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    | This libidinous lord's Venetian exploits included an 1818 swim from the Lido "right to the end of the Grand Canal" | 
    (David: Who is Casanova?)
  Lord Byron
 
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    1989: Tom Hanks & a slobbering junkyard dog | 
    Turner and Hooch
 
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    | Lucio Costa designed this South American city for 500,000 people; today the population is over 2 million | 
    Brasilia
 
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    | This steak is named for the letter-shaped hard substance separating the tenderloin from the top loin | 
    T-bone
 
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    | This Pole died in 1543, days after receiving the first copy of his book "On the Revolutions of Heavenly Bodies" | 
    (Kate: Who is Kepler?)
  Copernicus
 
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    | ...this, a boat, bowl or blood-carrier | 
    vessel
 
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    1973: James Coburn & Kris Kristofferson | 
    Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
 
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    | The U.K. helped fund the design of this capital after Belize City was destroyed by a hurricane | 
    Belmopan
 
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    | This rib roast is typically only rated as a "choice" cut, but its name signifies the highest-quality meat | 
    prime rib
 
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    | Although known as the founder of microbiology, this French chemist's first discoveries were in crystallography | 
    Pasteur
 
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    | ...this style of house, a specialty of artist Debbie Patrick | 
    Victorian
 
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    | This "Andrea del Sarto" poet spent his final days at Ca' Rezzonico, the palatial home of his son Pen, & died there in 1889 | 
    Robert Browning
 
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    1989: Sylvester Stallone & Kurt Russell | 
    Tango and Cash
 
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    | Punjab's capital Chandigarh was designed by this largely self-taught Swiss architect | 
    (Matt: Who is Corborsier?) (Alex: ...You know, ...I'm gonna give it to you. It's [*], and your pronunciation was a little off, but that's okay. You got it in there.)
  Le Corbusier
 
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    | This cut's name derives from a N.Y. liquor establishment & contains the tenderloin & the top loin muscle | 
    (David: I don't know.)
  porterhouse
 
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    | While serving as secretary of the Geological Society of London, 1839-41, he wrote the "Journal of Researches" | 
    Darwin
 
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    | ...this material, what old phonograph records are made of | 
    vinyl
 
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    | "Yes, this was Venice... half fairy-tale, half snare", wrote this author in "Death in Venice" | 
    Thomas Mann
 
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    1952: Katharine Hepburn & Spencer Tracy | 
    (Alex: A little before your time.  [*].  Matt?) (Matt: $2,000.) (Alex: Might as well finish it off.)
  Pat and Mike
 
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    | This architect served at Valley Forge before his appointment by Washington to design the new capital | 
    L'Enfant
 
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    | This geometric-sounding section of the hind leg extends from the rump to the ankle | 
    (Matt: What is the quadricep?)
  the round
 
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    | In 1938 Mussolini let him travel to Sweden to receive his Nobel Prize for Physics; he then defected to the U.S. | 
    (Enrico) Fermi
 
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    | ...this uplifting Italian import heard here | 
    (Alex: [*]. Correctamente.)
  "Volare"
 
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    1974: Clint Eastwood & Jeff Bridges | 
    (Alex: All right.  We're going somewhere else.  Thankfully.) (Matt: That's right.)
  Thunderbolt and Lightfoot
 
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    | This planned "City of Peace" includes the National Mosque as well as the Atomic Research Institute | 
    Islamabad
 
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    | French for "between the ribs", this tender cut comes from the meat between the 9th & 11th ribs | 
    (Kate: What is the sirloin?) (Matt: What is ...filet mignon?) ... (Alex: What is [*]?  It means "between the ribs.")
  entrecĂ´te
 
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    | In the 1820s this British scientist discovered the laws of electrical induction forming the basis for the magneto & dynamo | 
    Michael Faraday
 
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    | ...this official who rules over a province or colony in the name of a king | 
    viceroy
 
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