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    | 10 days before it was seized, the Marquis de Sade was moved from this prison for creating a disturbance | 
    the Bastille
 
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    | This Islamic holy book is divided into 114 sections called suras | 
    the Quran
 
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    | Attu in this Alaskan chain has only about a dozen clear days a year | 
    the Aleutians
 
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    | On Jan. 4, 1995 this Georgia Republican became Speaker of the House of Representatives | 
    Gingrich
 
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    | Aeschylus' tragic trilogy "Oresteia" won 1st prize at this Greek city's Great Dionysia Festival in 458 B.C. | 
    Athens
 
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    | The general society of this ship's descendants is headquartered in Plymouth, Massachusetts | 
    the Mayflower
 
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    | In English this 1792 song begins, "Arise you children of our homeland" | 
    "The Marseillaise"
 
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    | What is popularly called the Mormon church is officially "The Church of Jesus Christ of" these | 
    Latter-Day Saints
 
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    | This island is about 50 times the size of Denmark, but has only about 1% as many people | 
    Greenland
 
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    | On June 9, 1990 the son of this then New York governor married the daughter of Robert F. Kennedy | 
    Cuomo
 
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    | Shakespeare play in which Antonio asks, "Well, Shylock, shall we be beholden to you?" | 
    The Merchant of Venice
 
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    | In 1898 Haakon Nyhuus reorganized this Norwegian city's Deichman Library | 
    Oslo
 
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    | 4 months after this man's 1793 assassination, David presented a painting of it to the convention | 
    (Jean-Paul) Marat
 
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    | During Sukkot, one of this faith's 3 pilgrim festivals, temporary shelters are built | 
    Judaism
 
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    | This nation consists of most of the Greater & Lesser Sunda Islands, the Moluccas & part of New Guinea | 
    Indonesia
 
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    | This Missouri Democrat is the House minority leader | 
    Gephardt
 
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    | Ilya Ilyich Telyegin, whose nickname is "Waffles", appears in this playwright's "Uncle Vanya" | 
    Chekhov
 
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    | The beans of this "chocolate" tree were once used as money in Mexico & Central America | 
    cacao
 
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    | In 1789 this doctor called for humane decapitation by a single blow | 
    Guillotine (Guillotin)
 
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    | This 1962-63 Roman Catholic council was the first in church history to issue no condemnations | 
    Vatican II
 
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    | In antiquity this Spanish island group in the Atlantic was known as the Fortunate isles | 
    the Canarys
 
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    | Evan Bayh, governor of this state, is the son of former U.S. Senator Birch Bayh | 
    (Tom: What is Utah?)
  Indiana
 
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    | Part of his 1920s play "Strange Interlude" takes place in a small university town in New England | 
    Eugene O'Neill
 
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    | Stanislaw I was ousted as this country's king in 1709 & again in the 1730s | 
    Poland
 
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    | Robespierre was president of this club named for the convent in which it met | 
    the Jacobin Club
 
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    | Kes-Dhari are the followers of this Indian religion who do not cut their hair | 
    Sikh
 
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    | Sark in this island group off the coast of France is the smallest self-governing British possession | 
    the Channel Islands
 
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    | This West Virginian has served in the Senate longer than any present Democrat | 
    (Robert) Byrd
 
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    | Beth Henley wrote her 1st play, "Am I Blue", while a drama student at this private Dallas university | 
    SMU (Southern Methodist)
 
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    | This dry, warm wind blowing down the east slopes of the Rockies is sometimes called a "snow eater" | 
    (Jeffrey: What is a sirocco?)
  the Chinook
 
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