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    | August 23 is the feast of St. Rose of this capital city; she's credited with starting social services in Peru | Lima 
 
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    | In the 1970s, its ads called it "The Great American Shoe Store" | Kinney Shoes 
 
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    | These objects with comas & tails can be named for up to 3 independent co-discoverers | comets 
 
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    | On April 21, 1967, Col. Georgios Papadopolous engineered a military takeover of this Balkan nation | (Bob: What is Turkey?) 
 Greece
 
 
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    | In 1971, Pearl Hall's Pecan Surprise Bars won the grand prize in this biennial contest | the Pillsbury Bake-Off 
 
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    | "Aristotle Contemplating a Bust of Homer" was purchased in 1961 by the friends of this New York City museum | Metropolitan Museum of Art 
 
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    | St. Helena reportedly found this Christian relic buried on or near Calvary | (Bill: [No response]) 
 a piece of the cross
 
 
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    | In 1984 this American company introduced its first minivan | Chrysler 
 
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    | Of the 9 planets, only Mars & Venus can appear brighter in the sky than this largest one | Jupiter 
 
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    | Surrounded by Italy, this small country on Mt. Titano was once under the protection of the papacy | San Marino 
 
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    | This first American in Earth orbit was given the National Geographic Society's Hubbard Medal in 1962 | John Glenn 
 
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    | This large painting with a "nocturnal" name lost some of its left side when cut down in 1715 | "The Night Watch" 
 
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    | The symbol of St. Margaret; it's also associated with St. George | Dragon 
 
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    | Intuit's Checkbook program; it was first worked out in a dorm at Stanford in 1983 | Quicken 
 
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    | This famous nebula is the remnant of a supernova observed in 1054 | the Crab Nebula 
 
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    | In 1571 this Spanish king's forces helped defeat the Turks at Lepanto | Phillip II 
 
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    | This international music competition began in Moscow in 1958 with prizes for piano & violin | (Alex: Bill, that takes you to -$300; unfortunately, that is not enough.) 
 the Tchaikovsky Competition
 
 
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    | "The Jewish Bride" & "The Cyndics" are in this Amsterdam museum | The Rijksmuseum 
 
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    | Originally called The Poor Ladies, they are now called this, after their founder from Assisi | (Amanda: Who are the Franciscans?) 
 Poor Clares (St. Clare)
 
 
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    | These brothers, William & Andrew, became known as "Trade" & "Mark", the words under their pictures on the box | the Smith Brothers 
 
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    | This is defined as the position in a satellite's orbit when it's most distant from the Earth | apogee 
 
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    | In 1969 this country's Communist Party replaced leader Alexander Dubcek because of his liberal reforms | (Alex: Our Teen champion is cruisin', way to go!) 
 Czechoslovakia
 
 
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    | David Broder & George Will have won Pulitzer Prizes for Commentary while with this newspaper | The Washington Post 
 
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    | In Rembrandt's time, his reputation for this type of art was greater than for painting | (Bill: What is sketching?) (Amanda: What is sculpture?)
 
 etching
 
 
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    | She saw her 1st vision February 11, 1858 on the bank of the river Gave | (Alex: Bob, you're in the lead now.) 
 St. Bernadette
 
 
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    | This man whose company built the Flamingo & Sahara hotels in Las Vegas opened his first Sun City in 1960 | Del Webb 
 
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    | This 16th C. Flemish cartographer also made a star globe showing the constellations | Gerard Mercator 
 
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    | In 1980, striking workers at this Gdansk shipyard demanded the right to form a trade union | the Lenin Shipyard (Lech Walesa) 
 
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    | In 1976, this Connecticut governor was named "Woman of the Year" by Ladies' Home Journal | (Bill: Who is...) (Alex: Pick a name... no.  That takes you to -$900.)
 
 Ella Grasso
 
 
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    | In 1632-33, Rembrandt painted 2 Passion scenes for Prince Frederick Henrik of this ruling house | (Bill: Who are the Hapsburgs?) (Amanda: Who are the Hohenzollerens?)
 
 Orange
 
 
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