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    | In his last will & testament, this president left Mount Vernon to his nephew Bushrod | 
    George Washington
 
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    | A rapid piece with repetitive note patterns is called perpetuum mobile, Latin for "perpetual" this | 
    moving (or motion)
 
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    | Bullfighting memorabilia are displayed at the Museo Taurino in this European capital | 
    Madrid
 
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    | The F in the name of this criminal lawyer who defended Patty Hearst stands for Francis | 
    Bailey
 
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    | Italians call this fabric lino | 
    linen
 
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    | "Henry VI, Part 1" opens in this famous abbey | 
    Westminster
 
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    | His first radio chats were delivered while governor of New York | 
    Franklin Roosevelt
 
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    | Of allegretto, allegro or presto, the direction that means to play the fastest | 
    presto
 
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    | European city in which you'd find the museum at Checkpoint Charlie | 
    Berlin
 
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    | Later a Supreme Court justice, he headed the NAACP's legal defense fund for over 20 years | 
    Thurgood Marshall
 
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    | Nankeen is a durable, yellowish fabric that was originally handloomed in this country | 
    (Russ: What is India?)
  China
 
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    | "Antony and Cleopatra" begins & ends in this Egyptian city | 
    Alexandria
 
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    | This Republican defeated William Jennings Bryan in the elections of 1896 & 1900 | 
    McKinley
 
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    | The "ballad" type of this musical form usually has spoken dialogue, but "Hugh the Drover" is an exception | 
    (Dave: What is a folk song?)
  an opera
 
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    | The Cloisters, a branch of this New York City museum, is devoted to art of the Middle Ages | 
    the Metropolitan Museum of Art
 
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    | Before creating Perry Mason, he was a lawyer who specialized in defending indigent clients | 
    (Erle Stanley) Gardner
 
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    | Sateen, which has a satinlike finish, is usually made from this natural fiber | 
    cotton
 
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    | Much of "Titus Andronicus" is set in this Italian city that Titus describes as "a wilderness of tigers" | 
    Rome
 
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    | This U.S. president died in San Francisco on August 2, 1923 after an exhausting tour of Alaska | 
    Harding
 
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    | It's a system that coordinates mus. rhythms with body movements as well as an Annie Lennox rock group | 
    (Kathleen: What is choreography?)
  Eurythmics
 
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    | The Jasper County Historical Museum in Newton in this state has a Maytag washing machine exhibit | 
    Iowa
 
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    | He was a successful corporate lawyer before defending "Big Bill" Haywood & Leopold & Loeb | 
    (Clarence) Darrow
 
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    | Gros point de Venise, which features a bold pattern in very high relief, is a type of this delicate fabric | 
    lace
 
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    | Castle setting seen here; it's located on a sound that's the northern entrance to the Baltic Sea | 
    (Dave: What is Glamis?) (Alex: No, sorry. This is Hamlet's castle, [*].)
  Elsinore (or Helsingør, or Kronborg)
 
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    | This Whig was only the second U.S. president to have a middle name | 
    (Russ: Who was John Quincy Adams?)
  William Henry Harrison
 
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    | Divertimento is the Italian term for a musical diversion, & this is the French term | 
    divertissement
 
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    | The home of this author of "The Red Room" is now a museum in Stockholm | 
    August Strindberg
 
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    | Canadian lawyer Clarence Campbell served as the president of this sports league 1946-1977 | 
    the National Hockey League
 
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    | Napoleon said, "What is the throne?—a bit of wood gilded and covered with" this fabric | 
    velvet
 
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    | This comedy with an alliterative title is set in a park in Navarre | 
    Love's Labour's Lost
 
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