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| TRAINS & THE PEOPLE WHO LOVE THEM |
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| THE TITLE'S NOT IN THE LYRICS |
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| Stealing these round covers on car wheels was once a rite of passage for young delinquents like Evel Knievel & Steve McQueen |
hubcaps
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| As a group, the 4 largest of Jupiter's moons are named for this Italian |
Galileo
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| This train-loving president said, "I'm probably the most pro-rail guy in America. I've ridden over 1,300,000 miles" |
(Ken: AMTRAK Joe, yes.)
Biden
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| Georgian architecture was all the rage in colonial America, as seen in the old statehouse that's now on this city's Freedom Trail |
Boston
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| You'll hear "I wanna show you off" repeatedly in this Doja Cat hit, but not the title place |
"Agora Hills"
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| This New York borough was actually named for but one woman, Catherine of Braganza |
Queens
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| One way to say "start eating" is "strap on" this, usually attached to a horse's head |
a feed bag
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| Marked by its billowy surface, pahoehoe is a term for a flow of this |
lava
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| In 1975 Jackie Kennedy Onassis stepped in to save this Beaux-Arts New York City landmark |
Grand Central Station
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| This product once called "white gold" has been made in Meissen, Germany since 1710; before that, you had to get it from China |
porcelain
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| You'll hear the album title but not the song title in this Nirvana breakthrough smash; whatever, nevermind |
"Smells Like Teen Spirit"
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| Westernmost of the prairie provinces, it was named for the wife of the Marquess of Lorne, a Canadian governor general |
(Eileen: What is Victoria?)
Alberta
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| Four-letter word for a raised platform, like the one for the veep & speaker at the State of the Union address |
a dais
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| This end-of-the-alphabet word is the term for the spot in the celestial sphere directly above you |
zenith
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| Tiktoker Francis Bourgeois gained 3 million followers sharing this hobby, also the name of a Danny Boyle film |
trainspotting
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| This furniture style with curved ornamentation got big in the mid-1700s; nice time to be a Chippendale |
Rococo
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| A classic by The Who is titled "Baba O'riley", not "Teenage" this place, as the chorus might suggest |
Wasteland
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| Maryland is named for Queen Henrietta Maria, the wife of this man for whom the Carolinas are named |
(Dave: Who is George II?)
Charles (I)
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| It's the full-length robe worn by Catholic clergy: white for popes, red for Cardinals, black for priests |
(Eileen: What is a--what is an alb?)
the cassock
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| Immunoglobulins is another word for these, produced in the body to fight foreign invaders |
(Dave: What are... white blood cells?)
antibodies
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| The company relaunching this train describes it as a "dream on wheels"; it first puffed east from Paris in 1883 |
(Ken: Correct, with less than a minute to go.)
the Orient Express
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| A landmark of Neoclassicism, this Jacques-Louis David painting features, among other things, a cup of hemlock & a bummed-out Plato |
The Death of Socrates
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| We can't repeat many of the words in her No. 1 hit "Hiss", but the title's OK |
Megan Thee Stallion
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| This capital of South Australia was named for a consort of William IV |
(Klay: What is Victoria?)
Adelaide
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| Basically meaning "little moon", it's the style of window seen here |
a lunette
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| These microscopic pores in leaves & stems are opened & closed to exchange gases & reduce water loss |
(Klay: What are stigmata?)
stomata
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| This "commodore" didn't just love the sea; by 1873 he owned 4 railroads, including the New York Central |
Vanderbilt
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| In contrast to the weightier fare of "opera seria", this genre of light comic opera emerged in Naples in the mid-18th century |
opera buffa
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| Am I just paranoid, or do you not know that the title of a 1994 hit by this popular punk trio is actually "Basket Case"? |
Green Day
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| Yamoussoukro, a capital of this African nation, was named for a great-aunt of President Félix Houphouët-Boigny |
Côte d'Ivoire
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