Show #2367 - Tuesday, December 13, 1994

Contestants

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David Stauffer, a carpenter and contractor from Macungie, Pennsylvania

Charlie Tamlyn, a claims authorizer from Commack, New York

Lisa Laplante, a conveyor systems engineer from Wayne, New Jersey (whose 1-day cash winnings total $6,000)

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Jeopardy! Round

1978
POP MUSIC
COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES
NAUTICAL TERMS
THE COAT CLOSET
"O" NO!
(Alex: Each correct response will begin with that letter of the alphabet.)
    $100 1
This company announced it was ending production of its Beetle automobile in West Germany
    $100 6
These 2 writers won a 1966 Song of the Year Grammy for "Michelle"
    $100 11
It's often just called UCLA
    $100 16
Launched in 1886, the Gluckauf was the first of these ships to transport oil across the Atlantic
    $100 26
In 1988 Claude Montana designed a coat named for this wrap that's worn after taking a shower
    $100 21
A standing one comes with applause
    $200 2
A government commission in India ordered this former P.M. to stand trial for contempt
    $200 7
"If you're going to" this city, "be sure to wear some flowers in your hair"
    $200 12
Founded in 1812, this country's national university has campuses in Leon & Managua
    $200 17
A lookout sits on this high platform with an avian name
    $200 27
The coat named for this time of day is also called a cutaway
    $200 22
Mission-style furniture of the early 1900s was usually made of this wood & trimmed with nailheads
    DD: $200 3
This man's widow, Muriel, was named to take over his seat in the U.S. Senate
    $300 8
This duo's 1966 singles "Homeward Bound" & "I Am A Rock" were their first hits in the United Kingdom
    $300 13
Thomas A. Edison State College was established in this state in 1972
    $300 18
The bow is the front part of a ship; this is the rear portion
    $300 28
It's an evening coat that wraps around the body like the larval moth covering of the same name
    $300 23
One way to go for Christian soldiers
    $400 4
Under this name Albino Luciani was Pope for 34 days in August & September
    $400 9
Glen Campbell hit that begins, "I've been walkin' these streets so long, singin' the same old song"
    $400 14
New York City's Union Theological Seminary is affiliated with this Upper Manhattan Ivy League university
    $400 19
Vikings improved the stability of their ships by adding this long piece of wood to the underside
    $400 29
This Scotsman started making raincoats after he invented a rubberized fabric in 1823
    $400 24
A superannuated sombrero, or a 2-word phrase that describes it if it's behind the times
    $500 5
This 85-year-old Yugoslav president paid a 3-day official visit to the U.S.
    $500 10
Among the hits written by this woman & then- husband Gerry Goffin are "Up on the Roof" & "The Loco-Motion"
    $500 15
This Canadian province's only university is Memorial University in St. John's
    $500 20
A ship is divided into compartments by these walls
    $500 30
This great French couturier debuted his A-Line coat in 1955
    $500 25
It's a flying machine that has wings that flap like a bird's

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

Lisa Charlie David
$1,200 $1,800 $400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Lisa Charlie David
$1,900 $2,900 $2,300

Double Jeopardy! Round

U.S. PRESIDENTS
WORLD CAPITALS
FOOD & DRINK
LITERATURE
CHEMISTS
ARTISTIC QUOTES
    $200 16
He took the presidential oath at 2:39 P.M., Nov. 22, 1963
    $200 1
The Great Fire of 1666 was nothing new to this city; it also burned in 61, 798 & 982
    $200 3
This other name for home-fried potatoes also has a residence in its name
    $200 8
This author of "The Scarlet Letter" died before he could finish writing "The Dolliver Romance"
    $200 21
In 1783 J.A.C. Charles, known for Charles' law, made an ascent in one of these
    $200 26
Someone said of his "The Last Judgment", "Such things might be painted in a voluptuous bathroom"
    $400 17
In 1953, in his last State of the Union address, he warned of the dangers of atomic war
    $400 2
A famous opera house, Teatro Colon, is located in this Argentine capital
    $400 4
Though it has "wheat" in its name, this pancake flour ingredient is an herb, not a cereal grain
    $400 9
Her 1869 novel "Oldtown Folks" is about runaway children, not runaway slaves
    $400 22
Johannes Bronsted & T. Lowry are famous for describing the transfer of protons between acids & these
    $400 27
Miro called this Mobile sculptor "the tough guy with the soul of a nightingale"
    $600 18
He was the first president to graduate from West Point
    $600 13
Plaza de Armas in this capital city was designed by Pizarro
    $600 5
Indonesian satays are usually served with a spicy sauce made from these legumes
    $600 10
He wrote his last horror story, "Hop-Frog", in 1849, the year he died
    $600 23
When Mendeleyev made his periodic table in 1869, this was the only element in the first period
    $600 28
John Singer Sargent supposedly said,"every time I paint" this type of work "I lose a friend"
    $800 19
He was named for an older brother who died in infancy, & for his father, Abram
    $800 14
Before it became Haiti's capital, it was the capital of Saint-Domingue
    DD: $1,600 6
Cortes called it "the divine drink that builds up resistance and fights fatigue"
    $800 11
"The Rich Boy", one of his best stories, appears in his 1926 collection "All The Sad Young Men"
    $800 24
Scheele & Priestley told of discovering this gas at about the same time, so they're both credited
    DD: $3,000 29
Stevie Smith wrote of this artist, "See how Theotocopoulos throws on his canvas colors of hell"
    $1000 20
His granddaughter Letitia was the first girl born in the White House
    $1000 15
The name of this Pakistani capital reflects the country's religious nature
    $1000 7
Malmsey, the sweetest type of this Portuguese wine, is often sipped after dinner, m'dear
    $1000 12
Dostoyevsky's title character Prince Myshkin is known by this rude term, the novel's title
    $1000 25
19th century Italian chemist famous for his "number" of entities in 1 mole
    $1000 30
Degas said of this American impressionist, "I will not admit that a woman can draw so well"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Lisa Charlie David
$6,900 $8,900 $5,900

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

AMERICAN HISTORY
Appointed minister to Mexico in 1853, he was recalled in 1856

Final scores:

Lisa Charlie David
$4,899 $3,999 $4,900
2nd place: CounterPoint compact disc player + Klipsch speaker system 3rd place: Panasonic electronic keyboard New champion: $4,900

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Lisa Charlie David
$4,700 $8,200 $5,900
12 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
25 R
(including 2 DDs),
4 W
19 R,
5 W

Combined Coryat: $18,800

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

Game tape date: 1994-09-20
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