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    | Delaware's deed, given to William Penn in 1682, resides in the Hall of Records in this Capitol | Dover 
 
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    | 1995: "Uma,
 Oprah.
 Oprah,
 Uma"
 | (Billy: Who is Billy Crystal?) 
 David Letterman
 
 
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    | She got a B.A. from Cornell in 1960 & an LL.B. from Harvard Law School in 1963 | Janet Reno 
 
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    | Also known as the Sacco chair, it was designed by Zanotta of Milan & featured a bag filled with plastic beads | a bean bag (chair) 
 
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    | In a Shakespeare play, Mamillius says, "A sad tale's best for" this season | winter 
 
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    | "Ugliness was the one reality", muses this Oscar Wilde title character | Dorian Gray 
 
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    | The name of this capital is another word for God's guidance | Providence 
 
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    | 1979: "Welcome to 2 hours of sparkling entertainment spread out over a 4-hour show"
 | [Audience laughter] (Alex: ...and that was the recently departed [*].)
 
 Johnny Carson
 
 
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    | This American journalist was embedded in Petrograd in 1917 during the "10 Days that Shook the World"
 | John Reed 
 
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    | Empire, the first major style of the 1800s, originated in this country during its First Empire, 1804-1814 | (Billy: What is the Ottoman?) 
 France
 
 
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    | The existential statement "Hell is other people" comes from this play | No Exit 
 
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    | This 1858 work was a landmark in its use of medical illustrations of the human body | Gray's Anatomy 
 
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    | The homes of Mark Twain & Harriet Beecher Stowe can be found in this state capital | Hartford 
 
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    | 1968: "Welcome to the Academy Awards, or, as it's known at my house, Passover"
 | [Laughter] (Bernard: Who is Jerry Lewis?)
 ...
 (Alex: Who was the late [*]?  At least the quotes are entertaining.)
 
 Bob Hope
 
 
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    | He's seen here performing in one of his own works | (Alex: Gotta remember the category.) 
 Jerome Robbins
 
 
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    | From a Latin word for "read", it's a slanted-top stand used to support a speaker's notes | (Billy: What is a podium?) 
 a lectern
 
 
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    | Besides "Cyrano de Bergerac", his best-remembered play is the patriotic tragedy "The Eaglet" | Edmond Rostand 
 
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    | On Oct. 7, 2003 Arnold terminated this man's stay in the governor's mansion | Gray Davis 
 
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    | The Old Barracks Museum in this capital was the location of a major turning point in the Revolutionary War | (Bernard: What is Albany?) 
 Trenton
 
 
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    | 2003: "It was so sweet backstage, you should see it.  The Teamsters are helping Michael Moore into the trunk of his limo"
 | [Audience again laughs] (Alex: ...that was [*]'s line.)
 
 Steve Martin
 
 
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    | This portraitist was born in Devon on July 16, 1723 | Sir Joshua Reynolds 
 
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    | From the French for "scaffold", it's a stand resembling a scaffold that has open shelves used for small curios | an étagère 
 
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    | 1949 play character who says, "Charley is... liked, but he's not--well liked" | Willy Loman 
 
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    | Sciurus carolinensis, it pretty much always feels like a nut | a gray squirrel 
 
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    | A planetarium in this capital bears the name of Christa McAuliffe, who died in the 1986 Challenger explosion | (Bernard: Uh, what is Tallahassee?) 
 Concord
 
 
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    | 1974: "Just think, the only laugh that man will probably ever get is for stripping and showing off his shortcomings" | (Alex: ...the famous scene where a streaker ran behind [*], who was hosting that year.) 
 David Niven
 
 
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    | This English furniture designer who followed Chippendale wrote his "Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide" in 1788 | (Billy: Who was Duncan Phyfe?) 
 Hepplewhite
 
 
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    | As the title implies, this play features an important arrival, that of Hickey in the saloon | (Jeff: [Shakes head] I don't know.) 
 The Iceman Cometh
 
 
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    | In the 1870s he invented elements of a telephone-like device | Elisha Gray 
 
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