The Rialto or Ponte Vecchio

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The Rialto or Ponte Vecchio Jeopardy

Possible Solution: A BRIDGE

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Related Questions

# Questions
1 ( Jimmy of the Clue Crew is in a mailroom.) I'm with mail for ZIP Codes 60601 through 60827 at the United States Postal Services' main processing plant for this the third most populous U.S. c
2 A bit of evidence
3 This word for an ax comes from Algonquian though it's associated with the Florida State Seminoles
4 At $30 billion it's No. 2--in the Ivy League
5 This character first appeared in a comic strip called Li'l Folks
6 $650 million stolen in Iraq was found hidden in the walls of one of this leader's palaces in 2003
7 (Sarah of the Clue Crew is at the Dittrick Medical History Center.) I'm at the Dittrick Medical History Center of Case Western Reserve University in this Midwest city that has become one of t
8 This word for a little animal that may go through your trash comes from a word for he scratches with hands
9 The university system of this state has more than $30 billion; its A&M system more than $13 billion
10 He's the hitmaking singer-songwriter-producer seen here
11 Thomas Blood & his criminal gang stole these treasures from the Tower of London in 1671 but were quickly caught
12 (Sarah of the Clue Crew is at the Basketball Hall of Fame.) I'm at the Basketball Hall of Fame in this city in Massachusetts where James Naismith invented the game while teaching phys ed at a
13 A dog that gave its name to a Richard Nixon speech
14 A famous Farms started selling meats & cheeses in Ohio in the '50s but this tree in its name is a Virginia Algonquian word
15 With more than $27 billion this California school is the best-endowed non-Ivy League private university
16 Charlie Kaufman wrote this 2002 film that starred Nicolas Cage as Charlie Kaufman
17 Dunbar now part of this big armored car company was hit in 1997 to the tune of almost $19 million; the company got some of it back though
18 (Jimmy of the Clue Crew is standing in the street.) I'm in this South Dakota city named for the fallen timbers left by a forest fire. Today the entire city is a national historic landmark
19 Overlord or Desert Storm
20 This 5-letter word for a very large deer comes from words meaning he strips off (bark to eat that is)
21 With $8.5 billion it's the best-endowed school in the Carolinas
22 Jazz great Charlie Parker got this nickname while playing with Jay McShann's band in the early 1940s
23 In 1990 works by Rembrandt & Degas were among the half-billion dollars worth of art stolen from the Gardner Museum in this city
24 (Jimmy of the Clue Crew is standing in Ford's Rouge plant.) I'm in this city near Detroit at Ford's Rouge plant which during World War II employed 120000 people
25 A single gem set alone
26 Maize dishes (& their names) from Algonquian include hominy & this boiled corn & beans combo
27 This Pasadena school makes a big bang with its 2.9 billion bucks
28 Born in England in 1889 he made the comedy short Making a Living in 1914 in Los Angeles
29 This Belgian city is a world diamond exchange capital & was the site of a $100 million heist in 2003
30 In 2015 she told us This is my fight song take back my life song prove I'm all right song
31 In French: noir
32 To question formally like a cop does to a suspect
33 Originating in the late 1600s England's Tories believed in the doctrine called this right of kings
34 Simon & Garfunkel sang of this title guy who carries the reminders of every glove that laid him down
35 Francois-Marie Arouet used this one name on works like Candide
36 In Romanian: alb
37 This instrument records earthquake vibrations
38 In 2002 as the first woman to chair the Conservative a Party she pushed the Tories away from being the Nasty Party
39 On New Year's Eve New Orleans drops this floral emblem
40 Not big fans of Elvis or John Wayne this rap group urged its audience to Fight the Power in 1989
41 Using the 3 laws of robotics in his Lucky Starr Y.A. novels should have alerted folks that Paul French was him
42 In Mandarin Chinese: huang se
43 This type of pressure is also called atmospheric pressure
44 Tories Americans opposed to the American Revolution were also called Royalists or these (just change 1 letter)
45 A huge potato is lowered to celebrate New Year's in this state capital
46 The White Stripes sang I'm gonna fight 'em off; one of these couldn't hold me back
47 Lethal White is the fourth Cormoran Strike novel J.K. Rowling has written using this pseudonym
48 In Portuguese this primary color: vermelho
49 These waters are traditionally within 3 miles of a nation's shores
50 As prime minister this man the younger emerged in the late 18th century as the leader of the new Tory party
51 A giant musical note is the feature of this city's Music City Note Drop
52 In a 1974 Carl Douglas hit Everybody was doing this Those cats were fast as lightning
53 Gabriela Mistral (a pseudonym) encouraged this other Chilean Nobel Prize-winning poet (also a pseudonym)
54 In Japanese: midori
55 11-letter word meaning to give something in return perhaps your feelings
56 Canadians have Tories too like this prime minister who had a Shamrock Summit with Reagan
57 The Big Apple drops a ball but in Manhattan in this Midwest state The Little Apple they drop an apple at midnight


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"Jeopardy!" is a classic game show -- with a twist. The answers are given first, and the contestants supply the questions. Three contestants, including the previous show's champion, compete in six categories and in three rounds (with each round's "answers" being worth more prize money). In the third round, "Final Jeopardy," the contestants can name their own jackpot -- as long as it's within the amount of money they've already earned. If a player finishes the second round with zero dollars, they are eliminated from "Final Jeopardy." The first version of "Jeopardy!," which aired from 1964 to 1975 on NBC, was hosted by Art Fleming. Alex Trebek is the current host; he began with the program in 1984 (at the start of its syndicated run).

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