| CITY OF THE DAY: MINNEAPOLIS |  
   
 
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    | The information center at Minnehaha Park (off Hiawatha Ave.) is a replica of this poet's home in Massachusetts | 
    Longfellow
 
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    | "Shoeless Joe" | 
    Field of Dreams
 
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    | Some Indians of the Amazon use the teeth of this vicious fish as scissors or razors | 
    the piranha
 
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    | The man seen here was allegedly poisoned while trying to become president of this former Soviet republic | 
    the Ukraine
 
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    | This 3-letter word for excess pride is a psychoanalytic term for the conscious self | 
    the ego
 
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    | The person in this position is typically small & light but has enough authority to tell rowers what to do | 
    the coxswain
 
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    | In 2006 Lake Calhoun was the site of a tourney in this type of ice hockey, named for small bodies of water | 
    pond hockey
 
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    | "Monkey Planet" | 
    Planet of the Apes
 
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    | The bird spider, a member of this family of hairy spiders, usually eats beetles, but it does eat small birds on occasion | 
    (Craig: What is a wolf spider?)
  tarantula
 
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    | After overthrowing Milton Obote in 1971, he had some 300,000 people killed | 
    (Alex: You ID'd Victor Yuschenko, and you can now profit.) ... (Alex: [*] in Uganda.)
  Idi Amin
 
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    | The name of this part that supports an airplane's wing is also a prideful walk | 
    a strut
 
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    | The end of the oar that slices through the water, it's usually painted with a country's or team's colors | 
    the blade
 
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    | The first fully enclosed one of these opened in 1956 in Edina; today there's a good-sized one in Bloomington | 
    a shopping mall
 
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    | "Wiseguy: Life in a Mafia Family" | 
    Goodfellas
 
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    | The Amazon species of this sea cow is the only one to live exclusively in fresh water | 
    a manatee
 
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    | This Venezuelan's close friendship with Fidel Castro has made him controversial in some quarters | 
    Hugo Chavez
 
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    | Connoisseurs of pride in film might have this "theory" from the French for "high" | 
    (Craig: What is haute?  Haute theory?  What is haute theory?)
  hauteur
 
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    | As a verb, it refers to the motion propelling the boat; as a noun, it refers to the person who sets the pace | 
    (Alex: I never heard this word in this context.  It's called the [*]--the one who sits just in front of the coxswain.)
  stroke
 
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    | City Hall's Father of Waters statue was carved from the largest single block ever of the Carrara type of this | 
    marble
 
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    | "I, Tina: My Life Story" | 
    What's Love Got to Do with It
 
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    | The Western Hemisphere's largest snake, it may live about 28 years--about a year a foot | 
    an anaconda
 
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    | From 1952 to 1987 she was chief of state of Fiji | 
    (Alex: And that would be Her Majesty [*].)
  Queen Elizabeth II
 
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    | If you missed an Olympic berth at the Worlds, your last chance is at this qualification racing event | 
    (Thomas: What are the Nationals?)
  the Regatta
 
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    | The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden work seen here is by Coosje van Bruggen & this Swedish-born pop artist | 
    Claes Oldenburg
 
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    | "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" | 
    [Applause for Craig's run of the category] (Alex: You ran the category.  Congratulations, well done.  Boy, Craig, I'll tell you something. You must have gotten really ticked being in the hole for a good 2 or 3 clues, because you are relentless since then!) (Craig: Nothing to--nothing like that to focus your mind, doesn't it?)
  Blade Runner
 
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    | Also called a water hog, this largest rodent in the world has webbed feet that make it a very good swimmer | 
    a capybara
 
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    | Seen here is a prince & later king of this country, visiting President Carter | 
    (Roberta: What is... Jordan?) (Thomas: What is Kuwait?)
  Saudi Arabia
 
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    | When "glory" is tacked on to this adjective, you get a word for unwarranted pride | 
    vain (vainglory accepted)
 
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    | 2 disciplines in rowing are sweeping, in which each rower pulls just one oar, & this, in which each rower uses 2 oars | 
    sculling
 
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