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    | Elected in 1522, Adrian VI was the only Dutchman who held this high religious office | pope 
 
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    | With a reported gross of $13.5 million, her 1993/94 New Year's Concerts in Las Vegas set a U.S. record | Barbra Streisand 
 
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    | Chapter 6, verse 8 of this book says, "Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord" | Genesis 
 
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    | Our solar system is in the Orion arm of this galaxy | the Milky Way 
 
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    | This NYC landmark figured prominently in the 1957 Cary Grant film "An Affair to Remember" | the Empire State Building 
 
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    | This author's 1841 whaling voyage inspired his 1847 adventure novel "Omoo" | Herman Melville 
 
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    | The familiar legend that this outlaw killed 21 men by the time he was 21 probably isn't true | Billy the Kid 
 
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    | It was the nickname of French fashion designer Marie Nielli Ricci | (Bill: Who is Coco?) ...
 (Alex: Coco is Chanel.)
 
 Nina (Ricci)
 
 
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    | This book of praises is the longest in the Bible with 150 "songs" | the Psalms 
 
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    | The moon nearest a planet in our solar system is Phobos, 5,800 miles away from this planet | Mars 
 
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    | His home in Galena, Ill., given to him after the Civil War, is now a state historic site | U.S. Grant 
 
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    | This Flaubert heroine's maiden name is Emma Rouault | Madame Bovary 
 
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    | The great military hero Alexander Nevsky took the name "Nevsky" after winning a battle at this river | the Neva River 
 
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    | She operated a riding school & studied horse training in Argentina before becoming an expert on dogs | [Alex goes up a register and slightly hoarse for the last word of the clue.] (Alex: Tried to help you out there.  [Shifts back into his impression] "Walkies!  With the do-ogs!"  [*].)
 [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
 
 Barbara Woodhouse
 
 
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    | Chapter 20 of this book contains prophecies about the millennium | (Art: What is Revelations?) [Accepted without remark]
 
 Revelation
 
 
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    | Just before it was a nebula, the Crab Nebula was one of these | (Art: What was a star?) (Alex: Be more exc... uh, be more specific.)
 (Art: Uh, wh--what is a, um, a giant star?)
 (Tove: What is a nova?  A [*]?)
 
 a supernova (or an exploding star)
 
 
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    | This Caribbean island's Piarco International Airport is located about 15 miles from Port of Spain | (Bill: What is Dominican Republic?) (Tove: What is Haiti?)
 
 Trinidad
 
 
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    | In an 1894 novel, Trilby leaves her fiance, Little Billee Bagot, & falls under the spell of this musician | Svengali 
 
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    | This conquistador's enemies accused him of murdering his 1st wife, Catalina Xuarez | Cortés 
 
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    | Luke begins this book where he left off in his own gospel | the Acts of the Apostles 
 
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    | For a solar eclipse to occur, the Moon must be in this phase | new 
 
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    | This Italian city's Scuola Grande di San Rocco features 56 works by Tintoretto | (Art: What is Florence?) ...
 (Alex: We have less than a minute to go, Bill.)
 
 Venice
 
 
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    | "The Triumph of the Egg" is a collection of short stories by this author of "Winesburg, Ohio" | Sherwood Anderson 
 
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    | Gustavus Adolphus was just 16 when he became king of this country in 1611 | Sweden 
 
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    | Chapter 1 of this book reports there were 603,550 of the children of Israel | (Art: Uh, what is, um, Exodus?) 
 Numbers
 
 
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    | Number of stars often visible in the Pleiades, hence its "sisterly" other name | 7 
 
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    | The Tossa de Mar is one of the beaches along this, Spanish for "rugged coast" | the Costa Brava 
 
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