| ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA SAYS SO |
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| "Its '57 varieties' slogan was devised in 1896, but today the company markets more than 5,700 products" |
Heinz
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| Streets in this state capital include Roger Street, Williams Street & Friendship Street |
(Jon: What's Harrisburg?)
Providence (Rhode Island)
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| Estate Gamekeeper Oliver Mellors is the title paramour in this D.H. Lawrence novel |
Lady Chatterley's Lover
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| This tween idol double-dipped, having 2 CDs on the same chart with "Believe" & "Believe: Acoustic" |
(Justin) Bieber
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| Looking for an anti-inflammatory? Try a few quills of this spice |
cinnamon
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| A dad may find himself doing this in the delivery room & again 30 years later when he's ending financial support |
(Alex: You'll love it--what is [*]?)
cutting the cord
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| "Institution of higher learning in Durham, N.C. ... affiliated with but not controlled by the United Methodist Church" |
Duke (University)
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| Bank vaults beneath this Swiss city's Bahnhofstrasse are said to be crammed with gold & silver |
(Alex: That's the city.)
Zurich
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| Inspector Porfiry Petrovich is on the case in this 1866 novel |
Crime & Punishment
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| "Based on a True Story..." was from this man, "The Voice" of country music |
(Blake) Shelton
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| They're often teamed with sour cream, as seen here |
chives
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| Before it means dating several people at a time, it meant betting on all the racehorses |
playing the field
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| "Born... 1990" in Kentucky, "actress who by ... 22 had been nominated twice for the Academy Award for Best Actress" |
Jennifer Lawrence
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| On its 2,500-mile course to the Pacific, this road passed through the state capitals of Springfield & Oklahoma City |
Route 66
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| The line "no country for old men" comes from this Irishman's poem "Sailing To Byzantium" |
(William Butler) Yeats
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| Being dead since 1970 didn't stop this guitar legend from charting with "People, Hell And Angels" |
Jimi Hendrix
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| A prized black pepper comes from the Malabar Coast of this nation |
India
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| Passing through a crisis safely, or navigating your way 90 degrees from Hollywood to Vine |
turning the corner
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| "A series of intl. treaties... between 1864 & 1949 for... ameliorating the effects of war on soldiers and civilians" |
the Geneva Conventions
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| The location of offices like the Defence Ministry HQ, this London street has become a synonym for the government |
Whitehall
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| Richard Wright wrote "Native Son"; this African-American writer put out "Notes Of A Native Son" |
(Alex: And that author's name is [*].)
James Baldwin
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| This singer for Hootie & The Blowfish had a hit with his third solo country album, "True Believers" |
(Darius) Rucker
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| The nail-shaped buds of this spice used to alleviate a toothache gives us its name, from the Latin for "nail" |
cloves
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| Going to sleep, not punching dried grass, as you might think |
hitting the hay
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| This French artist portrayed "the personalities and facets of Parisian nightlife and... entertainment in the 1890s" |
Toulouse-Lautrec
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| He wrote that "naked lunch" means "a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on... every fork" |
(William S.) Burroughs
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| His "Unorthodox Jukebox" was quite popular; did he "planet" that way? |
(Alex: 'Cause his name is [*].)
Bruno Mars
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| To keep prices high in the 1760s, the Dutch burned warehouses of this spice whose seed covering supplies mace |
(Greg: What is mustard?)
nutmeg
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| This African custom seen at many weddings of African Americans symbolizes sweeping away the old |
(Varun: No.)
jumping the broom
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