Show #1942 - Tuesday, February 2, 1993

Contestants

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Susan Mace, a print production assistant from Sun City Center, Florida

Karl Weber, a book publisher from Chappaqua, New York

Barbara Sontz, a computer consultant from New York City, New York (whose 1-day cash winnings total $5,600)

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Jeopardy! Round

U.S. CITIES
POPULAR MUSIC
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY
NATURE
FOOD
LEFTOVERS
    $100 9
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Historic District is located in this Georgia capital
    $100 16
"Like A Rolling Stone" was featured on his "Highway 61 Revisited" album, released in 1965
    $100 1
The origin of this corporation was the 1878 founding of the Edison Electric Light Company
    $100 4
This national symbol is also known as the white-headed eagle
    $100 25
The jumbo size of these weigh at least 30 ounces per dozen
    $100 7
To provoke trouble is to stir up a "hornet's" one of these
    $200 10
In 1586, 21 years after it was founded, this Florida city was looted & burned by Sir Francis Drake
    $200 17
Though his version hit No. 1 in 1976, he didn't write "I Write The Songs"; Bruce Johnston did
    $200 2
This soft drink company owns Pizza Hut, Taco Bell & Kentucky Fried Chicken
    $200 14
This tree which yields the lightest commercial wood is also called a corkwood
    $200 26
Tubettini, ziti & mostaccioli are types of this
    $200 8
This makeup is commonly worn on the cheeks but can add color to the chin or eyelids, too
    $300 18
This city's Lincoln Park Zoo recently renovated its Kovler Lion House, creating a new area for big cats
    $300 21
"Leader Of The Laundromat" was written as a parody of this 1964 song
    $300 3
This brand name leads the U.S. in sales of men's underwear
    $300 15
The world's only marine lizard is a species of this lizard found on the Galapagos Islands
    $300 27
The Latin name of this type of mint is Mentha piperita
    $300 11
As a publicity stunt, this wife of George Burns ran for president in 1940 on the "Surprise Party" ticket
    $400 19
This Pennsylvania city is the state's only lake port
    $400 22
In 1968 this Beatles song topped the charts for 9 weeks--the longest of any of their singles
    $400 5
In 1961 it became the first Japanese company to sell stock to U.S. investors
    $400 24
Fleur-de-lis can refer to a lily or to this flower whose name is from the Greek for "rainbow"
    $400 28
This fermented Korean pickle can be made of other vegetables as well as cabbage
    $400 12
In 1739 highwayman Dick Turpin was hanged for stealing one of these animals
    $500 20
Completed in 1972, this firm's pyramid-shaped building has come to be a symbol of San Francisco
    $500 23
Georgia Brown introduced "As Long As He Needs Me" in the London & New York productions of this musical
    $500 6
These sunglasses by Bausch & Lomb are so named because they reduce infrared & ultraviolet light
    DD: $1,400 30
About 95% of this fruit grown in the world is of the European or Vitis vinifera type
    $500 29
Triticale is a hybrid of rye & this other grain
    $500 13
This actor who played John Steed on "The Avengers" subtitled his memoir "The Avenger Returns"

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

Barbara Karl Susan
$600 $1,000 $1,700

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Barbara Karl Susan
$1,600 $2,200 $4,800

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE 1980s
THEATRE HISTORY
CHILDREN'S BOOKS
MEDICINE MEN
MONEY
POPES NAMED LEO
    $200 15
In 1988, after purchasing MGM's library of films, he founded the TNT network
    $200 6
In 1928 this Barrymore starred in the play that opened the theatre named for her
    $200 8
"The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" was first published a few days after this author's 44th birthday in 1900
    $200 21
Around the turn of the century Karl Landsteiner found that there were 4 major types of this
    $200 1
You could spend a penni in Helsinki in this country where 100 of them are worth 1 markka
    $200 26
Leo I persuaded this Hun not to attack Rome, but couldn't keep Gaiseric the Vandal from sacking it
    $400 17
In July 1980 this presidential brother registered as an agent of the Libyan government
    $400 7
16th century theatrical form whose name is Italian for "comedy of the profession" or "comedy of art"
    $400 12
The first English version of this adventure novel was called "The Family Robinson Crusoe"
    $400 22
In the 1940s & 50s this New Yorker developed vaccines for influenza & polio
    $400 2
Just as 100 pence make one of these in the United Kingdom, 100 piasters do in Egypt
    $400 27
In 1535 Pope Leo XI was born Alessandro de Medici in this city
    $600 18
Originally a playing card manufacturer, this Japanese company debuted its video games in the U.S. in 1986
    $600 9
The great Greek tragic playwrights also wrote comedies about these lecherous goat-men
    DD: $2,000 13
T.H. White revised this 1939 book & republished it in 1958 as part of "The Once and Future King"
    DD: $3,600 23
During WWI brothers in this Minnesota family alternated as chief consultant on surgery for the Army
    $600 3
Subtract 3 letters from this country's name and you'll get a unit of its currency, the Mongo
    $600 28
Leo X excommunicated this German religious reformer in 1521
    $800 19
In 1981 this headmistress of a girls' school was convicted of murdering Scarsdale Diet Dr. Herman Tarnower
    $800 10
This Cardinal engaged 5 playwrights to collaborate on the 1635 play "La comedie des Tuileries"
    $800 14
"Teammates" is a children's book about this man who became the 1st Black Major League Baseball player
    $800 24
It's what Paul Ehrlich called the chemicals he shot at microbes to kill them
    $800 4
This Southeast Asian country's unit is the Dong
    $800 29
Leo XIII reached an agreement with this "Iron Chancellor", ending Germany's Kulturkampf against Catholics
    $1000 20
In 1987 this former two-term governor of Texas was forced to declare bankruptcy
    $1000 11
Legend says he was the first actor to talk back to the Greek chorus, if you don't count all those hecklers
    $1000 16
This creator of The Pushmi-Pullyu also wrote "Porridge Poetry", a book of poems for children
    $1000 25
In 1798 he wrote "An Inquiry into the Causes & Effects of the Variolae Vaccine, a Disease Known (as) Cow Pox"
    $1000 5
In 1986 this country replaced the cruzeiro with the cruzado
    $1000 30
During the Pontificate of Leo IX, the Schism between Rome & this Byzantine city became final

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Barbara Karl Susan
$10,200 $11,400 $6,600

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

HISTORIC NAMES
A U.S. naval squadron brought back his remains from France in 1905, 113 years after his death

Final scores:

Barbara Karl Susan
$18,200 $2,399 $13,100
2-day champion: $23,800 3rd place: Gibson freezer + Jeopardy! home game 2nd place: Bassett home office center + Panasonic home office package + Jeopardy! home game

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Barbara Karl Susan
$7,200 $10,000 $5,700
18 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
20 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
18 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W

Combined Coryat: $22,900

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

Game tape date: 1992-10-27
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