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    | David Livingstone's body was interred in this London landmark in 1874 | 
    (Phil: What is Winchester Abbey?)
  Westminster Abbey
 
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    | Mr. Potato Head could tell you the 3 best-known polysaccharides are cellulose, glycogen & this | 
    starch
 
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    | Now 80, this "French Chef" says she'll go until she drops, & "that should be about 95" | 
    (Alex reads second half of clue imitating [*]'s voice.)
  Julia Child
 
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    | About 94% of this country's population belongs to the Han nationality | 
    China
 
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    | This American poet wrote several versions of his lament "Lenore" | 
    (Edgar Allan) Poe
 
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    | Duane Eddy, Andres Segovia & Chuck Berry | 
    a guitar
 
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    | In 1870 the first rubber company west of the Alleghenies was founded in Akron, Ohio by this man | 
    (Phil: Who is Goodyear?)
  Goodrich
 
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    | Used in rechargeable batteries & to protect other metals from corrosion, its symbol is Cd | 
    cadmium
 
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    | This comedienne got her start on TV as the girlfriend of Jerry Mahoney, & we're not pulling your ear! | 
    Carol Burnett
 
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    | This country's 4 geographical provinces are Connaught, Leinster, Munster & part of Ulster | 
    Ireland
 
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    | The 9th sect. of this Longfellow poem begins, "On the shores of Gitche Gumee, of the shining Big-Sea-Water" | 
    (Alex: We'll accept that for "Song of [*]")
  Hiawatha
 
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    | Ginger Baker, Karen Carpenter & Buddy Rich | 
    the drums
 
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    | This president ran for reelection in 1872 against fellow Republican Horace Greeley, who was endorsed by the Democrats | 
    Grant
 
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    | An atom that loses one of these becomes a cation, a positively charged ion | 
    an electron
 
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    | It's the first name of cartoonist Guisewite, or her famous comic strip | 
    Cathy
 
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    | The Gallipoli Peninsula, a site of major action in WWI, is part of this country | 
    Turkey
 
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    | T.S. Eliot asked "Do I dare to eat a peach" in this title character's "Love Song" | 
    J. Alfred Prufrock
 
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    | Toots Thielmans, Larry Addler & Stevie Wonder | 
    (Renny: What is the piano?) (Michael: What is the synthesizer?) (Phil: What is the organ?) (Alex: What is [*] That's the one instrument in common to all three.)
  the harmonica
 
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    | In 1893 this labor leader founded the American Railway Union | 
    (Eugene) Debs
 
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    | Burn a piece of sodium in a flask filled with chlorine gas & the resulting white powder is this | 
    (Alex: [*] or sodium chloride, yes.)
  salt
 
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    | The original Gibson Girl, Irene Langhorne Gibson, was an older sister of this American-born British "Lady" | 
    Lady (Nancy) Astor
 
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    | Bob Hawke served as prime minister of this country from 1983 to 1991 | 
    Australia
 
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    | Books in this Tennyson work include "Merlin and Vivien" & "Lancelot and Elaine" | 
    "The Idylls of the King"
 
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    | Annie Whitehead, Kid Ory & Tommy Dorsey | 
    the trombone
 
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    | On Jan. 5, 1895, in front of French troops, he was stripped of his buttons & badges & had his sword broken | 
    Alfred Dreyfus
 
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    | This semiconducting element makes up 27.7% of the mass of the earth's crust | 
    silicon
 
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    | She founded the Elsa Wild Animal Appeal in England in 1961& in the U.S. in 1969 | 
    (Michael: Who is Dian Fossey?)
  Joy Adamson
 
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    | The Bryan-Chamorro treaty of 1914 gave the U.S. the right to build a canal thru this Central American country | 
    (Michael: What is Panama?)
  Nicaragua
 
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    | "Ah but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?" is from his "Andrea Del Sarto" | 
    Robert Browning
 
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    | Freddy Martin, Boots Randolph & John Coltrane | 
    the saxophone
 
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