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    | It's thought that this patron saint of Ireland studied for the priesthood in Auxerre, France | St. Patrick 
 
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    | At Epcot, the Garden Grill Restaurant does this, giving diners a "moving" view of the ride below | rotate/revolve 
 
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    | A female sheep is called a ewe; this term refers to a male sheep | Ram 
 
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    | This German chemist for whom a gas burner is named developed a zinc-carbon electric cell | Robert Bunsen 
 
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    | This "knight" devotes himself to Aldonza Lorenzo, whom he calls Dulcinea Del Toboso | Don Quixote 
 
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    | "Rendez-Vous With Marlene" is Norwegian actress Torill's 1-woman musical about this late sex symbol | Marlene Dietrich 
 
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    | In 1680 this "Sun King" established France's national theatre, the Comedie Francaise | (K: Who is Louis?) (Alex: Which one?)
 (K: Louis...the 14th.)
 (Alex: ....right.)
 
 Louis XIV
 
 
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    | The name of this Belgian capital's La Quincaillerie means "The Hardware Store", & it used to be one | Brussels 
 
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    | Receptors on the bill of this duckbilled mammal can detect electric fields which guide it to its prey | Platypus 
 
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    | 21 years after developing an improved electric light, he invented the alkaline battery | (G: Who is Volta?) 
 Thomas Edison
 
 
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    | Marlow, an adventurer, appears in several works by this author, including "Lord Jim" | Joseph Conrad 
 
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    | This "Gandhi" star named his son for 19th century actor Edmund Kean, whom he played in a 1-man show | Ben Kingsley 
 
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    | The July 1, 1899 will of this Cape Colony's prime minister formed the basis of his scholarship program | Cecil Rhodes 
 
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    | Name shared by a fish restaurant in New York City's East Village & a sign of the zodiac | Pisces 
 
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    | The name of this large rodent is from the middle French for "pig with spines" | Porcupine 
 
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    | In 1810 English inventor Peter Durand patented the idea of using food storage cans plated with this element | Tin 
 
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    | Her "Northanger Abbey" centers on Catherine Morland, a country parson's daughter | Jane Austen 
 
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    | This star of horror films like "House Of Wax" waxed poetic as Oscar Wilde in "Diversions And Delights" | Vincent Price 
 
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    | Of Henry VIII's 6 wives, 1 of 2 who survived him | Anne of Cleves & Catherine Parr 
 
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    | Planet Hollywood's Chicken Crunch is coated with a batter made from this "nautical" cereal | Captain Crunch 
 
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    | Quagga is a South African name for the Burchell's species of this horse relative | Zebra 
 
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    | His father developed a phonetic "visible speech" system used for teaching the deaf | Alexander Graham Bell 
 
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    | In 1970 C. Northcote Parkinson wrote a biography of this naval hero created by C.S. Forester | Horatio Hornblower 
 
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    | Once "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.", Napoleon Solo, he went solo as FDR in a 1977 show | Robert Vaughn 
 
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    | This first prime minister of Israel was born in 1886 in Plonsk, Russia, now a part of Poland | David Ben-Gurion 
 
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    | This star of the film "Gigi" owns La Lucarne Aux Chouettes, a restaurant & inn, in her native France | Leslie Caron 
 
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    | Weighing around a ton, the eland is the largest species of this animal in Africa | Antelope 
 
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    | In 1929 this electrical engineer became an Italian marquis | (Gerard: Who is Volta?) (Kim: Who is Tesla?)
 
 Guglielmo Marconi
 
 
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    | "Young" title character of a Hawthorne tale who discovers his neighbors practicing witchcraft | Young Goodman Brown 
 
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    | "Full Gallop" stars Mary Louise Wilson as this late, flamboyant fashion editor who was always in vogue | Diana Vreeland 
 
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