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    | During the Cold War, the CIA had this Pasternak novel printed in Russian & given to Soviet citizens as propaganda | Doctor Zhivago 
 
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    | This fictional libertine appeared in 1630's "El burlador de Sevilla" ("The Seducer of Seville") | Don Juan 
 
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    | Intensely bright, or a type of bulb with a warm yellow glow | incandescent 
 
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    | April 4, 1968 in Memphis
 | Martin Luther King Jr. 
 
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    | In 2010 one of these measuring a whopping 8 inches across fell to Earth in Vivian, South Dakota | (Sharon: What is an asteroid?) (Niels: What is a meteorite?)
 ...
 (Alex: That size not impressive for a meteorite, but [*], [*] 8-inches across.  Ooh, pain.)
 
 a hailstone
 
 
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    | This husband of Barbra Streisand screen-tested to play Bond in "Octopussy" | James Brolin 
 
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    | Familial titles from Chekhov include "The Three Sisters" & this one subtitled "Scenes from Country Life in Four Acts" | (Niels: Uh, what are pastorals?) 
 Uncle Vanya
 
 
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    | Term for a pair of beloveds, or the conversational candy seen here | sweethearts 
 
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    | The biblical golden calf is an example of this forbidden practice | idolatry 
 
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    | November 24, 1963 at Parkland Memorial Hospital
 | (Niels: Who is JFK?) ...
 (Alex: We're not talking about November 22nd, but November 24th and that was not JFK but [*].)
 
 Lee Harvey Oswald
 
 
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    | In 1926, the year before his historic crossing, he twice parachuted to safety while delivering airmail | (Charles) Lindbergh 
 
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    | He's been "Luther" & "Mandela", & some say it's time to make him the first black Bond | Idris Elba 
 
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    | His verse novel "Eugene Onegin" is set in 1820s imperial Russia | Pushkin 
 
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    | On the back of the envelope of a love letter, write "S.W.A.K.", short for this | (Niels: What is [**]?) [Originally ruled incorrect; reversed before Final Jeopardy!]
 ...
 (Alex: With less than a minute to go now.)
 
 sealed with a kiss (sent with a kiss accepted)
 
 
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    | You can buy gold in coins or bars, which are often called these | (Niels: What are investments?) 
 ingots
 
 
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    | February 3, 1959 in an Iowa cornfield (one of 3 musicians)
 | the Big Bopper (or Buddy Holly or Ritchie Valens) 
 
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    | The Perseid meteor shower occurs each August, when the Earth passes through the orbit of Swift-Tuttle, one of these | a comet 
 
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    | A candidate to play Bond at the start was this suave superstar who did capers like "To Catch a Thief" & "Charade" | Cary Grant 
 
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    | His "Notes from the Underground" was written in response to a utopian novel called "What Is to Be Done?" | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Dostoevsky
 
 
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    | Perhaps a poem will be inspired by seeing in Greek the name of this muse of love poetry 
 Ἐρατώ
 | (Niels: Who is Eros?) 
 Erato
 
 
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    | IPA, the golden brew originally shipped from England to Asia, is short for this | India pale ale 
 
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    | October 31, 1926 in Detroit, of peritonitis from a stomach injury
 | Houdini 
 
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    | In 1966 71.8 inches of rain fell in 24 hours on this Indian Ocean island that sounds like where classmates might get together | Reunion 
 
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    | The rumors won't go away that this star of "The Knick" & "Children of Men" might be Bond | Clive Owen 
 
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    | Britannica calls this Roman poet's "Ars Amatoria" "a manual of seduction and intrigue for the man about town" | Ovid 
 
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    | Gilding was a big part of this process of adorning medieval manuscripts | illuminating 
 
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    | April 18, 1955 in Princeton, New Jersey
 | (Alex: Pulled that one out of thin air, didn't you?) 
 Einstein
 
 
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    | Perhaps caused by a tornado, a strange rain of these sporting objects fell on Punta Gorda, Florida in 1969 | golf balls 
 
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    | This Aussie actor does have a 4-letter "B" name, which would have made for great he "is Bond!" posters | Eric Bana 
 
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