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    | In 1976 Florida's Dry Tortugas were paired with these vast wetlands as a UNESCO biosphere reserve | the Everglades 
 
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    | Though her clerks had to explain it to her, she's fond of her nickname "Notorious RBG" | Ruth Bader Ginsburg 
 
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    | In a kid lit classic, this elephant becomes king & marries Celeste, who becomes his queen | Babar 
 
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    | A campanile is a usually freestanding one of these housing a bell | a tower 
 
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    | This verb can mean to support the decision of a lower court in an appeal | (Alex: Less than a minute now.) 
 uphold
 
 
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    | About a century after this naturalist visited Bird Key in 1832, a storm washed it off the map | Audubon 
 
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    | During WWI she supported the French war effort by fitting ambulances with portable X-ray equipment | Marie Curie 
 
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    | "A Wind in the Door" is a follow-up to this classic by Madeleine L'Engle | A Wrinkle in Time 
 
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    | From the Latin for "four corners", it's a rectangular courtyard enclosed by buildings | quad 
 
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    | Here is the view from this in a front door | peephole 
 
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    | This 5-letter type of submerged sandbar is plentiful & dangerous in the Tortugas | a shoal 
 
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    | She made her first entry in her famous diary on June 14, 1942, after receiving it as a gift for her 13th birthday | Anne Frank 
 
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    | In a modern favorite by Mo Willems, "Don't Let the Pigeon" do this, even when he promises, "I'll just steer" | drive the bus 
 
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    | The horseshoe or keyhole type of this curved span above an opening is associated with Islamic architecture | an arch 
 
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    | These dogs can be German or Australian | shepherd 
 
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    | Formerly called Sand Key, Hospital Key once was home to a hospital built to battle this colorful disease | yellow fever 
 
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    | In 1952, this pioneering writer on the environment was the first woman to win a National Book Award for nonfiction. | Rachel Carson 
 
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    | In "Make Way for Ducklings", Mr. & Mrs. Mallard settle down in this U.S. city's public garden | Boston 
 
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    | "Drop" everything & give us this name for the portion of a roof that extends out over a supporting wall | (Barton: What is eavestrough?) ...
 (Alex: [*], yes, not an "eavesdrop".)
 
 an eaves
 
 
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    | This type of restaurant has specialized cuts of meat | (Sam: What is a striphouse?) ...
 [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 chophouse
 
 
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    | Josephine Esther Mentzer was the birth name of this founder of a fragrance & cosmetics empire | Estée Lauder 
 
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    | According to the title of a book by Giles Andreae, these animals "can't dance" | giraffes 
 
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    | This textured plaster used in ancient Greece & Aztec Mexico may not provide much insulation but is a great fire resister | (Adrian: What is... asbestos?) 
 stucco
 
 
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