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Q1: MoMA sells cookie cutters shaped like the Sears Tower, the Guggenheim Museum & this

Sydney landmark?

The crrect Answer is: Opera House

Q2: In 1841 a sound that became a center for Antarctic exploration was named for him?

The crrect Answer is: McMurdo

Q3: Fittingly, this Texas city has a 65-foot-tall replica of the Eiffel Tower?

The crrect Answer is: Paris

Q4: This Czech president's play "The Garden Party" was long banned in his homeland?

The crrect Answer is: Vaclav Havel

Q5: These caused a blurring of the image, so Newton replaced one of them with a curved
mirror?

The crrect Answer is: a telescope lens

Q6: The Harappan civilization is another name for the ancient civilization of this Asian river
valley?

The crrect Answer is: Indus River valley

Q7: "Meteorological" acquaintance who only hangs out with you when things are good?

The crrect Answer is: fair-weather friend

Q8: Name shared by Chicago's Great Lake & one of Chicago's major avenues?

The crrect Answer is: Michigan


Q9: The team that wins the Super Bowl is awarded the trophy named for him?

The crrect Answer is: the Vince Lombardi Trophy

Q10: The University of Minnesota's graduate school of medicine is named for this family?

The crrect Answer is: Mayo

Q11: Term given the home vegetable gardens planted by patriotic Americans during WWII?

The crrect Answer is: victory gardens

Q12: Title for the president of a yacht club, or the rank just below a navy's rear admiral?

The crrect Answer is: commodore

Q13: The park bench Tom Hanks sat on in much of this 1994 film was in Chippewa Square
in Savannah, Georgia?

The crrect Answer is: <i>Forrest Gump</i>

Q14: Nation's largest single user of almonds is this chocolate maker?

The crrect Answer is: Hershey

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