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  | MEL GIBSON: TORTURED THESPIAN |  |
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  | THE PRIME MINISTER OF INDIA |  |
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    | Ashley Wilkes says of him, "Arrogant devil, isn't he?  He looks like one of the Borgias" | Rhett Butler 
 
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    | Part of a house that comes before "community" in a term for a commuter suburb | bedroom 
 
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    | The integral symbol seen here, created by Leibniz, is a stylized "S" standing for this word | (David: What's function?) 
 sum
 
 
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    | India's prime minister is the leader of a parliamentary system modeled after that of this country | the United Kingdom 
 
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    | It's quite logical that this branch of knowledge is from the Greek for "lover of knowledge" | philosophy 
 
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    | This 1897 title character crawls down the wall of his castle face down, with his cloak spreading out like wings | Dracula 
 
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    | The chemistry (& torture) between Mel & Gary Busey's henchman was electric in this 1987 megahit | Lethal Weapon 
 
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    | Dan Bern sings, "It's" this type of town, "like Hershey, Pennsylvania... like Akron, Ohio" | a company town 
 
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    | Instead of a decimal point, the French use this common punctuation mark | a comma 
 
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    | The prime minister's official residence is found at No. 7 Race Course Road in this city | New Delhi 
 
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    | Aptly enough, this word for a sports participant is from the Greek for "one who contends for a prize" | athlete 
 
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    | The heroine of this 1722 novel is born in Newgate Prison, where her mother is incarcerated | (Matthew: What is Roxana?) 
 Moll Flanders
 
 
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    | Mad Mel's lashed to a pack animal & sent into the desert after a battle in this 1985 title structure | Thunderdome 
 
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    | If the roads are bad near this type of small South African village, traffic might slow to one of these | (Alex: It might slow to a [*] if it's near a [*] or in a [*].) 
 a kraal
 
 
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    | This third-generation Indian prime minister was once called "Mr. Clean" for his fight against corruption | Rajiv Gandhi 
 
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    | I exclaimed this when I found this Greek word for "I've found it" in the dictionary | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Eureka
 
 
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    | In Chapter 1 of a Theodore Dreiser novel, this naive 18-year-old heroine meets--uh-oh!--a traveling salesman | Sister Carrie 
 
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    | Capt. Picard, no!  Patrick Stewart water-tortures Mel in this 1997 pic, though without use of a grassy knoll | Conspiracy Theory 
 
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    | Anatevka in "Fiddler on the Roof" is this, a Yiddish word for a small Jewish village | a shtetl 
 
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    | An arrow with a dot at the non-pointed end indicates this, also a male first name | a ray 
 
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    | The first non-Hindu Prime Minister of India, current PM Manmohan Singh, is a member of this faith | (Jennifer: What is Muslim?) 
 Sikhism
 
 
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    | From the Greek "kuanos", meaning dark blue, it's a color used in printing & photography | (Alex: With a minute to go.) 
 cyan
 
 
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    | Eustacia Vye's wild passion for Damon Wildeve leads to tragedy in this Thomas Hardy novel | The Return of the Native 
 
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    | "Revenge" isn't quite the right word for this '99 pic where, when it comes to Mel's torture, let's say "The toes knows" | Payback 
 
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    | Frenchman's Bend is this title type of town in a 1940 William Faulkner work | [ERRATUM: The town of Frenchman's Bend makes its first appearance in 1931's "Sanctuary", while The Hamlet was published in 1940.] 
 a hamlet
 
 
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    | While in prison in the 1920s, he wrote "Glimpses of World History", a series of letters to his daughter | (Alex: ...his daughter, Indira Gandhi.) 
 (Jawaharlal) Nehru
 
 
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    | Omigod!  One of the top names for girls in the 1980s, it's from the Greek Theophania, "manifestation of God" | (Matthew: What is Bethany?) ...
 (Alex: The name we're going for is, duh, [*].  Matthew, back to you.)
 (Matthew: Thanks.)
 
 Tiffany
 
 
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