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    | This legendary golfer looked back on "A Life Well Played" | 
    Arnold Palmer
 
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    | "The very existence of" this James Bond chief, "let alone his identity, was never admitted" | 
    M
 
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    | For the bicentennial, PEZ put its first real people on dispensers, one being this Kentucky frontiersman | 
    Daniel Boone
 
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    | Hired as a hotel caretaker, Jack Torrance hopes to work on his play in this Stephen King classic | 
    The Shining
 
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    | 60 conspirators helped knock off Julius Caesar in 44 B.C., but as far as we know, only he got the "et tu" thrown at him | 
    Brutus
 
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    | An Egyptian sun god, or a cheerleader's exclamation | 
    Ra/rah
 
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    | "In Praise of Difficult Women" praises this "Parks & Rec" star & 28 other "Heroines Who Dared to Break the Rules" | 
    Amy Poehler
 
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    | Niacin is part of this vitamin group | 
    B
 
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    | Named for his literary relative, Edgar Allan Poe was named to the 1st of these elite college athletic teams in 1889 | 
    All-American
 
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    | The going rate for selling out America in 1780? For him, 6,315 pounds, but it's not like his name was totally destroyed...oh wait | 
    Benedict Arnold
 
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    | Jupiter's sister-wife, or an Alaskan panhandle city | 
    Juno/Juneau
 
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    | His story was that of "The Life and Legacy of Chile's Controversial Dictator" | 
    Pinochet
 
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    | Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time includes 2 by this L.A. punk quartet | 
    X
 
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    | Known as "The Liberty Bell of the West", the Kaskaskia bell is found on an island in this state | 
    Illinois
 
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    | Some say "truth is" this, a movie with Emma Thompson as a novelist writing Will Ferrell's life | 
    Stranger than Fiction
 
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    | FBI Soviet analyst Robert Hanssen began spying for this overseas intelligence agency in 1985 | 
    (Alex: Less than a minute now.)
  the KGB
 
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    | Sneaky Norse bad guy, or a hyphenated word for "understated" | 
    Loki/low-key
 
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    | "Swan: The Life and Dance of" this Russian is one bio of her; so is "Twentieth Century Ballerina" | 
    Anna Pavlova
 
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    | Einstein used it to denote the speed of light | 
    c
 
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    | Walter Chrysler & Elizabeth Arden are among those taking a "snooze" at this New York cemetery near Tarrytown | 
    Sleepy Hollow
 
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    | His alter ego, the sci-fi writer Kilgore Trout, appears in many of his books, like "Breakfast of Champions" | 
    [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  Vonnegut
 
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    | Last name of the couple who in 1953 were the first U.S. civilians to be executed for espionage | 
    the Rosenbergs
 
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    | A Roman food goddess, or another word for "TV show" | 
    Ceres/series
 
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    | One book examines the "Literary Life" of this 18th century English poet known for his savage wit & satire | 
    (Mark: Who is Oscar Wilde?)
  Alexander Pope
 
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    | In chess notation, this, not K, denotes a knight | 
    (Jessica: What is an L?)
  an N
 
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    | A witness in a 1950s Senate crime probe invoked this, refusing to answer "on the grounds it might intend to criminate him" | 
    the Fifth Amendment
 
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    | "Deadly Heat" was an actual 2013 bestselling novel by this TV title character played by Nathan Fillion | 
    Castle
 
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    | In 480 B.C. the traitorous Ephialtes helped the Persians outflank the Greeks at this mountain pass | 
    Thermopylae
 
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    | A deadly Hindu goddess, or a deadly Colombian drug cartel | 
    Kali/Cali
 
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