Suggest correction - #5152 - 2007-01-23

Fill in your contact information if you would like to be notified when your correction has been reviewed.
On the left you see the clue as it is currently displayed. Enter your correction on the right by editing the text directly. The top left field is the clue's value, either as given on the board, or, if a Daily Double, the value of the contestant's wager. If the clue is a Daily Double, check the checkbox to the right of this field. The top right field is the clue order number representing the order of the clue's selection amongst other clues in the round. The large blue field is for the clue text, which should be entered as closely as possible to how it appears on the show, with the exception that the words should not be all caps. Links to media clue files should be entered with HTML-style hyperlinks. Next come the nicknames of the three contestants in the form of response toggles: single clicks on the name change its color from white (no response) to green (correct response) to red (incorrect response) and back. Below this should be typed the correct response (only the most essential part--it should not be entered in the form of a question). The bottom field on the right is the clue comments field, where dialog (including incorrect responses) can be entered. (Note that the correct response should never be typed in the comments field; rather, it should be denoted by [*].)
    $2000 5
Tim McGraw won a Grammy for the touching title track of the 2004 album "Live Like You Were" this
#
 
 

Show #5152 - Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Contestants

Jen Heddle, a book editor from Brooklyn, New York

Freddy Bee, a teacher from La Verne, California

Leah Buswell, a substitute teacher originally from Toledo, Washington (1-day champion whose cash winnings total $16,600)

Jeopardy! Round

POETS & POETRY
THE WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
NAMES OF THE '60s
THE LARGEST U.S. STATE
(Alex: ...in area.)
LIP GLOSS
BEGINS & ENDS IN "G"
    $200 1
He also wrote a poem about "The Charge of the Heavy Brigade"
    $200 24
Asked if he used a wood to smash a motorist's windshield in 1994, this acting icon said, "No, a 5-iron, you think I'm crazy?"
    $200 16
In 1966 this former president was the very first recipient of a Medicare card
    $200 11
New Jersey,
New Hampshire,
New York
    $200 21
Lips are darker than the surrounding skin because of thousands of these tiny blood vessels
    $200 6
Alexander Solzhenitsyn spent 1945 to 1953 in one of these places for a letter critical of Stalin
    $400 2
He finished writing "Evangeline" on his 40th birthday
    $400 27
It's been said that this 1950s & '60s Colts QB had "a haircut you could set your watch to"
    $400 17
After leaving the Nation of Islam in March 1964, he formed the Organization of Afro-American Unity
    $400 12
Virginia,
West Virginia,
Kentucky
    $400 22
Before putting on lipstick, gals sometimes use a pencil to apply this product to define & shape their lips
    $400 7
In 2003 Funny Cide became the first one of these altered horses in 74 years to win the Kentucky Derby
    $600 3
"Seldom does a first book contain so few unsuccessful things", said Amy Lowell of his "Chicago Poems"
    $600 28
That's the ballgame for this city's Synergy Field, formerly Riverfront Stadium, in December of 2002
    DD: $1,000 18
From 1967 to 1971 he wasn't missing; he was serving time in prison for jury tampering
    $600 13
Delaware,
Hawaii,
Rhode Island
    $600 23
Chapstick is a lip type of this, a product of the biblical Gilead
    $600 8
The untuned type of this percussion instrument has no fixed pitch
    $800 4
He wrote "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" to amuse a sick child
    $800 29
From 1920 to 1932 this country's Paavo Nurmi set more than 20 world records in distances from 1,500 to 20,000 M
    $800 19
He first became head of the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1969
    $800 14
Washington,
Oregon,
Idaho
    $800 25
These painful, small ulcers that can be on the lip were so named because they were thought to be cancerous
    $800 9
The New Book of Knowledge says that it's the most familiar marmot in eastern North America
    $1000 5
"I have measured out my life with coffee spoons," wrote T.S. Eliot in "The Love Song of" this man
    $1000 30
A 2005 rain delay at the Nissan Open had this golfer known as "Long John" saying, "My marriages don't last this long"
    $1000 20
In 1968 this noted pediatrician was convicted of conspiring to aid, counsel & abet resistance to the draft
    $1000 15
Iowa,
Indiana,
Illinois
    $1000 26
Zyderm & Zyplast are types of these injections that you can get in your lips to feel more "Hollywood"
    $1000 10
Last name of the Supreme Court justice who resigned in 1965 to become U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.

