Suggest correction - #4080 - 2002-05-03

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    $2000 25
In Barcelona, take a rooftop tour of Casa Mila, designed by this master of Modernismo architecture
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Show #4080 - Friday, May 3, 2002

2002 Million Dollar Masters quarterfinal game 3.

Contestants

Eric Newhouse, a director of technical assistance from Vermillion, South Dakota

Leslie Frates, a Spanish teacher from Hayward, California

Chuck Forrest, a lawyer and CEO from London, United Kingdom

Jeopardy! Round

THE NEW YORK TIMES HEADLINES
NIETZSCHE, I'M GLAD TO MEETCHA
CLASSIC TV
YOUR FEMININE SIDE
MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS
18 YEARS OF LEFTOVERS
(Alex: Leftover clues from our shows.)
    $200 2
In 1988, yes, 1988, the Times reported, "For computers" this year "may prove a bit traumatic"
    $200 13
This one of St. Paul's 3 virtues, said Nietzsche, "is the worst of evils, for it prolongs the torment of man"
    $200 3
Fred MacMurray played Dad to Robbie, Chip & Ernie on this long-running comedy
    $200 7
A "wet" one of these breast-feeds another woman's child
    $200 4
This motorcycle manufacturer sponsors an owners group called H.O.G.
    $200 1
From Season 3:
This "Pretty Baby" once suggested wearing red mascara, because it's "perfect for the disco"
    $400 5
Its split-up in 1982 was noted with the headline seen here
    $400 20
One of the 2 things Nietzsche called "the 2 great European narcotics"
    $400 14
Psst! This game show hosted by Garry Moore & then Steve Allen ran for 15 seasons
    $400 10
(Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) If you're sure you've met this "correct" man but he's skittish, keep your options open
    $400 18
XJ6 & XKE are models of this car
    $400 6
From Season 14:
21-year-old Frances Folsom married 49-year-old Grover Cleveland in this "colorful" room
    $600 8
In the January 11, 1946 headline "UNO Opened", UNO was short for these 3 words
    $600 21
Nietzsche's family called him by this nickname, like the 1984 Democratic U.S. presidential nominee
    $600 15
In 1973 Beverly Hillbilly Buddy Ebsen returned to series TV as a private eye on this show
    $600 11
Completes the title of a 1977 play, also Victorian advice to new brides, "Shut Your Eyes and..."
    DD: $1,000 22
This fast-food chain got its name from a character in "The French Connection"
    $600 9
From Season 12:
Horace's quote "Permitte divis cetera" means "Leave the rest to" these beings
    $800 12
The end to this man's trial was noted with the January 22, 1950 headline seen here
    $800 28
Between 1872 & 1879, Nietzsche often visited Richard Wagner at his home in this city northeast of Nuremberg
    $800 16
This occult series featuring Darren McGavin premiered in September 1974, on Friday the 13th
    $800 19
An Estee Lauder perfume, or the type of non-rational sensing that's proverbially "feminine"
    $800 27
This chain owned by The Gap began selling its dog supply line of canine fashions, accessories & toys in 2001
    $800 24
From Season 11:
British nonsense poet who wrote the 1877 poem "The Courtship of the Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo"
    $1000 23
A November 9, 1917 story said this Russian "in exile lived in the Bronx"; "real name is Braunstein"
    $1000 29
Further complicating his health, Nietzsche worked as a hospital attendant during this 1870-71 conflict
    $1000 17
Officers Toody & Muldoon kept order in the Bronx on this '60s comedy
    $1000 26
Born Francisco Rabaneda, in the 1960s he clothed women in dresses held together with metal rings
    $1000 30
Based in Laufen, Switzerland, this company makes cough drops & breath mints from Alpine herbs
    $1000 25
From Season 10:
This count who commanded a French force at Yorktown had almost become a priest

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

Chuck Leslie Eric
$2,800 $2,200 $600

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Chuck Leslie Eric
$8,000 $5,200 $1,000

Double Jeopardy! Round

AUTHORS & THEIR CHARACTERS
BEST DRAMATIC ACTOR TONYS
"C" IN SCIENCE
KING ME!
TRAVEL FUN
BEFORE & AFTER
    $400 5
She fictionalized her affair with Nelson Algren in "Les Mandarins", & based the heroine's husband on Sartre
    $400 26
"Death of a Salesman"
(1999)
    $400 9
It's Latin for "bark" (like on a tree); the cerebral type is the layer that covers your brain
    $400 10
Maybe Columbus was trying to butter up this king when he gave his son the same name in 1488
    $400 12
Shop for "mystery pipes", whose designs don't appear until you smoke them, in this cheese-y city 17 mi. e. of Delft
    $400 6
Walt Whitman poem about the duo that sang "Love Will Keep Us Together"
    $800 8
This Bronte sister based the debauched Huntingdon in "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall" on her brother Branwell
    $800 27
"The Great White Hope"
(1969)
    $800 16
This type of cable has insulated conducting material around a separately insulated conducting tube
    $800 4
Meeting with President Clinton in 1996, he's the king seen here
    $800 21
You won't want to miss the ancestral chateau of the Counts of Egmont at Gaasbeek in this Low Country
    $800 7
He sang "Can You Feel The Love Tonight?" when negotiating a peace treaty with Japan & as Ike's Secretary of State
    $1200 14
The title of this D.H. Lawrence novel refers to the Brangwen sisters
    $1200 28
"Mark Twain Tonight!"
(1966)
    DD: $2,500 18
In an experiment, it's the "group" of people not receiving the treatment under study
    $1200 3
"Le Bref" was the epithet of this medieval king, Charlemagne's father
    $1200 22
Observe wild animals from this famous hotel where Princess Elizabeth was when she became Queen of England
    $1200 11
Hey Lady! This star of "The Nutty Professor" created the Mad Hatter
    $1600 15
A wild romance with Alfred de Musset inspired this Frenchwoman with a masculine name to write "Elle et lui"
    $1600 29
"Sunrise at Campobello"
(1958)
    $1600 19
(Jimmy of the Clue Crew finds some enormous turtles.) This word, derived from Spanish, refers to the upper part of a turtle's shell
    DD: $3,000 2
He was deposed by the Bavarian government in 1886; must've made him really "Mad"
    $1600 24
Let opera wash over you at the Roman baths named for this emperor who ruled from 211 to 217
    $1600 13
Frequent "What's My Line" panelist & vocalizing equine in a '50s film series
    $2000 23
A character known as "Sister" narrates this Mississippi woman's famous story "Why I Live at the P.O."
    $2000 30
"Hamlet"
(1995)
    $2000 20
This Frenchman showed that the inverse square law applied to the forces between magnetic poles
    $2000 1
Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Bhumibol Adulyadej grew up to become king of this country
    $2000 25
In Barcelona, take a rooftop tour of Casa Mila, designed by this master of Modernismo architecture
    $2000 17
Dueling vice president who created the puppet show "Kukla, Fran and Ollie"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Chuck Leslie Eric
$16,000 $21,700 $10,000

Final Jeopardy! Round

FAMOUS SHIPS
In 1999 the wreck of this ship known for its historic 1912 rescue effort was discovered 120 miles off England

Final scores:

Chuck Leslie Eric
$32,000 $22,000 $20,000
Automatic semifinalist 2nd place: $10,000 if eliminated 3rd place: $10,000 if eliminated

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Chuck Leslie Eric
$15,600 $20,400 $8,600
24 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W
20 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
12 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W

Combined Coryat: $44,600

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