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Alas, my love, this famous English tune is mentioned twice in "The Merry Wives of Windsor" |
"Greensleeves"
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Interstate 95 runs through this state from the Canadian border at New Brunswick to Portsmouth, New Hampshire |
Maine
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"Up" this if you want to see the ocean's surface while still underwater in a submarine |
a periscope
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1970: "A Man Called Horse" |
Richard Harris
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Protesting slavery, Thoreau refused to pay his poll tax & landed in jail, an act of this, the title of his 1849 essay |
civil disobedience
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A Boy Scout might carry his supplies in one of these on his back |
a backpack (knapsack)
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On Nov. 7, 1997 his presidential library opened at Texas A&M in College Station |
(Miriam: Who is Bush?) (Alex: Yes. Which one?) (Miriam: George, the senior one.)
George Bush the senior one
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The high resolution type of this microscope can be used to magnify objects up to 1 million times |
an electron microscope
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1955: "The Man with the Golden Arm" |
Frank Sinatra
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In 1990 this co-founder of the Eagles founded the Walden Wood Project to protect it from development |
Don Henley
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On this Jewish holiday, the candles of the menorrah are lit by a separate candle called a shammash |
Hanukkah
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Performers of this pair's operettas are called Savoyard |
Gilbert & Sullivan
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With 45 million gallons, this city's Shedd Aquarium on Lake Michigan is the world's largest indoor aquarium |
Chicago
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2001: "The Man Who Wasn't There" |
Billy Bob Thornton
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"Economy", the first part of "Walden", says, "The mass of men lead lives of" this |
quiet desperation
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Real last name of Darth Vader in the "Star Wars" films |
(Scott: What is Anakin?)
Skywalker
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Waltz King Johann Strauss wrote "Morgenblatter", or "Morning Papers", for an association of these in Vienna |
journalists
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While traveling through the southwest, stop in at John Price's UFO Enigma Museum on Main Street in this city |
Roswell, New Mexico
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Navigators "shoot the Sun" using this small handheld instrument invented around 1730 |
a sextant
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1966: "A Man For All Seasons" |
Paul Scofield
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Thoreau built his cabin on the shore of Walden Pond on land owned by this writer, his close friend |
Emerson
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This slipper with a soft sole resembles the deerskin Eskimo boot for which it's named |
(Scott: What is a mukmuk?)
a mukluk
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Originally sonata meant a piece to be played & this meant a piece to be sung, from the Latin for "to sing" |
a cantata
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The state capitol building in this U.S. city is decorated with murals by Thomas Hart Benton |
(Alex: I notice you three are staying away from "K"2. It's not as difficult as it sounds. Each correct response contains two K's. That's what the category's all about.) (Scott: You made me, Alex. "K"2 for $400.
Jefferson City
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With a 394-inch mirror, the Keck Telescope on this Hawaiian volcano is the world's largest optical telescope |
(Scott: What is Mauna Loa?) (Mary: What is Kilauea?)
Mauna Kea
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1988: "Tucker: The Man and his Dream" |
(Scott: Who is Bridges? [*]?)
Jeff Bridges
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By living in a cabin at Walden Pond, Thoreau enacted the doctrines of this philosophical movement he belonged to |
transcendentalism
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The name of this spicy German sausage means "cracked sausage" for the sound it makes when one bites into it |
knockwurst
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