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    | By the time he was appointed dictator in 49 B.C., the Roman "bread dole" had risen to 200,000 people | Julius Caesar 
 
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    | After marrying Eliza Stowe's widower, she had a daughter named Eliza & wrote a book about an Eliza | Harriet Beecher Stowe 
 
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    | "Melvin & Howard" is the story of a gas station attendant who claims to be a beneficiary in this man's will | Howard Hughes 
 
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    | According to Ted Williams, Babe Ruth had one that weighed 54 ounces | a bat 
 
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    | Yokohama is on the bay named for this larger city | Tokyo 
 
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    | It is this "that blows nobody any good" | an ill wind 
 
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    | Since Agrippina was a niece of Emperor Claudius, consent of this body was needed for them to wed | the Senate 
 
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    | Poet whose wife died after her dress caught fire while he worked on "Tales of a Wayside Inn" | (Jack: Who is Shelley?) ...
 (Alex: We've got about a minute to go.)
 
 Longfellow
 
 
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    | In 1926 John Barrymore kissed Mary Astor & Estelle Taylor a total of 127 times playing this lover | Don Juan 
 
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    | Spelled "G-E-R-D" in Old English where it meant a small stick, it now means a precise length | a yard 
 
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    | It's the ocean bordering Australia to the west | the Indian Ocean 
 
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    | "East or west", this "is best" | home 
 
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    | At one point in the 2nd Punic War, his forces almost annihilated the Roman army | Hannibal 
 
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    | Besides some songs, he wrote only 1 major poem, "Tam o' Shanter", after age 27 | Robert Burns 
 
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    | Only No. 1 hit for Henry Mancini & His Orchestra was this movie theme written by Nino Rota: 
 [Instrumental music plays]
 | (Gil: What is [*]?) (Alex: All right, that's the title of the song; we phrased it inaccurately, we were going for the title of the film, Romeo and Juliet--that was, of course, the "Love Theme" from that film.)
 
 "A Time For Us"
 
 
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    | It's the only measure of distance mentioned in the poem "The Charge of the Light Brigade" | (Alex: Half [*], half [*], Half [*] onward.) 
 a league
 
 
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    | In both area & population it's the 2nd largest country in South America | Argentina 
 
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    | In his collection "Hesperides", Robert Herrick advised to do this "while ye may" | (Chris: What is sow your wild oats?) 
 gather ye rosebuds
 
 
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    | Under the Romans, this kingdom in the Holy Land included Jerusalem & Bethlehem | Judea (Judah) 
 
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    | Mark Twain's last home, Stormfield, named for one of his last characters, was in this state | Connecticut 
 
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    | "Black Sunday"s terrorist target | the Super Bowl 
 
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    | Used in surveying, a chain is divided into 100 units called these | a link 
 
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    | Only country on the American mainland that borders only 1 other country | Canada 
 
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    | Proverbial phrase that precedes "... so is the tree inclined" | as the twig is bent 
 
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    | The largest provincial capital of the Roman Empire, it was once ruled by Marc Antony | (Jack: What is Egypt?) 
 Alexandria
 
 
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    | His story, "Music for Chameleons"; was about a real-life friend who played Mozart for lizards | Truman Capote 
 
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    | An assistant director in shirt sleeves & tie is seen scaling the walls of Babylon in this D.W. Griffith epic | Intolerance 
 
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    | In metric prefixes, kilo- means thousandfold & this means thousandth part | milli 
 
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    | The Portuguese found a lot of this in what is now Ghana, hence the name of its coast | (Jack: What is ivory?) 
 gold
 
 
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    | 1st half of proverb that ends "... & God for us all" | every man for himself 
 
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