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    | Pytheas, an ancient Greek geographer, was perhaps the first to associate tidal motion with this body | the Moon 
 
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    | Most of his profits from "The Birth of a Nation" were lost when he made "Intolerance" | D.W. Griffith 
 
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    | This arched brick or stone ceiling can be of the barrel, groin or ribbed style | a vault 
 
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    | "Sister Carrie" was Theodore Dreiser's first novel & "Carrie" was this author's | Stephen King 
 
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    | When Columbus reached this future U.S. commonwealth in 1493, he named it San Juan Bautista | Puerto Rico 
 
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    | Most of England's Hanoverian monarchs had this first name | George 
 
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    | This proposer of the absolute temperature scale was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1866 | Kelvin 
 
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    | He directed his last film, "A Countess from Hong Kong", in 1967, over 50 years after his first film | Charlie Chaplin 
 
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    | From the Latin for "porch", it's a structure consisting of a roof supported by columns | a portico 
 
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    | She sometimes joked that she was writing a sequel to her famous novel, to be titled "Back With the Breeze" | (Alex: Right, Gone With the Wind.) 
 Margaret Mitchell
 
 
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    | Argentina's claim to this British South Atlantic colony dates back to 1820 | the Falklands 
 
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    | This prominent Monegasque family is descended from wealthy Genoese merchants & politicians | (Robert: Who are the Garibaldis?) 
 the Grimaldis
 
 
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    | Hugo de Vries, who rediscovered Mendel's laws of heredity, also proposed this theory of altered genes | mutation 
 
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    | Although best known for his sound films, William Wellman directed this first "Best Picture" winner | Wings 
 
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    | Bernini's bronze canopy over the main altar at St. Peter's is a masterpiece of this style of architecture | (Richard: What is, uh, Rococo?) 
 Baroque
 
 
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    | He wrote about Jews in "Exodus", Muslims in "The Haj" & Protestants & Catholics in "Trinity" | Leon Uris 
 
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    | Quebec's Anticosti Island at the mouth of this river is the site of a provincial park | the St. Lawrence 
 
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    | The third Swedish king to bear this name was shot at a masquerade & died a few days later | Gustav 
 
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    | This German astronomer born in 1571 was the first to explain how the planets move around the Sun | Kepler 
 
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    | As an actor, this Vienna-born director was billed as "the man you love to hate" | Erich von Stroheim 
 
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    | Mesopotamians built these temples to look like miniature mountains | ziggurats 
 
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    | Sebastian Melmoth was the name used by this Irish playwright while in exile | Oscar Wilde 
 
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    | This island off the coast of Southern California was named in honor of St. Catherine of Alexandria | Santa Catalina 
 
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    | This 4-time British prime minister tried to abolish income taxes but failed | Gladstone 
 
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    | It was American physicist Arthur Compton who came up with this name for a quantum of light | a photon 
 
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    | He remade his first Hollywood film, "The Squaw Man", twice | (Alex: Sorry, Richard, not quickly enough.) 
 Cecil B. DeMille
 
 
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    | This architect, born in 1573, founded the English school of classical architecture | (Richard: Who is Wren?) 
 Inigo Jones
 
 
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    | Scientific American was one of the magazines that reviewed his novel "Gravity's Rainbow" | (Richard: Who is, um, Saul Bellow?) 
 Thomas Pynchon
 
 
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    | This Caribbean island in the Leeward group has both French & Dutch sections | Saint Martin 
 
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    | The name of this political faction in Medieval Italy was derived from the Welfs, a German family | the Guelphs 
 
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