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  | LESSER-KNOWN NOBEL PRIZE LIT WINNERS |  
   
 
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    | Hello? Headquartered in Dallas, it's the USA's largest tele-communications company | 
    AT&T
 
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    | He's still in prison for the murders his "family" committed in August of 1969 | 
    Charles Manson
 
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    A rainbow, a horseshoe hung above a door, a 4-leaf clover | 
    lucky charms
 
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    | More people know this name as a deformed French literary character than as the name of the Italian who won the 1959 prize | 
    Quasimodo
 
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    | A time of year, or a stream of water | 
    spring
 
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    | It might be "risky business" for him to keep doing his own stunts after he turns 50 on July 3 | 
    Tom Cruise
 
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    | You'll find the logo seen here on products throughout this retailer's more than 4,700 stores in the United States & Mexico | 
    RadioShack
 
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    | For murdering a nurse from county Clare, in 1954 Michael Manning became the last person executed in this country | 
    Ireland
 
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    Janet Evanovich, Lilian Jackson Braun, Sue Grafton | 
    mystery writers
 
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    | The Nobel folks said the tales of Patrick White "introduced" this continent "into literature" | 
    Australia
 
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    | A ceremony at which a baby is named | 
    a christening
 
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    | When the real Slim Shady stands up, this rapper will turn 40 on October 17 | 
    Eminem
 
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    | Failing to live up to its name, this largest video rental chain filed for bankruptcy in 2010 | 
    Blockbuster
 
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    | Firearm in the nickname of murderous Jack McGurn-- rat-tat-tat! | 
    machine gun
 
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    A piano, a typewriter, Florida | 
    they all have keys
 
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    | Carl Spitteler of this Alpine country was honored in "appreciation of his epic, 'Olympian Spring'" | 
    Switzerland
 
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    | To attack with guns by way of airplane | 
    strafe
 
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    | Just in time for summer, this British prince turned 30 on June 21 | 
    Prince William
 
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    | AMR is the parent company of this airline that landed in new headquarters in Dallas/Fort Worth in 1979 | 
    (Ayana: What is United?) (Bridget: What is Continental?) (Margaret: What is Southwest?)
  American Airlines
 
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    | 1880s Manhattan killer Mike McGloin appears in this chronicle of Big Apple crime, both the book & the Leo DiCaprio movie | 
    Gangs of New York
 
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    Redwood, Mammoth Cave, Mesa Verde | 
    (Bridget: All places in California?)
  [At the start of Double Jeopardy! it was revealed that there is a small community called Mesa Verde in California, as well as a very small cave called Mammoth Cave, making Bridget's answer correct]
  national parks
 
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    | Bjornstjerne M. Bjornson was recognized for his poems, one of which became this song of Norway | 
    the national anthem
 
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    | An illegal wrestling move, or complete power over something | 
    a stranglehold
 
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    | Young Jethro on TV's "The Beverly Hillbillies", he turns 75 in December | 
    Max Baer Jr.
 
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    | This large retailer of imported furnishings & gifts began as a single store in the San Francisco Bay area | 
    Pier 1
 
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    | Confined to an insane asylum for an 1872 London murder, William Minor became a major contributor to this dictionary | 
    Oxford English Dictionary
 
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    Hurricanes, needles, Swiss cheese | 
    things with eyes
 
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    | This country's Wislawa Szymborska, the 1996 winner for her poetry, died in 2012 | 
    Poland
 
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    | Adjective for a worn-out garment or a flimsy excuse | 
    threadbare
 
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    | This former child star & 2-time best actress Oscar winner hits the big 5-0 on November 19 | 
    Jodie Foster
 
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