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| Catherine Booth designed the bonnet worn by women in this semi-military group founded by her husband |
the Salvation Army
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| If a recipe calls for blanching tomatoes, it's so that you can remove this more easily |
skin
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| If you receive a Rhodes scholarship, you'll have to hit the road to this city |
Oxford, England
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| He's a weak-willed king in the Old Testament or a whaler captain in "Moby Dick" |
Ahab
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| The two pieces of silverware on the traditional sign for a restaurant |
[The end-of-round signal sounds.]
fork & knife
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| British soldiers wounded in the Crimean War called her the "Lady with the Lamp" |
Florence Nightingale
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| Be alert when you heat oil for frying, because once it reaches the point when it does this, it decomposes |
(Mark: What is boiling?)
smokes
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| The World Wildlife Fund is working with the Chinese on a detailed survey of pandas & this, their only food |
(Alex: Less than a minute to go.)
bamboo
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| It's the most famous industry of the Netherlands town of Edam |
cheesemaking
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| Poe poem about a maiden who "lived with no other thought than to love and to be loved by me" |
"Annabel Lee"
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| A road sign showing the back of a car with two wavy lines trailing from it stands for this |
slippery when wet
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| This famous nineteenth-century beauty had four husbands including a bigamist, but she never married Jim Brady |
(Mark: Who is "Diamond Lil"?) [Originally ruled correct; ruled incorrect prior to Final Jeopardy!]
Lillian Russell
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| To make pumpernickel, use the dark flour of this grain |
rye
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| Some of these birds have bald heads and necks, which prevents feather damage when eating from carcasses |
vultures
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| Though Amman used to be named this, it wasn't home to a "Jordanian Bandstand" TV show |
Philadelphia
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| Set in the forest of Arden, this comedy has more songs than any other Shakespeare play |
(Kate: What is All's Well That Ends Well?) [She remembered the correct response a second after she gave hers.]
As You Like It
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| In "The Talk Book", Dr. Gerald Goodman figures 25% of all we say is followed by this punctuation mark |
(Michael: What is a comma?)
a question mark
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| In 1893 this Sunday school teacher was the most notorious woman in Fall River, Massachusetts |
Lizzie Borden
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| It's the difference between a boiled potato and a parboiled one |
(Kate: What is not having skin?)
the parboiled one is not fully cooked
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| In Canada, the population of these tufted-eared wildcats depends on the population of snowshoe rabbits |
lynxes
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| Considered the home of Japanese drama, especially puppet theater, it's Japan's third largest city |
(Mark: What is Kyoto?)
Osaka
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| Robin Hood's hyphenated henchman |
Allan-a-Dale
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| The symbol for this appeared twice on May, 1988 sky charts, and that won't happen again in one month until 1990 |
a full moon
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| This abolitionist was born into slavery in New York, and the first language she spoke was Dutch |
Sojourner Truth
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| An Italian dish of veal shanks cooked with white wine, olive oil, spices, tomatoes & a few anchovies |
osso buco
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| Caimans are most closely related to these animals |
(Mark: What are crocodiles?)
alligators
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| If you take a case to the Swiss supreme court, you have to go to this French-speaking city near Geneva |
(Kate: What is Bern?)
Lausanne
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| Booth Tarkington book that ends as the title character enters the stairway to Frincke's business college |
Alice Adams
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| In a chemical equation this symbol denotes a substance has escaped as a gas |
an arrow pointing up
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