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    | Ernest Rutherford, the first to split this central part of the atom, doubted you could get power by doing so | Nucleus 
 
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    | This team's home, the Pontiac Silverdome, is the NFL's largest stadium with a seating capacity of over 80,000 | Detroit Lions 
 
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    | She was born in 1946, the year her mother Judy Garland starred in "The Harvey Girls" | Liza Minnelli 
 
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    | Composer Jean-Baptiste Lully brought this French country dance to Louis XIV's court | Minuet 
 
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    | Item removed with the device seen here: (holds papers together)
 | Staples (stapler) 
 
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    | In 1998 it was in the news that particles called neutrinos do have this -- perhaps a millionth of an electron's | (Greg: What is charge?) 
 mass
 
 
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    | This team's Marv Levy is the only coach to lead his team to 4 straight Super Bowl appearances | Buffalo Bills 
 
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    | The Duchess of Bedford introduced the beloved British custom of afternoon tea in this century | 19th century 
 
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    | Then the largest church in the Christian world, this basilica was dedicated in 1626 | St. Peter's Basilica 
 
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    | Term for a person who okays projects with no discussion, or the object illiustrated here: | Rubber stamp 
 
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    | An iguana who's skilled at sorcery | Lizard wizard 
 
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    | It's not a great railway employee, it's a modern material in which electricity meets no resistance | (Greg: What is a perfect conductor?) 
 a superconductor
 
 
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    | She's written some of her romance novels under her married name, Barbara McCorquodale | Barbara Cartland 
 
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    | Now a museum, its Grande Galerie was completed by Henri IV around 1606 | (Alex: With less than a minute to go.) 
 the Louvre
 
 
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    | It's what the artwork seen here is warning you against doing with eggs: | Don't put all your eggs in one basket 
 
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    | Seat you sit on in a Parisian park | French bench 
 
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    | The M in maser, which preceded the laser, stands for these "waves" | Microwaves 
 
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    | This University of Kentucky quarterback was the first player picked in the NFL's 1999 draft | Tim Couch 
 
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    | Goalkeeper Gwen Cheeseman was part of the bronze medal-winning U.S. team in this sport at the 1984 Olympics | (Greg: What is soccer?) 
 field hockey
 
 
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    | This Dutch master was barely 22 in 1628 when he started teaching in Leiden | Rembrandt 
 
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    | A puzzle such as "Why did the violin cross the road?" | Fiddle riddle 
 
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    | This late quantum electrodynamics pioneer was also known for his memoir "Surely You're Joking..." | Richard Feynman 
 
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    | The Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio is on a street named for this longtime owner-coach | George S. Halas 
 
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    | "The Dying Swan" was a "cygnet"ure solo for this ballerina for whom it was created in 1905 | Anna Pavlova 
 
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    | This Dutch artist turned out "The Jolly Toper" & "The Laughing Cavalier" | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Frans Hals
 
 
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    | The thighbone of a Madagascar mammal | Lemur femur 
 
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