Suggest correction - #4078 - 2002-05-01

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    $1600 29
The Times marked the Centennial of this poet who wrote, "I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother"
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Show #4078 - Wednesday, May 1, 2002

2002 Million Dollar Masters quarterfinal game 1.

Contestants

Frank Spangenberg, a lieutenant in the New York Police Department from Douglaston, New York

Rachael Schwartz, a lawyer with an international law firm from Washington, D.C.

Bob Harris, an author, comedian, and radio commentator from Los Angeles, California

Jeopardy! Round

LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY
WATER TRANSPORTS
WAX MUSEUMS
AUTOIMMUNE DISORDERS
LET THEM EAT CAKE
SO YOU'RE THE "SMART" ONE, EH?
    $200 10
In 1502, on his fourth voyage, he landed at what is now Trujillo, Honduras
    $200 21
This term for the area where you sit in a kayak is more associated with planes than boats
    $200 22
The Alamo exhibit at this city's Plaza Wax Museum is a bit eerie, because the Alamo itself is a short walk away
    $200 6
On "The West Wing" Jed Bartlet has a relapsing-remitting course of this autoimmune disorder
    $200 16
Truly "heavenly", this sponge cake made without egg yolks or butter is fat-free
    $200 1
Cartoon catchphrase meaning the quality of having a higher I.Q. than an ordinary ursine critter
    $400 11
In 1889 this country became a republic when Pedro II gave up his throne
    $400 27
When the Savannah passed Ireland in 1819, using this type of power, it made people on shore think she was on fire
    $400 23
Mingle with RuPaul & Fergie (their wax figures, that is) at the 42nd Street spin-off of this British museum
    $400 7
Both Graves' disease & Hashimoto's disease attack this gland
    $400 17
Despite its name this state dessert of Massachusetts is really a custard-filled cake
    $400 2
This series involved shoe phones & the activities of 86 & 99
    $600 12
In 1970 he became the first democratically elected Marxist to head a nation in the Western Hemisphere
    $600 28
This liquid is the first O carried by an O/B/O cargo ship
    $600 24
In 1962 this reclusive silent film sweetheart emerged to read the dedication at Movieland Wax Museum's opening
    $600 8
Deficient production of hormones by these endocrine glands causes Addison's disease
    $600 18
(Sarah of the Clue Crew puts in an evening as a dessert chef.) This dessert is a layer of cake & ice cream that's topped with meringue & then browned in the oven
    $600 3
It's what's put up by knowledgeable investors, or it's the investors themselves
    $800 13
General Alfredo Stroessner ruled this South American country with an iron hand for 35 years, 1954-1989
    $800 29
These "fish" boats, seen here, became the most popular sailboats ever produced
    DD: $1,000 25
Appropriately, Potter's Wax Museum in this Florida city bills itself as the oldest in the U.S.
    $800 9
AKA regional enteritis, this disease, a chronic inflammation of the intestines, bears the name of a U.S. doctor
    $800 19
Ricotta can be used to make this type of cake, part of a "factory" restaurant chain's name
    $800 4
One example is the 2,000 pound GBU-24
    $1000 14
In 1519, when Cortes entered the capital then called this, many believed he was a god
    $1000 30
Seen here, it shares its name with a French region, & broke the transatlantic speed record in 1935
    $1000 26
This father of a "Three's Company" star is one of the country legends depicted in wax at the Music Valley Wax Museum
    $1000 15
The name of this autoimmune disorder means "hard skin"
    $1000 20
This 3-layered "feminine" white cake filled with fruit & nuts was created in South Carolina, not Maryland
    $1000 5
From 1914 to 1923 H.L. Mencken co-edited this satiric monthly with George Jean Nathan

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

Bob Rachael Frank
$5,800 $1,000 $1,800

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Bob Rachael Frank
$7,000 $6,000 $4,800

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE NEW YORK TIMES ARTS & LEISURE
FROM THE GREEK
THE RENAISSANCE
MIDDLE NAMES
(Alex: Players, we...)
HOPE YOU LEARNED YOUR AFRICAN CAPITALS
(Alex: And if you're successful, we have...)
PLACES TO PUT YOUR BIG WINNINGS
    $400 26
The Times' article "Architecture's Dust-Up in the Desert" analyzed the school of architecture named for him
    $400 6
The name of this male singing voice is from the Greek for "deep-sounding"
    $400 2
The word Renaissance comes from rinascere, which loosely means this
    $400 16
It's the middle name shared by Miss Americas Meriwether & Mobley
    $400 11
Spread over 4 hills, this African country's capital of Kigali includes a Muslim Quarter, an airport & a technical college
    $400 21
Sealy now has Dr. Dot Richardson up to bat as a spokesperson for a new line of these to keep your money under
    $800 27
The Times' review of this 2001 French film was "Little Miss Sunshine as Urban Sprite"
    $800 7
The word ceramics is derived from keramos, which is Greek for this pottery material
    $800 3
In 1497 this Borgia was accused of murdering his brother Giovanni, Duke of Benevento & Gandia
    $800 17
Sir Winston Churchill's middle names were Leonard & this, a famous surname in his family tree
    $800 12
In 1926 the capital of this republic of Northwest Africa was moved from Zinder to Niamey
    $800 22
The Federal National Mortgage Association, known by this nickname, sells some nice securities
    DD: $1,500 28
The Met's 2002 production of this opera "calls for 346 people onstage along with a horse (Napoleon's)"
    $1200 8
From the Greek meaning "one who eats at another's table", it's an organism that feeds off a host
    $1200 1
Due to the Great Schism of 1378, Pope Urban VI remained in Rome; rival pope Clement VII moved to this city
    DD: $4,000 18
This middle name of Supreme Court Justice William Douglas reminds us of an early aviator
    $1200 13
In its capital, N'Djamena, you might learn that this nation was once part of French Equatorial Africa
    $1200 23
Use your general funds in these 2 "General" companies in the top 5 firms in the Fortune 500
    $1600 29
The Times marked the Centennial of this poet who wrote, "I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother"
    $1600 9
Read about it in this month's issue; this word for "worldly" is from the Greek for "world" & "city"
    $1600 4
In 1415 this Bohemian religious reformer was condemned for heresy & burned at the stake in Germany
    $1600 19
Because this is a million-dollar tournament, you have to spell the middle name of President Warren Harding
    $1600 14
On the northeast tip of Lake Tanganyika, Bujumbura is the capital of this African nation
    $1600 24
On the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, this investment opportunity is abbreviated "PB"
    $2000 30
This "famed... company from St. Petersburg is now at the mercy of... ballet masters of the world", the Times lamented
    $2000 10
From Greek for "tribe" or "race", it's the primary subdivision of a taxonomic kingdom
    $2000 5
In the 1400s this pioneering architect designed the Duomo & the Foundling Hospital in Florence
    $2000 20
John C. Calhoun's middle initial stood for this name
    $2000 15
Some go to the artisans' market in this country's capital of Bamako to look for monkey skulls & skins
    $2000 25
For mutual funds go to your broker; to invest this way, French for "betting amongst ourselves", go to the track

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Bob Rachael Frank
$15,800 $10,100 $19,200

Final Jeopardy! Round

ESPIONAGE
He was born in India; his father worked for the British government & he was nicknamed for a Kipling character

Final scores:

Bob Rachael Frank
$20,000 $12,401 $6,799
Automatic semifinalist 2nd place: $10,000 if eliminated 3rd place: $10,000 if eliminated

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Bob Rachael Frank
$15,800 $11,400 $16,400
21 R,
2 W
14 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
(including 1 DD)
20 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W

Combined Coryat: $43,600

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