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  | GEORGE CLOONEY ON CELLULOID |  |
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  | NATIONAL SPELLING BEE WINNING WORDS |  |
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    | Donatello sculpted 3 well-known statues of this biblical figure, 2 in marble & a nude bronze | David 
 
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    | 2005: TV news producer Fred Friendly
 | Good Night and Good Luck 
 
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    | Collinsville, Illinois, on the historic National Road, has a 170' bottle of this, waiting for a 200' burger | (Rick: What is Coke?) 
 ketchup
 
 
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    | Just like a papaya, this fruit when unripe contains enzymes that can tenderize meat | (Rick: What is lemon?) 
 mango
 
 
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    | In 1793 this French queen was tried & executed, charged with giving military secrets to her brother Emperor Leopold II | Marie Antoinette 
 
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    | 1928: No yolk, just this white part of the egg
 | A-L-B-U-M-E-N 
 
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    | This American's 1942 mobile "Red Petals" stands 8 1/2 feet high & consists of painted sheet metal & wire | (Alexander) Calder 
 
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    | 2005: Undercover CIA operative Bob Barnes
 | Syriana 
 
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    | This state's Edge of the Wilderness byway takes you near more than 1,000 lakes | Minnesota 
 
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    | This hot pepper is named after the capital of the state of Veracruz | jalapeƱo 
 
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    | Around 325 this Christian emperor began a basilica in Rome on the spot where St. Peter's stands today | Constantine (the Great) 
 
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    | 1954: This architectural term for the part of a church that crosses the nave at right angles
 | (Rick: What is A-P-S-E?) 
 T-R-A-N-S-E-P-T
 
 
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    | At age 75 he began to sculpt his Florentine Pieta, in which he portrayed himself in the guise of Nicodemus | Michelangelo 
 
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    | 1999: Gulf War soldier Major Archie Gates
 | Three Kings 
 
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    | The byway called "Top of" these is at over 9,000 feet, which is considered the lowlands there | the Rockies 
 
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    | The large dark brown crimino mushroom became much more popular when its name was changed to this | portobello 
 
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    | Plato's "Phaedo" describes this man's final days, including his death by poison | Socrates 
 
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    | This Roman's campaign against the Dacians in the early 2nd century was commemorated in a relief on a famous column | Trajan 
 
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    | 2000: Escaped convict Ulysses Everett McGill
 | O Brother, Where Art Thou? 
 
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    | Once a 900-mile route extending to Missouri, it's now a 565-mile scenic byway mostly in New Mexico | (John: What is Route 66?) 
 the Santa Fe Trail
 
 
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    | This fruit related to the grapefruit is also called a shaddock | pomelo 
 
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    | After abdicating this country's throne in 1654, Christina tried to get the throne in Poland or Naples--didn't work | Sweden 
 
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    | This cowboy sculptor, a contemporary of Remington, represents Montana in Statuary Hall | (Charles Marion) Russell 
 
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    | 2002: CIA recruiter Jim Byrd
 | (John: What is Confessions of a Hit Man?) 
 Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
 
 
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    | An Illinois byway covers 179 miles of this highway, the USA's first paved transcontinental road | the Lincoln Highway 
 
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    | The name of this kind of tuna is Spanish for "pretty" | (Alex: Are we accepting it?  Okay.  We are giving you the benefit of the doubt.  You made it sound as if you spell it B-E-N-I-T-O when in fact it is spelled B-O--[*].) 
 bonito
 
 
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    | He told the Rump Parliament, "You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing lately, depart, I say" | Oliver Cromwell 
 
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    | 1982: Psoriasis was the winning word;
 1965:
 This itchy skin condition
 | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 E-C-Z-E-M-A
 
 
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