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  | SHOPPING AROUND THE WORLD |  |
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    | Renee Taylor, who plays Fran Drescher's mom on this sitcom, writes plays with her husband Joseph Bologna | The Nanny 
 
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    | This colony founded by the Pilgrims was governed as a branch of the Separatist Church | Plymouth Colony 
 
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    | The U.S. Poet Laureate is officially a poetry consultant to this Washington, D.C. library | Library of Congress 
 
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    | At over 150 lbs., The Welcome Stranger, discovered in Australia, is the largest pure nugget of this | gold 
 
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    | Nathan Road on Kowloon is one of this British colony's best-known shopping streets | Hong Kong 
 
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    | This novelist's brother Alec Waugh wrote the novel "The Loom of Youth" at the youthful age of 17 | Evelyn Waugh 
 
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    | This movie "Jerk" won 2 Outer Critics Circle Awards for his 1995 play "Picasso at the Lapin Agile" | Steve Martin 
 
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    | It was the name of FDR's domestic program to end The Great Depression | New Deal 
 
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    | With over 3 million volumes, the Carnegie Library in this city is one of Pennsylvania's largest | Pittsburgh 
 
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    | This element found in coal derives its name from the Latin word for "coal" | carbon 
 
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    | Plaza Las Americas in this U.S. commonwealth is the largest shopping mall in the Caribbean | Puerto Rico 
 
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    | In the early 1500s Sir Thomas Wyatt introduced this type of 14-line lyric poem to England | (Alex: Yes, a Petrarchan [*].) 
 sonnet
 
 
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    | She wrote her play "One Night Stands of a Noisy Passenger" 1 year before starring in "The Poseidon Adventure" | Shelley Winters 
 
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    | Before leading his famous expedition, Meriwether Lewis was this President's private secretary | Thomas Jefferson 
 
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    | Included in this London library's collections are 2 copies of the Magna Carta | British Library 
 
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    | This second-lightest gas has the lowest boiling point of any element | helium 
 
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    | Miyawaki Baisen-An, a famous shop in Kyoto, has sold these fluttering objects since 1823 | (Grace: What are kites?) 
 fans
 
 
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    | "Das Schloss" is the German title of this Kafka novel | (Scott: What is The Trial?) 
 The Castle
 
 
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    | In 1995 this wife & comedy partner of Jerry Stiller debuted her first play, "Afterplay" | Anne Meara 
 
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    | On Dec. 16, 1773 60 members of this patriotic group dressed as Mohawk Indians & dumped tea into Boston Harbor | (Scott: Who are the Minutemen?) 
 Sons of Liberty
 
 
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    | This city is home to the Mayo Patient Health Education Library | Rochester, Minnesota 
 
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    | A molecule of ammonia is made up of 3 hydrogen atoms & 1 atom of this element | (Alex: The element is NH4, so it's [*].) [Alex corrected it to NH3 before revealing the Final Jeopardy! clue.]
 
 nitrogen
 
 
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    | You'll find Gucci's original store on Via Tornabuoni in this Tuscan city | Florence 
 
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    | Catholic priest Alexis Kagame is known for writing in Kinyarwanda, the language of this, his native country | Rwanda 
 
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    | This co-star of "Jaws" & "The Sting" adapted the play "The Man in the Glass Booth" from his own novel | (Grace: Who is Paul Newman?) 
 (Robert) Shaw
 
 
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    | In August 1995 this labor leader stepped down as president of the AFL-CIO | Lane Kirkland 
 
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    | Washington, D.C. school that houses the Moorland-Spingarn & Channing Pollock collections | Howard University 
 
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    | Terbium & Yttrium were both named for the village of Ytterby in this Scandinavian country | (Scott: What is Norway?) ...
 (Alex: Scott, you did what you had to do.  You took a chance.)
 
 Sweden
 
 
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    | This country is famous for its hand-knit woolen sweaters, which you can purchase with its Krona, abbreviated Ikr | (Scott: What is Denmark?) 
 Iceland
 
 
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    | Chapter XII of his novel "Sons and Lovers" is entitled "Passion" | (D.H.) Lawrence 
 
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