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    | In "Macbeth", among the items in this container are scale of dragon, tooth of wolf, tongue of dog & toe of frog | the witch's cauldron 
 
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    | In the 1932 Disney short "Babes in the Woods", friendly gnomes save this brother & sister from an evil witch | Hansel & Gretel 
 
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    | George Ryan, for racketeering conspiracy, tax fraud...
 | (Cobra: What is the 20th century?) (Jane: What is the 19th century?)
 ...
 (Alex: Yes, it's a recent thing.)
 
 the 21st century
 
 
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    | This German-Jewish philosopher was the grandfather of composer Felix | (Moses) Mendelssohn 
 
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    | This measure of a liquor's strength is twice its percentage of alcohol | proof 
 
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    | "There's no" this "lost" between 2 people used to mean they liked each other; now it means the opposite | love 
 
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    | She was worried when Hamlet came to her "pale as his shirt; his knees knocking each other" | Ophelia 
 
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    | Most know him as the neater half of TV's "Odd Couple"; he was the Gnome King in 1987's "The Gnomes' Great Adventure" | Tony Randall 
 
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    | Henry Ward Beecher for adultery
 | the 19th century 
 
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    | From Jan. 1978 to Dec. 1994, this center did not foul out for an NBA record 1,212 consecutive games | Moses Malone 
 
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    | Liquor placed in paper bags led to this slang term for liquor shops | package stores 
 
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    | "Ballon d'essai" is the French equivalent of this, sent up to test people's reaction | (Jane: What is a weather balloon?) ...
 (Alex: [*].  Yes.  Ballon
 d'essai.)
 
 trial balloon
 
 
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    | "Twelfth Night" opens with, "If music be the food of love," do this | play on 
 
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    | On "Happy Days" he was the father of Richie & Joanie, & he voiced the title character on "David the Gnome" | Tom Bosley 
 
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    | Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, et al., for witchcraft
 | (Alex: That's right, the 1600s in Salem, Massachusetts.) 
 the 17th century
 
 
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    | Profession of Thomas, husband of artist Grandma Moses | a farmer 
 
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    | This famous song is sung to the tune of the old British drinking song "To Anacreon In Heaven" | "The Star-Spangled Banner" 
 
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    | Caesar says this man "thinks too much: such men are dangerous" (No, it's not Brutus) | Cassius 
 
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    | Audrey Tautou sends her father's garden gnome on some worldwide travels in this French comedy from 2001 | Amélie 
 
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    | Henri Philippe Petain, for treason
 | the 20th century 
 
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    | In 1821 he got an OK from Mexico to bring U.S. settlers into the Texas area; his son Stephen carried on his work | (Moses) Austin 
 
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    | To create a depth charge, you usually drop a shot of liquor like schnapps or tequila into a glass of this | (Jane: What is [*]? [Smiles] [Laughs] BOOZE-A-PALOOZA for $2000, please.)
 (Alex: Familiar with that, were you?)
 
 beer
 
 
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    | To keep making the same point is to do this, like repeatedly picking the same string on a large instrument | (Cobra: What is pluck?) (Alex: No.  If you [*] on something.  [*] on something.)
 
 harp
 
 
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    | 2-word phrase for a predetermined ending; Othello talks of one in Act III | (Cobra: What is a fait accompli?) 
 a foregone conclusion
 
 
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    | 2 gnomes, 2 kids & a lumber tycoon set off on a forest adventure in the title vehicle in this 1967 film | The Gnome-Mobile 
 
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    | Thomas Cranmer, for heresy
 | (Jane: What is the 18th century?) 
 the 16th century
 
 
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    | Robert Caro won a Pulitzer Prize for "The Power Broker", about this administrator who shaped New York City | (Cobra: Who is LaGuardia?) (Alex: No.  Remember we are dealing with MOSESES, and this is [*].)
 
 Robert Moses
 
 
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    | This rum company's logo of a flying bat traditionally symbolizes long life & prosperity | Bacardi 
 
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    | (Kelly of the Clue Crew shows us a sifter.)  It's a part that restrains movement, like the movement of air; you may say that a setback puts one on your plans | (Dave: What is a crimp?) (Alex: No.  What is [*]? [*], yes, in the flue.)
 
 a damper
 
 
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