Show #2675 - Friday, March 29, 1996

Contestants

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Gary Fulcomer, an Air Force attorney originally from Allentown, Pennsylvania

Susan Hoppe, a medical student originally from Woodbridge, Virginia

Judy Zellers, a homemaker from Mountain View, California (whose 1-day cash winnings total $5,900)

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Jeopardy! Round

OLD TESTAMENT
TV CHARACTERS
LANGUAGES
SCULPTORS
SECTIONS
ODDS & ENDS
    $100 26
"And it came to pass afterward, that he loved a woman in the valley of Sorek, whose name was Delilah"
    $100 19
This "Addams Family" character usually entered a room with the words "You rang?"
    $100 1
The click languages are non-Bantu languages mostly spoken in this continent's southern part
    $100 12
Michelangelo gave 2 sculptures, now in this Paris museum, to a family who cared for him during an illness
    $100 2
By 1990 1 in 4 U.S. babies was delivered by this procedure
    $100 7
Until 1971 there were 240 of these in a British pound
    $200 27
He was a spry 600 when "the flood of waters was upon the earth"
    $200 20
On "The Beverly Hillbillies", this character was president of the Commerce Bank of Beverly Hills
    $200 16
When written, this official language differs very little from Austria to Switzerland
    $200 13
Gutzon Borglum, famous for sculpting this South Dakota monument, was a friend of Auguste Rodin
    $200 3
The cheapest seats in a stadium are usually in this uncovered section beyond the outfield
    $200 8
In 1846 Maine banned the sale of this except for medicinal or industrial purposes
    $300 28
2 Chronicles 5 covers its installation in the temple
    $300 21
Guy Williams won this Disney role because of his fencing ability
    $300 17
In the 1930s this country began moving from Osmanli, or Ottoman, to a more indigenous language
    $300 14
Thomas Crawford sculpted "Armed Freedom", the statue crowning the dome of this Washington building
    $300 4
Duncan & Ruby Red are varieties of this large fruit that has sections
    $300 9
By a 1912 executive order, the diameter of each of these shall be .0616 the height of the U.S. flag
    $400 29
He patiently said, "Hast thou not poured me out as milk, and curdled me like cheese?"
    $400 22
This character's sidekicks have included Ben Romero, Ed Jacobs, Frank Smith & Bill Gannon
    $400 18
The 2 major Baltic-Finnic languages are Estonian & this one
    $400 15
Edme Bouchardon's equestrian statue of Louis XV was destroyed during this 1789-1799 upheaval
    $400 5
Section of an orchestra in which the tuba player sits
    $400 10
This type of cloud is sometimes referred to as a thunderhead
    $500 30
The first book in the Hebrew Bible named for a specific person, though it's not certain he wrote it
    $500 23
George Morgan played this "M*A*S*H" priest in the pilot episode, William Christopher in the series
    DD: $300 24
The largest community of Scottish Gaelic speakers in North America is in this Canadian province
    $500 25
This genius of the early Renaissance was born Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi circa 1386
    $500 6
Ultramicrotomes are used to cut very thin sections of tissue for viewing by these powerful microscopes
    $500 11
It was the occupation of Charles Walgreen who opened his first store in 1901

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

Judy Susan Gary
$2,100 $600 $300

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Judy Susan Gary
$2,500 $600 $2,600

Double Jeopardy! Round

19th CENTURY PERSONALITIES
WORLD CAPITALS
PLANTS & TREES
NONFICTION
EDUCATORS
MUSICALS' OPENING NUMBERS
    $200 16
Astronomer Giovanni Battista Donati discovered 6 of these tailed bodies; one is named for him
    $200 1
This city dates back to the founding of the Roman settlement of Londinium in 43 A.D.
    $200 21
This "Dutch" flower's name is from the Turkish for "turban"
    $200 11
At his death in 1869, his "Thesaurus of English words and Phrases" had gone through 28 editions
    $200 6
This Black educator's own education was obtained at the Hampton Institute in Virginia, 1872-75
    $200 24
"Willkommen"
    $400 17
In 1813 he recaptured his hometown, Caracas, from the Spaniards
    $400 2
This capital is located at the mouth of the Bou Regreg on Morocco's northwestern coast
    $400 22
There are 2 species of the bristlecone type of this tree: Great Basin & Rocky Mountain
    $400 12
This comedienne offers some humorous observations in "Edith Ann: My Life, So Far"
    $400 7
This Mass. educator & legislator was known as the "Father of American Public Education"
    $400 25
"Once in the Highlands"
    DD: $500 18
Myra Bradwell, founder of the Chicago Legal News, got this famous woman's insanity verdict reversed in 1876
    $600 3
Heroes' Square in this capital is a monument to the Magyar Conquest
    $600 23
The prickly pear type of this plant is so named because its fruit is pear-shaped
    $600 13
In 1973 this astronomer published his 1st book for general readership, "The Cosmic Connection"
    DD: $500 8
In 1907 she opened her first children's house in a Rome slum
    $600 26
"Tradition"
    $800 19
Appropriately, this Bohemian composer wrote his symphony "From the New World" while living in the U.S.
    $800 4
Most of the people in this Uruguayan capital are of European descent
    $800 27
Scientists divide the 450 species of this tree into 3 groups: white, red & ringed
    $800 14
Anthony Burgess' 1973 book "Joysprick" is a study of the language used by this Irish author
    $800 9
This former Secretary of Education chaired the National Endowment for the Humanities 1981-85
    $800 29
"If a Girl Isn't Pretty"
    $1000 20
Dingane became King of the Zulu after taking part in the 1828 murder of this half-brother
    $1000 5
This city's railroad terminal was designed by Eliel Saarinen & completed in 1914
    $1000 28
The Bracken species of this spore-bearing plant can be poisonous to livestock
    $1000 15
Drawn from personal papers, "Sword of San Jacinto" celebrates the life of this Texas statesman
    $1000 10
Between 1836 & 1857, Truman & Smith Publishers of Cincinnati issued 6 of his "Eclectic Readers"
    $1000 30
"I Hope I Get It"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Judy Susan Gary
$5,700 $4,400 $7,000

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

POETS
In 1942 his collection of verse "Shakespeare in Harlem" appeared

Final scores:

Judy Susan Gary
$2,500 $4,300 $11,500
3rd place: Daniel Mink his & hers watches 2nd place: trip to Mexico City & Zihuatanejo, Mexico New champion: $11,500

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Judy Susan Gary
$5,700 $4,400 $7,800
18 R,
1 W
14 R,
5 W
19 R
(including 2 DDs),
2 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $17,900

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

Game tape date: Unknown
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