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  | ARE YOU READY FOR SOME FOOTBALL? |  
   
 
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    | Psychiatrist is fascinated by stable boy's mutilation of horses | 
    Equus
 
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    | The original Levi's with a button fly have had this number since 1890 | 
    501s
 
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    | Though she was executed by royal order in 1587, her son became King James I of England in 1603 | 
    Mary, Queen of Scots
 
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    | This type of home loan converts home equity into cash; you have to be 62 or older to qualify for the one from the FHA | 
    a reverse mortgage
 
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    | Distance from the equator measured in degrees | 
    latitude
 
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    | This Ivy League university was undefeated in 1912 & 1913 & was named national champion both years | 
    Harvard
 
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    | Young lovers, both in trouble, are forced to flee, & (what do you know!) both end up in the Forest of Arden | 
    (Jared: What is A Midsummer Night's Dream?) (Todd: What is... Romeo and Juliet?)
  As You Like It
 
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    | James Thomas Brudenell's title gave this classic buttoned sweater its name | 
    (Alex: Yes--Lord [*].)
  a cardigan
 
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    | In 1867 Harper & Brothers made Mary Louise Booth the first editor of this fashionable magazine | 
    Harper's Bazaar
 
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    | In knitting this basic stitch is the reverse of the knit stitch | 
    the purl
 
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    | A "kid" who lets himself in after school because his parents are working | 
    latchkey
 
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    | In 2013 this Green Bay quarterback signed a 5-year, $110-million deal making him the highest-paid NFLer ever | 
    Aaron Rodgers
 
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    | The Youngers get a $10,000 insurance check & leave their apartment to move into the all-white Clybourne Park neighborhood | 
    A Raisin in the Sun
 
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    | This nautical device is depicted on the buttons of genuine navy pea coats | 
    an anchor
 
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    | Once excommunicated by the Bishop of Adelaide, Mary MacKillop became the first Catholic st. of this country | 
    (Jared: What is Ireland?)
  Australia
 
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    | A phrase meaning a 180 in your situation, or a film with Jeremy Irons & Glenn Close as Claus & Sunny von Bulow | 
    Reversal of Fortune
 
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    | Applesauce & sour cream are 2 traditional accompaniments to these potato pancakes | 
    latkes
 
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    | This school gave birth to the football huddle in the 1890s, when players huddled up to hide their sign language | 
    (Alex: Hurry.) (Todd: I don't have it.)
  Gallaudet
 
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    | Recently deceased mathematician leaves behind huge discovery; or was it his daughter? | 
    Proof
 
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    | This girls' shoe with a girl's name has a strap that buttons or buckles | 
    a Mary Jane
 
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    | Later a U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson served as this nation's president from 1990 to 1997 | 
    (Alex: Less than a minute now, Jared.)
  Ireland
 
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    | It's the process in which pure water is produced by forcing waste through a semipermeable membrane | 
    reverse osmosis
 
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    | This open framework of metal or wood is usually overlapped in a crisscross pattern | 
    lattice
 
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    | 91,136 fans can watch this college team play home games in Pasadena | 
    (Jared: What are the USC Trojans?)
  UCLA (Bruins)
 
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    | Psychic Madame Arcati is no "coward"; she summons the ghost of Charles Condomine's ex, to hilarious effect | 
    Blithe Spirit
 
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    | Traditionally, the shirt named for this British sport has broad stripes in 2 colors, a white collar & rubber buttons | 
    (Jared: What is a [*] shirt?)
  rugby
 
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    | Like Florence Nightingale, Jamaican nurse Mary Seacole cared for British troops during this conflict | 
    the Crimean War
 
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    | A body such as Venus that moves in the opposite direction of other members of the solar system has this kind of motion | 
    retrograde
 
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    | A center of artistic & student life, this quarter is on the south bank of the Seine | 
    the Latin Quarter
 
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    | The 17 members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's first class in 1963 included this 1912 Olympian | 
    Jim Thorpe
 
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