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    | A coin placed under this vertical sail-holder brings good luck | 
    a mast
 
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    | In Adelaide "ankle biters" are these people | 
    children
 
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    | His travels took him from Venice to Asia & back again (1271-1295); he died in Venice in 1324 | 
    Marco Polo
 
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    | This country boasts North America's highest point at 20,320 feet | 
    the United States
 
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    | Since 2001 John Hurt has played Mr. Ollivander, an eccentric wandmaker, in this film series | 
    Harry Potter
 
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    | Located in the skin & other tissues, pain receptors are the ends of these fiber bundles | 
    nerves
 
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    | The seam around a ship's hull was called this, so you might get caught between it & the deep blue sea | 
    the devil
 
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    | This name of a "Sweet Little" gal of song is also Australian slang for a young woman | 
    Sheila
 
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    | Temujin was the original name of this conqueror & ruler from the steppes who died in 1227 | 
    Genghis Khan
 
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    | Africa tops out in this country | 
    (Jessie: What is Kenya?) ... (Alex: [*]. Mt. Kilimanjaro, correct.)
  Tanzania
 
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    | In the 2011 TV movie "Too Big to Fail", William Hurt played this GOP Treasury Chief who helped bail out Wall Street | 
    (Henry) Paulson
 
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    | From Latin for "crushing", it's a fancy term for a bruise | 
    (Jay: What is hematoma?) (Lloyd: What is maceration?)
  a contusion
 
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    | Be careful with any Finns on board--olden sailors say they're these, a word for specifically male witches or wizards | 
    (Jessie: What is a mage?)
  warlocks
 
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    | A blanket or bedroll is also called by this female name mentioned by the singing jolly swagman | 
    Matilda
 
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    | This founder of a private detective agency in Chicago was born in Scotland--which, ironically, he fled to avoid arrest | 
    (Allan) Pinkerton
 
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    | About 57,000 square miles, it's the smaller of the 2 countries that share Asia's peak peak | 
    Nepal
 
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    | The 2011 Broadway revival "The House of Blue Leaves" features Mary Beth Hurt alongside this star nurse/mobster's wife | 
    Edie Falco
 
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    | Luxation is another term for this often painful misalignment of a joint, perhaps a shoulder | 
    a dislocation
 
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    | A sailor's afterlife of wine, women & song is called this musician's "green" | 
    a Fiddler's Green
 
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    | If you get a busy signal in Brisbane, the line is said to be this premarital term | 
    (Alex: Yes, just like you!)
  engaged
 
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    | In 1514 this Spanish explorer was made military governor of Bimini & Florida | 
    (Alex: Yes, that's right.  Never found the Fountain of Youth, but wound up as governor.  Go again.)
  Poncé de Leon
 
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    | Mount Aconcagua is the highest you can get on this continent | 
    South America
 
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    | John Hurt reprised the role of Quentin Crisp for 2009's "An Englishman in" this U.S. city | 
    New York
 
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    | Rogaine won't repair this stress-induced pain also called a capillary fracture | 
    (Jessie: Uh, what is... um... uh...) ... (Alex: When you say "Rogaine", you think of hair...  Baldness.  So it's [*].)
  a hairline fracture
 
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    | A 2005 book is titled these: "Tales of Abandoned, Doomed & Haunted Vessels" | 
    Ghost Ships
 
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    | If you stick your nose in other people's business, you're a "sticky" this bird part | 
    beak
 
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    | An excise officer in England, he hunted for smugglers & collected taxes before coming to America & writing "The Crisis" | 
    Thomas Paine
 
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    | Europe's high point is 18,510-foot Mount Elbrus in this country | 
    Russia
 
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    | Making this film in Brazil in 1985, William Hurt was kidnapped at gunpoint; that's one hard-earned Oscar | 
    Kiss of the Spider Woman
 
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    | Pain originating in one part of the body but felt in another is called this, like a patient who's sent from another doctor | 
    referred pain (referral accepted)
 
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