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  | NATIONAL MEDAL OF ARTS RECIPIENTS |  |
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  | LITERARY WHICH CAME FIRST |  |
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    | In 1872 she was fined $100 for voting in the presidential election; she never paid it | Susan B. Anthony 
 
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    | "License to kill gophers by the government of the United Nations.  Man, free to kill gophers at will" | Caddyshack 
 
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    | Actress Jessica Tandy received the medal the same year as her husband, this fellow actor in the film "Cocoon" | Hume Cronyn 
 
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    | "The Green Mile", "Carrie",
 "Needful Things"
 | Carrie 
 
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    | This term used of lady sonneteers is now disdained as condescending | poetess 
 
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    | The self-penned epitaph of this president who died on July 23, 1885 reads, "Let us have peace" | (Ulysses) Grant 
 
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    | "I've been stabbed, shocked, poisoned, frozen, hung, electrocuted & burned... I am an immortal" | (Alex: The filmmaker gets a film category Daily Double.) 
 Groundhog Day
 
 
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    | The Edelweiss Lodge in Garmisch is a resort for soldiers on this alliterative type of leave | R&R 
 
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    | As Brancusi's assistant, Isamu Noguchi mastered this art form on display at a Queens museum named for him | sculpture 
 
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    | "The Pelican Brief", "The Firm",
 "The Client"
 | The Firm 
 
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    | A type of Italian noblewoman, like the "Barefoot" one in a 1954 movie | contessa 
 
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    | In 1853 at age 33, she became superintendent of London's Harley Street Nursing Home | (Florence) Nightingale 
 
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    | "Why worry?  Each one of us is carrying an unlicensed nuclear accelerator on his back" | Ghostbusters 
 
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    | This widely recorded soprano was chosen by Ira Gershwin for the lead role in a 1952 revival of "Porgy and Bess" | (Dan: Who is Marian Anderson?) (Quinn: Who is Ella Fitzgerald?)
 
 Leontyne Price
 
 
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    | "Bleak House", "A Christmas Carol",
 "The Mystery of Edwin Drood"
 | (Quinn: What is Bleak House?) 
 A Christmas Carol
 
 
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    | Take one letter out of a breaded, fried piece of potato to get this, a woman who flirts to get her way | (Alex: The breaded potato is a croquette; take the "R" out and you have [*].) 
 coquette
 
 
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    | The eldest of 10 children, this Irish writer would make June 16, 1904 a date to remember | (James) Joyce 
 
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    | "C'mon, it's Czechoslovakia.  We zip in, we pick 'em up... zip right out again...  It's like we're going into Wisconsin" | Stripes 
 
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    | In the 1980s these Army food packets replaced C rations; old-time soldiers would have loved the chicken tetrazzini | Meals Ready-to-Eat 
 
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    | This Texas playwright also wrote the screenplays for "To Kill a Mockingbird" & "Tender Mercies" | Horton Foote 
 
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    | "The Hound of the Baskervilles", "A Study in Scarlet",
 "The Valley of Fear"
 | (Quinn: What is The Hound of the Baskervilles?) 
 A Study in Scarlet
 
 
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    | The -ine suffix is seen in words like chorine for a chorus girl & this for a harem member | concubine 
 
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    | In 1684 this German philosopher published the foundations of calculus, unaware of Newton's work on the subject | Leibniz 
 
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    | "Once again, my life has been saved by the miracle of lasagna" | Garfield 
 
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    | Some distinguished figures in this field include Michael Graves, Robert Venturi & Denise Scott Brown | architecture 
 
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    | "The Plague", "The Rebel",
 "The Stranger"
 | The Stranger 
 
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    | A man who has left a will is a testator; this is the equivalent word for a woman | testatrix 
 
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