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  | THOSE PHABULOUS PHOENICIANS |  |
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    | An authority on card & board games, his last name completes the expression, "According to..." | Hoyle 
 
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    | This Colorado resort city was named for a type of poplar tree growing in the area | Aspen 
 
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    | This granddaughter of George III became queen of England in 1837 | Victoria 
 
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    | As can be seen thru a telescope, the sizes of this red planet's polar ice caps change with the seasons | Mars 
 
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    | This sensuous Hawaiian dance evolved from a religious form to a hip story-telling device | the hula 
 
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    | The Phoenician city of Berytus is known known by this name | Beirut 
 
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    | In 1850 he left the Chicago police force, having started his own national detective agency | Pinkerton 
 
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    | This South Dakota capital was named for a French fur trader | Pierre 
 
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    | Hefty king whose sister Mary was the grandmother of Lady Jane Grey | Henry VIII 
 
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    | 17 days after this planet was discovered in 1846, William Lassell found one of its satellites, Triton | Neptune 
 
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    | Formerly called Ballet Society, it changed its name in 1948 when it gave its 1st performance at City Center | (George: What is Ballet Theatre?) 
 the New York City Ballet
 
 
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    | The ancient city of Byblos was known for its production of this material, hence bible, meaning book | papyrus 
 
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    | After setting up shop in Hollywood, he developed the first make-up for films | Max Factor 
 
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    | In population it's the second-largest city on the Pacific Coast | San Diego 
 
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    | This castle, where the Royal family goes for Grouse shooting, was built in the Scottish Baronial style | Balmoral 
 
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    | Streaming out of coronal holes, it causes comet tails to point away from the sun | solar wind 
 
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    | Irene & Vernon "strolled" their way to fame with this dance | (Alex: They were The Castles, and their dance was [*].) 
 the Castle Walk
 
 
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    | Seaport city known for its very expensive purple dye | Tyre 
 
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    | In 1817 he founded America's first free school for the deaf in Hartford, Conn. | (George: Who is Alexander Graham Bell?) 
 Thomas Gallaudet
 
 
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    | Oliver H. Perry's flagship, the Niagara, can be seen on the lakefront of this Pennsylvania city | Erie 
 
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    | After she was born in March 1990 a hotline was set up offering the Palace's pronunciation of her name | (Elaine: Who is Beatrice?) 
 Princess Eugenie
 
 
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    | Its twisting back & forth as it orbits Jupiter generates heat & drives its volcanoes | Io 
 
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    | This dance associated with sailors was named for the instrument accompanying it | the hornpipe 
 
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    | The Phoenicians were known for this skill; even the Greeks called the North Star the Phoenician Star | navigation 
 
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    | She served as president of the Girl Scouts until 1920, when she was given the title of founder | (Juliette) Low 
 
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    | Michigan City is not in Michigan but in this state to the south | Indiana 
 
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    | He had at least 13 illegitimate children--a "Merry Monarch" indeed | Charles II 
 
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    | When he found Venus had phases like the moon, he cautiously announced it in the form of an anagram | Galileo 
 
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    | This founder of an American ballet troupe was born Abdullah Jaffa Bey Khan | (George: Who is George Balanchine?) 
 Robert Joffrey
 
 
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    | Zeno, a Phoenician, founded this "Greek" school of philosophy | Stoicism 
 
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