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    | In July 1855 this collection of 12 poems by Walt Whitman was first published in Brooklyn | Leaves of Grass 
 
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    | In 1753 George Richmann was electrocuted trying to duplicate this man's lightning experiment | Franklin 
 
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    | In Africa it's the chief religion north of the Sahara | Islam 
 
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    | This athlete & her husband Al Joyner once won a trip to Jamaica on "The Newlywed Game" | Florence Griffith-Joyner 
 
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    | Founded in 1802, this Scottish city's Review was renowned for its political & literary criticism | Edinburgh 
 
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    | In Chausson's opera "King Arthur", this wife of Arthur strangles herself with her own hair | Guinevere 
 
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    | This "Trees" poet was killed in action in France on July 30, 1918 | Joyce Kilmer 
 
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    | Though expelled from Harvard, this geodesic dome inventor later held more than 2,000 patents | (Michael: Who is Art Buckminster Fuller?) [Michael is originally credited with a correct response, but this is corrected before the next Daily Double is played.]
 (Alex: "R." for Richard.)
 
 R. Buckminster Fuller
 
 
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    | About a fourth of this country's people live in the city of Amman | Jordan 
 
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    | This pianist has been called "The Clown Prince of Denmark" | (Victor) Borge 
 
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    | "Looking Good" & "Spotlight" are departments of this magazine whose name is the objective case of "We" | Us 
 
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    | In "Il trovatore", Lenora avoids marrying di Luna by swallowing poison from this piece of jewelry | her ring 
 
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    | On July 10, 1962 this communications satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral | Telstar 
 
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    | Bernard Lyot invented the coronagraph, allowing observation of this body's coronas | the sun 
 
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    | On Chad's flag the red stands for fire & unity, the yellow for the sun & the blue for this | (Sally: What is loyalty?) 
 the sky
 
 
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    | Bob Caron, the tail gunner on this plane that bombed Hiroshima, died in 1995 at age 75 | the Enola Gay 
 
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    | Born Martha Kostyra, she's really "Living" with her own magazine off cooking & decorating tips | Martha Stewart 
 
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    | In "La Muette de Portici", set in Naples, Fanella leaps into the mouth of this volcano | Vesuvius 
 
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    | In the 1948 convention of the States' Rights Party, Fielding Wright was selected as his running mate | (Strom) Thurmond 
 
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    | This German graf was largely responsible for inventing the rigid airship | Zeppelin 
 
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    | Of the more than 50 independent countries in Africa, it's the largest in area | the Sudan 
 
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    | He wrote & directed the 1950s film "The Seventh Seal", which i based on his own play "Tramalning" | (Ingmar) Bergman 
 
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    | This woman who wrote the book "Passages" is a contributing editor of Vanity Fair | (Bernie: Who is Sheeny?) 
 (Gail) Sheehy
 
 
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    | In a Verdi opera Radames is to be buried alive & this heroine hides in the tomb to share his fate | Aida 
 
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    | On July 7, 1898 Pres. McKinley signed a joint resolution of Congress annexing this future state | Hawaii 
 
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    | This armsmaker died at his Hartford, Connecticut home, Armsmear, in 1682 | Colt 
 
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    | It's the southernmost country on the Balkan peninsula | Greece 
 
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    | His painting "Three Flags" sold for just $900 in 1959; in 1980 it was resold for $1 million | (Jasper) Johns 
 
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    | Known as "The Movie Magazine", it's named for a movie event | Premiere 
 
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    | Owen is found dead after sleeping in a haunted room in this "Billy Budd" composer's "Owen Wingrave" | Benjamin Britten 
 
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