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    | Term for any painting, except a fresco, applied directly to a wall, from the Latin for wall | 
    a mural
 
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    | In the 17th century, Anton van Leeuwenhoek discovered bacteria while using this instrument | 
    a microscope
 
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    | Despite his 1945 decisions, he warned in 1946 that "civilization cannot survive" this kind of war | 
    a nuclear war
 
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    | The word statistics comes from the Latin meaning "affairs of" this | 
    state
 
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    | Vehicle from which the Fab 4 observed a "Sky of blue & sea of green" | 
    the yellow submarine
 
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    | Undergarment whose name, derived from Middle English, literally means "short coat" | 
    (Cynthia: What is chamois?)
  petticoat
 
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    | Completes the title of the Bosch work, "The Garden of Earthly..." | 
    delights
 
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    | Conveniently for bacteria that cause most human diseases, this is the  temperature for optimum growth | 
    98.6o Fahrenheit
 
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    | "I never sit on" this, Truman affirmed, "I am on either one side or the other" | 
    a fence
 
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    | An American Public Works Assn. survey says the largest part of household trash, 35% by weight, is this | 
    paper (newspapers sccepted)
 
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    | Pat Boone sang "How you laughed when I cried each time I saw the tide" wash these away | 
    "Love Letters in the Sand"
 
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    | Ovate, ovoid & oval all mean this | 
    egg-shaped
 
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    | Shows by French Academy members were called salons, from the salon d'Apollon, a hall n this building | 
    the Louvre
 
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    | He proved, once & for all, bacteria don't come from non-living matter (& milked it for all it was worth) | 
    Louis Pasteur
 
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    | He told Congress this organization is "a mirror in which the state of world affairs is reflected" | 
    the United Nations
 
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    | Of 22, 30 or 38%, part of U.S. population over 18 which Census Bureau says has never married | 
    (Johanna: What is 30%?) (Cynthia: What is 38%?)
  22%
 
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    Though many have recorded it, only the Righteous Bros. had a Billboard Top Ten hit with this song:
  "Then rolls out to sea / And the sea is very still once more..." | 
    [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  "Ebb Tide"
 
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    | Something that is soporiferous induces this | 
    sleep
 
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    | This country's Sidney Nolan is known for his paintings about Ned Kelly | 
    Australia
 
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    | Meaning "acid loving" this bacterial culture that thrives in acid is sometimes added to milk | 
    acidophilus
 
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    | Truman regretted saying that Ike "had the capacity to serve ably as" this | 
    president
 
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    | Hungary has the world's lowest suicide rate, while this Hashemite Kingdom has the lowest | 
    Jordan
 
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    | "Podia" is the plural of this | 
    podium
 
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    | Painting style used in Picasso's "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon", influenced by African tribal art | 
    Cubism
 
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    | A bacteria that has built a protective wall around itself, or the "seed" of a mold or fern | 
    a spore
 
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    | Truman believed this animal, his favorite, had "more horse sense than a horse" | 
    a mule
 
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    | It's reported that about 60% of 1st-born children in this NATO island country are born out of wedlock | 
    Iceland
 
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    | This word specifically means a person who tells, writes or makes up fables | 
    (Yes. That's right and we've got less than a minute to go.)
  a fabulist
 
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