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    | Sadly, the drama became all too real in 1613 when this theatre burned down after cannon fire set off its thatch during "Henry VIII" | Globe 
 
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    | To fly high & to box | (Isaac: What is to--what it to... flight and fight?) 
 soar, spar
 
 
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    | He succeeded Scalia: NG
 | Neil Gorsuch 
 
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    | You can find this material, perfect for lounging, in the piped pajamas from Derek Rose of London for $880 | (Isaac: What is flannel?) (Adriana: What is velvet?)
 (Ken: Neilesh, any pajama knowledge? These are very fancy [*] pajamas.)
 
 silk
 
 
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    | In 2020 he was on a "watermelon sugar, high, watermelon sugar, high" | Harry Styles 
 
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    | Not yet known as le Roi Soleil, in 1643 this new ruler of 19 million subjects was a few months shy of his 5th birthday | Louis XIV 
 
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    | Speak softly & whine softly
 | (Ken: That would be [*], as I think Adriana just realized.) 
 to whisper & to whimper
 
 
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    | 4-time Pulitzer Prize-winning poet: RF
 | Robert Frost 
 
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    | Although this company sells Nulu fabric casual wear in lichen lime, it has another citrus fruit in its name | Lululemon 
 
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    | Sorry, this state! The wind may come sweeping down the Plain there, but per Luke Combs, there "Ain't No Love in" it | Oklahoma 
 
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    | (David Remnick presents the clue.) A classic cover that gave us a rare light moment in 2001 shows the city like a "National Geographic" map; after 90 years in Khouks, The New Yorker is now down in Moolahs, in this building, One WTC for short | One World Trade Center 
 
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    | In 1676 this colonist led a rebellion against Gov. William Berkeley but didn't live to see the end of the year | (Ken: [*]'s Rebellion, right.) 
 Bacon
 
 
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    | A witty remark & a British pound sterling
 | quip quid 
 
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    | One of his nicknames was "Old Kinderhook": MVB
 | Martin Van Buren 
 
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    | You can keep your waves from rippling away with this hair protector; Merriam-Webster says the word comes from "hairdo" | a durag 
 
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    | Chappell Roan wasn't horsing around--or was she?--"on the stage in my heels", dancing at this title place | Pink Pony Club 
 
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    | This dynasty may have come to an end in 1644, but one of its vases was doing just fine in 2011, selling for $21.6 million | the Ming 
 
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    | A TV show with a limited number of episodes & the duties of members of the clergy
 | (Ken: That's tricky--[*].) 
 miniseries & ministries
 
 
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    | In 1921 she founded the American Birth Control League: MS
 | Margaret Sanger 
 
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    | Many a robe is made with this kind of "cloth" whose name may come from the French for "drawn" | terrycloth 
 
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    | A headbanger, to be specific, 1991's "Enter Sandman" by this band advises, "Sleep with one eye open gripping your pillow tight" | Metallica 
 
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    | (David Remnick presents the clue.)  The New Yorker profile is an art form & it can be celebratory or less so, as in 1957 when Truman Capote visited this actor on location for "Sayonara" & reported on his meal of soup, steak, fries, three vegetables, spaghetti, salad, sake & apple pie with ice cream | Brando 
 
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    | In 1626 this Dutch colonial governor got big into the Manhattan real estate market, paying 60 guilders for, well, Manhattan | (Peter) Minuit 
 
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    | Expressed in words & relating to spring
 | vernal & verbal 
 
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    | At his death in 1848, he had an estimated $20 million fortune: JJA
 | John Jacob Astor 
 
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    | The 3-letter name of this company that sells yoga & active apparel is an abbreviation of other words for wind, earth & water | Alo 
 
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    | "I can't stand it, I know you planned it"; listen, all y'all, it's this Beastie Boys song, "classical music" in "Star Trek Beyond" | "Sabotage" 
 
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    | (David Remnick presents the clue.) Sports writing has always had a place in the magazine; one classic is the 1960 piece about Ted Williams's last game by this literary giant whose sole ambition in small town Pennsylvania was to make The New Yorker | (Ken: It looks like Isaac really wanted to come up with [*].) 
 John Updike
 
 
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