Show #4403 2003-10-29 (taped 2003-08-19) Regular

Game data retrieved from an alternate archive.

Contestants

Saul Rollason — a business owner from Hilo, Hawaii

Judy Olson — a college teacher from Los Angeles, California

John Lindquist — an attorney from Marietta, Georgia (whose 2-day cash winnings total $33,201)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
John $3,200 $5,200 $12,800 $9,799
3-day champion: $43,000
$13,400
23 R (including 1 DD), 3 W (including 1 DD)
Judy $800 $3,800 $15,800 $5,999
2nd place: $2,000
$15,800
15 R, 2 W
Saul $1,400 $3,200 $800 $800
3rd place: $1,000
$2,800
9 R, 4 W (including 1 DD)

Jeopardy! Round

SCIENTISTS MUSIC TO MY EARS AN "F" IN HISTORY LEFTOVERS PRINCETON IN OTHER WORDS...
$200 [1]
Upon her husband's death in 1906, she succeeded him as Professor of Physics at the Sorbonne
Marie Curie
John
$200 [3]
Thissong won a 1939 Academy Award
"Over The Rainbow"
John
$200 [11]
Mary Queen of Scots' first marriage was in 1558 to the Dauphin of this country
France
John
$200 [21]
This alloy used in musical instruments is also a slang term for high-ranking Army officers
brass
Saul
$200 [26]
This comic's address on Class Day in 2003 included the line "Which brings me to the subject of Raisin Bran"
Jerry Seinfeld
$200 [16]
Hound-consume-hound
dog-eat-dog
Judy
$400 [2]
This British naturalist's grandfather Erasmus had earlier developed his own theory of evolution
Charles Darwin
Saul
$400 [7]
For many, this song is a tradition
"Hava Nagila"
John
$400 [12]
Commemorated in a series of Giotto frescoes, this 13th century Italian saint from Assisi founded an order of Catholic monks
Francis
John
$400 [22]
Because of their ability to record and replay speech, these toys were banned in 1999 from military installations
Furbies
John
$400 [29]
Types of these that became popular starting in the 1940s included the Princeton, Crew & Butch
haircuts
John
$400 [17]
Steal from Mr. O'Toole as compensation for Mr. Reiser
rob Peter to pay Paul
John Judy
$800 [5]
Between 1943 & 1945, he took a leave from Cal Tech & Berkeley to direct the Manhattan Project
Oppenheimer
Judy
$600 [8]
Thissong heard here is a standard at some establishments
"The Stripper"
John
$600 [13]
In 1803 this American piloted a steam-driven paddlewheel boat on the Seine River at about 3 mph
Robert Fulton
John
$600 [23]
This author was a draper's apprentice before he got hung up on "The War of the Worlds"
H.G. Wells
Saul
$600 [30]
The school song's line "Her sons shall give" became "Our hearts shall give" to reflect this change
the admission of women
Judy
$600 [18]
Lollipop wallop
sucker punch
DD $1,000 [4]
In 1958 this chemist published his book against nuclear testing called "No More War"
Linus Pauling
John
$800 [9]
Thiscontagious toe-tapper was a hit song for composer Harold Arlen in 1930
"Get Happy"
John
$800 [14]
Home to the Lowell Observatory, this Arizona city was first settled in 1871
Flagstaff
John
$800 [24]
By the 17th century the once-glorious Roman Forum had become the Campo Vaccino, a place for these animals
cows
Judy
$800 [28]
The Tiger, published since 1882, is Princeton's equivalent of this Harvard humor mag, established in 1876
The Lampoon
John
$800 [19]
A few folks enjoy the temperature high
some like it hot
John
$1,000 [6]
This Russian chemist's Periodic Law of 1869 predicted the existence of elements yet to be discovered
Mendeleev
Saul
$1,000 [10]
Thissong began as part of a minstrel show in 1859
"Dixie"
Saul
$1,000 [15]
In 1952 this King of Egypt was forced to abdicate
Farouk
Saul
$1,000 [25]
From the Greek for "turn-to-sun", it's another name for the Bloodstone
heliotrope
$1,000 [27]
In his last years this non-consecutively elected President was a trustee at Princeton
Cleveland
Judy
$1,000 [20]
Traverse the indicated spanning structure upon arrival
we'll cross that bridge when we get to it
Saul

