Show #2104 - Thursday, October 28, 1993

Rachael Schwartz game 5.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Allyson Bennett, a teacher from Scottsdale, Arizona

Kathleen Shilkret, a public relations officer originally from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (whose 1-day cash winnings total $9,800)

Rachael Schwartz, an attorney from Bedminster, New Jersey (whose 4-day cash winnings total $37,499)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

NEW ENGLAND
FOOTBALL
WORD ORIGINS
NANCY DREW
CORPORATE SYMBOLS
MISC.
    $100 11
This 1981 Henry Fonda film was shot on New Hampshire's Squam Lake
    $100 1
If a team fails to advance the ball this many yards in 4 downs, it loses possession
    $100 3
The "nickel" in the name of this dark bread is a German word for "goblin", not a coin
    $100 4
Today "Super Mystery" books pair Nancy with this young crime-solving team
    $100 10
Kind of animal used by Esso & by Kellogg's Frosted Flakes
    $100 9
This 14-acre Manhattan theatre complex has its own film society & chamber music society
    $200 23
Connecticut's largest library is at this university
    $200 2
On November 8, 1970, Tom Dempsey kicked the longest one of these in NFL history, 63 yards
    $200 5
This adjective that means impudent or just plain rude is an alteration of "saucy"
    $200 27
Originally she had this hair color, but it was changed to titian to avoid looking like her friend Bess
    $200 16
The smiling pitcher for this General Foods drink was created in 1956
    $200 12
Of, coffee, tea or mead, the one that's also known as metheglin
    $300 24
In 1990 a New Hampshire planetarium was dedicated to this teacher who died in the Challenger explosion
    $300 20
This former Jets quarterback holds his team's record for career touchdown passes with 170
    $300 6
This word for a self- service restaurant evolved from an American Spanish term for a coffee store
    $300 28
This bespectacled talk show hostess prefers producers who've read Nancy; they're better investigators
    DD: $500 17
Brand that uses the following character in its ads:
    $300 13
Keyboardist Dizzy Reed, who joined this Axl Rose group in 1990, is a big "Jeopardy!" fan
    $400 25
Rhode Island's state house boasts a full- length portrait of George Washington by this native son
    $400 21
Mike Ditka, the former coach of this team, won Super Bowls as a player, assistant coach & head coach
    $400 7
This musical instrument is named for the muse of epic poetry; you might hear it at the circus
    $400 29
Under this pen name, Mildred Wirt Benson wrote 23 of the 1st 30 stories, including the very 1st
    $400 18
This athletic shoe company refers to the boomerang-shaped slash under its name as the "Swoosh"
    $400 14
Though this swan's name implies that it's silent, it will hiss loudly when angry
    $500 26
Mount Desert Island off the coast of this state is home to New England's only nat'l park, Acadia
    $500 22
In his career, 1957-1965, this Cleveland back scored 126 touchdowns, a record that still stands
    $500 8
The boojum tree is named for an imaginary creature in his poem "The Hunting of the Snark"
    $500 30
Published in 1930, the first Nancy Drew book concerned "The Secret of" this object
    $500 19
A stylized one of these fits around the Arby's name
    $500 15
This late magazine publisher & balloonist's middle initial, S., stood for Stevenson

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

Rachael Kathleen Allyson
$100 $1,200 $1,500

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Rachael Kathleen Allyson
$2,200 $2,500 $1,900

Double Jeopardy! Round

HISTORY
MUSEUMS
MUSICIANS
THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
NOTORIOUS
ACT ONE, SCENE ONE
    $200 1
With a fleet of much more than gondolas, this republic destroyed the Egyptian fleet in 1123
    $200 15
You can see this rock star's jet Lisa Marie at his estate in Memphis
    $200 18
In the 1970s Joshua Rifkin became famous for reviving the ragtime music of this composer
    $200 2
3 of the 4 people honored in 1901 & 1902 were from this neutral country
    $200 9
Anna Sage fingered this public enemy at a Chicago theatre to avoid deportation
    $200 17
When this Woody Allen play begins, Allan Felix is watching "The Maltese Falcon" on TV
    $400 5
Formerly Dutch, Britain's Cape Colony was on this cape
    $400 23
An Arlington, Tex. museum has 145 of these machines on exhibit, including some of Elias Howe's from the 1860s
    $400 19
Before his solo career, James Galway played this instrument for 6 years in the Berlin Philharmonic
    DD: $600 3
After Andrei Sakharov in 1975, he was the next Russian to win
    $400 10
President Carter stated that he thought this doctor had been unjustly convicted in the Lincoln assassination
    $400 27
This Neil Simon comedy opens in a 7th floor hotel suite overlooking Central Park
    $600 6
In Italy the Ghibellines owed their allegiance to the Emperor & the Guelphs to this man
    $600 24
Waterloo Gallery, part of his London home, Apsley House, contains his art collection
    $600 20
Jose Iturbi played the music of this composer in the 1945 movie "A Song to Remember"
    $600 4
1960 Nobel Peace Prize winner Albert John Luthuli was a chief of this African people
    $600 11
By 1896 Robert Leroy Parker was using this name in honor of his mentor, a cattle rustler
    $600 28
Martha imitates Bette Davis saying, "What a dump!" in scene one of this Edward Albee play
    $800 14
In March 1964 the U.N. sent a peacekeeping force to this Mediterranean island
    $800 25
Crop dusting equipment is displayed at the Nat'l Agricultural Aviation Museum in this Miss. capital
    $800 21
Robert Mann is the leader of this string quartet named for a New York music school
    $800 7
This Holocaust survivor won the prize in 1986
    $800 12
This organization abbreviated SLA was behind the kidnapping of Patty Hearst
    DD: $1,000 29
At the beginning of this 1890 Ibsen play, the title character has just returned from her honeymoon
    $1000 16
A soldier & man of action, Maurice of Nassau was head of this house in Holland
    $1000 26
This former Nevada boomtown has 2 museums devoted to Mark Twain, who was a newspaper reporter there
    $1000 22
This pianist's return to Russia in 1986 produced a concert televised worldwide
    $1000 8
Saying that peace had not been achieved, this North Vietnamese negotiator turned down the 1973 prize
    $1000 13
George Hull was the man behind this hoax "giant" discovered in New York in 1869

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Rachael Kathleen Allyson
$9,800 $7,100 $3,100

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES
This holiday is the top avocado-eating day of the year in the U.S.; Super Bowl Sunday is second

Final scores:

Rachael Kathleen Allyson
$5,400 $10,101 $100
2nd place: Broyhill living room set + Imperial wall coverings 2-day champion: $19,901 3rd place: ProForm exercise machine

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Rachael Kathleen Allyson
$9,400 $7,100 $2,900
20 R
(including 2 DDs),
0 W
19 R,
2 W
13 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W

Combined Coryat: $19,400

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

Game tape date: 1993-08-24
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.