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    | As a youngster his family called him "Teedie" | Teddy Roosevelt 
 
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    | In Seattle, a 1-mile-long transportation system of this type still remains from its fair | a monorail 
 
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    | His "Nachtmusik" is lost but "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" survives | Mozart 
 
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    | The Bonneville Dam on this river has special ladders for salmon to use | the Columbia 
 
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    | She wrote some 1,775 of these but only 7 were published during her life | poems 
 
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    | This New Zealand fruit can be eaten with the skin on, but it's advisable to rub off the fuzz first | a kiwi fruit 
 
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    | The 18th, 19th & 20th presidents, Grant, Hayes & Garfield, were all born in this state | Ohio 
 
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    | This city's 1964-65 World's Fair wasn't sanctioned by the Bureau International des Expositions | New York 
 
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    | His operas "Manon Lescaut" & "La Boheme" both premiered at the Teatro Regio in Turin | Puccini 
 
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    | Only about 20 miles of this 252-mile-long river that runs through Rome is navigable | (Abraham: What is the Po?) (Roger: What is the Arno?)
 
 the Tiber
 
 
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    | The longest trip of Emily's life was to Washington, D.C., where her father was serving as a Whig in this | Congress 
 
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    | With its firm, dark- fleshed fruit, it's the leading variety of fresh sweet cherries | a Bing cherry 
 
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    | In 1933 he became the last president whose term of office ended on March 4 | (Roger: Who is FDR?) 
 Hoover
 
 
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    | This city hosted World's Fairs in 1855, 1867, 1878, 1889, 1900 & 1931 | Paris 
 
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    | Orlando Gibbons died 2 months after conducting music for the funeral of this first Stuart king | James I 
 
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    | This lake is shared by Uganda, Kenya & Tanzania | Lake Victoria 
 
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    | Born December 10, 1830, she was the third generation of her family born in this Massachusetts town | Amherst 
 
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    | In mythology this reddish fruit with hundreds of seeds is a symbol of Persephone | the pomegranate 
 
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    | From 1830 to 1833, he served as mayor of Greeneville, Tennessee | (Andrew) Johnson 
 
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    | The 25-story Sunsphere from the 1982 fair still towers over this Tennessee city | Knoxville 
 
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    | This composer's father, George Ives, was a military bandleader during the Civil War | Charles Ives 
 
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    | Touraine, an area famous for its chateaux, lies in this river's valley | the Loire 
 
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    | In 1851 Emily attended a concert by this "Swedish Nightingale" on her only American tour | (Steve: Who was Lillie Langtry?) 
 Jenny Lind
 
 
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    | Used as a topping for peach Melba, Melba sauce is made mainly of this fruit | (Roger: What is apple?) (Alex: No, sorry. Obviously you're not a big peach Melba fan. [*] is the correct response.)
 
 raspberries
 
 
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    | When the Prince of Wales visited the White House in 1860, this president had to sleep in the hallway | Buchanan 
 
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    | Expo 70, the first World's Fair in Asia, was held in this Japanese city | Osaka 
 
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    | His sister Adelheid Wette wrote the libretto for his opera "Hansel und Gretel" | Englebert Humperdinck 
 
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    | It's the Churun, a tributary of this Venezuelan river, that flows over angel falls | the Orinoco 
 
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    | Emily wrote, "Success is counted sweetest by those who ne'er" do this | (Steve: What is fail?) 
 succeed
 
 
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    | The name of this small golden fruit is from the Latin for "early ripening" | apricot 
 
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