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 | 21st CENTURY POLITICAL QUOTES |  |  |  | 
  
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    | This Daniel Defoe hero is "thrown into a violent calenture"--a fever once said to affect sailors in the Tropics | Robinson Crusoe 
 
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    | David Letterman walked Oprah to the opening of this musical based on an Alice Walker novel | The Color Purple 
 
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    | During the 1992 L.A. riots, one of these worn by Madonna in a video was stolen from Frederick's of Hollywood | (Dave: Uh, what is a bra?) (Alex: Nnn, be more specific.)
 (Dave: Um...)
 ...
 (Alex: They stole [*], a little bit more than a bra.)
 
 a bustier
 
 
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    | Shortly after establishing a lab in Menlo Park, N.J., he invented the carbon telephone transmitter | Edison 
 
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    | This branch of medicine is from the Greek for "mind cure" | psychiatry 
 
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    | In "The Europeans" Gertrude wears a "quaint and charming leghorn" one of these, "tied with white satin bows" | a hat 
 
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    | In the 1960s women would puff out their hair in this style, French for "full" or "puffed" | bouffant 
 
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    | "I spent several years in a North Vietnamese prison camp... you think I want to do that all over again as vice president?" | (John) McCain 
 
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    | In 1936 he wrote a paper for the Smithsonian entitled "Liquid-Propellant Rocket Development" | (Robert) Goddard 
 
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    | Spread it around--it goes back to a Greek word for "cow cheese" | (Dave: Uh, what is feta?) 
 butter
 
 
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    | In "A Tale of Two Cities", Jerry Cruncher is a "resurrection-man"--defined as a person who steals & sells these | corpses 
 
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    | "Big Girls Don’t Cry" over "Jersey Boys", a musical bio of this '60s group that had its peaks & "Valli"s | The Four Seasons 
 
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    | In the 1800s women would puff out their skirts by wearing this padding or framework underneath | a bustle 
 
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    | Regarding the attacks on his son: "If Barbara gets her hands on John Kerry, he might get another Purple Heart" | George Herbert Walker Bush 
 
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    | In 1815 he built America's first steam-powered warship | Fulton 
 
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    | The name of these sometimes nasty microscopic life forms is from the Greek for "little rod" | (Dave: Uh, what is flagella?) (Eleanor: What is bacilla?)
 [Originally ruled incorrect; reversed before the Double Jeopardy! Round]
 
 bacteria (bacilla later accpted)
 
 
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    | In "Emma", Emma speaks of being in Broadway-lane when "it began to mizzle", which means this | drizzle (mist accepted) 
 
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    | This short jacket worn open in the front is perfect for listening to Ravel's music of the same name | a bolero 
 
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    | "I want to thank the Canadian people who came out to wave, with all five fingers, for their hospitality" | George W. Bush 
 
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    | By early 1895, at his estate near Bologna, he could ring a bell a few yards away via radio waves | Marconi 
 
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    | This elevated Athens area appropriately comes from 2 Greek words meaning "highest city" | the Acropolis 
 
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    | "What a mommet of a maid!" (mommet meaning scarecrow) is said of this Thomas Hardy title character | (Alex: [*] is right, [*] of the d'Urbervilles.) 
 Tess
 
 
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    | The USA's oldest clothing retailer, this upscale, once family-run business has collared the market on men's apparel since 1818 | Brooks Brothers 
 
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    | Secretary of Health and Human Services: "For the life of me, I cannot understand why the terrorists have not attacked our food supply" | Tommy Thompson 
 
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    | Around 1862 this American locksmith introduced a dial-operated combination lock for bank vaults | (Alex: And that name is [*].  [*]--still associated with locks.) 
 Linus Yale
 
 
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    | One of the sacraments established by Christ; its "holy" name is from the Greek for "grateful" | (Alex: And that word is [*]--Holy [*].) 
 Eucharist
 
 
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