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    | The Swiss National Museum is in this largest city, not the capital | (Larry: What is Geneva?) 
 Zurich
 
 
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    | He worked provisioning the Spanish Armada long before writing "Don Quixote" | Cervantes 
 
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    | A large moon crater is named for this cosmonaut who was the first man in space | Yuri Gagarin 
 
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    | Wieland Wagner, grandson of this composer, was a great-grandson of Franz Liszt | Richard Wagner 
 
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    | It's the pounding & grinding tool that you expect to see in a mortar | a pestle 
 
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    | The first one met in 1774 & demanded repeal of the Intolerable Acts | the Continental Congress 
 
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    | The name of this Scottish city on the Clyde means either "Green Glen" or "Dear Green Spot" | Glasgow 
 
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    | This hero first appeared in J.M. Barrie's "The Little White Bird" | Peter Pan 
 
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    | Once an aide to Gen. MacArthur, he became Pres. Reagan's first Sec'y of State in 1981 | (Larry: [*].  Who is [*]?) 
 Alexander Haig
 
 
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    | William Walton wrote pieces for the coronation of George VI in 1937 & hers in 1953 | Queen Elizabeth II 
 
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    | A color, or a verb meaning to put ashore on a desolate island | maroon 
 
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    | 2 days after this president's heart attack Sept. 24, 1955, the N.Y. Stock Exchange lost $14 billion | Eisenhower 
 
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    | Lee Kuan Yew was prime minister of this Asian city-state from its independence in 1965 to 1990 | Singapore 
 
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    | Jody Tiflin gets a red colt named Gabilan in a 1933 work by this author | (Paul: Um... who is Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings?) 
 John Steinbeck
 
 
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    | A native of Northern Ireland, he's been called "The Man with the Golden Flute" | James Galway 
 
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    | This composer's last name means "beet garden" in Dutch | (Alex: [Calling on Larry] Be--Larry?) 
 Ludwig van Beethoven
 
 
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    | Despite its name, it's not a little wolf but a fur-bearing relative of the badger | (Larry: What is the fox?) 
 the wolverine
 
 
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    | At his peak in 1868, he had contractors in NYC pad their bills 85%, the proceeds going to his gang | Boss Tweed 
 
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    | About 350,000 Allied troops were evacuated from this city on the Strait of Dover in 1940 | Dunkirk 
 
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    | She borrowed the title of her "Ship of Fools" from a 15th century poem, "Das Narrenschiff" | (Melissa: Who is Mansfield?) 
 Katherine Anne Porter
 
 
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    | At age 73 this developer of the first atomic-powered submarine was made a full admiral | (Larry: Who is Hiram Rickover?) (Alex: Yes.)
 (Larry: 20th CENTURY PERSONALITIES for $1000.)
 (Alex: Wait a second.  Before you--all right, I'll read this.)
 [Reversed after clue 24.]
 
 Hyman Rickover
 
 
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    | He has written a symphony & a violin concerto as well as music for "Star Wars" & "Jaws" | (John) Williams 
 
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    | It's a person involved in extortion, not someone who sells tennis equipment | (Alex: Cute clue--not fast enough, Larry.) 
 a racketeer
 
 
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    | In 1853 he was sent to buy land south of the Rio Grande but came back with a different purchase | (James) Gadsden 
 
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    | This city is Russia's largest Pacific port and capital of its maritime territory | Vladivostok 
 
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    | He wrote "Stage Door" with Edna Ferber & "You Can't Take It with You" with Moss Hart | [Paul attempted to ring in, but was too late.] 
 George S. Kaufman
 
 
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    | He resigned as head of the AFL-CIO in 1979 & died two months later | (Alex: And Larry, I think I'm going to have to penalize you, because I think you said "Hiram Rickover"--am I correct on that?--...) ...
 (Alex: We've got a minute to go.)
 
 George Meany
 
 
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    | Ottorino Respighi wrote symphonic poems about "The Pines" & "The Fountains" of this city | Rome 
 
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    | By definition, a person who is "piscivorous" eats this | (Melissa: [Without ringing in] Oh, what is [*]?) (Alex: Wait--you have to ring in.)
 [Melissa just barely beats Larry on the signaling device.]
 
 fish
 
 
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    | During the 1830s & '40s he reformed the educational system in Massachusetts | (Melissa: Who is Dewey?) 
 Horace Mann
 
 
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