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    | The British took New Netherland & New Amsterdam from the Dutch in 1664 & renamed them both this | New York 
 
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    | One of Marie Osmond's "favorite things" was playing Maria von Trapp in a national tour of this musical | The Sound of Music 
 
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    | Since 1909 his head has appeared on billions & billions of pennies | Lincoln 
 
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    | In 1730 he became sole owner of the Pennsylvania Gazette; he also printed it & wrote much of it himself | Benjamin Franklin 
 
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    | This assassin's 3rd, 4th & 5th vertebrae aren't in a Baltimore cemetery; they're at the National Museum of Health & Medicine | John Wilkes Booth 
 
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    | Chinese for "Buddha" (it's not fe, fi or fum) | (Maria: What is om?) 
 fo
 
 
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    | Carpenters in this colony's city of Savannah went on strike in 1746 for better working conditions | Georgia 
 
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    | In "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown", this kid famous for his security blanket sings "My Blanket And Me" | Linus 
 
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    | According to its website, this chain serves more than a billion "finger lickin' good" chicken dinners annually | Kentucky Fried Chicken 
 
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    | Born in Philadelphia in 1901, she would later graduate from Barnard & spend some time in Samoa | Margaret Mead 
 
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    | An American urologist is said to own a very important part of this French leader who died on May 5, 1821 | Napoleon 
 
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    | It's a bird! It's a plane!
 It's Superego & his sidekick, Ego, suppressing this
 | Id 
 
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    | The second of these legislatures drew up the Articles of Confederation | the Continental Congress 
 
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    | Chip is a chip off the old teapot in this musical based on a Disney film | Beauty and the Beast 
 
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    | Forbes magazine has estimated that this comic book boy is "worth" $24.7 billion | Richie Rich 
 
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    | After the White House, he retired to his Lancaster estate, where he died a bachelor in 1868 | (Alex: And I believe he was our only bachelor president.) 
 James Buchanan
 
 
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    | This lord protector's body was once buried in Westminster Abbey; it's believed his head is buried in Cambridge | Oliver Cromwell 
 
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    | A prefix meaning "out of", or informally, your former spouse | ex 
 
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    | For "traducing the ministers", Anne Hutchinson was among the first to be "banned in" this capital | Boston 
 
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    | This Mark Twain tale about a rich kid & a poor kid who trade places inspired a musical that opened off Broadway in 2002 | The Prince and the Pauper 
 
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    | The only event the Time Almanac has listed under 4.5 billion B.C. is this "formed" | Earth 
 
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    | Over 15 years, he created more than 200 paintings & drawings of his Chadds Ford neighbor Helga Testorf | (Andrew) Wyeth 
 
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    | General Lee said, "He has lost his left arm" (which was buried in Ellwood, Virginia) "but I have lost my right arm" | Stonewall Jackson 
 
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    | It's the 13th letter of the Greek alphabet, which is very old | nu 
 
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    | This alliterative name was given to the 1644 union of 4 Rhode Island towns | (Alex: Maria? Nothing coming to you?) (Maria: No.)
 
 Providence Plantations
 
 
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    | This fictional girl known for her red braids that stick out & her unusual legwear has her own "pip" of a musical | Pippi Longstocking 
 
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    | This eccentric billionaire formed an aircraft company in 1934 to design racers | Howard Hughes 
 
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    | Before he was "in control" as Secretary of State, he was senior military adviser to Henry Kissinger | Alexander Haig 
 
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    | P.T. Barnum didn't have this actress' leg to stand on when she refused his $10,000 offer for it | (Alex: And the famous French 1-legged actress--[*].) [ERRATUM: The story about P.T. Barnum offering money for her leg is apocryphal.  Her amputation was in 1915, while Barnum died in 1891.]
 
 Sarah Bernhardt
 
 
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    | This Italian river begins near Mount Viso | Po 
 
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