|  |  |  |  |  |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | The suggested maximum speed limit for these German expressways is 81 mph | the Autobahn 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | July 29, 1991 marked the 10th wedding anniversary of this royal couple | Prince Charles & Princess Diana 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1975 this company introduced its first new product in 54 years, Freedent gum for denture wearers | Wrigley 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | It's the common name of the 1932 federal kidnapping law | the Lindbergh Law 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1978 Menachem Begin shared the Nobel Peace Prize with this Egyptian president | Anwar Sadat 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | A soothsayer calling from the crowd in Act I, scene 2 tells Caesar to beware this | the Ides of March 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In Ireland the gender signs on rest rooms may be printed in this language, not English | Gaelic 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1987 he became the 1st American talk show host to tape shows in the Soviet Union | Phil Donahue 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | As well as its own appliances, this company makes KitchenAid & the Kenmore line for Sears | Whirlpool 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Francis W. Pettygrove was from this Maine city & named the Oregon city he co-owned after it | Portland 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In addition to the cash award, winners also receive a diploma & one of these | a lovely gold medal 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Caesar follows this question in Latin with "Then fall, Caesar!" & then dies | Et tu, Brute? 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | A Benelux Tourrail pass will give you 5 days of travel in these three countries | Belgium, the Netherlands & Luxembourg 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1988 this "Cosmopolitan" editor was inducted into the Publisher's Hall of Fame | Helen Gurley Brown 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | After a complaint from Radio Shack, Computer Shack changed its name to this in 1977 | ComputerLand 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Wilmer McLean's farmhouse was where this general surrendered | Robert E. Lee 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Dennis Gabor won the 1971 Physics Prize for his invention of this 3-D photographic process | holography 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This man "has a lean and hungry look; he thinks too much: such men are dangerous" | Cassius 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Most of this royal palace near the Louvre was destroyed, but its lavish gardens can still be visited | (Jim: What is the Luxembourg?) 
 the Tuileries
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In the 1970s this Israeli psychic claimed he could bend metal objects using nothing but his mind | Uri Geller 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Matsushita Electric's 1990 purchase of this entertainment co. was the largest U.S. co. buyout by the Japanese | (Alex: They purchased [*], the parent company of Universal.) 
 MCA
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In October 1976 the government began inoculations to prevent an epidemic of this flu | swine flu 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | For his work on digestion, this Russian physiologist won a Nobel Prize in 1904 | Pavlov 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This man, Caesar's adopted son, has the last speech in the play | (Todd: Who is Mark Antony?) 
 Octavius (or Augustus Caesar)
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In the cathedral town of Roskilde, you can visit the tombs of over 35 of this country's kings | Denmark 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This tenor made his official debut in a 1961 Mexican performance of "La Traviata" | Placido Domingo 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | In 1989 the B-2 stealth bomber accounted for half this company's sales | (Alex: If you lived in southern California, you would know this for sure. What is [*]? We have less than a minute to go. Todd, back to you.) 
 Northrop
 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | Pirate attacks on U.S. ships led to war with this Libyan city in 1801 | Tripoli 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | A presidential advisor, he won the 1976 Prize for Economics | Milton Friedman 
 
 |  | 
  
    | 
        
       |  
    | This woman, his wife, begs Caesar to stay away from the capitol because of a dream she's had | (Jim: Who is Julia?) (Alex: No, sorry. You picked the wrong one there. Who is [*]?)
 
 Calpurnia
 
 
 |  |