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  | PRESIDENTIAL MIDDLE NAMES |  |
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    | She accepted her Oscar for Best Actress shouting, "You like me! You like me!" | Sally Field 
 
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    | With only 4 ships, this neighbor of Australia had the smallest navy | New Zealand 
 
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    | Most living organisms have millions, but a prisoner only has one | a cell 
 
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    | You can get a knish at a Jewish one, or mozzarella at an Italian one | a delicatessen 
 
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    | In song, Davy Crockett was said to have "Kil't him a bar when he was only" this age | (Alex: And we have less than a minute to go in the round.) 
 three
 
 
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    | Completes Mae West line, "It's not the men in my life that count..." | it's the life in my men 
 
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    | The U.S. Navy had a ship whose sole purpose was to make this dessert | ice cream 
 
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    | A 5th C. B.C. Greek philosopher was 1st to theorize that all matter is made of these | atoms 
 
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    | From Latin for "repentance", San Quentin for example | a penitentiary 
 
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    | The original Smokey the Bear became a popular attraction at this city's zoo | (Alex: Yes, the National Zoo.) 
 Washington, D.C.
 
 
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    | His actual first name was Hiram while his middle name was Ulysses | Ulysses Grant 
 
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    | Romantic idol who said, "This king stuff is pure bull... I'm just a lucky slob from Ohio" | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Clark Gable
 
 
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    | In 1942, approaches to the Mississippi River were mined by this type of German vessel | a U-boat (or a submarine) 
 
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    | Term for creatures like vultures or hermit crabs that eat carcasses & refuse | a scavenger 
 
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    | Before 1934, the date for this was March 4; after 1934, January 20 | inauguration 
 
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    | The constellation Ursa Major, meaning the "great bear", is better known by this name | Big Dipper 
 
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    | This Axis leader had a complete set of dental tools taken everywhere he went | Hitler 
 
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    | Days & nights are always 12 hours long there | the equator 
 
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    | The univ. choral group whose theme song is the following: 
 "Yes, the magic of their singing /
 Of the songs we love so well /
 'Shall I Wasting' and 'Mavourneen' and the rest..."
 | the Whiffenpoofs 
 
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    | Bear who was featured in an exercise book with drawings by Ernest Shepard | Winnie-the-Pooh 
 
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    | Abram | (James Abram) Garfield 
 
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    | Over 5,000 of them were pilots in the Soviet air force | women 
 
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    | If you're studying mensuration, you're studying this | [Applause for the completion of the category] 
 measurement
 
 
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    | From the Latin for "bend the knees", not the cry of a ski instructor, but the act of showing reverence | genuflection 
 
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    | Few Americans got to see this mascot at the 1980 Olympics | (Susan: Who is the Soviet bear?) (Alex: Be more specific.)
 (Susan: Uh, don't know the bear's name.)
 (Alex: Sorry, I can't give it to you.)
 
 Misha
 
 
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