| WE'VE GOT TO STOP MEETING LIKE THIS |  
   
 
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    | In the 1920s & '30s this literary group that included Dorothy Parker met regularly for lunch at a NYC hotel | 
    the Algonquin Round Table
 
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    | 9 wire arches called wickets are used in this backyard game | 
    croquet
 
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    | These 2 beastly symbols are used to describe advancing & declining stock markets | 
    bear & bull
 
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    | In August 1578 this English navigator sailed around Cape Horn | 
    (Barb: Who is... I gave it a shot?) (Ken: You had to do it.)
  Francis Drake
 
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    | No spy should be without one of these aptly named outer garments worn by British soldiers in WWI | 
    a trench coat
 
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    | Before you ask for mine, you should know it's from the Greek for "self-written" | 
    (Jilana: What is autobiography?)
  autograph
 
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    | The Dumbarton Oaks Mansion was the site of a 1944 meeting that proposed forming what became this world body | 
    (Barb: [Whispers] Thank goodness.)
  the United Nations
 
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    | Dating back 50 years, "Maze War" & "Spasim" were some of the first of this type of video game, abbreviated FPS | 
    first person shooter
 
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    | It's the income from your investment, or a triangular street sign | 
    yield
 
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    | Willem Schouten, who rounded the Horn, named it after his birthplace in this country | 
    Holland (the Netherlands)
 
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    | Although this company's name was trademarked in 1871, its logo didn't appear on men's underwear until many decades later | 
    Fruit of the Loom
 
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    | The prefix "eu" means good, so this word comes from the Greek for "good death" | 
    euthanasia
 
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    | During the 1604 Hampton Court Conference, this king accepted a request for a new translation of the Bible | 
    King James
 
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    | The classic game Reversi is aka this game, like a Shakespearean title character | 
    Othello
 
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    | If you invest in a "CD" down at the bank, it's not music, but one of these | 
    a certificate of deposit
 
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    | An around-the-world yacht race that requires sailors to round Cape Horn awards a trophy named for this author | 
    (Barb: Who's... Thor Heyerdahl?)
  Jules Verne
 
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    | From 1915 to 1947 the Tirocchi sisters brought haute couture to this capital of a tiny U.S. state | 
    Providence
 
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    | This liquid part of the blood derives its name from the Greek for something molded or formed | 
    plasma
 
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    | In February, 1945, FDR, Churchill & Stalin met at the Livadia Palace near this Black Sea resort | 
    (Barb: [Prior to the wager] You're killing me, Ken.) [Ken and audience laughter] ... (Barb: [Sighs] What is Walt Disney World?) [Laughter] (Ken: I think Stalin would have had a better time.)
  Yalta
 
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    | In Scrabble, these 2 letter tiles are the most lucrative, each worth 10 points | 
    [Barb selected the first clue.] (Jilana: What are J & Z?)
  Q & Z
 
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    | From the Latin for "year", it's an investment or retirement fund that pays out yearly | 
    an annuity
 
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    | In 1910 he said he was sailing from Norway to the Arctic Ocean via Cape Horn, but he was really headed to the South Pole | 
    Amundsen
 
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    | This French designer's "New Look" for 1947 included a narrow waist & padded hips | 
    (Barb: Who is Pierre Cardin?)
  Christian Dior
 
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    | From Greek for "color", it means pertaining to color, or to a musical scale that's been modified | 
    chromatic
 
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    | Holy Roman Emperor Charles V called the 1521 meeting of this assembly at Worms | 
    (Barb: What is [**]?) (Ken: No.) [Ruled incorrect; reversed prior to revealing the Final Jeopardy! category]
  the Diet (of Worms) (the Council at Worms)
 
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    | In chess there are this many possible opening first moves for white | 
    (Ken: Two for each pawn and two for each knight.)
  20
 
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    | To determine a company's performance before you invest, check out its P/E ratio, this | 
    price-to-earnings
 
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    | This British naval captain "Endeavour"ed to sail around the Horn--& did in 1769 | 
    Cook
 
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    | In 1939, she closed her Paris shop & spent the rest of World War II in the Ritz hotel with her German boyfriend | 
    Coco Chanel
 
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    | A battery of tests will tell you this element's name is from the Greek for "stone" | 
    lithium
 
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