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    | On the moon, these include the Jules Verne, the Plato, & the Giordano Bruno | craters 
 
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    | Canadian province whose name is Latin for "New Scotland" | Nova Scotia 
 
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    | Beethoven thought about basing an opera on this play & even began a witches' chorus | Macbeth 
 
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    | In most months the ides fell on the 13th, but in March, May, July & October it fell on this date | (Linda: What is the ide? I'm sorry, what is the 13th?) 
 15th
 
 
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    | Symbol in the center of the Japanese flag | (Steve: What is a rising sun?) 
 circle
 
 
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    | To conduct an orchestra, or a poor conductor | [Alex announces it is a new category for the show.] 
 lead [leed] & lead [led]
 
 
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    | Its atmosphere is made up of about 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen & 1% mixed gases | Earth 
 
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    | Despite its name, this South American body of water is an estuary, not a river of silver | Rio de la Plata 
 
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    | Verdi's is "Moor" famous, but this "William Tell" composer wrote an "Otello" opera, too | Rossini 
 
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    | If a Roman showed you his domus, you'd be looking at this | house 
 
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    | To see the only North American national flag w/out red, white or blue, "come back to" this Caribbean island | Jamaica 
 
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    | Book of the Bible the Silhouettes might ask you to get | Job [jobe] & job [jawb] 
 
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    | This planet was discovered in 1781; in 1977, astronomers discovered it has rings | (Alex: Yes, and we've got about a minute to go.) 
 Uranus
 
 
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    | The Atlantic Ocean isn't named for a lost continent but for these Moroccan mountains | Atlas Mountains 
 
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    | Mozart's rival Salieri wrote an opera about this comic character from "The Merry Wives of Windsor" | Falstaff 
 
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    | In 73 B.C., Spartacus assembled a force on this site that would explode with force in 79 A.D. | Mount Vesuvius 
 
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    | The top of your head or a paste of liver | pate [pāt] & pate [pah-tay] 
 
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    | In 1967, the U.S. probe Mariner 5 & the Russian probe Venera 4 arrived there within hours of each other | Venus 
 
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    | Britannica says this city got its name from the Greek phrase "Eis ten Polin", meaning "in the city" | Istanbul 
 
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    | Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I wrote the opera "Timone Misantropo", based on this play | Timon of Athens 
 
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    | Rome helped the Mamertines defend Messana setting off their 1st war with this city-state | Carthage 
 
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    | Not surprisingly, this tiny country takes its flag's colors from those of France & Spain | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Andorra
 
 
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    | A line of seats in an arena or a loud fight over who gets to sit in them | row [rō] & row [rau] 
 
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    | Its visible surface is called the photosphere | Sun 
 
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    | South Sea island group which Captain Cook named for the "royal" group that sponsored his voyage there | Society Islands 
 
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    | His opera based on "Measure for Measure" is called "Das Liebesverbot", which has a nice "ring" to it | Wagner 
 
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    | The "Traveling Emperor", during 121-129 A.D. he went to Spain, Gaul, Germany, Athens, Britain, Africa & Syria | Hadrian 
 
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    | Put the tennis ball in play a second time or secure a court for your next match a week early | reserve [REE-serv] & reserve [ri-ZERV] 
 
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