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    | In 1946 AT&T offered this service in St. Louis, but it wasn't cellular back then | 
    mobile phones (car telephones)
 
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    | Larousse calls it the most widespread spice in the world, which is nothing to sneeze at | 
    pepper
 
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    | In soccer, he's the only player allowed to touch the ball with his hands or arms | 
    a goalie
 
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    | A song from "Funny Girl" ends with "You are woman, I am" this, "let's kiss" | 
    (Jeff: What is "I am woman, you are man?") (Jim: What is "You are a woman, I am man?") (Alex: Jim's response is acceptable; Jeff was trying to make it sound like the Helen Reddy song.)
  man
 
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    | While moths are nocturnal, these close relatives are diurnal, or "day-flyers" | 
    butterflies
 
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    | One critic said this 1948 Mailer novel is "more concerned with the latter than the former" | 
    The Naked and the Dead
 
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    | It should be a snap to tell us this spice is used in a soda & a bread, man | 
    ginger
 
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    | Fencers wear only one of these long  white gloves, to protect the sword hand | 
    a gauntlet
 
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    | "I don't want to set the world on fire, I just want to start a flame in" this | 
    your heart
 
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    | They contain tiny insect larvae that jump when exposed to heat | 
    Mexican jumping beans
 
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    | On Nov. 2, 1947 he piloted the Spruce Goose for the first & only time it flew | 
    Howard Hughes
 
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    | The leaves of this pickling herb are called a weed | 
    dill
 
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    | Since they sport black & white stripes, football officials are sometimes called these | 
    zebras
 
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    | In song titles, this word precedes "of Washington Square" & "of Tralee" | 
    rose
 
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    | Stage of a bee's development that falls between larva & adult | 
    pupa
 
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    | In October 1941 he was appointed to replace premier Fumimaro Konoye | 
    Tojo
 
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    | Coffee can be used as a spice, & this name describes cakes made with it | 
    (Alex: We have a minute to go, Jim.)
  mocha
 
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    | Piece of sports equipment that consists of a nock, a fletch, a shaft & a metal tip | 
    (Jeff: What is a javelin?)
  arrow
 
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    | "They're blood has wash'd out their foul footstep's pollution" is a seldom sung line from this nat'l anthem | 
    the American national anthem ("The Star-Spangled Banner")
 
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    | The 2 insects in the title of an Aesop's fable, one hard-working & the other lazy | 
    ant & grasshopper
 
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    | It's thought "whack" is a variant of this longer word that means "to strike with something flat" | 
    (Jeff: What is to wallop?)
  thwack
 
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    | In a 1941 speech, Churchill made the name of this Norwegian prime minister synonymous with "traitor" | 
    Vidkun Quisling
 
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    | As its name suggests, in medieval Europe this herb was believed to promote wisdom | 
    sage
 
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    | This racquet sport, first played at Harrow School in England, was named for its soft ball | 
    squash
 
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    | In "What's Love Got to Do with It?" Tina Turner sang, "What's love but a second hand" one of these | 
    emotion
 
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    | Also called the looper & measuring worm, it's actually the caterpillar of a moth | 
    inchworm
 
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    | This animal sound is also called a "low" | 
    (Bob: What is a bleat?) [end-of-round signal sounds]
  moo
 
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