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

Leah Freddy Jen
$3,200 $2,800 $400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Leah Freddy Jen
$7,000 $4,000 $1,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE HERBERT HOOVER PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY
ALBUMS
A YEAR TO REMEMBER
ALSO A MOUNTAIN
LUCY!
YOU GOT SOME SPLEENING TO DO
    $400 26
(Kelly stands in front of several vases.) Hoover began collecting these vases when he lived in this country, & was trapped there during the Boxer Rebellion
    $400 1
This 1973 Pink Floyd album includes "Time" & "Money"
    $400 6
Benedict XV becomes Pope; Franz Ferdinand is assassinated; Ralph Ellison becomes visible man
    $400 11
Grace Kelly's prince of a hubby
    $400 16
On April 22, 1878 U.S. First Lady Lucy Hayes instituted this annual event on the White House lawn
    $400 21
When you're born, your spleen stops producing these blood cells, but keeps filtering out used ones
    $800 27
(Jimmy stands behind sacks of food.) During World War I, Hoover provided sacks of food via the Commission for Relief of this country caught between German bayonets & a British blockade
    $800 2
In 1994 these rappers had "Ill Communication", a No. 1 album
    $800 7
British government makes Pitt stop; castrato Caffarelli's life ends on high note; Revol. War ends
    $800 12
First biblical mate plus what the sleepy need
    $800 17
December 13 is the feast day of Saint Lucy, a 4th century Christian martyr from this Italian island
    $800 22
An enlarged spleen is a symptom of this infectious disease, often called simply "mono"
    $1200 28
(Kelly stands in front of a map and diorama.) As Secretary of Commerce, Hoover won praise by helping the victims of the horrific flooding of this river in 1927
    $1200 3
"Thank You" to this one-named London singer who released her album "Life For Rent" in 2003
    $1200 8
Teddy Roosevelt hits San Juan Hill; Otto von Bismarck sinks; Sir George Frampton comes alive sculpting Keats
    $1200 13
He was president on Dec. 31, 1899
    $1200 18
Lucy Craft Laney founded the first private school for Black students in Augusta in this state
    $1200 23
The spleen is a repository of these little guys produced by B cells to defend against infection
    $1600 29
(Kelly stands on the grounds of the Hoover Presidential Library.) On the grounds of the Hoover Presidential Library stands the meeting house that he & his wife, Lou, used as members of this religious group
    DD: $1,000 4
Dialogue in the movie "The Producers" inspired the title of this 1991 U2 album
    $1600 9
The Great Fire of London isn't so great; Queen Anne of Austria makes a royal exit; Moliere pens "The Misanthrope"
    DD: $1,000 14
This crossbreed of Red Delicious & Ralls Janet apples was bred at a Japanese research station
    $1600 19
Lucy Maud Montgomery wrote "Rilla of Ingleside" & "Rainbow Valley" as well as tales of this Anne
    $1600 24
In olden medicine & psychology, the spleen was said to produce the melancholy humor, a fluid of this color
    $2000 30
(Jimmy stands in front of a seated statue of Herbert Hoover.) As a young geologist in the 1890s, Hoover found a gold mine near Coolgardie in this country; he called it "a land of red dust, black flies, and white heat"
    $2000 5
Tim McGraw won a Grammy for the touching title track of the 2004 album "Live Like You Were" this
    $2000 10
Montreal holds an expo; we excuse Dorothy Parker's dust; Louis Armstrong hits with "What A Wonderful World"
    $2000 15
This maker of Stylus cameras started out 87 years ago as a microscope manufacturer
    $2000 20
The hominid fossil remains known as Lucy were dug up in Hadar in this East African country in 1974
    $2000 25
The spleen is the biggest structure in this fluid-carrying system that also has many nodes

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Leah Freddy Jen
$17,000 $9,600 $4,600

Final Jeopardy! Round

BUSINESS INNOVATIONS
In 1709 an Italian settled at this German city & made a new product using oil of bergamot

Final scores:

Leah Freddy Jen
$14,750 $17,600 $9,100
2nd place: $2,000 New champion: $17,600 3rd place: $1,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Leah Freddy Jen
$16,600 $9,600 $6,200
22 R
(including 1 DD),
4 W
13 R,
4 W
12 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $32,400

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

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.