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  | CHARACTERS IN DICKENS BOOKS |  |
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    | Fan, Mr. Fezziwig,
 Bob Cratchit
 | "A Christmas Carol" 
 
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    | What's up Doc?  The bestselling postage stamp of 1997 featured this cartoon character | Bugs Bunny 
 
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    | Considered your largest organ, it's waterproof, somewhat stretchy & covers you from head to toe | Skin 
 
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    | A major reason for his invasion of Persia in 334 B.C. was to cover the debt left by his father, Philip II | Alexander the Great 
 
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    | In 1998, after 27 years in the "Monday Night Football" booth, he gave up his seat to Boomer Esiason | Frank Gifford 
 
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    | This subspecies of the peach has been called a peach without fuzz | Nectarine 
 
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    | Master Charles Bates, Mr. Bumble,
 Bill Sikes
 | "Oliver Twist" 
 
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    | The stamp seen here, part of the "Celebrate the Century" series, honors the creation of this (4 down, for example) in 1913 | Crossword puzzle 
 
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    | Remember, it's in this largest part of the brain that learning & remembering take place | (Alex Weathers: What is the cerebellum?) 
 Cerebrum
 
 
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    | At least a dozen of this Babylonian king's 282 laws dealt with wages & fee rates | Hammurabi 
 
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    | This Cubs broadcaster, who took millions of fans out to the ballgame, died in 1998 | Harry Caray 
 
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    | Duo heard here: ("Shake Your Groove Thing")
 | (Alex Weathers: Who are Peaches and Cream?) 
 Peaches and Herb
 
 
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    | Monsieur the Marquis, Charles Darnay,
 Lucie Manette
 | "A Tale of Two Cities" 
 
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    | The first U.S. stamp bore portraits of George Washington & this first postmaster general | Ben Franklin 
 
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    | Put your hand on your hip & you can feel your ilium, part of this bony structure from the Greek for "bowl" | Pelvis 
 
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    | This Cretan civilization dominated the Aegean world until about 1450 B.C. | Minoan 
 
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    | Bob Griese was in the broadcast booth as son Brian led this team to victory in the 1998 Rose Bowl | Michigan 
 
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    | It's the dessert created & named for an opera singer | Peach Melba 
 
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    | Mr. Creakle, Peggotty,
 Mr. Micawber
 | "David Copperfield" 
 
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    | This painter was pictured on a 1940 stamp; his mother would have approved | James McNeill Whistler 
 
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    | No joke, it's the part of the body that contains vitreous humor & aqueous humor | Eye 
 
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    | Henry II, who succeeded Stephen as king of England in 1154, was the first monarch from this "house" | Plantagenet 
 
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    | L.A. Laker announcer Chick Hearn coined this 2-word term for a shot taken from above the rim | Slam dunk 
 
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    | Paul Terry was the title character in this 1996 movie about a boy and a piece of fruit | James and the Giant Peach 
 
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    | Dick Swiveller, Kit Nubbles,
 Little Nell Trent
 | (Andrew: What is "David Copperfield?") 
 "The Old Curiosity Shop"
 
 
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    | Jackie Robinson & this "King of Ragtime" have been featured on "Black Heritage" issues | Scott Joplin 
 
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    | Well-utilized by Elvis Presley, the levator labii superioris alaeque nasi is the muscle that curls this | Lip 
 
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    | The statue of him, a wonder of the ancient world, marked the site of the original Olympic games | Zeus 
 
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    | Now broadcast partners, Mary Carillo & John McEnroe won this event together at the 1977 French Open | Mixed doubles 
 
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    | In this poem, T.S. Eliot asked, "Do I dare to eat a peach?" | "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" 
 
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