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  | SUPPORTING CAST OF OSCAR'S BEST PICTURE |  |
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  | JEOPARDY! WRITERS' ONLINE GO-TOs |  |
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    | In "Sons", a sequel by this woman, Wang Lung's sons deal with their father's legacy & wealth | (Pearl) Buck 
 
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    | Frank Stallone as a timekeeper, Frank Stallone Jr. as a streetcorner singer, Butkus Stallone as a dog | Rocky 
 
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    | Seen here is all the equipment you need for this game | tetherball 
 
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    | Bartlett's attributes "But it does move!" to this 16th century astronomer | (Tyler: Who is Copernicus?) 
 Galileo
 
 
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    | This agency may be clandestine, but its World Factbook is online & the writers love its up-to-date info on nations | the CIA 
 
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    | Last name of Susan Eloise, who in "Tex" created McCormick brothers Tex & Mason | S.E. Hinton 
 
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    | J.K. Simmons, Rosemarie DeWitt & John Legend...no, I'm sorry! I mean Naomie Harris, Patrick Decile & Andre Holland! | Moonlight 
 
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    | Soft down, or a slang term for the police | fuzz 
 
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    | This businessman/PM, unafraid to go big: "I am the Jesus Christ of politics... I sacrifice myself for everyone" | (Alex: With less than a minute.) 
 Berlusconi
 
 
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    | Named for a lake, this famed Chicago shopping street is also known as the Magnificent Mile | Michigan 
 
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    | Biblehub is a good source to compare translations of passages from many different Bibles, like this one, the KJV | the King James Version 
 
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    | The title character of this 1928 Virginia Woolf novel is male in the beginning, but that doesn't last... | (Gilbert: What is Mrs. Dalloway?) 
 Orlando
 
 
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    | Dooley Wilson, Claude Rains & Peter Lorre | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Casablanca
 
 
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    | A swift retort, or a conversation marked by an exchange of witty replies | repartee 
 
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    | He told GQ, "I made the jacket unstructured because I wanted to accentuate the body. See the sensuality" | Giorgio Armani 
 
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    | Anne Rice's "Interview with the Vampire" influenced Sting's song "Moon Over" this street | (Tyler: I think I'm way too young. Let's go with... what is Hudson?) 
 Bourbon Street
 
 
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    | We have many fine books from this U.K. enterprise, OUP for short, & we can also access more than 400 of them online | the Oxford University Press 
 
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    | Ayn Rand is the architect of this architect at the center of "The Fountainhead" | (Howard) Roark 
 
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    | After metal has been cast, cut or drilled, this ragged edge remains | (Gilbert: What is chaff?) 
 burr
 
 
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    | In 1934 this leader said, "We have buried the putrid corpse of liberty" | Mussolini 
 
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    | This street runs from  the Arc de Triomphe to the Place de la Concorde | Champs-Élysées 
 
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    | The Tech, a newspaper at this eastern college, maintains the first online edition of Shakespeare's works & we love it | MIT (or Massachusetts Institute of Technology) 
 
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    | This foppish lord began solving crimes for Dorothy Sayers in 1923 | Lord Peter Wimsey 
 
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    | Tiny, sharp teeth give this plant its name, also an elite Florida golf course | sawgrass 
 
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    | This 19th century virtuoso: "When women hear me play (the violin), they come crawling to my feet" | (Steve: Who is Stravinsky?) 
 Paganini
 
 
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    | The name of this Jerusalem street means "way of sorrows" | (Gilbert: What is Via Doloroso?) 
 Via Dolorosa
 
 
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    | For legends & suspect claims, the writers may check snopes.com, named for a family in this man's novels | (Steve: Who's Doyle?) 
 William Faulkner
 
 
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