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When the Greeks destroyed this city in Asia Minor around 1200 B.C., they weren't horsing around |
Troy
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While cows & goats keep theirs for life, deer shed them each year |
horns
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Mayor considered possible Democratic V.P. candidate during convention in her city |
Dianne Feinstein
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This Soviet foreign minister has at least 2 copies of every Dolly Parton record |
Andrei Gromyko
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Weapon wielded by the farmer's wife on 3 blind mice |
(Bill: What is a butcher knife?)
a carving knife
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Both a type of bird & a flower share this "heavenly" name |
(Bill: What is a sunflower?)
bird of paradise
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Greek & Roman name for a stone coffin |
a sarcophagus
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The horned toad is really one of these |
a lizard
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Before becoming California's Rep. senator, he was mayor of San Diego |
Pete Wilson
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2 years before Lincoln freed slaves, Czar Alexander II freed these victims of feudal system |
the serfs
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Weapon featured each week in the opening of "Mission Impossible" |
a bomb
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In Jolson song, "it isn't raining rain, you know, it's raining" these |
violets
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Under the Ptolemies, this city had the greatest library in ancient world, over 700,000 scrolls |
Alexandria
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The largest member of the camel family in South America |
a llama
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She dressed like a Blues Brother when Aykroyd & Belushi made their movie in Chicago |
(Jane) Byrne
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This song, a major hit in the late '60s, derives from an old Russian folk song:
"Once upon a time there was a tavern / Where we used to raise a glass or two" |
"Those Were The Days"
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It might not have a money-back guarantee, but it can always return itself |
a boomerang
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Though this flower is associated with weakness, its name comes from the French for "thought" |
a pansy
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Zoroastrianism was the religion of this ancient empire |
(Rick: What was Greece?) (Bill: What is ancient China?)
the Persian Empire
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Kinds include the dik-dik & the bongo of the Congo |
(Bill: What are monkeys?) (Rick: What are deer, or [*]?)
antelopes
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Philadelphia's "law & order" mayor until '80, he's now with the city's gasworks |
Frank Rizzo
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After spending 17 years in the West, she recently returned to Russia |
Stalin's daughter (Svetlana)
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Gaucho's weapon of long pieces of rope with up to three stones or balls attached |
a bola
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Anna Jarvis, considered founder of Mother's Day, wore this flower on that day |
a carnation
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Romans called them "Punic Wars" because Carthage had been founded by these people |
(Rick: Who are the Carthaginians?) ... (Alex: Less than a minute to go.)
the Phoenicians
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Killer whales are the largest of these |
porpoises (dolphins)
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One of the first Blacks to become a big city mayor, he's serving his 5th term as mayor of Gary, Indiana |
(Bill: Who is Mayor Hatch?)
Richard Hatcher
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The successful & unsuccessful weapons in Hitchcock's "Dial M for Murder" |
(Rick: What are a knife and a pair of scissors?) (Alex: Oh, sorry. You got the [**] correctly, but the [*] was the other one. [*]. The man tried to strangle her. She stabbed him with the [**].)
the stocking & scissors
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Though Gilbert & Sullivan made her "sweet", cattle won't eat this flower because it's bitter |
(Bill: What is a dandelion?) [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
a buttercup
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