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    | In 1893, New Zealand became the first country to give women this right | 
    the right to vote
 
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    | In 1931, Ferde Grofe was "suite" on this natural wonder | 
    the Grand Canyon
 
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    | Of a musical instrument, horse-drawn vehicle, or type of wine, what a "Zinfandel" is | 
    type of wine (red wine)
 
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    | Unit of electrical energy equal to 1,000 watts of power consumed for 1 hour | 
    (Sharon: What is kilowatt?) [Initially accepted as correct; reversed prior to Final Jeopardy!, when Alex mentioned that Sharon forgot the "hour" part of the correct response, hence the score change.]
  kilowatt hour
 
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    | Flag of this Asian nation, with symbol resembling the yin-yang, will fly at '88 Olympics there | 
    South Korea
 
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    | Playing Tom Hanks' brother, this big man made a big splash in "Splash" | 
    John Candy
 
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    | The 2 countries, which, in 1964, merged to form Tanzania | 
    Tanganyika & Zanzibar
 
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    | Though inspired by his stay in the U.S., this Dvorak symphony uses no American folk songs | 
    (Alex: We've got less than a minute to go in the round.)
  the New World Symphony
 
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    | Describing something as "piscine" means it resembles this | 
    (Ty: What is a pig?)
  a fish
 
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    | First unfurled after Hawaii's statehood, it's flown officially since 1960 | 
    50-star flag
 
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    | Nickname of Ferdinand Morton, who claimed to have invented jazz in 1902 | 
    "Jelly Roll"
 
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    | During World War II, the United States ruled this island on behalf of Denmark | 
    (Sharon: What are the Virgin Islands?)
  Greenland
 
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    | Respighi wrote symphonic poems about this city's pines & fountains | 
    Rome
 
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    | A nose that is "retrousse" is said to do this | 
    (Carl: What is droop?) ... (Alex: Just the opposite, Carl; it's a nose that  [*] at the end, not one that goes down.)
  turns up
 
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    | A large collection of these triangular tapering flags is found at 161 St. in the Bronx, NYC | 
    pennants (at Yankee Stadium)
 
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    | In 1977, this corpulent crooner came onto the pop scene like a "bat out of hell" | 
    Meat Loaf
 
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    | In 1858, the British government took over control of India from this company | 
    (Ty: What is the East India Company?) (Alex: Be a little more specific.) (Ty: The East India Trading Company?) (Alex: No.)
  The British East India Company
 
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    | This work by Sibelius aroused such patriotism that it was banned at times by ruling czarist regime | 
    Finlandia
 
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    | "Defenestration" is the act of getting rid of an unwanted guest by doing this | 
    (Carl: What is throwing him out?) (Alex: Be more specific.) (Carl: What is throwing him out of the door?) (Alex: Sorry, that is wrong. "Fenestration", "Fenestrate," the window; [*]. Woosh! So you lose 500 bucks, but you're, uh, still in control of the board. Go again.)
  throwing him out the window
 
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    | These sub-atomic particles form the smallest units of electricity | 
    electrons
 
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    | Among international code flags, a yellow flag indicates this health warning | 
    quarantine
 
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    | In 1971, he was "chiefly" responsible for instituting busing to end school segregation | 
    (Alex: You're gonna love this one or you're gonna hate this one: "Who is Chief Justice [*]?") [Carl groans as audience laughs at the response] (Alex: Yeah, I know, Carl. You can give us another "oooh" if you want, another groan.)
  Warren Burger
 
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    | America's "Open Door Policy" of the late 19th century pertained to trade with this country | 
    (Carl: What is Japan?) ... (Alex: You were in the right part of the world, Carl, but the correct response is "What is [*]?". But you select again.)
  China
 
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    | Resulting from a trip to Spain, this rhapsody brought wide recognition to Chabrier | 
    EspaƱa Rhapsody
 
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    | "Segniorage" is the profit a government makes by doing this | 
    making coins
 
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    | In honor of its inventor, a Galvanometer measures current in these units | 
    (Carl: What are ohms?) ... [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  amperes
 
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    | 1 of 2 southern states on whose state flag the Confederate Battle flag can be seen | 
    (Ty: What is Alabama?)
  (1 of) Georgia or Mississippi
 
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    | This actress shot her way into the heart of Robert Redford in "The Natural" | 
    Barbara Hershey
 
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