Show #2035 - Friday, June 11, 1993

Al Lin game 2.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Chris Bennington, an insurance coverage attorney from Moorpark, California

Peter Fish, a writer from San Carlos, California

Al Lin, a law student originally from Chesapeake, Virginia (whose 1-day cash winnings total $10,501)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

MYTHOLOGY
CHARLOTTES
TRAVEL TEXAS
1990
COOKING
COMPLETES THE PROVERB
    $100 8
Buto, a snake goddess of this ancient civilization, is often shown with papyrus
    $100 25
The title character in this 1952 children's book is a spider
    $100 11
People in this city call their major downtown freeway interchanges "The Spaghetti Bowl", not the Astrobowl
    $100 4
In March Capt. Joseph Hazelwood was acquitted of the major charges in the grounding of this ship
    $100 1
Collective term for the innards of a turkey used to make gravy
    $100 17
"Where there's a will,..."
    $200 9
Artemis is the Greek goddess of the hunt & she's the Roman goddess of the hunt
    $200 27
She played Edna Garrett on "Diff'rent Strokes" &amp; "The Facts of Life"
    $200 20
This First Lady donated the land for the National Wildflower Research Center in Austin
    $200 5
This TV comedienne caused a flap with her off-key rendition of the national anthem July 25
    $200 2
Varieties of these include spritz, refrigerator &amp; snickerdoodles
    $200 18
"Waste not,..."
    $300 10
Hermes wears winged ones called talaria; their name comes from talus, Latin for "ankle"
    $300 28
Monticello sits on a hill overlooking this Virginia city
    $300 22
Fort Worth has a display of 13 life-size wax figures that depict this Leonardo da Vinci painting
    $300 14
Over 1,000 Muslim pilgrims died in a stampede in this holy city July 2
    $300 3
They can be twice-baked &amp; Italians turn them into gnocchi
    $300 19
"Promises, like pie-crust, are made to be..."
    $400 12
The Greek sea god Nereus is most closely associated with this sea that's an arm of the Mediterranean
    $400 29
Hollis was the last name of the Bette Davis character in this 1965 film
    $400 23
This theme park near Arlington, Texas boasts a 200' parachute drop called the Texas Chute-Out
    $400 15
After 10 days in the Vatican mission in Panama City, he surrendered to U.S. troops Jan. 3
    $400 6
"Cooking A to Z" calls it the French equivalent of Chinese stir-frying
    $400 21
"The nearer the bone,..."
    $500 13
Collective name of Tisiphone, Alecto &amp; Megaera, who are known for their "rages"
    $500 30
This 19th c. author who once used the pen name Currer Bell married Curate Arthur Bell Nicholls
    $500 24
This city's Post Office is divided by a state line, so you can stand with 1 foot in Texas &amp; 1 in Arkansas
    DD: $1,000 16
On March 11 Patricio Aylwin was sworn in as president of this country, replacing Gen. Pinochet
    $500 7
It's to make clear by removing impurities; you do it to butter &amp; stock
    $500 26
"Hell hath no fury..."

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

Al Peter Chris
$2,800 -$900 $200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Al Peter Chris
$4,400 $500 $1,600

Double Jeopardy! Round

MILITARY LEADERS
POETRY
DISASTERS
NICKNAMES
ISLANDS
POP MUSIC
    $200 16
As captain of H.M.S. Director, he was set ashore in a 1797 mutiny, 8 years after the Bounty affair
    $200 1
This Poe heroine "lived with no other thought than to love and be loved by me"
    $200 11
In adjusted dollars, the 1906 earthquake in this city was America's costliest
    $200 26
Harriet Tubman's nicknames compared her to this biblical hero who led his people out of slavery
    $200 6
This island 2 miles from the Italian mainland is the most populous in the Mediterranean
    $200 21
This Beatle won a 1971 Grammy for arranging "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey"
    $400 17
In 218 B.C. he left eastern Spain for northern Italy with 102,000 men &amp; about 40 elephants
    $400 2
On July 8, 1822 he drowned while sailing off Livorno, Italy; his body was cremated on the beach
    $400 12
This volcano which buried Pompeii destroyed the city of Torre del Greco several times
    $400 27
Nicknamed "The Smiling Pope", he didn't have much to smile about: he was only pope for 33 days
    $400 7
The last full-blooded Aborigine on this island state of Australia died in 1876
    $400 22
The TV soundtrack album "Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite" was this rock star's last No. 1 LP
    $600 18
This Israeli general lost his left eye while fighting with the Allies in Lebanon in World War II
    $600 3
The prologue to this 14th c. work describes the over 2 dozen people who meet at the Tabard Inn
    $600 13
In 1918, in the worst epidemic in U.S. history, over 500,000 Americans died from the Spanish form of this
    $600 28
World War II GIs called this "Sarong Girl" "The Sweetheart of the Foxholes"
    $600 8
Longwood House, a Napoleonic museum, is maintained on this South Atlantic British territory
    $600 23
Eddie Kendricks left this Motown group in 1971, right after "Just My Imagination"
    $800 19
AEF commander whose "My Experiences in the World War" won the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for History
    $800 4
Oliver Wendell Holmes called this sea creature "a ship of pearl" that "sails the unshadowed main"
    $800 14
In 1945 a U.S. Army bomber crashed into this skyscraper, leaving 13 dead
    $800 30
"Thespian" nickname of bank robber Willie Sutton, who was known for his disguises
    DD: $2,200 9
Once known as the Spice Islands, the Moluccas are now part of this country
    $800 24
This lead singer &amp; his group The Mindbenders topped the charts in 1965 with "Game of Love"
    $1000 20
This Japanese officer who planned the attack on Pearl Harbor attended Harvard in 1919
    DD: $2,100 5
The 1798 collection "Lyrical Ballads" contained poems by both Coleridge &amp; this "Tintern Abbey" poet
    $1000 15
1988 saw one of the worst air disasters when a Pan Am jet exploded over this Scottish village
    $1000 29
Comparing him to a Visigoth king &amp; a poet, Voltaire dubbed this "Great" Prussian ruler Alaric-Cotin
    $1000 10
The Azores & this island group 400 miles off Morocco are districts of Portugal
    $1000 25
In 1984 Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck &amp; Nile Rodgers formed this group to record "Sea Of Love"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Al Peter Chris
$11,900 $4,100 $3,600
(lock game)

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
The success of this book in 1957 prompted Random House to create its "Beginner Books" series

Final scores:

Al Peter Chris
$10,000 $100 $4,101
2-day champion: $20,501 3rd place: reference books + Wheel of Fortune & Jeopardy! for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System & Sega Genesis 2nd place: trip on Delta to the Bahamas & stay at the Bahamas Princess Resort & Casino

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Al Peter Chris
$10,300 $6,300 $3,600
27 R
(including 2 DDs),
2 W
14 R,
4 W
(including 1 DD)
16 R,
5 W

Combined Coryat: $20,200

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

Game tape date: 1993-01-20
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.