Lisa Cherry, Bird-trainer from Winchester, CA
Chris Serb, Firefighter from Chicago, IL
Tom Walsh, Writer from Washington, D.C. (Returning 1-day champ with $16,100)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
THE WAR YEARS
| SONGS EVERYBODY KNOWS
| DOME, SWEET DOME
| GIMME AN "S"!
| MACHINERY
| THE LAST
|
$200 - Tom (6) In Indochina: | $200 - Tom (11) A Santa Cruz, California pub is named for this irritating ditty sung on long journeys | $200 - Tom (1) (Video) It's the European city you'll visit to see the dome seen here | $200 - Lisa (14) The right side of a ship | $200 - Tom (26) In 2002 China unveiled its first homegrown "super" one of these, with 272 gigabytes of RAM | $200 - Tom (21) Ordered by Texas inmate Stanley Baker Jr., it included 2 16-oz. ribeyes, 2 potatoes & a pint of ice cream |
$400 - Tom (7) In South Africa: | $400 - Chris (12) The "Pop!" in this children's song may be an old word for pawn, & the song is about pawning all one's possessions | $400 - Chris (2) The only ruin intentionally left standing in this Japanese city is the A-Bomb Dome | $400 - Chris (15) You might "promenade left" & "do-si-do" in this style of popular American folk dance | (-$400) - Lisa (27) Named for a typographical mark, it copied written material using an ink-transfer process | $400 - Tom (22) "Why me?" Dept.: |
$600 - Chris (8) In the south Atlantic: | $600 - Lisa (13) Now over a century old, it's the seasonal song heard here | $600 - Tom (3) Architect Thomas Walter completed the cast-iron dome of this Washington, D.C. building in 1863 | $600 - Chris (18) Until nylon was developed, many parachutes were made out of this natural material | $1000 - Tom (28) The Jack LaLanne power one of these has surgical blades & a super-sized pulp catcher DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1000 | $600 - Chris (23) The Garde Republicaine is France's last of these horse-mounted regiments |
$800 - Chris (9) In France: | $800 - Lisa (16) Lines added to this song include "She'll be tuggin' on two turtles" & "She'll be pluckin' four fat pheasants" | $800 - Chris (4) The frescoes that decorate the interior of the dome of this London cathedral are by Sir James Thornhill | $800 - Chris (19) It's the body of water in the title of the following orchestral favorite | $800 - Chris (29) Also meaning "to disturb or excite", it's the term for the action of most automatic washing machines | $800 - Triple Stumper (24) Alaska is home to the USA's last flagstop one of these, which passengers flag down as it approaches |
$1000 - Chris (10) A series of wars in north Africa & around the Mediterranean: | $1000 - Tom (17) This Italian classic whose title translates as "O My Sun!" dates from 1898 | $1000 - Chris (5) Completed around 691, this Muslim shrine in Jerusalem is also known as the Mosque of Omar | $1000 - Tom (20) The Red Sea is connected to the Mediterranean Sea by this peninsula | $1000 - Tom (30) (Video of Jimmy at the | $1000 - Triple Stumper (25) The last of the Yahi Indians wouldn't tell his name, so anthropologists called him Ishi, meaning this word |
Scores at the first commercial break:
Chris: $5,400
Tom: $1,600
Lisa: $800
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
Chris: $8,200
Tom: $6,400
Lisa: $1,200
Click here for the correct responses.
RUSSIAN PAST
| TV ROLL CALL
| HISTORICAL NOVELS
| SEEN IN THE MIDWEST
| THERE IS NOTHING LIKE A DANE
| AN ABBREVIATED CATEGORY
|
$400 - Tom (2) In 1812 fleeing Muscovites burned many buildings as his troops marched into Moscow | $400 - Tom (1) Sharon, Jack, Kelly & Ozzy | $400 - Chris (10) Norman Mailer's "Ancient Evenings" is set in this country between the reigns of Ramses II & Ramses IX | $400 - Chris (16) Bronner's Christmas Wonderland in Frankenmuth, MI. has over 500 of these scenes, & one's life-size | $400 - Chris (21) In 1724 this Dane was sent to explore the water routes between Siberia & North America | $400 - Tom (26) 29.57 ml., milliliters, equals 1 fl. oz., this |
$800 - Chris (3) In 1703 this city on the Neva River became Russia's first built in imitation of western European cities | $800 - Chris (4) Cousin Pearl, Mr. Drysdale, Elly May | $800 - Tom (11) This dueling Vice President was the subject of a 1973 novel by Gore Vidal | $800 - Tom (17) Liberty, Kansas has restored the site of the first daylight bank robbery by this man's gang | $800 - Tom (22) This Danish Baroness' best-known work is "Out of Africa" | $800 - Tom (27) It's abbreviated V.O., & movies that tell coming-of-age stories use a lot of it |
(-$1200) - Tom $1200 - Chris (8) In 1972 Nixon & Brezhnev signed an agreement to limit nuclear arms after a series of meetings called SALT, or this | $1200 - Chris (5) Hannibal Smith, Howling Mad Murdock, B.A. Baracus | (-$1200) - Lisa (13) (Video of Sarah in Alaska) This famed Western writer turned way northwest to write his historical novel, "Sitka" | (-$1200) - Tom $1200 - Lisa (18) The Alpine-Alpa Restaurant near Wilmot, Ohio has a 23 1/2-foot-tall one of these timepieces | $1200 - Tom (23) In 1920 this man became the director of Copenhagen's Institute for Theoretical Physics | $1200 - Tom (28) MRE is short for these military munchies |
$1600 - Lisa (9) In 1240 Batu & his troops destroyed Kiev & Russia became a part of this empire | $1600 - Tom (6) Basil, Sybil, Polly, Manuel | $1500 - Tom (14) Robert Graves wrote this 1934 classic about a Roman Emperor in the form of an autobiographical memoir DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1500 | $1600 - Tom (19) (Video) An Auburn, Indiana museum has over 15 examples of this doozy of a car, including the one seen here | $1600 - Tom (24) Born in Copenhagen in 1813, this Danish philosopher helped lay the foundation of Existentialism | $1600 - Tom (29) Found before Albany & Oswego, SUNY stands for this |
$2000 - Tom (12) In 1903 Russia's Socialist Democratic Labor party split into 2 groups: the Bolsheviks & this | $2000 - Lisa (7) Noah Bain, Alexander Mundy, Alister Mundy | $2000 - Tom (15) In a 2002 novel this author of the "North and South" trilogy told the history of "Charleston" | (-$2000) - Tom (20) The Berghoff Restaurant in Chicago displays one of these issued in 1933, bearing the number 1 DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2000 | $2000 - Chris (25) Kepler's mentor, this Danish astronomer lost part of his nose in a duel | $2000 - Tom (30) (Video of Sofia in front of the Goodyear blimp) Each side of the Goodyear blimp displays about 3,800 of these devices, abbreviated LED |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
Tom: $22,700
Chris: $15,400
Lisa: $4,800
ANIMALS
|
Camelus, the genus name of camels, is also the species name of these birds
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Lisa: $4,800 + $4,000
Chris: $15,400 - $7,301
Tom: $22,700 - $8,100
Final Scores
|
| Tom: $14,600 (2-day total of $30,700)
Lisa: $8,800 Chris: $8,099 |
| Tom: $24,400 (29 right, including 2 DDs; 3 wrong, including 1 DD)
Chris: $15,400 (20 right, including 1 rebound; 0 wrong) Lisa: $4,800 (6 right, including 1 rebound; 2 wrong) Total: $44,600
|
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