| 
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
    
      
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | The Sumerians' pottery was the first made on this device | 
    Potter's wheel
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Piled high with cold cuts & condiments, the Dagwood Sandwich is named for a character in this comic strip | 
    Blondie
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1893 she earned a physics degree from the Sorbonne, ranking first in her class | 
    Marie Curie
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1996 the Pont Charles de Gaulle, a new bridge spanning this river, opened in Paris | 
    Seine
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Karen Lynn Gorney, the first Tara on "All My Children", played his dance partner in "Saturday Night Fever" | 
    (L: Who was Swayze?)
  John Travolta
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "The Mirror Crack'd" is one of several of her novels to feature Miss Jane Marple | 
    Agatha Christie
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Ezekiel prophesized for the Israelites during this "captivity" | 
    Babylonian Captivity
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | These Southern pecan patties are named for a French diplomat | 
    Pralines
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Hermann Muller won a 1946 Nobel Prize for proving that these rays can cause genetic mutations | 
    X-rays
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1973 Queen Elizabeth II dedicated a new one of these bridges; the old one's in Arizona | 
    London Bridge
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Accompanied by this boyfriend, Gwyneth Paltrow watched her film "Emma" in the White House with Pres. Clinton | 
    Brad Pitt
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Living in South America, Josef Mengele clones 94 potential Hitlers in this Ira Levin novel | 
    "The Boys From Brazil"
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | This city's different ages are given Roman numerals; it's believed the "Homeric" one was VIIa | 
    (J: What is Athens?)
  Troy
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | There are 2 distinct varieties of this bean:  the Fordhook & baby | 
    Lima bean
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | While a professor at Stanford in 1970 he published "Vitamin C And The Common Cold" | 
    Linus Pauling
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | The Bosporus Bridges I & II connect the European & Asian parts of this country | 
    Turkey
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | She played a dual role in the 1991 thriller "Dead Again", directed by her then-husband, Kenneth Branagh | 
    Emma Thompson
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In the title of Sue Grafton's latest murder mystery "M Is For" this | 
    Malice
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Persia kept switching sides in this 424-405 B.C. war depending on who was winning , Sparta or Athens | 
    The Peloponnesian War
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | What we call a Polish sausage is also known by this Polish name | 
    Kielbasa
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1871 he issued a new version of his periodic table, leaving gaps for elements not yet known | 
    Dmitri Mendeleev
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Named for an explorer, it's the longest suspension bridge in the U.S. | 
    the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Janine Turner of "Cliffhanger" was once engaged to this actor who's now married to Kim Basinger | 
    Alec Baldwin
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | "The Laws of our Fathers" is a 1996 legal thriller by this author of "Presumed Innocent" | 
    Scott Turow
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
  
  
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | The Incas called their area Tawantinsuyu, The Land of the 4 Quarters, with this Peruvian city as its center | 
    (P: What is Machu Picchu?) (J: What is their empire?) (L: What is Lima?)
  Cuzco
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Cassareep, a condiment used in west Indian cookery, is made from this root, as is tapioca | 
    (J: What is the taro root?)
  Cassava/manioc
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | In 1955 this Danish physicist organized the 1st Atoms For Peace conference in Geneva | 
    Niels Bohr
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Venice's most famous bridge, it was built about 1600 to link the Doge's palace with the new prisons | 
    Bridge of Sighs
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Lauren Bacall called this ex-husband "The greatest interpreter of O'Neill in anyone's memory" | 
    Jason Robards
 
  | 
   
 
     | 
    
  
    | 
       
        
       
     | 
   
  
    | Novels by Olivia Goldsmith include "Bestseller" & this book about 3 vengeful spouses | 
    "The First Wives Club"
 
  | 
   
 
     |