Show #2192 - Tuesday, March 1, 1994

Contestants

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Lisa Churinskas, an executive assistant from Howell, New Jersey

Bob Parks, a security supervisor originally from Buffalo, New York

David Kraut, a writer from Roosevelt Island, New York (whose 3-day cash winnings total $33,002)

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Jeopardy! Round

FIRST LADIES
ACTORS & THEIR ROLES
HINTS FROM HELOISE
WORLD POTPOURRI
LESSER-KNOWN NAMES
ANIMAL PHRASES
    $100 1
Julia Tyler started the tradition of greeting the president with this song
    $100 2
The voice he used as Hannibal Lecter was inspired by Hal the Computer's voice in "2001"
    $100 21
If one of these fasteners is stuck, try rubbing its teeth with a bar of soap or a candle
    $100 11
This country with which castanets are now associated may have gotten them from the Moors
    $100 23
Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar was the second president of this republic; Sam Houston was the first
    $100 16
Purchasing something sight unseen is like buying this animal "in a poke"
    $200 7
It's the name our current First Lady uses professionally
    $200 3
In 1989 she played Olivia in "Twelfth Night" onstage & Susie Diamond in "The Fabulous Baker Boys" on film
    $200 22
Don't throw out the canisters that the 35mm type of this comes in; use them for storage
    $200 12
The new Abbey Theatre opened in this Irish city in 1966; the old one was destroyed by fire in 1951
    $200 24
The Reeds were part of this "party" that got trapped in a California pass in 1846-47
    $200 17
This animal may "never forget", but the reason why we say so has been forgotten
    $300 8
In her over 12 years as First Lady, she held 348 press conferences
    $300 4
"Evening Shade" co-star whose portrayal of Mark Twain was inspired partly by his own grandfather
    $300 28
Use henna or strong coffee to color this without irritation or toxic chemicals
    $300 13
Traditional Moroccans slip on babouches, which are a backless style of these
    $300 25
Russian Irina Rodnina has won 3 Olympic gold medals with 2 different men in this sport
    $300 18
An older person is "no spring" one, & a coward has the heart of one
    $400 9
Eliza McCardle Johnson followed her as First Lady
    $400 5
In this TV series' last season, Nancy Walker played housekeeper to Uncle Bill, Buffy, and Jody
    $400 29
If you lose 1 of a pair of these jewelry items, you can turn the other into a pendant or stud
    $400 14
Naumburg Cathedral in this country is known for its fine Gothic statues
    DD: $500 26
Marie-Anne de Cupis de Camargo may be the first woman in this field to perform a quadruple entrechat
    $400 19
A person who takes both sides in an argument is said to "run with the hare" & "hunt with" these dogs
    $500 10
She was also a first lady in the Philippines; her husband William was governor-general there
    $500 6
Rex Harrison ends up as a ghost in this 1945 film based on a Noel Coward comedy
    $500 30
To rid your home of these bugs, try Heloise's boric acid, flour, sugar, onion & fat mixture
    $500 15
This South American country ranks third in the world as a grower of cacao beans
    $500 27
Charles Eames made his name designing these pieces of furniture
    $500 20
Wrinkles that form at the outer corners of the eyes are called these, after a certain bird's imprints

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

David Bob Lisa
$600 $1,600 $300

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

David Bob Lisa
$2,800 $3,400 $900

Double Jeopardy! Round

ANCIENT EGYPT
TRANSPORTATION
MOUNTAINS
BIOLOGY
AMERICAN HISTORY
LONGFELLOW'S POETRY
    $200 9
Abu al-Hawl, the Arabic name for this famous recumbent statue at Giza, means "father of terror"
    $200 26
In its infancy this canal was known as "Clinton's Ditch"
    $200 6
This California mountain is the USA's 17th highest; it was No. 1 until 1959
    $200 16
In women these tubes aren't connected directly to the ovaries; the eggs have to jump a gap
    $200 1
In the mid-1700s this Pennsylvania city was the busiest Colonial port
    $200 19
Longfellow wrote, "I heard the bells on" this "day their old, familiar carols play"
    $400 10
Soon after the death of Cleopatra in 30 B.C., Egypt became a province of this empire
    $400 27
Swiss federal railroad trains are powered by this
    $400 7
This country's Mount Kosciusko lies in the Snowy Mountains
    $400 17
The vessels within a leaf blade, the pattern they form is used to identify plants
    $400 2
Now in West Virginia, this village was the site of an 1859 raid by abolitionist John Brown
    $400 20
"Pemican and buffalo marrow, haunch of deer and hump of bison" were served at his wedding- feast
    $600 11
2 of the most popular foods in ancient Egypt, or what the queen was eating in "Sing a Song of Sixpence"
    $600 28
Introduced in 1936, this company's DC-3 became the world's dominant transport plane
    $600 8
This Alaskan mountain's north peak was first scaled in 1910, its south peak in 1913
    $600 18
You have 2 different types of these, autosome & sex
    $600 3
In the 1950s "Operation Bootstrap" improved the economy of this U.S. commonwealth
    $600 21
This heroine is the daughter of Benedict Bellefontaine, "the wealthiest farmer of Grand-Pre"
    $800 12
This "book" contains spells that were supposed to help the deceased in the afterlife
    $800 29
This American automaker owns 75% of Aston Martin & 25% of Mazda
    $800 14
The Notre Dame Mountains aren't in Indiana; they lie south of the St. Lawrence River in this province
    $800 24
The term brachial refers to this body part or something that resembles it
    $800 4
The 1794 treaty named for this Chief Justice provided for the removal of the British from U.S. territory
    $800 22
Italian city that Longfellow called a "White Water-Lily... whose untrodden streets are rivers"
    $1000 13
Egyptians painted the area below their eyes this color with a paste made from ground malachite
    $1000 30
The merchant fleet registered in this African nation leads the world in gross tonnage
    $1000 15
Africa's highest peak, Mount Kilimanjaro, is in this country
    DD: $1,000 25
Among the lipids produced by this organ is cholesterol
    $1000 5
In February 1933 gunman Joseph Zangara missed FDR but killed Anton J. Cermak, this city's mayor
    DD: $2,800 23
Longfellow may have written this poem about Pilgrims because John Alden was one of his ancestors

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

David Bob Lisa
$7,400 $9,400 $3,700

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

BRAND NAMES
In the 1930s this product was advertised with the phrase "Don't put a cold in your pocket"

Final scores:

David Bob Lisa
$14,799 $16,801 $7,399
2nd place: Singer Furniture bedroom set + S&S Mills carpeting New champion: $16,801 3rd place: Service Merchandise gift certificate

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

David Bob Lisa
$5,500 $9,400 $3,700
18 R
(including 2 DDs),
3 W
21 R
(including 1 DD),
0 W
14 R,
2 W

Combined Coryat: $18,600

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

Game tape date: 1993-12-01
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