Show #5236 - Monday, May 21, 2007

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Vic Sawyer, a snowcoach driver and hotel manager from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming and Montana

Allison Frisbee, a law student from Concord, New Hampshire

Martin Hughes, a sociology professor from Indiana, Pennsylvania (whose 1-day cash winnings total $21,601)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

TERMS OF ENGINEERMENT
ONE-NAMED TV CHARACTERS
FIVE ABOUT TENN.
BOB'S YOUR UNCLE
ALL WE ARE "SAY"ING
GIVE WAR AND PEACE A CHANCE
    $200 1
It's a gated canal section in which water levels are raised & lowered
    $200 6
Bob Denver said the first name of the title character on this sitcom, never revealed, would have been Willie
    $200 11
The Coliseum is the home stadium of this pro football team
    $200 21
In 1970 he began his newspaper career with the Montgomery Co. Sentinel, & in 1971 he joined the Washington Post
    $200 12
In the 1980s it was Nancy Reagan's 3-word advice to someone offered illegal drugs
    $200 26
In Book 3 of "War and Peace", this city is famously abandoned & burned
    $400 2
Used extensively by the Romans, it's a bridge built to transport water, not people
    $400 7
Just one more thing, sir: this L.A. detective's show premiered in 1971, but his first name wasn't actually "Lt."
    $400 13
Located in Memphis, this mansion is the second most-visited home in the U.S.; thank you very much
    $400 22
If there's anything Bob Dole knows, it's that when Bob Dole was Senate majority leader, Bob Dole served for this state
    $400 16
This type of legal evidence is unverified, unofficial & not part of one's direct knowledge
    DD: $1,000 27
In "War and Peace", this man is described as the Antichrist scourging Europe
    $600 3
The Golden Gate & the Brooklyn are steel-cabled examples of this type of bridge
    $600 8
Say hello to this evil postal worker played by Wayne Knight on "Seinfeld"
    $600 14
This music program based in Nashville is the USA's oldest continuous live radio program
    $600 23
This former sitcom shrink got the Kennedy Center's 2002 Mark Twain Prize for his contribution to American humor
    $600 17
This popular children's game bearing a man's name tests your ability to follow directions
    $600 28
Appropriately, Tolstoy wrote "War and Peace" in these 2 languages
    $800 4
When burned with oxygen, this gas, C2H2, burns so hot it can weld iron & cut steel
    $800 9
You are about to enter the world of forensic medicine with this boat-dwelling coroner played by Jack Klugman
    $800 15
One of the 3 instruments that appear with some sheet music on the back of Tennessee's state quarter
    $800 24
In 1972 he choreographed "Pippin", & later, "Chicago"; now... jazz hands!
    $800 18
A person who professes to foretell the future; one warned of the ides of March
    $800 29
The novel opens at a party given by Anna Pavlova in this city, the capital at the time
    $1000 5
In this type of well named for a region of France, groundwater rises to the surface under pressure from an aquifer
    $1000 10
In 1987 this android, a Lt. Commander in Starfleet, began going where no android had gone before
    $1000 19
Instrumental in the development of the atomic bomb, this Tenn. city is the "Energy Capital of the World"
    $1000 25
This ex-senator & governor of Nebraska served in the Navy & received the Medal of Honor
    $1000 20
Bring your ore nuggets down to this office in the Old West to see if they're really gold, pilgrim
    $1000 30
Real life figures in "War and Peace" include this man who was the czar from 1801 to 1825

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

Martin Allison Vic
$1,600 $0 $4,400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Martin Allison Vic
$3,800 $800 $6,600

Double Jeopardy! Round

COMMUNICATION
HOT MOVIES
COUNTRIES' HIGHEST POINTS
(Alex: You have to identify the country.)
MILITARY MATTERS
FORBES' CARS FOR THE RICH
ANAGRAMMED BIRDS
    $400 18
Dahalo, a language of Kenya, uses only one of these, like Amazon.com's online shopping technology
    $400 1
Norman Jewison asked Rod Steiger to chew gum, eventually 263 packs, as Police Chief Bill Gillespie in this 1967 film
    $400 6
Mount Meron in Galilee
    $400 11
The museum of this largest & oldest military academy in the U.S. houses tanks & other WWI memorabilia
    $400 26
Things get personal for personal computer mogul Michael Dell in a 2005 H2 from this manufacturer
    $400 16
I'd pay to see a hare race this tall South American bird
    $800 19
(Jimmy of the Clue Crew demonstrates that he is a man of letters.) By looking at its first few letters, you'll see the Russian alphabet is based largely on this much more ancient alphabet
    $800 2
Hedy Lamarr sued Mel Brooks over the "use" of her name in this 1974 comedy & eventually settled out of court
    $800 7
Mount Ararat
    $800 12
Benedict Arnold finished his military career in this nation's army
    $800 27
Investor Warren Buffett drives one of these "urban" car models from Lincoln
    $800 17
This arctic bird should rent a waterfront home
    $1200 20
Police radio codes that start with this 2-digit number date back to the 1930s
    $1200 3
Steve McQueen & Paul Newman did some of their own stunts in this 1974 special-effects extravaganza
    DD: $3,000 8
Ras Dashen, the fourth-highest mountain in Africa
    $1200 13
The world's most powerful military alliance takes its name from this ocean region
    DD: $2,400 28
Put it together: IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad drives a 240 GL from this European auto company
    $1200 23
I'd like to greet this wading bird with a friendly hello
    $1600 21
(Jon of the Clue Crew delivers a cryptic message.) Julius Caesar communicated with his generals using a code that shifted each letter a set distance down the alphabet--for instance, these letters spell "Jeopardy"; it's now called the "Caesar" this
    $1600 4
This 1977 movie produced the second-best-selling soundtrack in movie history
    $1600 9
Pico Bolivar in Merida
    $1600 14
During WWII, the U.S. built a military base in this Ecuadorian island group to protect the Panama Canal
    $1600 29
For Bill Gates, it computes to own 2 models, the 959 & the 911, from this manufacturer
    $1600 24
If you're in the lair of this slim bird, don't tell him he's as skinny as...
    $2000 22
It can mean "speed", or a message or news story sent with speed
    $2000 5
This 1981 dramatic film about Stone Age man won the Academy Award for Best Makeup
    $2000 10
Moldoveanu
    $2000 15
This term from the Japanese refers to the 3 military govts. that ruled Japan between 1192 & 1867
    $2000 30
No stranger to the finer things in life, Saudi Prince Alwaleed Alsaud traverses the sands in this auto's Phantom
    $2000 25
I wonder if I'd see this long-legged bird along the Rhone River

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Martin Allison Vic
$14,000 $4,800 $14,200

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

19th CENTURY INVENTORS
He wrote, "Isn't it the irony of fate that I have been prescribed nitroglycerin to be taken internally"

Final scores:

Martin Allison Vic
$14,400 $5,400 $28,001
2nd place: $2,000 3rd place: $1,000 New champion: $28,001

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Martin Allison Vic
$12,200 $5,800 $16,600
19 R
(including 1 DD),
6 W
10 R,
3 W
(including 1 DD)
21 R,
2 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $34,600

[game responses] [game scores] [suggest correction]

Game tape date: 2007-02-20
The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.