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    | Of Cambridge, Oxford & the University of London, the one with the most students | 
    the University of London
 
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    | Scaring fans & critics alike, Vincent Price announced in '86 that he'll retire from this film genre | 
    the horror film
 
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    | In the Confederate Army only Samuel Cooper & Albert Sidney Johnston ranked higher than him | 
    [NOTE: This was the 500,000th clue entered into the J! Archive, on 2023-08-08.]
  Robert E. Lee
 
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    | Before his career "Dawned", he made his TV debut singing "halfway to paradise"-with his fly open | 
    Tony Orlando
 
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    | From 1944-1946, while a doctor in the Navy, he wrote "The Common Sense Book of Baby & Child Care" | 
    Dr. Benjamin Spock
 
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    | This organization collects & distributes more blood than any other U.S. agency | 
    the Red Cross
 
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    | It's England's national summer sport | 
    cricket
 
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    | Before spurning Scarlett O'Hara he was scarlet himself, in "The Scarlet Pimpernel" | 
    (Kerry: Who is Clark Gable?)
  Leslie Howard
 
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    | The Union often named battles after the nearest stream while the rebels named them after this | 
    the nearest town
 
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    | This Beatle is sole owner of the rights to all the songs Buddy Holly wrote | 
    Paul McCartney
 
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    | His "Animal Farm" satirized the Russian revolution | 
    Orwell
 
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    | From Greek "topos" or place, it's art of trimming trees & shrubs into animal or ornamental shapes | 
    topiary
 
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    | Though it's as far north as parts of Siberia, England is much warmer due to winds warmed by this current | 
    the Gulf Stream
 
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    | Seeing himself in "A Passage to India", this TV "smiley" lost his smile & left for the men's room | 
    (Alex: Yes, he was upset with the way the director had edited the work.)
  Alec Guinness
 
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    | In song, he "died that the slaves might be free" | 
    (Sally: Who is Jesus?)
  John Brown
 
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    | 1 of 2 Creedence Clearwater Revival top 10 hits whose titles are questions ending with the word "rain" | 
    "Who'll Stop The Rain" (or "Have You Ever Seen The Rain")
 
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    | "Diary of a Genius" is what this Spanish surrealist modestly titled his 1965 autobiography | 
    Salvador Dali
 
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    | 2-wheeled 1-seat carriage used in harness racing, or adjective describing jockey who's sore at losing | 
    a sulky
 
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    | A memorial to John F. Kennedy, not King John, is at this historically significant site | 
    Runnymede
 
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    | This Oscar-winner watched electric shock treatments to prepare for her role in "The Snake Pit" | 
    Olivia de Havilland
 
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    | When capital of Confederacy moved to Virginia, representatives of this state had best reason to complain | 
    (Hank: What was Mississippi?) (Alex: No, sorry. The capital was in Montgomery, [*]. Then it moved to Richmond, Virginia. We've got less than a minute to go.)
  Alabama
 
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    | 4 years after singing Oscar-winning "The Morning After", she was a secy. in Marina Del Rey, California | 
    (Alex: She is no longer a secretary, by the way. She's back on Broadway and doing very well. [*].)
  Maureen McGovern
 
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    | Though best known for "The Jungle", which is set in Chicago, he was a 3-time candidate for Gov. of Calif. | 
    (Upton) Sinclair
 
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    | Making the national Nielsen "Top 10" 19 times, this film has been shown 27 times in 30 years | 
    [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  The Wizard of Oz
 
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    | There's a statue of Lady Godiva in this city where she supposedly made her 11th cent. ride | 
    Coventry
 
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    | 1944's "Cobra Woman" who said, "When I look at myself, I am so beautiful, I scream with joy" | 
    Maria Montez
 
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    | Bloodiest single-day battle of the war was fought at this Maryland site | 
    Antietam
 
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    | In the '50s, "Silhouettes" was the only hit for The Rays, while this was the only hit for The Silhouettes | 
    "Get A Job"
 
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    | In 1831, having worked on it for over 58 years, Goethe finally completed this, his masterpiece | 
    Faust
 
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