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| He was inaugurated in 1885 at age 47, & again in 1893 at age 55 |
Grover Cleveland
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| Evil Jedi knight of "Star Wars" whose heavy breathing sounded like an obscene phone call |
Darth Vader
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| This Finnish city did a "capital" job doubling for Moscow in "Gorky Park" |
Helsinki
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| In pi, the number to the left of .14159 |
3
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| He was Chief Petty Office Otto Sharkey |
Don Rickles
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| Playboy reported red hot news when they found this was the most common food item choked on |
(Bob: What is chili?) (Alex: Read the clue carefully and it gives you the response. "Red hot news", what is [*]?)
hot dogs
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| The last 2 democratic tickets to run against Reagan were combinations of these 3 people |
Carter & Mondale & Ferraro
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| Wanting to be "evil", the good knights in this Broadway musical sing "Fie on Goodness" |
(Al: What was "Grease"?)
Camelot
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| Doris Day heard murder threats, not "pillow talk", rising out of this city's fog in "Midnight Lace" |
London
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| Number whose square is 10,000 & whose square root is 10 |
100
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| Jim Rockford's dad was known by this nickname |
(Emalie: What is Stony?)
Rocky
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| Spanish for "killer", it's the fellow who gets to kill the bull |
the matador
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| He was born in & died in Kinderhook, New York |
Martin Van Buren
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| Spurned by her, Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert accuses Rebecca of witchcraft in this classic British novel |
Ivanhoe
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| Teenage Disney star set spinning on the blades of a Cretan windmill in 1964's "The Moonspinners" |
[ERRATUM: The correct title of the movie is The Moon-Spinners.]
Hayley Mills
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| Number of equal sides on a rhombus |
(Alex: It's a square pushed out of shape.)
4
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| According to the show's title, what the group of men put together by Lt. Craig Garrison were called |
[Alex misreads "Craig" as "Greg" but corrects himself after Bob gives the correct answer.]
Garrison's Gorillas
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| They're the victims of the dreaded contagious disease known as "ich" |
(Alex: If you think of ichthyology, [*].)
fish
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| Though he was the first Federalist Party candidate elected president, he wanted to be nonpartisan |
Washington
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| In the "Chanson de Roland", the evil knight Ganelon betrays this "Great" Frankish king |
(Alex: The last clue...) [The end-of-round signal sounds.] (Alex: ...is one that I won't get to read.)
Charlemagne
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| In this 1954 film, 3 women wished for romance at Rome's Fontana di Trevi |
Three Coins in the Fountain
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| Greek for "3-angled measuring", this branch of mathematics is widely used in navigation |
trigonometry
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| He played the "I" in the '50s series "I Married Joan" |
Jim Backus
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| He didn't win his pulitzer for "Obituaries" or "Not Dying", but for "The Time of Your Life" |
(Alex: That's right, we've got less than a minute to go.)
William Saroyan
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| In 1884, it was done to honor both grandfathers, Solomon Young & Anderson Shippe Truman |
(Al: What is statues were erected of the grandfathers of Benjamin Harison?)
Harry Truman's middle initial being made S
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| Two Vincente Minnelli musicals set in Paris which won Oscars for Best Picture of '51 & '58 |
An American in Paris & Gigi
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| Term for the line that divides an angle into 2 parts |
bisector
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| This family lived at 39 Crenshaw St., Tuckahoe, N.Y., next door to Arthur & Vivian Harmon |
(Al [after being judged correct]: I don't know her husband's name, but you didn't ask that.)
Maude Findlay & her husband
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| This English explorer joked with his executioner & even gave the signal for the ax to fall |
(Sir Walter) Raleigh
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