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    | Capt. John Smith wrote about this Indian weapon & compared it to a poleax | a tomahawk 
 
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    | "1984" was a 1949 book by Eric Blair written under this pen name | George Orwell 
 
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    | To go from Philadelphia to New Jersey, you cross this river that shares its name with another state | the Delaware 
 
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    | This Nazi minister of propaganda & his wife killed themselves & their children on May 1, 1945 | Goebbels 
 
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    | The hypoglossal nerve controls its many movements, including wagging | (Debra: What is the tail?--[*]?  [*], sorry.) (Alex: [*].  She corrected in time.  There's a big difference between the tail and [*].  Debra, select.)
 (Debra: I know!)
 
 the tongue
 
 
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    | This "divine" French actress was the illegitimate daughter of a Dutch courtesan | Sarah Bernhardt 
 
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    | Slaves bought in Africa were sold in the West Indies for molasses used to make this liquor | rum 
 
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    | "Where Have I Been?" was the 1982 autobiography of this "Your Show of Shows" comedian | Sid Caesar 
 
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    | The Cubans call it Bahia de Cochinos; we call it this | the Bay of Pigs 
 
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    | This infamous French nobleman died at the asylum of Charenton in 1814 -- it "pains" us to tell you | the Marquis de Sade 
 
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    | On land this class of vertebrates can absorb oxygen through the skin, provided it's moist | amphibians 
 
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    | '40s film star whose family, the Lupinos, performed in Europe in the 17th century | Ida Lupino 
 
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    | Colorful name of Edward Teach, the pirate who hid out on Ocracoke Island off the N.C. coast | (Michael: Who is Bluebeard?) 
 Blackbeard
 
 
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    | 1 of 2 Arthur Hailey novels to become the top-selling fiction book of the year | Airport (or Wheels) 
 
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    | Incan ruins have been found on islands in this lake on the border of Bolivia & Peru | Lake Titicaca 
 
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    | Etta Place, who rode with this outlaw pair, was probably a lady of the evening, not a schoolteacher | Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid 
 
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    | It mitosis 1 cell becomes 2; in meiosis a single cell produce this many daughter cells | 4 
 
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    | Italian actress Eleonora Duse was famous for her roles in this Norwegian's plays | Henrik Ibsen 
 
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    | He followed his novel "Monsieur Beaucaire" with a term in the Indiana state legislature | Booth Tarkington 
 
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    | Odessa is the largest Soviet port on this sea | (Debra: What is the Caspian Sea?) 
 the Black Sea
 
 
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    | After a serious illness in 37 A.D., this Roman emperor became cruel & mentally unbalanced | (Alex: That's right, and we have a minute to go.) 
 Caligula
 
 
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    | Protozoans living in a termite's gut break down this substance in the wood the termite eats | (Michael: What is the pulp?) 
 cellulose
 
 
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    | This "Jersey Lily" was the daughter of the Very Reverend Wm. C. Le Breton, Dean of Jersey | Lillie Langtry 
 
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    | Shawmut was the Indian name for the peninsula on which this city was founded in 1630 | (Michael: What is Philadelphia[?--recording unintelligible]?) (Debra: What is Jamestown?)
 (Peter: What is, um... hm... what is...)
 [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 Boston
 
 
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    | An incident from his book "My Life in Court" inspired the stage play "A Case of Libel" | Louis Nizer 
 
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    | In sailing from the English Channel to the North Sea, one would pass through this strait | the Strait of Dover 
 
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    | 6 of "Bugs" Moran's henchmen & an optometrist were the victims of this 1929 slaughter | the St. Valentine's Day Massacre 
 
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    | A healthy red blood cell in your body has about 300 mil. of these oxygen-carrying molecules | hemoglobin 
 
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    | This bass-voiced Alabama actress starred in the original 1939 production of "The Little Foxes", darling | Tallulah Bankhead 
 
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