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  | A VERY SPECIAL PULITZER PRIZE |  |
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    | Oskar Schindler is buried on Mount Zion in this city | Jerusalem 
 
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    | He's the funny man who played the title role in the movie version of "The Cat in the Hat" | Mike Myers 
 
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    | 1984: To this "physician", for his books of playful rhymes, nonsense words & strange illustrations
 | Dr. Seuss 
 
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    | This ditty about a pony-riding gentleman is Connecticut's state song | (Adam: What is "Yankle Doodle"--what is "Yankee Doodle Dandy"?) (Beth: What is "Yankee Doodle Dandy"?)
 ...
 (Alex: The song is just called [*], not "Dandy," even though that word appears in it.)
 
 "Yankee Doodle"
 
 
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    | Catch an express train to the Algarve from the Barreiro Station in this Iberian capital | (Adam: What is Madrid?) 
 Lisbon
 
 
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    | A cntrctd. form of a wd. or phrs., frm. the Ltn. for "shrtnd." | abbreviation 
 
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    | This innovative Polish director brought Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist" to life in 2005 | (Roman) Polanski 
 
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    | 1960: To Professor Garrett Mattingly, for his study of this 16th century Spanish fleet
 | the Armada 
 
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    | How sweet it is that this is North Carolina's official state insect | [Peter's response garners applause] 
 the honeybee
 
 
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    | President Harding drove the golden spike at Nenana for this state's RR & died on the way home | Alaska 
 
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    | Class of a pro boxer topping out at 160 pounds | middleweight 
 
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    | This capital's Plaza Independencia has a statue of Jose Artigas, hero of Uruguayan independencia | Montevideo 
 
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    | "Zathura" is from a book by Chris Van Allsburg, author of this "cool" story, later a Tom Hanks animated film | The Polar Express 
 
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    | 1978: To Richard Lee Strout, for his body of work for this "Christian" publication
 | the Christian Science Monitor 
 
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    | The state motto of Pennsylvania is "Virtue, liberty, and" this, quite a declaration | "independence" 
 
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    | Commuter maglevs are still being tested in this country, so take a ride on the slower Shinkansen bullet trains | Japan 
 
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    | The walls at the U.S. one in Leavenworth are 40 feet high & 40 feet below ground | penitentiary 
 
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    | 1952: To this Missouri city's Star newspaper, for its coverage of a series of natural disasters
 | (Beth: What is St. Louis?) 
 Kansas City
 
 
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    | This arthropod seen here, Delaware's state marine animal, shares its name with quadruped footwear | a horseshoe crab 
 
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    | The Eurostar chunnels from London to Paris & this other nearby capital | (Alex: Capital of Belgium?  [*].) 
 Brussels
 
 
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    | Luggage-based term for a war-profiteering Northerner in the Postbellum South | carpetbagger 
 
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    | Somalia is on the geographic projection usually called this "of Africa" | the horn 
 
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    | In 2004 Reese Witherspoon starred in the big screen version of "Vanity Fair" by this author | Thackeray 
 
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    | 1938: To this Alberta city's Journal newspaper, for its freedom of the press editorials
 | Edmonton 
 
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    | This state gem of Washington was once a tree, or at least a piece of it | (Adam: What is amber?) 
 petrified wood
 
 
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    | This country's royal trains will take you from a Jain temple city to the Arabian Sea | (Beth: What is Saudi Arabia?) 
 India
 
 
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    | Term for the fear or hatred of Gallic culture | (Adam: Uh... What is an anglophobe?) ...
 (Alex: It's, uh... France.)
 (Adam: Yes.)
 
 francophobia
 
 
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