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REAL NAMES ON THE MARQUEE |
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In the 1390s King John I of Castile & King John I of Aragon both died by falling from these animals |
horses
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This daughter of Ronald Reagan ran fifth in the 1982 California primary for the U.S. Senate |
Maureen Reagan
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These rubber boots are called wellies for short |
wellingtons
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His writings include the 1920 publication "Relativity: The Special and General Theory" |
Albert Einstein
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He's a lumberjack & he's okay, his footprints became the Great Lakes |
Paul Bunyan
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Ruth Elizabeth Davis & Lucille Le Sueur in "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?" |
[ERRATUM: LeSueur is the surname.]
Bette Davis & Joan Crawford
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Joachim of Fiore divided history into 3 ages: the ages of the Father, the Son & this entity |
Holy Ghost
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On Dec. 19, 1974 this former New York governor became vice president under the 25th Amendment |
Nelson Rockefeller
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British theatregoers call it the interval |
(Will: What is the [*]?) [Will's response was ruled incorrect and the decision was reversed in the second segment.]
intermission (*entr'acte)
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Past winners of this annual event include Bob Verini & Bob Blake |
(Hugh: What is the, uh, Tournament of Champions?) (Alex: On?)
Tournament of Champions on Jeopardy!
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You might say that the source of this biblical hero's strength was hair today, gone tomorrow |
Samson
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Maria Farrow & Ruth Jones in "Rosemary's Baby" |
(Hugh: Who are, um, Mia Farrow and...?)
Mia Farrow & Ruth Gordon
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Ancus Marcius, the legendary fourth king of this city, may have been the grandson of Numa Pompilus |
Rome
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In 1960s this senator from Arizona published "The Conscience of a Conservative" |
Barry Goldwater
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Order candy floss at an amusement park & you'll get this fluffy confection |
cotton candy
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"A Gardener Touched with Genius" is Peter Dreyer's book on this American hoticulturist |
Luther Burbank
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A Big Bad one in song saved miners, a Little one in Sherwood Forest was a Merry Man |
John
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Frederick Auserlitz & Virginia McMath in "Flying Down to Rio" |
(Hugh: Who's um, Fred Astaire and uh, Fred Astaire and uh...?) ... (Alex: Hugh is great at getting that first one out but has trouble and gets stuck on that second one.)
Fred Astaire & Ginger Rodgers
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In 1616 this Native American created a sensation in London, where she was known as Lady Rebecca |
Pocahontas
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Son of a U.S. president, he served as a senator from Ohio from 1939 until his death in 1953 |
Robert Taft
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Brits call this part of a car the silencer |
muffler
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Blaise Pascal is said to have mastered this Greek mathematician's "Elements" by age 12 |
(Hugh: Who is Pascal?) (Marilyn: Who is Aristotle?)
Euclid
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Name shared by a Titan & a former 97-pound runt |
Atlas
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Greta Gustafsson & Melvin Hesselberg in "Ninotchka" |
[Applause] (Alex: Right! And you got it in this time. Way to go!)
Greta Garbo & Melvyn Douglas
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2-word "seasonal" term given to the time of reform in Czechoslovakia after March 22, 1968 |
Prague Spring
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This state's Mark Hatfield is the ranking Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee |
Oregon
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The ancient name for this city was Mancunium & a person from it is still called a Mancunian |
Manchester
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After this coil inventor moved to America, he worked briefly with another genius—Thomas Edison |
(Will: Who is uh, Marconi?) (Hugh: Who is Watt?)
Nikola Tesla
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This "Mania"-creating wrestler was born Terry Gene Bollea in 1953 |
Hulk Hogan
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Bernard Schwartz & Jeanette Morrison in "Houdini" |
Tony Curtis & Janet Leigh
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