Show #1116 - Monday, June 12, 1989

Contestants

[<< previous game]

John Katchmer, a word processor originally from Millersville, Pennsylvania

Robert Plunkett, an attorney from Simi Valley, California

Julie Harris Neiger, a teacher from San Diego, California (whose 1-day cash winnings total $4,400)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

AUTHORS
TRANSPORTATION
WEDDINGS
SPORTS
POTLUCK
DOUBLE TALK
    $100 1
As a teenager, she cut her hair, dressed in boyish clothes & called herself William Cather
    $100 10
From the Old Norse word for a roof beam, it's a craft of beams lashed together
    $100 23
Facing the altar, it's the side of the church where the relatives & friends of the bride sit
    $100 4
At the Highland Games, all Scots who want to toss the caber or the weight must wear this
    $100 5
This Tijuana Brass leader now markets a women's perfume called "Listen"
    $100 21
A really dumb person or the toy Tommy Smothers plays with on his "Comedy Hour"
    $200 2
Playwright Oliver Goldsmith may have written some of the rhymes attributed to this old woman
    $200 11
A London cab drove for 70 days from Buckingham Palace to this Australian opera house
    DD: $400 24
Title of the following in which Marilyn McCoo addressed her then-fiance, Billy Davis Jr.:
"...and love won't carry me / Till you marry me Bill / Bill I love you so / I always will / And in your voice I hear a choir of carousels..."
    $200 6
Persia may have been the birthplace of this equestrian team sport
    $200 14
In the U.S., no company can now sell a 3-wheeled "ATV", which stands for this
    $200 22
In a certain Coleridge poem it precedes "everywhere, nor any drop to drink"
    $300 3
Shortly before his death, Washington Irving completed a 5-volume biography of this president
    $300 15
Like the Wrights, the Dodge Brothers began their career in transportation making these
    $300 25
She & Rep. Nicholas Longworth had a White House wedding in 1906
    $300 7
Though Hartford isn't a seaport, its pro hockey team is called this
    $300 16
Saying "Nikon has the perfect camera for both", its ads include photos of Einstein & this Stooge
    $300 28
It's the capital of America Samoa
    $400 12
Though he was born in Prague, Franz Kafka wrote his novels in this language
    $400 19
The events at the '88 Summer Olympics ran from A to Y, archery to this
    $400 26
At the end of a traditional Jewish marriage ceremony the groom smashes one of these with his foot
    $400 8
They lost back to back Super Bowls in 1987-1988
    $400 17
In America, wine made by the Charmat Process can be labeled champagne, but in France it must be labeled this
    $500 13
After this philosopher sired Heloise's illegitimate child, her uncle had him emasculated
    $500 20
Name of the high speed passenger trains running between Washington, D.C. & NYC
    $500 27
During the bride & groom's 1st dance, the bride's father should dance 1st with this person
    $500 9
Sizzling the pits, lollipop & digging lips are terms in this sport, whether on the court or on the beach
    $500 18
The highest price paid for any Chinese ceramic work of art was for a 15th c. vase from this dynasty

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

Julie Robert John
$600 $1,300 $2,000

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Julie Robert John
$1,800 $2,900 $2,900

Double Jeopardy! Round

AMERICAN HISTORY
FOOD
THE MIDDLE EAST
MYTHOLOGY
WEATHER
SINGERS & ROLES
    $200 2
In 1915 he chartered a "peace ship" & built his millionth car; he was busy
    $200 1
This bottled bean extract must contain at least 35% alcohol
    $200 7
War broke out on Sept. 22, 1980 when fighter bombers from this nation attacked 10 Iranian airfields
    $200 12
At the end of their story, Psyche & this cute Roman love god lived happily ever after
    $200 19
The National Hurricane Center is based in this Florida city
    $200 17
The Beatle who wrote & starred in "Give My Regards to Broad Street"
    $400 3
In 1894 while the gov't was trying to break the Pullman strike, Congress made this a national holiday
    $400 13
Served by the Indians at the 1st Thanksgiving, this food explodes when cooked
    $400 8
The building of Egypt's Aswan High Dam in the 1960s was financed by loans from this country
    $400 24
Name given the 6 priestesses who tended the fire of Vesta, goddess of the hearth
    $400 20
In 1921 Silver Lake, Colorado saw 76 inches of this fall in a 24 hour period, a world record
    $400 18
Michael Jackson's 1st feature film was this 1978 musical
    $600 4
On July 26, 1775 Congress established this service & put Ben Franklin in charge
    $600 14
An important product of Hawaii which Luther Burbank called "the perfect nut"
    $600 9
Of all the Arab countries, this one has the highest percentage of Christians, about 40%
    $600 25
This Sophocles heroine was walled up in a cave as punishment for burying her brother's body
    $600 28
This condition, a layer of warm air over a layer of cool, allows pollutants to build up over a city
    $600 21
Country singer who played Buck, a country singer, in "Honeysuckle Rose"
    $800 5
2 of the 3 things Nixon "froze" August 15, 1971
    $800 15
Also called the "butter bean", it was 1st cultivated by Peruvian Indians
    $800 10
In 1917 Britain issued the Balfour Declaration which called for the creation of this
    $800 26
Helen of Troy's husband, Menelaus, was king of this Greek city-state
    $800 29
Nearly all weather occurs in this, the lowest layer of the atmosphere
    $800 22
Frank Sinatra won an Oscar for his role as Maggio in his 1953 Oscar-winning film
    $1000 6
John Adams & Jefferson both died on the July 4th that marked this anniversary of our independence
    DD: $1,500 16
This twice baked, hard toasted bread is a long-lasting treat for tots
    $1000 11
In 1941 Syria gained its independence from this European country
    $1000 27
Castor & Pollux were mothered by Leda & fathered by Jupiter in this disguise
    $1000 30
The National Weather Service is part of this Cabinet department
    DD: $1,500 23
The 2 singer-actresses who played Esther in "A Star is Born", 1 in 1954 & the other in 1976

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Julie Robert John
$8,600 $9,900 $4,500

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

VOCABULARY
This 7-letter synonym for dictionary is from a Greek word for "word"

Final scores:

Julie Robert John
$4,100 $2,599 $6,000
2nd place: 4-day Bahamas cruise + 3-day Disney World trip 3rd place: Dykstra Glass grandfather clock New champion: $6,000

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Julie Robert John
$7,400 $9,900 $4,500
19 R
(including 3 DDs),
2 W
19 R,
1 W
17 R,
2 W

Combined Coryat: $21,800

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

Game tape date: 1989-02-13
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.