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    | Though he lived in many states, his body "lies a-moudering in the grave" south of Lake Placid | 
    John Brown
 
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    | This comedy features a woman named Hero & a hero named Benedick, but it isn't "Much" | 
    Much Ado About Nothing
 
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    | In Hebrew, this word literally means "fit", as in "fit to be eaten" | 
    kosher
 
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    | In the 1890s William Halsted introduced the practice of wearing these sterile surgical accessories | 
    rubber gloves
 
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    | This wealthy oil magnate was born in 1839 just outside the village of Richford | 
    (John D.) Rockefeller
 
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    | Villain in "Othello" who says, "Wine is a good familiar creature, if it be well used" | 
    Iago
 
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    | The holy day of the week in the Seventh-day Adventist Church | 
    Saturday
 
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    | His goal was to collect 100,000 sexual histories; when he died in 1956, he had about 18,000 | 
    Kinsey
 
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    | The local government official who determines the value of a property specifically for tax purposes | 
    (Alex: Now's the time for it!) [Laughter]
  an assessor
 
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    | His running ability helped this Dustin Hoffman character escape his Nazi foe | 
    The Marathon Man
 
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    | Make no mistake: this play about twins was "musicalized" as "The Boys from Syracuse" | 
    (Rich: What is Twelfth Night?)
  A Comedy of Errors
 
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    | Biblical event commemorated by the taking of communion in Christian ceremonies | 
    the Last Supper
 
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    | Connected to a beeping machine, people have learned to control their blood pressure using this process | 
    (Thompson: What is biorhythms?)
  biofeedback
 
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    | Before granting a mortgage, a lender has this person inspect the property to determine its market value | 
    (Doug: What's an assessor?)
  an appraiser
 
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    Film that inspired Burt Bacharach & Hal David to write this 1962 Top 10 hit:
  "Alone and afraid she prayed that he'd return that fateful night / Aw, that night / When nothing she said could keep her man from going out to fight..." | 
    The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
 
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    | Brooklynite Jennie Jerome was the mother of this famous statesman | 
    (Doug: I have no idea.) (Alex: I betchyou Rich and Thompson were hoping they would get this one.) (Doug: I'm sure they do, yeah.) (Alex: Who was Jennie Churchill, [*]'s mother.) [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  Winston Churchill
 
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    | In "Antony and Cleopatra", Marc Antony commits suicide by doing this | 
    falling on his blade
 
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    | European mercenaries of the 15th to 19th c., they now exist only to protect the Pope | 
    (Doug: Who are the Vatican Guard?) (Alex: Be more specific.)
  the Swiss Guard
 
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    | Encyclopedia Americana says an infant has about 350 of these, but a typical adult only 206 | 
    bones
 
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    | An area legally designated for specific use, such as business, residential or industrial | 
    a zone
 
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    | Title roles played by Jean-Louis Trintignant & Anouk Aimée in 1966 & a 1986 sequel | 
    A Man and a Woman
 
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    | This 19th c. politician was born at 1 Cherry Street, Manhattan & died in the Ludlow St. jail | 
    Boss Tweed
 
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    | He was banished from Verona for killing Tybalt | 
    Romeo
 
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    | Every good Moslem is expected to make one of these pilgrimages to Mecca once in his life | 
    a hajj
 
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    | An otolaryngologist treats these 3 body parts | 
    the ear, nose, & the throat
 
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    | An agreement with a real estate broker to market one's property | 
    a listing
 
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    | Hitchcock "Man" played by Leslie Banks in 1934 & James Stewart in 1956 | 
    The Man Who Knew Too Much
 
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