Show #2438 - Wednesday, March 22, 1995

Contestants

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Chris Sullivan, a naval flight officer from Manama, Bahrain

Sue Whelan, a teacher from East Brunswick, New Jersey

Art Vespignani, a compliance officer from Lake Hiawatha, New Jersey (whose 1-day cash winnings total $19,300)

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Jeopardy! Round

AMERICAN HISTORY
THE BEATLES
WHEN IN ROME...
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
TEA
FOREIGN WORDS & PHRASES
    $100 1
On July 8, 1776 revolutionary patriot John Nixon gave the first public reading of this document
    $100 3
Badfinger, Mary Hopkin & Billy Preston were among those featured on this Beatle-owned label
    $100 14
Visitors can get a panoramic view of Rome from the top of the dome of this Vatican City church
    $100 8
In "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea", this submarine visits Atlantis
    $100 20
On Dec. 16, 1773 tea worth £18,000 was destroyed in this city's harbor
    $100 15
If you want something made of this material while shopping in Germany, ask for das Leder
    $200 2
This famous frigate made her last cruise in battle under Charles Stewart in 1815
    $200 4
Questionable title preceding "Do you promise not to tell?"
    $200 17
The family tomb of Scipio Africanus is one of the sights along this ancient road
    $200 9
His fairy tales first appeared in English in 1846, 11 years after they were published in Danish
    $200 21
Not surprisingly, this country is the world's largest importer of tea
    $200 16
In French a million is un million, while this larger number is un milliard
    $300 11
In 1890 Congress established this territory & added the Panhandle region to it
    $300 5
On a 1990 tour one of this former Beatle's sidemen was his son Zak
    $300 23
In a city of many fountains, the most famous is this one dominated by Oceanus in a sea chariot
    $300 10
"The Sea Cook" was the working title of this 1881 Robert Louis Stevenson novel
    $300 22
The 2 types of tea served during this country's tea ceremony are usucha, a thin tea, & koicha, a thick tea
    $300 24
When in Spain, it's the kind of food you'd expect to buy at la pescaderia
    $400 12
In 1921 President Harding appointed this former president chief justice of the United States
    $400 6
"In Penny Lane there is" one of these "with an hourglass and in his pocket is a portrait of the Queen"
    $400 26
On Capitoline Hill, a white marble monument to this king contains Italy's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
    $400 18
In Carlo Collodi's story, Pinocchio turns into this animal & is sold to a circus
    $400 25
R. Blechynden invented iced tea at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Expo in this city on the Mississippi
    $400 28
The Portuguese call this color amarelo
    DD: $1,100 13
In 1867 this newspaper editor helped Jefferson Davis gain his freedom by signing his bail bond
    $500 7
In the 1994 film "Backbeat", Stephen Dorff played this "Fifth Beatle"
    $500 27
At the end of a fine Roman meal, try this anise-flavored liqueur served with coffee beans
    $500 19
This Illinois poet wrote 3 collections of nonsense tales about the Rootabaga country
    $500 29
This chemical in tea leaves provides color & a bitter taste
    $500 30
An Esperanto speaker would call this day of the week Lundo

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

Art Sue Chris
$2,100 $700 $200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Art Sue Chris
$4,400 $2,800 $600

Double Jeopardy! Round

KINGS & QUEENS
TRAVEL U.S.A.
DOGS
TRANSPORTATION
RELIGION
PLAYS
    $200 7
In 1993 she ranked ninth on Fortune Magazine's list of the world's billionaires
    $200 14
You can visit the Kentucky Derby Museum in Louisville at this racetrack
    $200 6
These sporting dogs are called "labs" for short
    $200 24
In the late 1920s, Greyhound bought a fleet of these common London vehicles to use in the U.S.
    $200 1
A center of Hindu pilgrimage is prayaga, at the confluence of the Yamuna & this river
    $200 15
"Peter and Wendy" was J.M. Barrie's retelling of this play in book form
    $400 8
The "Catholic Monarchs", they married October 19, 1469 at Valladolid, Spain
    $400 21
This state's 306-foot-high granite tower in Bennington is one of the world's tallest battle monuments
    $400 30
Roman soldiers brought the ancestors of the Bernese mountain dog to this country over 2,000 years ago
    $400 25
Bill Clinton drove his own 1967 model of this Ford classic at a 30th anniversary festival
    $400 2
The first members of this religion to settle in America were all Sephardim
    $400 16
In 1949 the N.Y. Drama Critics Circle chose his "Death of a Salesman" as the best new American play
    $600 9
His 6-year reign over Scotland ended in 1040 when he was killed by Macbeth
    $600 12
This Colorado city just east of Pikes Peak is the site of the U.S. Olympic Training Center
    $600 29
The cairn breed of this dog is known for its ability to squeeze into cairns, which are heaps of stones
    $600 13
One of these made its first flight February 18, 1977 atop a 747
    $600 3
This Haitian folk religion played a significant role in Haiti's war for independence
    $600 17
"Monday After the Miracle" was a sequel, set 17 years later, to this play about Helen Keller
    DD: $800 10
Queen Liliuokalani composed this song:
    $800 20
An Acadian village of 16 reconstructed buildings can be seen in Van Buren in this New England state
    $800 28
The face of a Pomeranian resembles the face of this vulpine mammal
    $800 18
Richard Branson, this airline's CEO, was the 1st to hot-air balloon across the Atlantic
    DD: $1,400 4
In Arabic he is usually called Isa ibn Maryam
    $800 22
This Thomas Wolfe novel about the Gant family was adapted for the stage by Ketti Frings
    $1000 11
It's the name shared by 2 20th century Iraqi kings & a Saudi Arabian king
    $1000 26
Red Cloud, Nebraska holds an annual spring conference devoted to this author of "O Pioneers!"
    $1000 27
The Affenpinscher was a forebear of this griffon that's named for a European capital
    $1000 19
During the 1940s, after building just 51 of the "first new car in 50 years", he went bankrupt
    $1000 5
The Book of Laws for this faith is the "Kitab al-Aqdas" of Baha'ullah
    $1000 23
The title of this David Mamet play comes from 2 real estate subdivisions

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Art Sue Chris
$10,600 $3,800 $5,400

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

AUTHORS
His father, Apollo Korzeniowski, helped organize Polish rebellion against Russia in the 1860s

Final scores:

Art Sue Chris
$10,399 $100 $100
2-day champion: $29,699 3rd place: Sanyo fax machine with 15 second per page transmission + the Jeopardy! Sports Edition for PC or Super Nintendo Entertainment System + Jeopardy! home game 2nd place: a trip aboard Trans World Airlines + a week at Indian River Plantation Beach Resort on Hutchinson Island, Florida + the Jeopardy! Sports Edition for PC or Super Nintendo Entertainment System + Jeopardy! home game

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Art Sue Chris
$10,200 $3,800 $5,400
23 R
(including 2 DDs),
2 W
(including 1 DD)
16 R,
1 W
14 R,
3 W

Combined Coryat: $19,400

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

Game tape date: 1994-12-06
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