Suggest correction - #4488 - 2004-02-25

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    $1000 15
"I'm looking over" one of these "that I overlooked before"
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Show #4488 - Wednesday, February 25, 2004

Arthur Gandolfi game 4.

Contestants

Damon DiPietro, a carpenter from Marietta, Georgia

Janice Dooner Lynch, a homemaker from New York, New York (1-day co-champion whose cash winnings total $27,600)

Arthur Gandolfi, a commercial real estate executive from New York, New York (3-day co-champion whose cash winnings total $101,300)

Jeopardy! Round

STATE CAPITALS
GREAT OL' SONGS
WHAT'S THAT CALLED?
PRESIDENTIAL NAME FACTS
A GREEN CATEGORY
FITS "U" TO A "T"
(Alex: Each response will begin with the letter "U" and will end with a "T".)
    $200 1
A bronze statue known as "The Independent Man" tops the Rhode Island state house in this city
    $200 11
This U.S. state "here I come, right back where I started from"
    $200 21
Dottle is the plug of ash you knock out of this
    $200 6
Alphabetically by first name, he's listed last
    $200 16
It's the name of this experienced, yet still "Green" politician
    $200 26
If you've wrecked someone's careful planning, you've done this to the applecart
    $400 2
Opened in 1917, the Museum of Fine Arts in this city was built in the Pueblo Revival style
    $400 12
"Ev'ry morning, ev'ry evening, ain't we got" this
    $400 22
As its name indicates, this device divides a cable signal before it enters your TV set
    $400 7
Alphabetically by last name, he's listed last
    $400 17
Seen here is the cover illustration from this classic children's book
    $400 27
The condition of an apple pie fresh out of the oven, it's also how I like my movies
    $600 3
Hollywood Cemetery in this city is the final resting place of James Monroe, John Tyler & Jefferson Davis
    $600 13
"When" this man "comes marching home again, hurrah, hurrah"
    $600 23
Sir, you verily have offended me & if you'll not step aside I'll knock that cockade off this & into yon gutter
    $600 8
He's the only president whose wife did not change her last name after he married her
    $600 18
Happy hero of Green Bay, seen here
    $600 28
Apple pie is often rich, so it makes sense that this part of the pie is a synonym for "rich"
    DD: $1,000 4
This city dropped the word "Great" from its name in 1868, while it was still a territorial capital
    $800 14
This title completes the line "Now I ask you very confidentially..."
    $800 24
The 4 sections attached to these to help them go straight in barrooms are called flights
    $800 9
He's the only president with a 2-word last name
    $800 19
A cross-section of this green treat is seen here
    $800 29
Saying that Dutch apple pie is just good is one of these, because it's the best dessert on Earth
    $1000 5
The exterior of the gov.'s mansion in Tallahassee was inspired by the Hermitage in this other state capital
    $1000 15
"I'm looking over" one of these "that I overlooked before"
    $1000 25
Seen here is an instance of this type of sign
    $1000 10
At 10 letters, he has the longest single middle name
    $1000 20
Comic book evildoer seen here
    $1000 30
If a bakery spends $12 producing 6 apple tarts, this cost is $2

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

Arthur Janice Damon
$1,000 $2,600 $0

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Arthur Janice Damon
$5,200 $4,800 $1,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

ARCHITECTURE
THE EUROPEAN DIRECTOR'S CHAIR
EPHEN STEPHEN
WORD & PHRASE ORIGINS
7th CENTURY HEADLINES
"NEW"S
    $400 6
A small campanile, hopefully batless
    $400 1
"Two Men and a Wardrobe",
"Death and the Maiden",
"The Pianist"
    $400 8
With his "Company" & "Follies", he can stand side-by-side with the best of Broadway's composers
    $400 26
Used to express a ratio, it's from the Latin for "by the hundred"
    $400 16
Reports Say the First Observance of This October 31st Holiday Held
    $400 14
It's put out by the Washington Post Company's magazine publishing division
    $800 7
This 12th century style was revived in Europe in the 19th century & used for churches into the 20th century
    $800 2
"Amarcord",
"La Strada",
"La Dolce Vita"
    $800 9
With Steven Jobs he created a new Apple for your teacher
    $800 27
Now a final resting place for great people, it was originally a great banquet hall for Norse gods
    $800 17
Rhodes Invaded by the Arabs; This Ancient Wonder's Remains Sold Off
    $800 18
"Space Aliens Are Here for our Toothpaste!" is a typical headline of this American media publication
    $1200 11
Wallace K. Harrison met with success designing this theater for Lincoln Center
    $1200 3
"Fahrenheit 451",
"Jules and Jim",
"The 400 Blows"
    $1200 10
The state university in Nacogdoches, Texas is named for him
    $1200 28
Latin for "cross", it's the critical point or feature of an argument
    $1200 20
Vitalian Elected to This Religious Post; Serves for 15 Years
    $1200 19
Jay McInerney worked as a fact-checker at this magazine & portrayed it in "Bright Lights, Big City"
    $1600 15
(Sarah of the Clue Crew reports.) This railing system often seen on balconies includes a top rail, balusters, & sometimes a bottom rail
    $1600 4
"Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!",
"High Heels",
"Talk to Her"
    $1600 12
One of the commodores seen here
    $1600 29
From the Hungarian for "shepherd", it came to mean shepherds' food, a stew of meat & vegetables
    $1600 21
The Avars Attack the Byzantine Capital City Called This
    $1600 24
Journalist/novelist Pete Hamill has been editor-in-chief of the New York Post & this paper
    DD: $2,000 23
This early 20th century school designed with horizontal lines like the flatness of the land in the Midwest
    $2000 5
"Mona Lisa",
"The Crying Game",
"Interview with the Vampire"
    DD: $2,000 13
He was such a great poet that his unfinished "Western Star" won him a Pulitzer (his second) in 1944
    $2000 30
Some say "Great Scott!" began as a tribute to the exploits of this Mexican War hero
    $2000 22
Saint David, Patron Saint of This U.K. Country, Passes on to His Heavenly Reward
    $2000 25
The 2003 movie "Shattered Glass" is set at this political magazine

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Arthur Janice Damon
$18,000 $18,000 $3,800

Final Jeopardy! Round

ASTRONOMY
The name of Mintaka, a star in this constellation, is from the Arabic for "belt"

Final scores:

Arthur Janice Damon
$36,000 $0 $3,800
4-day champion: $137,300 3rd place: $1,000 2nd place: $2,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Arthur Janice Damon
$19,000 $18,000 $3,800
24 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W
(including 1 DD)
22 R
(including 1 DD),
0 W
6 R,
2 W

Combined Coryat: $40,800

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