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    | This river ends its 2,300-mile course just above St. Louis | the Missouri 
 
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    | This goofy cartoon moose often said, "Hey, Rocky, watch me pull a rabbit out of my hat" | Bullwinkle 
 
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    | Every 3,600 seconds | hourly 
 
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    | General Douglas MacArthur led the forces in support of South Korea until this president fired him in April 1951 | Truman 
 
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    | During a baseball game, the player who typically wears a chest-protecting pad | the catcher 
 
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    | One of the earliest accounts of the use of passwords is by Polybius, describing their use by this army around 150 B.C. | (John: What is the Spartan army?) (Mary Beth: What's the Athenian army?)
 
 the Roman army
 
 
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    | This Scandinavian city built on 14 islands is nicknamed the "Venice of the North" | Stockholm 
 
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    | This young stag locks horns with a rival to fight successfully for Faline's affection | Bambi 
 
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    | Time for the worm-catching bird | early 
 
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    | U.S. General "Rosie" O'Donnell commanded operations of B-29s, this type of plane | a bomber 
 
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    | Alan Gilbert & Valery Gergiev are 2 of these baton users | conductors 
 
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    | "Open sesame!" cried this man, & the hidden cave of the 40 thieves opened to him | (Mary Beth: Who is Aladdin?) 
 Ali Baba
 
 
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    | The smallest & shallowest of the world's 5 oceans is this one | the Arctic 
 
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    | Robert May was inspired by the Ugly Duckling & the way he'd been teased as a kid to create this Christmas misfit | Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer 
 
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    | It's the "F" before "AQ" | frequently 
 
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    | The forces of this organization were Korean & American, supplemented by troops from 15 other countries | the United Nations 
 
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    | In a 1949 comic book & a 1978 movie, he uses a chunk of kryptonite to mess with Superman | Lex Luthor 
 
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    | In "Horse Feathers", this man uses the password "swordfish" to get into a speakeasy | Groucho Marx 
 
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    | This 1,200-mile-long system of mountain ranges is home to the Barbary ground squirrel | the Atlas Mountains 
 
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    | In "The Pioneers", one of these "Tales", James Fenimore Cooper wrote that a buck "darted like a meteor" | The Leatherstocking Tales 
 
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    | The Greek speirein, to scatter or sow, is related to this synonym for "irregularly" that also starts with "sp" | sporadically 
 
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    | "War's End Near" said a jubilant U.S. headline on the capture of this metropolis October 19, 1950 | (Mary Beth: What is Saigon?) 
 Pyongyang
 
 
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    | In an operating room, this specialist uses a continuous flow Boyle's machine | the anesthesiologist 
 
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    | When Bill Clinton went digital, he chose this name of his dog as his password | (Alex: Minute to go.) 
 Buddy
 
 
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    | The city of Chiang Mai in this country is home to Baan Chang Elephant Park | Thailand 
 
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    | Jody's companion is a fawn named Flag in this novel by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings | The Yearling 
 
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    | It can mean "soon" or "in a rude or curt manner" | shortly 
 
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    | Protecting hydropower on this river was one reason China crossed it & entered the war in late 1950 | (Mary Beth: What is the Yellow River?) 
 Yalu River
 
 
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    | Man was no longer the one tool-using animal when in 1960 a chimp named David was observed using twigs to fish for these to snack on | (John: What are ants?) (Alex: Ants?  We'll accept that.  [*] also.)
 [John's response was ruled incorrect at the start of the Double Jeopardy! Round.  Alex explained that they were going for [*] or white ants, but "ants" was not acceptable.]
 
 termites
 
 
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    | The first computers to use passwords was probably this New England university's CTSS computer in the 1960s | MIT 
 
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