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  | THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WARS |  |
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  | EARLY AMERICAN CONSTRUCTION |  |
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  | WHAT KIND OF MOVIE ANIMAL ARE YOU? |  |
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    | Aptly, this author of "Tropic of Capricorn" was, in fact, a Capricorn | (Glenn: Who is James?) 
 (Henry) Miller
 
 
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    | "But mostly he watched with eager search the belfry-tower of the Old North Church" | Longfellow 
 
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    | This military man with a famous plan bested Albert Schweitzer, among others, to win the 1953 Nobel Peace Prize | (George C.) Marshall 
 
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    | To "hitch" this conveyance "to a star" means to dream big | a wagon 
 
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    | St. Luke's church in Va. is the USA's oldest continually standing building made of this--the third little pig had it right | brick 
 
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    | Mumble in "Happy Feet" | [Meredith selected the first clue.] 
 a penguin
 
 
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    | Capricorn is a goat who scales mountains, like this Capricorn who said in 1968, "I've been to the mountaintop" | Martin Luther King 
 
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    | "April is the cruellest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land" | (T.S.) Eliot 
 
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    | Nobody won the Peace Prize in 1939, but both Neville Chamberlain & this Munich Pact partner were nominated | (Alex: Hard to believe, but [*] was nominated for the Peace Prize.) 
 Adolf Hitler
 
 
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    | To commit irrevocably is to "cross" this Italian stream | the Rubicon 
 
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    | Now the governor's mansion, La Fortaleza in this U.S. territory was built by the Spanish in 1533 | Puerto Rico 
 
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    | Winter, who gets a new tail in a 2011 movie | a dolphin 
 
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    | With the typical patience of a Capricorn, she studied & was accepted by mountain gorillas in Rwanda | (Meredith: Uh, who is Jane Goodall?) ...
 (Alex: Jane Goodall was with the chimps, and we have less than a minute to deal with the last four clues.)
 
 (Dian) Fossey
 
 
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    | "The owl and the pussy-cat went to sea in a beautiful pea-green boat" | (Meredith: Who is Lewis Carroll?) 
 (Edward) Lear
 
 
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    | In 1922 Fridtjof Nansen beat out this Brit economist who'd opposed harsh economic reparations against Germany | (John Maynard) Keynes 
 
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    | If you're in your birthday suit, you're "naked as" this bird | a jaybird 
 
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    | Built between 200 B.C. & 500 A.D., the earthworks called the Hopewell Mounds are in this Great Lakes state | Ohio 
 
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    | Bonzo, one of Ronald Reagan's co-stars | a chimpanzee 
 
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    | In emergencies, Capricorns are resourceful, like this woman who nursed the wounded in the 1st Battle of Bull Run | (Glenn: Who is Florence Nightingale?) ...
 (Alex: [*], yes.  America.)
 
 Clara Barton
 
 
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    | "But, if thou spare to fling Excalibur, I will arise and slay thee with my hands" | (Alex: From "Le Morte d'Arthur" by [*].) 
 Tennyson
 
 
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    | Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler & this Hull House founder tied for first for the 1931 Peace Prize | Jane Addams 
 
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    | A cook who's almost done with a dish might "put it on" this alliterative place until it's needed | the back burner 
 
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    | This 16-letter science of tree-ring dating tells us a structure in Dedham, Mass. is the USA's oldest timber frame house | (Erin: Ugh.  What is ringology?) [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 dendrochronology
 
 
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    | Ben & Socrates in "Willard" | rats 
 
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    | John C. Fremont was glad to have this sure-footed Capricorn guiding him along the Oregon Trail in 1842 | Kit Carson 
 
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    | "Out of the cradle endlessly rocking, out of the mocking-bird's throat, the musical shuttle" | (Alex: That would be America's poet, [*].) 
 Walt Whitman
 
 
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    | In 1955 Dwight Eisenhower was a losing nominee despite his 1953 U.N. speech known as these "for Peace" | Atoms 
 
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    | "Lay on" this man, a line from Shakespeare, means "do your damnedest" | Macduff 
 
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    | Polynesia in 1967's "Doctor Dolittle" | a parrot 
 
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