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Time Out New York called "The Lightning Thief", a musical about this son of Poseidon, "worthy of the gods" |
Percy Jackson
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In person or online, you can tour his Hartford home where he wrote "Huckleberry Finn" |
Mark Twain
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Companies in this Midwest city include Gateway Metals, Gateway Title & Gateway Chili & Beans (okay, we made that last part up) |
St. Louis
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When this show opened, Hank Azaria played several roles including Sir Lancelot & a Knight of Ni |
Spamalot
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Canicular refers to this star aka Sirius |
the Dog Star
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He lived & wrote works like "To Have and Have Not" in the Key West home seen here |
Hemingway
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There are no roads or trails in Alaska's Gates of this region National Park |
Arctic
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Officially opened in 1994, this engineering marvel now allows for a less than 3-hour train trip from Paris to London |
the Chunnel
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Brown was supported by transcendentalist writers like Emerson & this friend who gave a "Plea for Captain John Brown" |
Thoreau
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Jessie Mueller took piano lessons to play this singer-songwriter in "Beautiful" |
Carole King
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Referring to wisdom, the adjective palladian comes from an alternate name for this Greek goddess |
(Alex: Yes, Pallas [*].)
Athena
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In the 1870s she & her family lived in a little dugout house near Walnut Grove, Minnesota on the banks of Plum Creek |
Laura Ingalls Wilder
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North of Pacifica & San Bruno, & just south of this city, Daly City, Calif. is the "Gateway to the Peninsula" |
San Francisco
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In 2007 this company unveiled its Dreamliner, a commercial jet made of 50% carbon-composite materials |
Boeing
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Kathleen Turner played cougar Mrs. Robinson to Jason Biggs' Benjamin Braddock in the Broadway adaptation of this film |
The Graduate
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Something that is quadragesimal happens during this period of the Catholic calendar |
Lent
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In 1842, he & his new bride moved into the old manse in Concord, Massachusetts, hence his "Mosses from an Old Manse" |
Nathaniel Hawthorne
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This Manitoba capital is Canada's "Gateway to the West" |
Winnipeg
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A howdah is a seat for one or more people to ride on the back of one of these creatures |
(Doug: What is a [**]?) (Alex: We'll accept that; [*] would've been more proper.)
elephant (camel)
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After an 1858 raid, this pres. put a $250 bounty on Brown, who in turn offered a reward of $2.50 for the capture of the pres. |
(Alex: Less than a minute now.)
Buchanan
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In 2014 this Lorraine Hansberry drama won the Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play |
A Raisin in the Sun
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Absinthial can mean related to this herb that is used to make absinthe |
(Daniella: What is anise?)
wormwood
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In 1972 his daughter Jill sold Rowan Oak, the family home in Oxford, to the University of Mississippi |
Faulkner
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Rostov-on-Don, Russia is the "Gateway" to this mountainous region between the Black & Caspian seas |
(Greg: What is the Cacausus?) [Greg's response was accepted as correct and the decision was reversed before the Daily Double at clue 13 as Alex stated the judges ruled that Greg changed the pronunciation substantially.]
Caucasus
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First used in Japan around 1870, this 2-wheeled cart pulled by a runner often had a hood to protect the passengers |
a rickshaw
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