to 300 A.D. | the Mayans 
 
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    | From its incorporation in 1813 until 1901, this New York village was known as Sing-Sing | (Rachael: What is Attica?) 
 Ossining
 
 
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    | St. Raphael shares his feast day, September 29, with these two archangels | Michael & Gabriel 
 
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    | This company's fleet has included the Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, & Queen Elizabeth II | Cunard 
 
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    | A plastron is the quilted pad worn by competitors in this sport to protect their torso & sides | (John: What is football?) ...
 (Alex: That's what it's called, the plastron.)
 
 fencing
 
 
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    | His novel "Daisy Miller" opens at the Trois Couronnes hotel in Vevey, Switzerland | Henry James 
 
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    | He was only 16 when he became Roman emperor upon the death of Claudius | Nero 
 
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    | South Carolina's highest point, Sassafras Mountain, rises 3,560 feet in this range of the Appalachians | (Alex: If you made it a True Daily Double as you can see and responded correctly, you and Rachael would be tied for second place, trailing John by $100.) (David: Let's give it a shot: $2,600, please.)
 
 the Blue Ridge Mountains
 
 
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    | This man who added utopia to our vocabulary was made a saint in 1935 | St. Thomas More 
 
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    | This empire's fleet was defeated in the 1571 Battle of Lepanto | the Ottoman Empire 
 
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    | This apron for young girls has a ruffled bibbed top & a gathered skirt | a pinafore 
 
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    | He published his third novel, "A Cool Million", in 1934, one year after "Miss Lonelyhearts" | Nathanael West 
 
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    | This Old Kingdom capital of Egypt was originally named Hikouptah | Memphis 
 
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    | This Lake Erie port in Northwest Ohio was once called "the Glass Capital of the World" | (John: What is Cleveland?) (Rachael: What is Steuben?)
 ...
 (Alex: David's thinking, thinking, thinking he's not going to ring in to try to come up with "What is [*]?")
 
 Toledo
 
 
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    | This scholarly 13th century saint was often called "The Angelic Doctor" | (Alex: The last clue is yours, and look at those scores, Rachael.  Big decision for you--$100 separating first place from third.) 
 St. Thomas Aquinas
 
 
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    | The Black Sea fleet in dispute between Russia & Ukraine is based at this Crimean port | (David: What is Yalta?) 
 Sevastopol
 
 
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    | It's the fur pouch that a Scotsman wears on the front of his kilt | (John: What is a claymore?) 
 a sporon
 
 
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    | In English, Ivan Turgenev's novel "Ottsy i Deti" is known by this "familial" title" | Fathers and Sons 
 
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