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    | Montana's Flathead National Forest is home to this carnivore & many creatures below it on the food chain | 
    (Taylor: What is the bear?) (Ken: Can you be more specific?)
  the grizzly bear
 
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    | "N", 2005: Llewelyn Moss decides to take off with millions in drug money in this Cormac McCarthy tale; Llewelyn comes to regret that | 
    No Country for Old Men
 
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    | This national heroine of France was canonized on May 16, 1920, nearly 500 years after her death | 
    Joan of Arc
 
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    | Obviously someone fully prepared for squalls, a brolliologist collects these | 
    umbrellas
 
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    | "The Ol' Perfessor" Casey Stengel, won 2 World Series titles as a player with the Giants, then seven more as a  manager of these crosstown rivals | 
    the Yankees
 
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    | Someone with this criminal profession can also be called a dipper, a fingersmith or a cutpurse | 
    a pickpocket
 
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    | The Allegheny National Forest in this state is a prized source of black cherry wood used in furniture making | 
    Pennsylvania
 
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    | "G", 1992: "G" is for this mystery writer who wrote "I Is for Innocent" | 
    Sue Grafton
 
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    | After Pierre's death, Marie Curie was appointed to his professorship in 1906 & became the first woman to teach at this U. in Paris | 
    the Sorbonne
 
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    | In "Diner", Daniel Stern plays an avid collector of these; when wife Ellen Barkin says, "Who cares" what's on the flip side?, uh-oh | 
    LPs (records)
 
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    | Brainy Italian soccer star Gianluca "Il Professorino" Pessotto got his nickname for wearing these, though not on the pitch | 
    eyeglasses
 
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    | A 16-year-old wrote this 19th century waltz that shares its name with paired eating utensils | 
    "Chopsticks"
 
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    | This carnivorous plant can be found in North Carolina's Croatan National Forest, the only true coastal natl. forest in the East | 
    the Venus flytrap
 
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    | "O" (No!), 1898: William S. Porter was convicted of embezzlement; after prison, he put out short stories under this name | 
    O. Henry
 
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    | We fell for Audrey Tautou after seeing her in the title role of this 2001 film about a lonely waitress who falls in love | 
    Amélie
 
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    | Marie Osmond is a noted collector of these, including several of herself & Donny | 
    dolls
 
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    | For years a star on the Red Army team, in 1989 Igor "The Professor" Larionov became one of the first Soviets to play in this league | 
    the NHL
 
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    | Naples, Florida has been called the "capital of the world" for this paddle sport rising in popularity | 
    pickleball
 
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    | The 1.6 million acres of Arizona's Kaibab National Forest are divided by a natural wonder that is divided by this river | 
    (Taylor: What is the... Gila River?) ... (Ken: Through the Grand Canyon, right.)
  the Colorado River
 
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    | "B", 1956: Appropriately, "Giovanni's Room" by this man from Harlem is about an American living in Paris | 
    (James) Baldwin
 
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    | After her mom died in the 1890s, her dad put her in an orphanage where nuns taught her to sew, leading to an iconic career in fashion | 
    Coco Chanel
 
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    | Labeorphilists collect beer bottles; tegestologists collect these, to protect furniture from labeorphilists? | 
    coasters
 
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    | Nicknamed "The Professor" for her intelligent shotmaking, Agnieszka Radwanska won 20 titles on the WTA, this tour | 
    the Women's Tennis Association
 
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    | This noun is used for pranksters of myth like Anansi & Loki | 
    trickster
 
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    | With over 600 miles of fishable streams, Eldorado National Forest is an angler's delight in these eastern California mountains | 
    the Sierra Nevadas
 
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    | "I", 1819: Rebecca is a Jewish heroine in this Sir Walter Scott novel & was played on film by future Judaism convert Liz Taylor | 
    Ivanhoe
 
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    | Barely over 5 feet tall but a giant in his field, this artist gave us "Au Salon de la rue des Moulins" in the 1890s | 
    Toulouse-Lautrec
 
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    | Vladimir Nabokov was an avid collector of these, called babochkas or "bow ties" in his native Russian | 
    (Ken: Justin?) (Justin: What are hats? I don't know.)
  butterflies
 
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    | You don't see a lot of players nicknamed both "The Professor" & "Mad Dog", but this Hall of Fame Braves pitcher of the '90s pulled it off | 
    Greg Maddux
 
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    | In "Oil!", Upton Sinclair writes, "Water and oil would spout up over the top of" this framework, "staining it... black" | 
    derrick
 
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