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    | It's a good thing he was born on "July12", 100 B.C., since the month was named for him | Julius Caesar 
 
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    | When this New England novelist died in 1864, vacationing with college chum F. Pierce, it was no "red letter" day | (Nathaniel) Hawthorne 
 
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    | Frank James Cooper | (Sandra: Who is Gary Cooper's father?) 
 Gary Cooper's real name
 
 
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    | The vines of this fruit were 1st grown in Europe in Cantalupo, Italy | (Sandra: What are grapes?) 
 cantaloupe
 
 
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    | Length of a regulation polo field, 3 football fields long | 300 yards 
 
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    | Japanese city whose police force numbers more than Chicago's & New York City's combined | Tokyo 
 
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    | On this date, the Israelis raided Entebbe Airport, 1 day before the U.S. bicentennial | July 3, 1976 
 
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    | Like his physician father, this author of "To Have & Have Not" committed suicide | Hemingway 
 
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    | One of his most famous roles was in this movie with the following theme: 
 [Instrumental theme plays.]
 | (Alex: "Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darling", yes, the theme from [*].) [The theme was not reprised going into the break.]
 
 High Noon
 
 
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    | Since camellias belong to this plant family, a stewardess might ask "coffee, camellia, or milk?" | (Alex: [After next clue selection] Less than a minute to go in the round.) 
 tea
 
 
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    | "Cop" may be from initials for "constable on patrol", or it may be short for this metal used for badges | copper 
 
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    | Bread had to be rationed in England beginning July 21, 1946 due to worldwide shortage of this | (Tim: What is yeast?) 
 wheat
 
 
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    | Defoe novel appropriate if you could have only 1 book when stranded on a desert island | Robinson Crusoe 
 
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    | As a real-life background for Westerns he made, he was born in this state's "Big Sky Country" | (Hank: What is Idaho?) 
 Montana
 
 
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    | Of a grass, shrub or tree, kind of plant sassafras is | (Hank: What is a grass?) (Tim What is a... shrub?)
 ...
 (Alex: Oh, you're so sharp on that one.)
 [Laughter]
 
 a tree
 
 
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    | From French for "men of arms", it can be a French policeman | gendarme 
 
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    | Evita's widower, he died on July 1, 1974 while president of Argentina again | Juan PerĂ³n 
 
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    | "All mimsy were the Borogroves" when the Jabberwock appeared in this Lewis Carroll book | (Tim: What is Alice in Wonderland?) 
 Through the Looking-Glass
 
 
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    | One of his earliest films was this, winner of 1st Oscar for Best Picture | Wings 
 
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    | Yellow flower of the genus "Tagetes", named for the Virgin Mary | a marigold 
 
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    | Despite their nickname, this famous North American force no longer patrols on horses | the Royal Canadian Mounted Police 
 
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    | The 10th Olympic games began in Los Angeles on July 30th of this year | (Sandra: What is 1984?) 
 1932
 
 
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    | Set in Hollywood, this Nathanael West novel ends with a riot at a movie premiere | [Sandra did not include the leading article in her response.] 
 The Day of the Locust
 
 
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    | Known for portraying the average man, his   character took this "average" name in a 1941 Frank Capra film | (Sandra: What is Mr. Smith?) (Hank: What is Meet [*]?)
 (Alex: [*] is the name, yes. Mr. Smith was played by Jimmy Stewart.)
 
 John Doe
 
 
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    | Polo comes from the Tibetan "pulu", meaning this important piece of equipment | (Tim: What is horse?) ...
 [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 ball
 
 
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    | Every 4 years, Dept. of Justice & this Cabinet dept. alternately provide head of U.S. office of Interpol | the Treasury Department 
 
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