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    | In the 16th century, Dr. Ambroise Paré began treating wounds with egg yolk balm instead of with boiling this | oil 
 
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    | "Bob & Rhoda & Teddy & Mary" | The Mary Tyler Moore Show 
 
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    | In 1868 Red Cloud agreed to accept for this tribe a reservation in the Dakota Territory nearly as big as Pennsylvania | the Sioux 
 
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    | Vittorio Orlando represented this country at the meeting of the "Big Four" leaders in Paris in 1919 | Italy 
 
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    | Mary Ann Evans wrote under this pseudonym, partly to honor her lover | George Eliot 
 
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    | This blonde "Casino" actress serves as the rock associated with the coronation of Scottish kings | Sharon Stone of Scone 
 
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    | The greatest surgeon of his time, Dr. Paré began his career as the apprentice to this type of professional | a barber surgeon 
 
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    | "Lamont Goes African" | Sanford and Son 
 
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    | In 1820 Edwin James climbed a Colorado peak that was then named for him; today we call it this | Pikes Peak 
 
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    | It's the stadium where the Capital One Bowl is held each January in Orlando, Florida | the Citrus Bowl 
 
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    | Last name of Sidonie-Gabrielle, also her pen name | Colette 
 
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    | Hit duet for Sonny & Cher that was a pro golfer who married a pro wrestler in 1938 | (Dan: What is "I've Got You Babe Didrikson"?) (Alex: Yes!)
 [The judges resound, "No."]
 (Dan: Zaharias...?)
 (Alex: No?  No.  Sorry, Sorry...)
 ...
 (Alex: I think you said "I've Got You" and it's "I Got You Babe".  I assume that's why the judges were ruling against you.  Sorry about that.)
 
 "I Got You Babe Didrikson"
 
 
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    | Paré rejected such methods of this ancient physician as dropping the patient off a roof | [Alex giggles while reading the clue.] ...
 (Dan: Who is Galen?)
 ...
 (Alex: He was a lot funnier than Galen.)
 
 Hippocrates
 
 
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    | "Reuben Kincaid Lives" | The Partridge Family 
 
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    | In August of 1807 this steamboat made its first run, traveling from NYC to Albany | the Clermont 
 
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    | Orlando is the title hero/heroine of this author's 1928 time-traveling, gender-bending novel | Virginia Woolf 
 
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    | This Russian-American novelist published his early Russian works as V. Sirin | (Michael: Who is Isaac Asimov?) 
 Nabokov
 
 
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    | Viking leader of a colorful Stendhal classic | Eric the Red and the Black 
 
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    | Paré created trusses for patients troubled by this, doing away with an older treatment, castration | hernia 
 
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    | "Rerun Gets Married" | What's Happening!! 
 
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    | When completed in 1855, the Point Loma Lighthouse in this Southern California city was the USA's tallest at 462 feet | San Diego 
 
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    | Famed Westminster Abbey organist Orlando Gibbons performed at the funeral of this Stuart King in 1625 | James I 
 
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    | Playwright Jean-Baptiste Poquelin wrote under this nom de plume | Molière 
 
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    | Pioneering palimony suit brought by the singer of "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" | (Michael: Who is...) 
 Marvin v. Marvin Gaye
 
 
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    | To prevent this, i.e. heavy bleeding, Paré tied blood vessels instead of cauterizing them with hot irons | (Alex: And aren't you glad we are thanking Dr. Paré?  If we still had those cures, oh my gosh!) 
 hemorrhage
 
 
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    | "The Secret Life of Buddy and Sally" | The Dick Van Dyke Show 
 
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    | In 1875 this Republican was elected governor of Ohio; 17 months later, he took the oath of office as president | (Rutherford B.) Hayes 
 
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    | This word follows "Orlando" in the title of a 16th century epic poem by Ludovico Ariosto | (Jerome: What is Furiosuh?) (Alex: Ye--Say it again?)
 (Jerome: What--what is [*], Orlando [*]?)
 
 Furioso
 
 
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    | H.H. Munro published his stories under this potent potable name | Saki 
 
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    | General nicknamed "Old Fuss and Feathers" who replaced Ari Fleischer as White House Press Secretary | Winfield Scott McClellan 
 
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