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    | "And whatsover" he "called every living creature, that was the name thereof" | (Jana: Who is Noah?) 
 Adam
 
 
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    | On April 22, 1995 he retained his heavyweight boxing title in a controversial decision against Axel Schulz | (Jana: Who is Al, uh, Evander Holyfield?) ...
 (Alex: Who is one of my heroes, [*], a hero because he's still fighting at an advanced age for boxers.)
 
 George Foreman
 
 
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    | There are over 500 species of this kind of tree in Australia | the eucalyptus 
 
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    | Pisco, a South American kind of this snifter spirit, is distilled from Muscat grapes | brandy 
 
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    | In 1922 she broke a women's shooting record by smashing 100 clay targets in a row | Annie Oakley 
 
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    | Dostoyevsky's 1866 tale of murder & its consequences | Crime and Punishment 
 
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    | God told him to "stretch out thine hand over the sea, that the waters may come again upon the Egyptians" | Moses 
 
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    | On August 30, 1991, Mike Powell set the world record in this event with a leap of 29' 4 1/2" | (Jana: What is pole vault?) 
 the long jump
 
 
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    | This capital is a totally planned city equidistant from Sydney & Melbourne | Canberra 
 
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    | A 1736 British law effectively banned this juniper-flavored spirit; it was repealed a few years later | gin 
 
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    | During her reign, 1762-1796, she established the first Russian schools for girls | Catherine the Great 
 
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    | Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea" is set in a fishing boat & this Lear poem in a pea-green boat | "The Owl and the Pussy-cat" 
 
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    | "Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be" this | Abraham 
 
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    | In 1972 & 1973 this school's Bill Walton was named Outstanding Player of the NCAA Basketball Tournament | UCLA 
 
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    | Some parts of this 1,250-mile-long structure are 100 miles  from shore | the Great Barrier Reef 
 
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    | Moscato di Siracusa is a sweet, strong dessert wine made on this Italian island | Sicily 
 
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    | For her nursing reforms & care of the sick. she was the 1st woman to receive the British Order of Merit | (Jana: Who is Clara Barton?) 
 Florence Nightingale
 
 
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    | George Bernard Shaw's tale that gave a Greek tailor "paws" to think | Androcles and the Lion 
 
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    | After interpreting Nebuchadnezzar's dream, he was made "ruler over the whole province of Babylon" | Daniel 
 
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    | In the 1950s this Brooklyn Dodgers catcher was named the National League's Most Valuable Player 3 times | (Jana: Who is Yogi Berra?) ...
 (Alex: Yes, Yogi Berra was a Yankee.)
 
 Roy Campanella
 
 
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    | The first group of settlers in Australia included 717 of these people, 188 of them women | convicts 
 
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    | This Greek spirit is a close cousin to French pastis or Pernod | (Don: What is Anisette?) (Michael: What is "oohzoo"?)
 (Alex: [*].)
 
 ouzo
 
 
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    | By the time this Girl Scouts leader died in 1927, there were over 140,000 members in the U.S. | (Juliette Gordon) Low 
 
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    | Maugham's tale of a man who moves to Tahiti to paint | The Moon and Sixpence 
 
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    | Jacob was the father of Joseph & Benjamin; she was their mother | Rachel 
 
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    | Nicknamed "Cha Cha", she exceeded 250 mph as the first woman licensed to drive top fuel drag racers | Shirley Muldowney 
 
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    | This island south of Australia was colonized in 1803-04 for fear the French might seize it | Tasmania 
 
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    | Cherry Heering is made by the firm of Peter Heering in this Scandinavian country | Denmark 
 
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    | Appointed by FDR, she was the 1st female cabinet member, serving as Secretary of Labor until 1945 | (Frances) Perkins 
 
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    | Of Jane Austen's 6 novels, the 2 titles that fit the category | (Michael: What is [*]?) (Alex: Yes.)
 (Michael: What is... I...)
 (Alex: It's the tougher of the two, [**].)
 
 Pride and Prejudice & Sense and Sensibility
 
 
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