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    | Just months before George M. Cohan's death, this film about his life premiered | Yankee Doodle Dandy 
 
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    | In the film "Snoopy, Come Home", Snoopy almost leaves this boy to live with Lila, his original owner | Charlie Brown 
 
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    | This Chicago airport is named for a WWII ace who was listed as missing in 1943 | O'Hare 
 
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    | Mined in the Cumberland Plateau, the bituminous type of this is Tennessee's most valuable mineral | coal 
 
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    | The god of this potent potable is celebrated with a bacchanalia | (Ed: What is--who is Bacchus?) 
 wine
 
 
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    | Nomads often head to one of these desert places to find a date | an oasis 
 
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    | At an auction in New York, this sculptor's "The Thinker" sold for $9,500 | (Alex: Yes, how times have changed.) 
 Rodin
 
 
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    | Charles Schulz' son Monte's interest in WWI model airplanes inspired the strips about this Snoopy nemesis | the Red Baron 
 
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    | Just prior to the 1984 Summer Olympics, this airport opened its Tom Bradley International Terminal | LAX 
 
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    | In 1854 Tennessee's first railroad was completed between Nashville & this "choo-choo" city | Chattanooga 
 
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    | The American Heritage Dictionary calls it an autumn festival emphasizing merrymaking & beer drinking | Oktoberfest 
 
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    | Counting from 1, it's the first number to fit the category | eight 
 
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    | The Supreme Court ruled that divorces granted in this state were valid throughout the U.S. | Nevada 
 
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    | You can meet Snoopy at Camp Snoopy, which opened at this California theme park on July 1, 1983 | Knott's Berry Farm 
 
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    | When it opened in 1939, this New York City airport was called North Beach Airport | (Ed: What is JFK?) (Debby: What is Idlewild?)
 
 La Guardia
 
 
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    | Since the 1930s flooding of the Tennessee River has been controlled by dams built by this agency | the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) 
 
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    | It's a ceremonial dinner, or the type of hall in which it's held | a banquet 
 
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    | It means to listen to a private conversation without the speakers' knowledge | eavesdrop 
 
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    | On July 20 the first group of officers in this women's military unit began basic training in Iowa | the Women's Army Corps (the WACS) 
 
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    | Once, after a heavy snowstorm, Snoopy found that this little bird had built an igloo in his nest | Woodstock 
 
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    | An airport in Warm Springs, Georgia is named in memory of this president | [Debby said both names.] 
 Roosevelt (FDR)
 
 
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    | Sue K. Hicks, assistant prosecutor in the Scopes Monkey Trial, later inspired this Johnny Cash hit | "A Boy Named Sue" 
 
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    | On the Mexican kids' TV show "TVO", Gaby Ruffo sings about this, Spanish for the party or festival | fiesta 
 
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    | In 1983 this group featuring Annie Lennox hit No. 1 with "Sweet Dreams" | the Eurythmics 
 
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    | To the dismay of many countrymen, he was named Minister- President of Norway | (Ed: Who is Olof Palme?) 
 Vidkun Quisling
 
 
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    | Snoopy wears sunglasses & a turtleneck in his guise as this BBOC, or big beagle on campus | Joe Cool 
 
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    | This first man to break the sound barrier has an airport named for him in Charleston, West Virginia | Charles Yeager 
 
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    | Famous for its handicrafts, the resort town of Gatlinburg is located near the entrance to this nat'l park | Great Smoky 
 
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    | A noisy celebration for a collection of Boy Scouts | a jamboree 
 
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    | In 1865 Wellington replaced this city as capital of New Zealand | [Prior to this clue, Debby's score went from $700 to $800, and was at $1,300 after this clue, instead of $1,200, with no justification.  The scoring error was never corrected.] 
 Auckland
 
 
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