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    | In 1819, R. Laennec invented this doctor's instrument, but didn't say to warm it before use | 
    stethoscope
 
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    | Of the 27 people listed on baseball's disabled list on July 29, 1986, 20 played this position | 
    pitcher
 
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    | Exactly a month after the Boeing 747 made its maiden flight, this Anglo-French airliner was 1st flown | 
    Concorde
 
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    | The Super Bowl trophy is named for this super coach | 
    (Jay: Who is Bear Bryant?)
  Vince Lombardi
 
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    | Stanley Kowalski trips the light fantastic in the ballet version of this play | 
    A Streetcar Named Desire
 
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    | It's the maiden name of "Liza with a Z" | 
    (Gary: What is M-I-N-E-L-L-I?)
  M-I-N-N-E-L-L-I
 
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    | When papa, Pedro, abdicated in 1831, 5-year-old Pedro II acquired this So. American country's crown | 
    Brazil
 
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    | According to Henry Adams, # of letters the average U.S. adult received during entire year of 1800 | 
    one
 
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    | The largest of these, such as Russian Typhoons & U.S. Tridents, are almost 2 football fields long | 
    submarines
 
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    | It wasn't until 1947 that participation in the Rose Bowl was limited to these 2 conferences | 
    Big 10 and Pac 8/Pac 10
 
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    | Legendary dancer who choreographed & danced the title role in the following: | 
    (Alex: Afternoon of a Faun was the music.)
  Nijinsky
 
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    | Shared last name of leaders of India assassinated in 1948 & 1984 | 
    (Jay: What is G-H-A-N-D-I?)
  G-A-N-D-H-I
 
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    | 2 of the 4 provinces that formed the new Dominion of Canada in 1867 | 
    (Chuck: What are Ontario and Prince Edward Island?)
  (2 of) Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia
 
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    | Bankrupt in '31, ressurected in '32, it remained airborne by one congressional vote in '71 | 
    Lockheed
 
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    | In the 1950s, this European car company introduced gasoline fuel injection | 
    Mercedes
 
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    | His Oklahoma teams of the '50s won 47 consecutive games, a major college football record | 
    Bud Wilkinson
 
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    | Before they were ballets, "Coppelia" & "The Nutcracker" were "Tales of" his | 
    Hoffmann
 
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    | Last name of "Today" host who gets letters addressed to "Gunball", "Dumble", "Bumvel", etc. | 
    (Gary: What is G-U-M-B-L-E?)
  (Bryant) G-U-M-B-E-L
 
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    | The ill-planned 1825 Decembrist rising in this country was suppressed on the same day it occurred | 
    Russia
 
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    | It's the longest-running TV game show still in production | 
    (Gary: What is the Wheel of Fortune?)
  The Price Is Right
 
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    | Shielded by a car, in 1941 Alf Letourner hit a speed over 108 mph on this | 
    (Gary: What is the Bonneville Salt Flats?)
  bicycle
 
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    | University whose teams have appeared in more bowl games than any other | 
    (Jay: What is UCLA?) ... (Alex: We're thinking of the Crimson Tide of [*].) [A single audience member clapped either at the mention of UCLA or at Jay missing.]
  Alabama
 
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    | On July 3, 1986, Mikhail Baryshnikov danced for the 1st time as one of these | 
    American
 
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    | Last name of Chief Justice William H. | 
    R-E-H-N-Q-U-I-S-T
 
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    | It's what Livingstone was looking for in Africa when Stanley found him | 
    source of the Nile
 
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    | The close race between these 2 future presidents resulted in a record 62.8% voter turnout | 
    Nixon and Kennedy
 
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    | Introduced during the middle ages, the use of this allowed horses to pull a much greater load | 
    (Jay: What is a harness?)
  padded horse collar
 
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    | L. Bernstein wrote music for ballet "Fancy Free" & for this musical about sailors it inspired | 
    [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  On The Town
 
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    | Full name of the lady who plays Maddie Hayes on "Moonlighting" | 
    C-Y-B-I-L-L S-H-E-P-H-E-R-D
 
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