Doug Jungemann, Satellite operations technician from Rapid City, SD
Leslie Basalla, Newspaper reporter from Cleveland, OH
Chuck Champagne, Vice president of finance from Cumberland, RI (Returning 1-day champ with $15,201)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
NURSERY RHYMES
| HICKORY, DICKORY OR DOC
| THE MOUSE
| WREN
| "UP THE"
| CLOCKED
|
(-$200) - Leslie $200 - Doug (12) Rowley Powley seems to be an early AKA for this kiss & run guy | $200 - Doug (11) In 1999 this Rivers became head coach of the Orlando Magic | $200 - Doug (17) Like the house cat, the house mouse uses these facial appendages to feel its way around in the dark | $200 - Leslie (1) Young Christopher Wren translated into Latin William Oughtred's book on these clocks that don't work at night | $200 - Chuck (6) It means "in a difficult situation" & you don't want to be there without a paddle | $200 - Leslie (22) Encarta reports that some of these mammals have been clocked flying at 60 mph |
$400 - Leslie (13) Dame Dob whipped her for causing Jack's disaster | $400 - Doug (27) Farms famous for beef stick summer sausage | $400 - Chuck (18) Grasshopper mice are known to do this, like a coyote or a Ginsberg | $400 - Chuck (2) In physiology, Wren devised a way to transfuse this from one animal to another | $400 - Doug (7) To raise the stakes, as in a poker game | $400 - Leslie $400 - Chuck (23) In 1992 Iniki, one of these, had gusts clocked at 175 mph |
$600 - Doug (14) (Video) She's the subject who sat for the John Everett Millais painting seen here | $600 - Chuck (28) The one who was a participant in the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral | $600 - Leslie (19) Bambi might know that when deer mice get excited they do this with their feet, like his rabbit friend | $600 - Chuck (3) Wren's first design for this church's new dome was accepted the week before the great fire DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $600 | $600 - Chuck (8) It's where the itsy bitsy spider went, again & again | $600 - Doug (24) When he retired from the Rangers in 1993, his fastballs were still being clocked at over 90 mph |
$800 - Leslie (15) "And so the teacher turned" it "out, but still it lingered near" | $800 - Leslie (29) It's a member of the walnut family | $800 - Chuck (20) For most of a mouse's life, these teeth keep growing | $800 - Doug (4) Wren designed the observatory in this London borough in 1675 | $800 - Triple Stumper (9) Come in last & you're said to do this, like a plastic surgeon does to a droopy bottom | $800 - Chuck (25) In 1988 Flo Jo clocked a time of 10.49 seconds in this event |
$1000 - Leslie (16) Town on the Cornish coast a traveler was heading to when he met a man with 7 wives | $1000 - Triple Stumper (30) First name of Daniel Defoe's Mr. Cronke, the Dumb Philosopher | $1000 - Chuck (21) If you eat like a harvest mouse you prefer to eat these, probably before they germinate | $1000 - Leslie (5) For William & Mary, Wren redid 2 palaces: Kensington & this "court", Henry VIII's favorite residence | $1000 - Chuck
(10) Sandy Dennis starred in the film version of this Bel Kaufman tale set in a high school | $1000 - Doug (26) He clocked in with a record time with each of the 7 Olympic gold medals he won at the 1972 Munich games |
Scores at the first commercial break:
Leslie: $3,200
Chuck: $2,800
Doug: $2,200
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
Chuck: $6,800
Leslie: $4,400
(Increased to $5,200 when the judges reversed their original decision and ruled her "typhoon" response correct.)
Doug: $4,400
Click here for the correct responses.
RUSSIAN GEOGRAPHY
| HISTORY ON FILM
| LET'S GO LOBSTERING
| THAT YEAR'S HEADLINE!
| WILLIAMS
| FOREIGN LANGUAGES
|
(-$400) - Leslie $400 - Chuck (16) Of north, south, east or west, the primary direction from Moscow to St. Petersburg | $400 - Leslie (6) A tagline for "Thirteen Days" is: This island. "1962. You'll never believe how close we came" | $400 - Chuck (26) (Video of Jimmy | $400 - Leslie (21) Hanging chads hold up Presidential election results! | $400 - Chuck (11) (Video of Alex | $400 - Leslie (1) In French: Chinois |
$800 - Chuck (17) The first Soviet atom bomb was produced at the Mayak Complex in this range running from the Arctic to Kazakhstan | $800 - Doug (7) In 1932 Ethel Barrymore played Empress Alexandra & her brother Lionel had power over her as this man | $800 - Leslie (27) The American lobster is basically differentiated from Pacific ones by having these big enough to eat | $800 - Doug (22) Paris falls to the Nazis! | (-$800) - Chuck (12) This orator who unsuccessfully ran for U.S. President 3 times was known as "The Great Commoner" | (-$800) - Leslie (2) In Portuguese: Coreano |
$1200 - Chuck (18) An island off the north coast is named for this majority group in revolutionary circles | $1200 - Triple Stumper (8) Before "Dragonheart" there was this movie in which Eric Stoltz looks for King Richard I | $1200 - Triple Stumper (28) (Video of Jimmy | $1200 - Chuck (23) Olympic Games begin in Montreal! | $1200 - Doug (13) "The Great Commoner" & "The British Cicero" were nicknames of this "elder" statesman | (-$1200) - Leslie $1200 - Doug (3) In Norwegian: Nederlansk |
$1600 - Leslie (19) Siberia is bordered on its east by the Bering Sea, Sea of Okhotsk & Sea of this country | $1600 - Chuck (9) In "Max", this "Say Anything" actor has to say, "You're an awfully hard man to like, Hitler, but I'm going to try" | $1600 - Leslie (29) Term for a tidal area used to store live lobsters, or where a stray dog might end up | (-$1600) - Doug (24) Chernobyl reactor explodes | $1600 - Leslie (14) This 18th & 19th C. poet & illustrator called one work "Oh, How I Dreamt of Things Impossible" | $2000 - Doug (4) In Spanish: Aleman DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2000 |
$2000 - Triple Stumper (20) Most of this capital city of a Russian republic has been destroyed by Russian-Chechen fighting | $2400 - Chuck (10) (Video) DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2400 | $2000 - Triple Stumper (30) (Video of Sofia | $2000 - Triple Stumper (25) Spanish Civil War erupts! | $2000 - Chuck (15) (Video) He's the journalist and abolitionist seen here | $2000 - Triple Stumper (5) In Latvian: Ungaru Valoda |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
Chuck: $16,400
Leslie: $9,600
Doug: $8,800
AWARDS
|
Created as a Pulitzer Prize for broadcasting, it was named for a Georgia philanthropist
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Doug: $8,800 + $4,801
Leslie: $9,600 - $6,000
Chuck: $16,400 + $2,801
Final Scores
|
| Chuck: $19,201 (2-day total of $34,402)
Doug: $13,601 Leslie: $3,600 |
| Chuck: $16,000 (20 right, including 2 DDs & 2 rebounds; 1 wrong)
Leslie: $9,600 (16 right; 4 wrong) Doug: $8,400 (14 right, including 1 DD & 2 rebounds; 1 wrong) Total: $34,000
|
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