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    | When caught as a spy in September of 1776, he was disguised as a Dutch schoolteacher | 
    Nathan Hale
 
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    | This university has campuses at Tuscaloosa, Huntsville & Birmingham | 
    University of Alabama
 
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    | A composer's works are often numbered & appear with the abbreviation Op., which stands for this | 
    Opus
 
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    | This founder of the American Red Cross also founded one of New Jersey's first public schools | 
    Clara Barton
 
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    | Victoria, the capital of British Columbia, is located on this island | 
    Vancouver Island
 
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    | A defrocked minister-turned-tour guide is the leading character in his play "The Night of the Iguana" | 
    Tennessee Williams
 
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    | During the last years of the revolution, he worked on his "Notes on the State of Virginia" | 
    Thomas Jefferson
 
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    | Churchill College is one of 31 residential colleges at this British university | 
    Cambridge
 
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    | Earlier composers used these large drums in pairs; modern composers may use 3 or more | 
    Timpani
 
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    | A candidate for vice president in 1984, she ran for the Senate in 1992 | 
    Geraldine Ferraro
 
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    | What Argentina calls the Islas Malvinas, England calls this | 
    Falkland Islands
 
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    | He was a writer for "The Garry Moore Show" when he began his first play "Come Blow Your Horn" | 
    (less than a minute to go, Gordon...)
  Neil Simon
 
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    | He protested the Stamp Act through his widely circulated copper engravings | 
    Paul Revere
 
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    | The oldest U.S. university west of the Alleghenies is Transylvania University, at Lexington, in this state | 
    Kentucky
 
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    | Styles of music in the titles of the JVC & Playboy festivals | 
    Jazz
 
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    | Urged by Louis Leakey, she went to Africa to study mountain gorillas in 1966 | 
    Dian Fossey
 
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    | The last pureblooded Aborigine on this Australian island died in 1876 | 
    Tasmania
 
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    | "Plutus" is the latest extant play by this master of ancient Greek comedy who gave us "The Birds" | 
    Aristophanes
 
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    | About 60% of the essays in "The Federalist" were written by him | 
    Alexander Hamilton
 
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    | The University of Cape Town is on the grounds of Groote Schuur, the estate of this 19th century diamond king | 
    Cecil Rhodes
 
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    | Sousa wrote "Semper Fidelis" during the 12 years he directed this group | 
    Marine Corps Marching Band
 
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    | In 1975 a New Jersey park was named for this swimmer of the English Channel | 
    Gertrude Ederle
 
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    | This unincorporated U.S. territory includes the islands of Olosega, Ofu & Tutuila | 
    American Samoa
 
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    | The women in his play "Three Tall Women" are known by the letters "A", "B" & "C", not by names | 
    Edward Albee
 
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    | In 1770, this future president defended the British soldiers accused in the Boston Massacre & won the case | 
    John Adams
 
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    | Established in 1881, this Atlanta college is America's oldest college for black women | 
    Spelman College
 
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    | After his 1901 opera "Feuersnot" flopped, he found a wild story, "Salome" | 
    Richard Strauss
 
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    | As well as MADD, she founded SADD, Students Against Driving Drunk | 
    Candy Lightner
 
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    | Mount Fengari, the highest point in the Aegean, is on this island, famous for its "Winged Victory" statue | 
    (Bruce: What is Rhodes?)
  Samothrace
 
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    | "Master Harold...and the Boys" was the first of this South African's plays to premiere in the United States | 
    Athol Fugard
 
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