Show #1390 - Friday, September 21, 1990

Game entered from audiorecording. Missing prizes.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Bob Priser, a sales and service manager from Brookline, Massachusetts

John Nam, a law student from Silver Spring, Maryland

Burr Baldwin, a painting and decorating contractor from Minneapolis, Minnesota (whose 1-day cash winnings total $11,300)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

FAMOUS QUOTES
MUSICALS
NECKWEAR
MONEY
MEDICINE
4-LETTER WORDS
    $100 6
Robert Louis Stevenson said "marriage is like life in... that it is a field of battle and not a bed of" these
    $100 30
He wrote the music & lyrics for "No Strings" in 1962 after the death of Oscar Hammerstein II
    $100 26
It sounds like it would keep you quiet as well as warm
    $100 19
In Japan 100 sen don't make a breath freshener but one of these
    $100 15
Many believe this vitamin can prevent colds, but the AMA says there's no scientific evidence
    $100 1
A whit or a jot, an owl may not give one, but then again it may
    $200 7
This ancient physician, who lived past 90 said, "Life is short"
    $200 20
In titles of musicals this word describes Jessie James, Johnny Jones & Mary Sunshine
    $200 12
Common clothing accessory for a cleric or slang for an arrest by a cop
    $200 22
One of the few words in the dictionary starting with the letters P-F, it's 1/100th of a mark
    $200 16
Cutting back on this food flavoring & preservative can help prevent hypertension
    $200 2
You're free as a bird if you fly this & we don't mean a 2-door automobile
    $300 8
In 1957 this labor leader told reporters, "I do unto others what they do unto me, only worse"
    $300 21
Harve Presnell played Johnny Brown, the miner husband of this title character
    $300 27
Name for a snake that crushes its prey & we hope it doesn't turn into a choker on you
    $300 13
The only currency you can use to buy a Big Mac at the biggest McDonald's in the world
    $300 17
Micro-trach is an oxygen delivery system developed by this doctor known for his maneuver
    $300 3
A farewell performance is this type of song
    $400 9
This actor never said, "Come with me to the Casbah" in the 1938 film "Algiers"; his press agent made up the line
    $400 25
In 1967 Cab Calloway placed Horace Vandergelder in this musical
    $400 28
A scarf worn as a necktie, its name refers to the Croatians who originally wore them
    DD: $500 23
Unit of currency used to buy a turkey in Turkey or a bologna in Bologna
    $400 14
These chemical compounds can prevent decay but if you take too much your teeth might become mottled
    $400 4
In the rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence", the maid had this body part pecked off by a blackbird
    $500 10
This philosopher who died 90 years ago said, "God is dead"
    $500 11
John Rubinstein had the title role in this musical set in the Holy Roman Empire & thereabouts
    $500 29
Half of this famous pair goes under a baby's chin & half is a lace frill worn around the neck & shoulders
    $500 24
While the core of a quarter is copper, the core of a penny is this
    $500 18
The vestigial tailbone, consisting of 3-5 vertebrates, just below the sacrum
    $500 5
It can precede tip, nut or ding

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 16):

Burr John Bob
$1,600 $700 $1,000

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Burr John Bob
$800 $1,800 $2,700

Double Jeopardy! Round

U.S. CITIES
THE 1960s
HISTORIC NICKNAMES
EUROPEAN TRAVEL
MODERN LITERATURE
4-LETTER BIRDS
    $200 8
When captured by the British Fort Duquesne was named this in honor of William Pitt the Elder
    $200 1
On October 18, 1965, David Miller was the first to be arrested under a new law against burning these
    $200 22
Erik Thorvaldsson, who colonized Greenland, was given this colorful nickname
    $200 12
To go there, drive south from La Linea, Spain to Winston Churchill Avenue
    $200 16
Andre Malraux, who wrote "Man's Fate", was this country's minister of culture
    $200 25
Groucho Marx depended on this bird to bring him the secret word on "You Bet Your Life"
    $400 9
In 1970 this state capital merged with Douglas, Alaska to form the largest U.S. in area
    $400 2
In 1962 18-year-old Peter Fechter became the first person to be killed trying to scale this
    $400 19
Currently back in service this World War II battleship is known as "Mighty Mo"
    $400 24
This city's Topkapi Palace, formerly a sultan's palace, has been a museum since 1924
    $400 11
"A Thief in the Night" investigates the mysterious 1978 death of this pope
    $400 23
Like a myna & parrot, some species of this black bird can be taught to talk
    $600 14
This largest city in Maine was formerly called The Neck
    $600 3
In March 1964, at age 23, Constantine II became king of this country
    $600 6
This pioneer in the canning of pineapples was known as the "Hawaiian Pineapple King"
    $600 10
When this anisette liqueur is served with coffee beans in Italy it's called con mosche, "with flies"
    $600 13
This 1990 Gore Vidal book is subtitled "A Novel of America in the 1920s"
    $600 17
Pronounced one way, it's a bird; pronounced another way it means "jumped in head first"
    $800 4
This 3rd-largest Pennsylvania city is the state's only lake port
    DD: $300 5
On August 7, 1960, the government of this island country seized American property
    $800 20
Attorney general's wife who was called "The Mouth that Roared" & "Watergate's Warbler"
    $800 27
Berchtesgaden in this German state is home to a tea house that was once Hitler's private retreat
    $800 28
It was once rumored that this author of "Gravity's Rainbow" was really J.D. Salinger
    $800 18
Often found in crossword puzzles, this sea eagle can also be a 3-letter bird when its final E is dropped
    $1000 15
The oldest steel bridge in the United States, Eads Bridge, spans the Mississippi between Illinois & this city
    $1000 7
She was sworn in as governor of Alabama, January 16, 1967
    $1000 21
Admitted to the Union on Feb. 14, 1912, this state has been called "The Valentine State"
    DD: $2,700 29
It's the next capital city you'll reach sailing down the Danube from Vienna
    $1000 26
The white & glossy varieties of this bird live in the Americas, the sacred in Egypt

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Burr John Bob
$5,500 $5,900 $5,500

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

DIRECTORS
Born in Turkey, he won 2 Tonys before directing Marlon Brando in his first Oscar-winning performance

Final scores:

Burr John Bob
$5,495 $11,001 $5,500
3rd place New champion: $11,001 2nd place

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Burr John Bob
$3,800 $6,400 $6,000
16 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W
21 R
(including 1 DD),
6 W
16 R,
2 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $16,200

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

Game tape date: 1990-08-06
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.