Suggest correction - #4512 - 2004-03-30

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    $800 9
Joyce Kilmer wrote, "Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make" this
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Show #4512 - Tuesday, March 30, 2004

Contestants

Anne Noble, an appellate lawyer from Washington, D.C.

David Seminer, a neurologist from Sacramento, California

Valerie Takacs, an accounting assistant from Hudson, Ohio (2-day champion whose cash winnings total $31,400)

Jeopardy! Round

PRESIDENTIAL FACTS
'70s MUSIC
ARMOR
PROVINCE TOWNS
(Alex: We'll give you some towns; you have to identify the Canadian province in which you would find those towns.)
CRIME TIME
IT'S ALWAYS ABOUT "U"
    $200 6
In 1937 he made his first movie
    $200 1
She had a 2-sided No. 1 hit with "It's Too Late" & "I Feel the Earth Move"
    $200 9
A bracket on the chest positioned this 12-foot spear that could be driven through another knight's armor
    $200 20
Cap-de-la-Madeleine,
Sept-Iles,
Trois-Rivieres
    $200 14
It's a serious crime (without the "Y", it's the person who commits it)
    $200 7
In 1949 Harry Truman traveled to New York to help lay a cornerstone for this body
    $400 15
Unlike his Republican cousin, who was also president, he was a Democrat
    $400 2
Shut your mouth! Isaac Hayes won an Oscar for the theme from this 1971 flick
    $400 10
These gloves were made in a fashionable hourglass shape, narrow at the wrist
    $400 21
Prince George,
Prince Rupert,
Victoria
    $400 16
From the name of an old Germanic tribe, it's the willful destruction of property
    $400 8
Seats are reserved in the Indian parliament for this group that falls outside of the caste system
    $600 22
He was the first president to live long enough to see his son elected president
    $600 3
When it charted in 1976, this song first called "Cotton's Dream" was subtitled "The Young And The Restless"
    $600 25
Plate armor first covered, then replaced this protective wrap
    $600 28
Sydney,
Dartmouth,
New Glasgow
    $600 17
Despite the name, in this form of bribery, a public official gets money, not skin
    $600 11
Now a democratic republic of central Asia, in 1992 it ratified its first post-Soviet constitution
    $800 23
The last incumbent to be unseated; it was the 10th time it had happened
    $800 4
A 1973 song says, "Give me the beat, boys, and free my soul, I wanna get lost in your rock & roll and" do this
    $800 26
The nasal, a piece on this item, could get you in trouble when the other guy grabbed it
    $800 29
Big Beaver House,
Sault St. Marie,
London
    $800 18
A failure to meet an obligation, it may be "of contract"
    $800 12
Its atomic weight is 238
    DD: $1,000 24
It was the last office to which Gerald Ford was elected
    $1000 5
"An Old Fashioned Love Song" & "Never Been to Spain" were '70s hits for this trio
    $1000 27
The 16th century Maximilian style is named for a ruler of this empire who was called "The Last of the Knights"
    $1000 30
Vulcan,
Medicine Hat,
Red Deer
    $1000 19
A step further than trespassing, it's sneaking onto the manor grounds to do some hunting or steal game
    $1000 13
The language known as Hindi is very close to this official language of Pakistan

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

Valerie David Anne
$1,600 $2,800 $1,000

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Valerie David Anne
$3,200 $4,800 $2,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

VOLCANOES
SCREEN PLAYS
THE EAGLES HAVE LANDED
10-LETTER WORDS
MR. T
(Alex: And what do we associate with him...)
I PITY THE FOOL
    $400 26
Please excuse this tallest peak in the Cascades--although it is dormant, it still exudes gassy fumes
    $400 2
In the '60s, young Martin Sheen starred on Broadway & on film in "The Subject Was" these
    $400 1
Earn 21 merit badges to qualify as one of these
    $400 7
It's someone who helps carry the coffin at a funeral
    $400 8
In 1975 he was named the first black Anglican dean of Johannesburg
    $400 5
In "A Midsummer Night's Dream", this character says, "Lord, what fools these mortals be!"
    $800 27
The most violent volcanic eruptions are classified under the name of this "Elder" Roman naturalist
    $800 4
John Osborne's 1961 play about this Protestant reformer became a 1974 film starring Stacy Keach
    $800 3
Eagle chicks are called these
    $800 11
Jiminy Cricket acted as this for Pinocchio
    $800 10
This Republican served in the Ohio house of representatives from 1921 to 1926 & the U.S. Senate from 1939 to 1953
    $800 9
Joyce Kilmer wrote, "Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make" this
    $1200 6
The 1988 film version of this hit Neil Simon play is seen here
    $1200 17
Traditionally part-eagle, it's the heraldic emblem seen here
    $1200 20
Oh my darling, it's a variety of small, sweet tangerine
    $1200 13
This French statesman served under 7 regimes, including during the French Revolution & under Napoleon
    $1200 23
This title character of Spanish literature is called "A muddled fool, full of lucid intervals"
    $1600 12
"An Ideal Husband" was adapted from an 1895 comedy by this "Earnest" author, definitely not ideal husband material
    $1600 18
When reused & expanded one of these eagle nests can grow to over 10 feet across
    $1600 21
Person who'd repair your Timex or Seiko
    $1600 15
"Germania" & "Historiae" are major works by this Roman orator & public official
    $1600 24
This book of the Bible says, "Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit"
    DD: $2,000 28
The name of this sacred mountain is said to be derived from the Ainu word for fire
    $2000 14
1933's "Cavalcade", based on a drama--not a comedy--by this urbane British wit, won a Best Picture Oscar
    $2000 19
In 1978 the Double Eagle II took a 6-day journey to become the first one of these to cross the Atlantic
    $2000 22
Remember Chuck Mangione? Remember this instrument that he plays?
    DD: $1,700 16
He was among the first students when the St. Petersburg Conservatory opened in 1862
    $2000 25
This transcendental essayist wrote "The wise through excess of wisdom is made a fool"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Valerie David Anne
$11,300 $15,600 $2,800

Final Jeopardy! Round

AMERICAN LITERATURE
It contains the line "There stood the Kaatskill Mountains... there was every hill and dale... as it had always been"

Final scores:

Valerie David Anne
$1,000 $22,601 $5,400
3rd place: $1,000 New champion: $22,601 2nd place: $2,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Valerie David Anne
$11,600 $15,600 $4,800
16 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W
26 R,
3 W
6 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $32,000

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