Double Jeopardy! Round

NATIONAL MEMORIALS HOLLYWOOD HODGEPODGE LITERARY CROSSWORD CLUES "M" HEY MIKEY! FRENCH ART PREFIX PLUS SUFFIX
$400 [21]
Chamizal National Memorial in El Paso honors the peaceful 1963 settlement of a border dispute with this country
Mexico
John
$400 [11]
In "On Golden Pond", Henry Fonda wore a hat that was once this actor's; it was a gift from Katharine Hepburn
Spencer Tracy
John
$400 [6]
Edna St. Vincent (6)
Millay
John
$400 [16]
In 1958 this husband of Elizabeth Taylor was killed in a plane crash
Mike Todd
Saul
$400 [1]
Louis Leroy coined this term in 1874, applying it to Monet & Pissarro but not to co-exhibitors Degas & Renoir
Impressionism
John
$400 [25]
Earth plus science equals can you dig it?
geology
Judy
$800 [22]
A monument to this duo atop a N.C. hill bears the words: "In commemoration of the conquest of the air ..."
the Wright brothers
John Judy
$800 [12]
1956's "Dance With Me Henry" was this comedy duo's last film together
Abbott & Costello
Saul
$800 [7]
Dame Agatha's Miss Jane (6)
Marple
Judy
$800 [17]
The last President of the Soviet Union
Mikhail Gorbachev
John
$800 [2]
Francois Rude's masterpiece, a sculpture of 1792 soldiers of The Republic, shares its name with this song
"The Marseillaise"
Saul
$800 [26]
One plus speech equals you're talking to yourself
monologue
Judy
$1,200 [23]
The bronze statue of him in his D.C. memorial depicts him wearing a coat given to him by his friend Gen. Kosciuszko
Thomas Jefferson
$1,200 [13]
This 1972 Marlon Brando film was originally rated X
Last Tango in Paris
Saul
$1,200 [8]
Adjective for Swift's "Proposal" (6)
Modest
Judy
$1,200 [18]
According to one writer, this legendary boatman was "the William Tell of marksmen" & "the Prince of Moose Catchers"
Mike Fink
John
$1,600 [4]
Maurice de Vlaminck of the Fauvist Movement bragged of never entering this place on the Seine's right bank
the Louvre
John Judy
$1,200 [27]
Eight plus angled equals stop right here
octagon
John
$1,600 [24]
The 1897 parade & dedication ceremony for this famous tomb attracted more than 1 million people
Grant's Tomb
Judy
$1,600 [14]
Married to Clark Gable at the time of her death, this actress was also a cousin of director Howard Hawks
Carole Lombard
Judy
$1,600 [9]
Austen's "Park" (9)
Mansfield
Judy
$1,600 [19]
He packed up his Packer gear & flew to Seattle to be Head Coach of the Seahawks
Mike Holmgren
John
DD $2,000 [3]
Classicist Nicolas Poussin, whose work is seen here, left France to spend his career in this capital
Rome
Saul
DD $2,000 [29]
All plus to eat equals a nightmare customer for an all-you-can-eat buffet
omnivore
John
$2,000 [28]
(Cheryl of the clue Crew presents from Oklahoma City, OK) The National Memorial here in Oklahoma City stands on the spot once occupied by this building, named for an Oklahoma judge
the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building
$2,000 [15]
The "Hollywood Ten" was a group of individuals who refused to answer questions from this committee in 1947
the House Un-American Activities Committee
Judy
$2,000 [10]
Latin American style of realism (5)
magic
Judy
$2,000 [20]
Offbeat classics from this stylish director include "Stormy Monday" & "Leaving Las Vegas"
Mike Figgis
$2,000 [5]
This neoclassicist's favorite pupil was Antoine-Jean Gros, who also glorified Napoleon in art
Jacques-Louis David
Saul

Final Jeopardy!

THE WORLD'S PEOPLE

The 1st recorded use of this word now applying to 1.1 billion people was by St. Ignatius of Antioch around 100 A.D.

Catholic

Saul "What is Chineese?" — wagered $0
John "What is Christian?" — wagered $3,001
Judy "What is Christian?" — wagered $9,801

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