Show #4446 - Monday, December 29, 2003

Game data retrieved from an alternate archive.

Contestants

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Riki Swanson, an economist from Arlington, Virginia

Chris Stansfield, a bartender from New York, New York

John Salmon, a computer programmer from Altadena, California (whose 1-day cash winnings total $31,200)

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Jeopardy! Round

ROBERT E. LEE
TELEVISION & THE '60s
WHIRLED CAPITALS
AIRLINE CARRY-ON NO-NOs
KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES
WHAT THE "L"?!
    $200 26
In 1829 Robert E. Lee graduated second in his class from this academy
    $200 3
(Sofia of the Clue Crew reports from Kauai, Hawaii.) On November 22, 1963, while making the pilot for this Bob Denver series here on Kauai, the cast learned that JFK had been shot
    $200 1
NON OLD
    $200 12
Metal ones with pointed tips are a no-no; the blunt plastic pairs used by kids are okay
    $200 14
The phrase "I have not yet begun to fight" has been attributed to this man
    $200 19
The 36 columns of his memorial represent the number of U.S. states at the time of his assassination
    $400 27
In 1859 Lee commanded a group of Marines who were called in to capture this man at Harpers Ferry
    $400 4
By the time this series ended, it was set in the '60s & The Fonz had become Dean of Boys at a high school
    $400 2
IN VANE
    $400 9
Even Cupid can't carry on these tools of his trade
    $400 16
(Hey y'all, this is Darryl Worley.) When I was in college, my band sang the songs of this man, the "Rolls Royce of Country singers"
    $400 15
There's one "of Bagger Vance" & one "of Sleepy Hollow"
    $600 28
The detail of Lee seen here is from this monumental landmark in Georgia
    $600 5
Barbara Walters started out as a writer on this morning show in 1961, eventually working her way up to co-host
    $600 8
I RASP
    $600 21
Meat cleavers--no,
hammers--no,
this invention of Alfred Nobel--really no!
    $600 13
This model played May Day in "A View to a Kill"
    $600 20
This 3-letter- named car of the 1920s sounds like a psychedelic drug from the hippie era
    DD: $200 29
The Virginia house & surrounding grounds where Lee once lived became this hallowed site
    $800 6
Debuting in 1966, this Marlo Thomas sitcom paved the way for other shows about independent career women
    $800 10
APE RUG
    $800 23
Screwdrivers are a no-no, except as part of a repair kit for these
    $800 17
A biography of this labor organizer called her "The Miner's Angel"
    $800 22
You'll find Texas Tech in this Texas town
    $1000 30
In the photo seen here, Lee is sitting astride this beloved horse
    $1000 7
A Red Cross worker named Cherry White was killed in the 1968 Tet Offensive on a 1989 episode of this series
    $1000 11
IN SILK, EH?
    $1000 24
On your mark... get set... no! for this sporting device
    $1000 18
His novels include "The Thin Red Line" & "From Here to Eternity"
    $1000 25
Atomic number 103, this short-lived element is named for the physicist who built the machine that first produced it

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 15):

John Chris Riki
$1,400 $3,000 $2,600

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

John Chris Riki
$5,600 $5,400 $3,200

Double Jeopardy! Round

INTELLECTUAL PURSUITS
SONGS FROM MUSICALS
THE UNITED NATIONS
LET ME HAVE YOUR ADDRESS
WOMEN AUTHORS
ALLITERATION
    $400 6
To teach everyone about everything Pierre Larousse published a 17-volume combined dictionary & this
    $400 1
"Cell Block Tango" &
"All That Jazz"
    $400 12
The U.N. delegates' dining room offers international cuisine (naturally) & views of this river
    $400 17
When chatting with Queen Elizabeth, you can just use "Ma'am" after calling her this once
    $400 21
Nobel Prize winner Wislawa Szymborska is one of the most famous modern poets in this language
    $400 26
These edibles are the best part of some parties -- mmm, here comes the stuffed mushroom lady
    $800 7
Cryptologists don't break into crypts, they devise & break these
    $800 2
"I Won't Grow Up" &
"I'm Flying"
    $800 11
In 2003 its docket included a frontier dispute between Benin & Niger
    $800 16
To address a Marquess, George Harrison would have said this (& he didn't need the "sweet")
    $800 22
In "Northanger Abbey" she wrote that in novels "the greatest powers of the mind are displayed"
    $800 27
(Video of Sarah in Squaw Valley, California.) Seasonal term for what I'm doing; good thing there's still snow on the mountain
    $1200 8
A popular superstring theory says there are 10 of these, including time
    $1200 3
"If Ever I Would Leave You" &
"I Wonder What The King Is Doing Tonight"
    $1200 13
The Security Council's Rule of "Great Power Unanimity" means 5 nations have this on substantive matters
    $1200 18
If Hillary Clinton becomes President, she'd be addressed this way when you talk to her
    DD: $3,000 23
Existentialism pervades the work of this Parisian woman who died in 1986
    $1200 28
As opposed to the trade type, it's a roughly 4x7 paperback sold in drugstores & airports
    $1600 9
Around 400 B.C. Indian grammarian Panini compiled the grammar of this language
    DD: $2,000 4
"The King of Broadway" &
"In Old Bavaria"
    $1600 14
A member of the U.N. system, it's the international agency symbolized here
    $1600 19
Writing to anyone in the military, it's rank, full name, comma, then the abbreviation for this
    $1600 24
The author of "Ramona" had this name, like a current actress, before marrying William Jackson
    $1600 29
Term for the animals seen here, it's mispronounced in a memorable "Honeymooners" episode
    $2000 10
The theoretical radiation emitted by these is called Hawking Radiation after physicist Stephen, who proposed it
    $2000 5
"Big Spender" &
"If My Friends Could See Me Now"
    $2000 15
U.N. mediation helped create the 1992 peace accord between the FMLN & this country's government
    $2000 20
If you take a bead on an Archdeacon you can refer to him as this, like Bede
    $2000 25
Her stories, in collections like "Friend of My Youth", often concern women of small-town Canada
    $2000 30
Another name for the game of skipping stones, from the stones' resemblance to skipping waterfowl

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

John Chris Riki
$8,800 $13,400 $10,200

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

FOODSTUFFS
A plant called this accompanies sushi & also the Passover seder

Final scores:

John Chris Riki
$6,401 $21,400 $2,200
2nd place: $2,000 New champion: $21,400 3rd place: $1,000

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

John Chris Riki
$9,000 $15,400 $8,400
16 R,
4 W
(including 1 DD)
20 R,
4 W
(including 1 DD)
14 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W

Combined Coryat: $32,800

[game responses] [game scores] [suggest correction]

Game tape date: 2003-10-28
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