Meg Wall-Wild, Publications editor from Madison, WI
Dave Fuller, High school teacher from Midlothian, VA
Tom Walsh, Writer from Washington, D.C. (Returning 6-day champ with $152,900)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
MEDICAL MATTERS
| NO. 1 HITS IN OTHER WORDS
| A McCATEGORY
| STATE STUFF
| CLOTHES ENCOUNTERS
| OF THE "THIRD" KIND
|
$200 - Dave (26) "Brace yourself" -- Edward Angle was the first specialist in this dental field | $200 - Dave (1) (1983) | $200 - Tom (19) Now in dictionaries, it's low-paying employment with no hope of advancement | $200 - Meg (7) One of this state's license plates depicts an automobile & says it's the "World's Motor Capital" | $200 - Tom (12) The costumes for this long-running musical based on a T.S. Eliot book of poems include pointy ears & tails | $200 - Dave (2) The less developed, non-industrialized nations of the planet |
$400 - Dave (27) The FDA has approved getting your flu vaccine this way (same way as many pay their doctors) | $400 - Meg (13) (1959) | $400 - Tom (22) On Feb. 1, 2000 he defeated George W. Bush in the New Hampshire primary | $400 - Dave (8) This "Home on the Range" animal "roams" across Indiana's state seal | $400 - Meg (14) A bullfighter's costume includes a satin "suit of lights" & a montera, a 2-cornered one of these | $400 - Meg (3) It rose in Germany in 1933 & fell in 1945 |
$600 - Tom (28) Because it mainly affects babies & children, this disease is also called infantile paralysis | $600 - Tom (17) (1989) | $600 - Meg (23) A spring wrapped around a shock absorber, it's the strut system of many front-wheel-drive vehicles | $1000 - Dave (9) Its state poem, "Howdy Folks", was written for a memorial to a humorist & mentions Wiley Post DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1000 | $600 - Meg (15) Because of the jackets they wore during the 18th century, troops of this nation were known as Redcoats | $600 - Meg (4) In a classic comedy routine, it's where you'll find "I Don't Know" |
$800 - Dave (29) Listen up! Teens & adults, as well as children, may have this disorder, ADD for short | $800 - Dave (18) (1986) | $800 - Meg (24) In 1841 a sound that became a center for Antarctic exploration was named for him | $800 - Meg (10) Connecticut has a state ship -- this nuclear-powered submarine which was commissioned at Groton on September 30, 1954 | $800 - Dave (16) The distinctive colored clothes worn by these competitors are called "silks" | $800 - Meg (5) This type of narrator is outside of the action commenting on it |
$1000 - Meg (30) In 1997 dieters who'd taken this drug combination were advised to get checked for heart damage | $1000 - Dave (20) (1996) | $1000 - Meg (25) "The northern lights have seen queer sights, but the queerest they ever did see was that night ... I cremated" him | $1000 - Meg (11) This state animal of Vermont, a breed of horse, is named for the ancestor's original owner | $1000 - Meg (21) Designer Sarah Phillips made news for designing this woman's inaugural gown worn on Jan. 20, 1993 | $1000 - Meg (6) Called the Ajna Chakra in Hinduism, opening it leads to cosmic wisdom |
Scores at the first commercial break:
Meg: $6,200
Dave: $1,800
Tom: $200
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
Meg: $10,600
Dave: $5,800
Tom: $2,000
Click here for the correct responses.
BERLIN IS IN!
| MOVIE VILLAINS
| PIRATES: FACT & FICTION
| FILL IN THE RELATION
| THE ART WORLD
| WHAT YOU'RE LEFT WITH
|
$400 - Dave (7) (Video of Cheryl at the Berlin Wall) | $400 - Dave (1) This villain started out as Anakin Skywalker, a young slave on Tatooine | $400 - Meg (26) Pew was an evil pirate in this classic 1883 novel | $400 - Dave (16) Smothers ___, entertainers | $400 - Dave (20) "The Fiddler", by Marc Chagall, is portrayed as a fiddler on one of these ... L'Chaim! | $400 - Dave (6) If the bottom stripe falls off your American flag, you're left with this many |
$800 - Tom (8) Karl Schinkel designed the Werderscher Kirche as this type of building; it's now a Schinkel museum | (-$800) - Tom $800 - Dave (2) Of "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly", the one played by Lee Van Cleef | $800 - Meg (27) His ship, the Queen Anne's Revenge, was formerly a French merchant ship he took and refitted | $800 - Tom (17) ___ Ben, rice guy | $800 - Meg (22) This French sculptor's first masterwork, a young male nude circa 1875, was later called "The Age of Bronze" | $800 - Dave (12) If 1/3 of the U.S. Supreme Court suddenly quits, there'll be this many judges left on the bench |
$1200 - Tom (9) Tempelhof Airport, opened in 1923, was made famous by this 1948-49 event | $1200 - Dave (3) In this 1988 film Alan Rickman as Hans Gruber spoiled Bruce Willis' day -- well, night | $1200 - Tom (28) In honor of its centenary, Joseph Papp produced a version of this in Central Park in 1980 | $1200 - Dave (18) ___ Machree, Irish favorite | $1200 - Tom (23) 17th century artist born in Delft known for his paintings that have a cool, silvery light | $1200 - Dave (13) If one of your nonet gets bumped off, you're left with a group called this |
$1600 - Tom (10) Much of this innovative female director's film "Olympia" was shot at Berlin's Olympic Stadium in 1936 | $1600 - Tom (4) Bill McKinney, one of the mountain men who went after Ned Beatty in this 1972 film, has a CD of love songs out | $1600 - Tom (29) Tortola in this island group was a popular spot for 17th century pirates | $1600 - Meg (19) ___ Jones, "Hee Haw" star | $1600 - Tom (24) In 1930 Picasso created 30 etchings as illustrations for this ancient Roman's "Metamorphoses" | $3000 - Dave (14) If 31 of the gross of personalized pencils you ordered were sent back due to typos, you'd still have this many DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $3000 |
$2000 - Tom (11) (Video of Sarah at the Reichstag in Berlin) | $2500 - Tom (5) Betty Lou Gerson voiced her in 1961; Glenn Close played her in 1996 & 2000 DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2500 | (-$2000) - Meg (Video of Jeff Probst in Panama) | $2000 - Meg (21) ___ Rhody, recipient of goose death notice | (-$2000) - Meg (25) (Video) The Philadelphia Museum of Art has works by this famed local artist, like the one seen here, and a parking lot named for him | $2000 - Triple Stumper (15) Congrats! You won the Nobel Prize in Economics -- that leaves you this many other categories to go after |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
Tom: $17,300
Dave: $16,000
Meg: $12,200
DEADLY FIRSTS
|
The first man to die as the result of one of these accidents was Lt. Thomas Selfridge on Sept. 17, 1908
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Meg: $12,200 + $12,000
Dave: $16,000 + $16,000
Tom: $17,300 + $14,700
Final Scores
|
| Tom: $32,000 (Co-champion with 7-day total of $184,900)
Dave: $32,000 (Co-champion) Meg: $24,200 |
| Tom: $16,800 (16 right, including 1 DD; 1 wrong)
Dave: $14,200 (21 right, including 2 DDs & 1 rebound; 0 wrong) Meg: $12,200 (20 right; 2 wrong) Total: $43,200
|
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