Show #2310 - Friday, September 23, 1994

Contestants

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Peter Pinnola, an attorney from Melrose Park, Pennsylvania

Bob Zalin, a Ph.D. candidate from New York City, New York

Neil Quarterman, a foreign service officer from Washington, D.C. (whose 3-day cash winnings total $40,803)

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Jeopardy! Round

BRITISH HISTORY
TV ACTORS & ROLES
ANNUAL EVENTS
MOUNTAINS
MISSED IT BY THAT MUCH
CROSSWORD CLUES "D"
    $100 6
He married a pregnant Anne Boleyn while still legally married to Catherine of Aragon
    $100 22
Pat Morita played Arnold on this Ron Howard sitcom before he coached "The Karate Kid" on film
    $100 20
In October this state's annual State Fair takes place in Shreveport
    $100 9
The heads carved on this South Dakota mountain would fit a person 450 feet tall
    $100 1
Pioneer IV was supposed to fly by this in 1959, but missed it by so much that its instruments were useless
    $100 24
Bird of peace
(4)
    $200 5
King John set his royal seal to this document on June 15, 1215
    $200 21
She was one of Marcus Welby's nurses, but she's more famous for playing Chris Cagney on "Cagney & Lacey"
    $200 19
During the summer, Grandview State Park in West Virginia presents a play about these 2 feuding families
    $200 11
Mount Carmel extends from the Esdraelon valley to the Bay of Haifa in this country
    $200 18
In December 1992 the asteroid Toutatis missed this planet by a mere 2.2 million miles--whew!
    $200 25
Some are raised & glazed
(9)
    $300 2
This title reserved for the eldest son of the monarch was first conferred in 1301 on Edward I's son
    $300 23
He played a man named Tiny on "Cimarron City" before he played a man called Hoss on "Bonanza"
    $300 14
Annual events in this state include the Maple Festival in St. Albans & the Marlboro Music Festival
    $300 7
On May 1, 1963 James W. Whittaker became the first American to reach the top of this mountain
    $300 12
In 1991 at Super Bowl XXV, they lost to the Giants 20-19
    $300 26
Crack a code
(8)
    $400 3
The Henley Regatta originated in 1829, when crews from these 2 universities competed on the Thames
    $400 29
Tim Matheson provided the voice of this cartoon adventurer, the son of Dr. Benton Quest
    $400 15
The Cereal City Festival with "The World's Longest Breakfast Table" takes place each June in this city
    $400 8
Among North American mountains, only this one is taller than Canada's Mount Logan
    $400 13
In 1974 he lost the French election with 49.19% to Giscard d'Estaing; in 1981 he beat him with 51.76%
    $400 27
Widowed queen or empress
(7)
    $500 4
Under the 1564 Treaty of Troyes, England gave up her claims to this French seaport for 222,000 crowns
    $500 30
Roseanne's TV mom, she won an Oscar for playing Clyde's sister-in- law in "Bonnie and Clyde"
    DD: $600 16
A harvest festival honoring this fruit is held each September in Harwich, Massachusetts
    $500 10
About 20,000 people were killed when this Sicilian volcano erupted in 1669
    $500 17
In 1906 this Russian periodic table founder missed winning a Nobel Prize by 1 vote
    $500 28
Synonym for stalemate
(8)

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

Neil Bob Peter
$800 $2,700 $400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Neil Bob Peter
$800 $5,000 $1,100

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
MIDDLE NAMES
DOGS
QUOTATIONS
COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD
CIRCUS HISTORY
    $200 20
The 1783 Treaty of Paris gave the U.S. all land east of this river except Spanish Florida
    $200 10
This middle name of actor Michael Douglas should remind you of his father
    $200 23
In Mexico this dog is known as the Chihuahueno
    $200 15
He wrote, "How many roads must a man walk down before you call him a man?"
    $200 1
On Feb. 11, 1979 followers of the Ayatollah Khomeini overthrew this country's Pahlavi Dynasty
    $200 27
Clyde Beatty preferred to be called a lion trainer because this other term implies lions can be domesticated
    $400 9
The first of 5 Intolerable Acts passed by Parliament in early 1774 closed this city's port
    $400 11
Since he stopped using the initial J. for James, Sen. Thurmond has gone by this middle name
    $400 24
A schnauzer is born with a long one, but a veterinarian often docks it a few days after birth
    $400 19
Ben Franklin rhymed, "Nothing but" this "is sweeter than honey"
    $400 2
Giza is 1 of 3 cities in this country with a population exceeding 1 million
    $400 28
In 1985 a statue of this huge elephant was erected in St. Thomas, Ont., where he died 100 years earlier
    $600 4
After this June 17, 1775 battle, the American troops retreated via the Charlestown Neck
    $600 12
It was the middle name of American sculptor Daniel French
    $600 25
This Chinese dog, one of the world's most unusual-looking, is known for its loose, wrinkled skin
    $600 14
Speaking of the NL Pennant Race, this former Yankee catcher said, "It ain't over till it's over"
    $600 6
This island nation north of Indonesia was named for Philip II of Spain
    $600 30
These performers are called "Joeys" in honor of Joseph Grimaldi, who was the father of their art
    $800 3
At the Battle of Monmouth, her husband, John Hays, was a gunner in a Pennsylvania regiment
    $800 13
Samuel Morse had 2 middle names, Finley & this
    $800 26
The Sealyham terrier is named for an estate in Pembrokeshire in this country, part of the U.K.
    $800 18
Bartlett's attributes the phrase "It'll play in" this Illinois city to John Ehrlichman
    DD: $800 7
It's the largest republic in the Commonwealth of Independent States
    $800 29
This big ape was known as Buddy before he was renamed for a giant in a 16th century satire
    $1000 5
This Prussian wrote a manual for "The Order and Discipline of the Troops", used until the War of 1812
    DD: $1,200 16
This playwright & novelist had the middle names Fingal O'Flahertie Wills
    $1000 21
The Brabancon is a smooth-coated type of this dog with a Belgian city in its name
    $1000 17
In "Gravity's Rainbow", he wrote, "Yet who can presume to say what the war wants, so vast and aloof is it"
    $1000 8
In Feb. 1993 Michal Kovac was elected the first president of this new European republic
    $1000 22
A former fire-eater named Guy Laliberte founded this highly unusual circus in Montreal in 1984

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Neil Bob Peter
$2,600 $9,000 $4,100
(lock game)

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

NOVELISTS
In 1918 he proudly wrote to his family "I'm the first American wounded in Italy"

Final scores:

Neil Bob Peter
$4,100 $9,500 $5,201
3rd place: Kroy labelling system New champion: $9,500 2nd place: "Mesa Con Frutas" serigraph by Manel Anoro & Lane Venture sleigh bed

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Neil Bob Peter
$4,400 $9,000 $4,900
18 R,
5 W
(including 2 DDs)
24 R,
2 W
10 R,
1 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $18,300

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

Game tape date: 1994-07-26
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