Show #1688 - Wednesday, December 25, 1991

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Mary Hurley, a senior gardener originally from Stockton, California

Doug Petersen, a dentist originally from Minneapolis, Minnesota

Larry Dunn, an export manager from Northridge, California (whose 2-day cash winnings total $17,800)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

AIR
DISNEY VILLAINS
NATIONAL HISTORIC SITES
U.S. NAVY
WORD ORIGINS
BROKEN
    $100 18
A person who boasts about nothing is full of this
    $100 10
His hand, the left one, is inside another character, the crocodile
    $100 11
In Georgia, a 7' tall "big smiling peanut" is part of a Nat'l Historic Site honoring this president
    $100 3
This Navy marching song became popular after the annual Army-Navy football game in 1907
    $100 1
A variety show, from the French meaning "song of vau de vire", a region in France
    $100 26
Moses broke the first set of these after seeing the golden calf
    $200 19
In aviation lingo, when a plane hits a sudden downward stream of air it hits an "air" one of these
    $200 14
The Heffalumps & Woozles who tried to steal his honey were imaginary; he dreamt them
    $200 13
This boulevard between the White House & the Capitol was designated a Nat'l Historic Site in 1965
    $200 4
Trident & Poseidon missiles are launched from this type of ship
    $200 2
A farrier, one who shoes horses, comes from ferrum, Latin for this metal horseshoes are made of
    $200 27
Even with a broken one of these, John Wilkes Booth escaped from Ford's Theatre
    DD: $600 20
In the 17th century this compound became the first part of the air to be identified
    $300 15
In this 1977 film Bernard & Bianca save the orphan Penny from the evil clutches of Madame Medusa
    $300 23
Every May 10, Golden Spike Nat'l Historic Site reenacts the completion of this
    $300 5
Command & strategy courses are taught at the Naval War College in this Rhode Island summer resort
    $300 8
This central part of an atom is Latin for kernel
    $300 28
In 1971 the Bee Gees asked, "How can you mend a broken" one
    $400 21
In 1868 he used air power to operate a mechanical brake
    $400 16
J. Worthington Foulfellow, a.k.a. Honest John, is this type of sly animal who charms Pinocchio
    $400 24
A 17-room Victorian house belonging to this Sierra Club founder is part of a historic site in California
    $400 6
In 1866 this commander who fought at Mobile Bay became the 1st Navy officer promoted to the rank of admiral
    $400 9
The name of this symptom of certain diseases comes from Latin for greenish-yellow, "galbinus"
    $400 29
It was broken October 14, 1947 by Charles Yeager
    $500 22
These are 4 main classifications of air masses: polar, arctic, tropical & this
    $500 17
Even the name of this wicked fairy in "Sleeping Beauty" sounds evil
    $500 25
The Springfield Armory where Daniel Shays led a rebellion is a national historic site in this state
    $500 7
During the 1950s the Navy named a class of aircraft carriers for this 1st Defense Sec'y
    $500 12
From Nawwab, a rank of government officials under India's Mogul rulers, it's a man of prominence & wealth
    $500 30
It was broken into in 1922 by Lord Carnarvon & Howard Carter

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 12):

Larry Doug Mary
$1,200 $600 $500

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Larry Doug Mary
$2,000 $900 $2,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

VICE PRESIDENTS
SHORT STORIES
THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
GEMS
PEOPLE
ZOOLOGY
    $200 1
This New York governor was the last governor to become vice president
    $200 4
His "Plain Tales from the Hills" is a volume of stories about life in India
    $200 16
It was the dominant religion of the empire
    $200 8
Often found in geodes, this purplish gem is the most highly valued quartz stone
    $200 21
Arne Naess, who scaled Mount Everest in 1985, married this "Supreme" singer that same year
    $200 26
It's the branch of zoology that studies insects
    $400 2
While vice president in 1804, he was indicted for murder in New York & New Jersey
    $400 5
It's O. Henry's story about 2 people who "sacrificed for each other the greatest treasures of their house"
    $400 17
The seat of the empire was in Anatolia which is now in this country
    DD: $1,000 9
It's the largest blue diamond in the world
    $400 22
This star of TV's "Evening Shade" was once employed as a bouncer at NYC's Roseland Ballroom
    $400 27
It's the process by which a bird cleans, smoothes & oils its feathers
    $600 3
Grover Cleveland's 2nd vice president, his grandson shared his name & ran for president in 1952 & 1956
    $600 13
The name of his "Twice-Told Tales" may have come from a line in Shakespeare's "King John"
    $600 18
Mehmed VI, the last sultan of the once great Ottoman Empire, fled his office in this century
    $600 10
Since ancient times peridot has been found off the Egyptian coast in this "colorful" sea
    $600 23
Newsday is the New York home paper of this woman called America's most popular gossip columnist
    $600 28
This mollusk has a long, internal shell called a pen, & like the octopus, can shoot ink
    $800 6
While mayor of Minneapolis in 1947, he helped found Americans for Democratic Action
    $800 14
D.H. Lawrence wrote a story about a boy who rides himself to death on 1 of these equine toys
    $800 19
The famous Ottoman Corsair Khayr-Ad Din was called this by Europeans because of a facial feature
    $800 11
Mexico is a major source of the "fire" type of these gems
    DD: $1,000 24
This executive editor of the Washington Post announced his resignation in June 1991
    $800 29
It's the term for the grasping claw on a crab or lobster
    $1000 7
He served under FDR for 2 terms & then ran against him for the 1940 presidential nomination
    $1000 15
"The Jewels" was 1 of many stories written by this Frenchman who died in an asylum in 1893
    $1000 20
Selim I killed all rivals for the throne, including his sons, except this one who succeeded him
    $1000 12
Most of the Biwa type of these gems are cultivated in Japan's Lake Biwa, for which they're named
    $1000 25
This late king of Norway won an Olympic gold medal for yachting in 1928
    $1000 30
Referring to its large nose, Nasalis larvatus is the scientific name for this monkey

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Larry Doug Mary
$4,400 $3,300 $7,200

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

CHINA
The Ch'in Dynasty gave China its first emperor, this dynasty gave it its last

Final scores:

Larry Doug Mary
$8,700 $1 $11,601
2nd place: a trip to Orlando, Florida with 1 week at the Orlando Marriott International Drive 3rd place: Ross Simons diamond-starred 14-karat gold bracelet + a Nintendo Entertainment System with Super Jeopardy! & Wheel of Fortune + InfoGenius for Nintendo Game Boy New champion: $11,601

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Larry Doug Mary
$5,000 $3,300 $6,400
20 R,
6 W
(including 1 DD)
13 R,
3 W
18 R
(including 2 DDs),
3 W

Combined Coryat: $14,700

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

Game tape date: 1991-10-01
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.