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    | In May, peasants rioted, breaking into rice storehouses in Edo, Osaka & other cities in this country | Japan 
 
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    | Bacon bits & fat are typically substituted for mayonnaise in this ethnic group's potato salad | (Kate: Who are Jews?) (Alex: We've got a minute to go in the round.)
 
 German
 
 
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    | This politician's last film, "The Killers", was made for TV but shown in theaters because of its violence | Ronald Reagan 
 
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    | If a train "leaves the metals", it's done this | derailed (jumped the track) 
 
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    | On October 29, his opera "Don Giovanni" premiered at the National Theater in Prague | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 
 
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    | Foul-smelling "cabbage" that can be good to eat if you change the cooking water several times | (Dorothy: What is sauerkraut?) 
 skunk (or swamp) cabbage
 
 
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    | Movie which won its 2 Oscars for its music which included the following "Best Song": | [the song was "Moon River"] 
 Breakfast at Tiffany's
 
 
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    | It's what you're wearing when you put on your "Wellingtons" | boots 
 
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    | There was talk of summoning the Estates-General, this country's legislature, tho it hadn't met in some 170 years | France 
 
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    | Many consider this, Norman Mailer's 1st published novel, the best war novel to emerge from WWII | The Naked and the Dead 
 
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    | A freestone peach is one whose flesh doesn't do this | (Kate: What is fuzz?) (Pete: What is the flesh does not come off the pit?)
 
 cling
 
 
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    | 1974 film whose sound & visual effects shook up Charlton Heston & Ava Gardner | Earthquake 
 
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    | A British woman might be upset to be told she has a "ladder", which is this | run in her hose 
 
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    | 2 of 3 states that ratified the Constitution in 1787 | (Kate: Who were Delaware &, um....[time] New Jersey?) (Dorothy: Who were Vermont &...[time]?)
 (Alex: Kate, you said New Jersey but time ran out on you, I'm sorry.)
 
 Delaware & New Jersey (& Pennsylvania)
 
 
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    | This school, Richard Nixon's alma mater, is named for a famous American Quaker poet | Whittier College 
 
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    | In 1920, Chas. Nordhoff & James Hall moved to Tahiti where they wrote this novel about a real event | Mutiny on the Bounty 
 
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    | These 2 widely consumed beverages were unknown in England until the 17th century | coffee and tea 
 
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    | 1964 Sophia Loren film originally titled "Ieri, Oggi, Domani" | Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow 
 
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    | Boxing Day, December 26, doesn't celebrate pugilism but gets its name from this custom | (Alex: Giving Christmas gifts away.) 
 giving gifts to working class people
 
 
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    | Thomas Lord, a Yorkshireman, opened a "ground" for playing this in London | (Pete: What is polo?) 
 cricket
 
 
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    | In 1960, Alabama Polytechnic Institute became this university | (Pete: What is the University of Alabama?) 
 Auburn
 
 
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    | "Giants in the Earth", a story of pioneer life in the Dakotas, was originally written in this language | (Pete: What was Swedish?) [end-of-round signal sounds]
 
 Norwegian
 
 
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    | 3 chicken parts that can be referred to as "giblets" | (Alex: And the neck, the feet, the wing tips & the kidney sometimes as well.) 
 heart, the liver and the gizzard
 
 
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    | Fred Astaire & Cyd Charisse starred in "Silk Stockings", a musical version of this 1939 comedy classic | Ninotchka 
 
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    | In British political folklore, the Gnomes of Zurich aren't dwarfs but these | Swiss bankers 
 
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