Jason Flowers, High school teacher originally from Morgan City, LA
Vane Lucas, Banker from Tulsa, OK
Tom Massimo, Equity trader from New York, NY (Returning 1-day champ with $23,200)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
PRESIDENTIAL TERMS OF SERVICE
| CLASSIC COMIC STRIPS
| WORLD TRAVEL
| THE NEXT SOUND YOU HEAR ...
| PEAS
| "Q"s
|
$200 - Tom (1) 1933 - 1945 | $200 - Tom (6) In 1933 Dagwood's dad disinherited him for marrying this woman whose maiden name was Boopadoop | $200 - Jason (11) Feel free to wear your jodhpurs to Jodhpur in this country; they were named for it | $200 - Vane (21) ... after you shout in Mammoth Cave National Park, especially on the river of that name | $200 - Jason (26) Recipes for split-pea soup often call for carrots, potatoes & this smoked meat | $200 - Tom (16) Put out, such as a fire; or satisfy, such as your thirst |
$400 - Jason (2) 1977 - 1981 | (-$400) - Vane $400 - Jason (7) When Dik Browne died in 1989, his son Chris took over this Viking strip | $400 - Tom (12) Sailing on this river on the MS Serenade you'll stop at Esna, Edfu & Aswan | $400 - Vane (22) ... after Lurch makes his entrance is this phrase | $400 - Tom (27) Peas & this "Peruvian" bean are great fresh vegetable sources of protein | $400 - Vane (17) The title character in a 1605 novel gave us this adjective that means caught up in the romance of noble deeds |
$600 - Vane (3) 1901 - 1909 | $600 - Tom (8) Kingdom in which you'll find Bung, the drunken court jester | $600 - Vane (13) Tradition says the Monastery of St. Catherine on the Sinai Peninsula is on the site where Moses saw this phenomenon | $600 - Vane (23) ... in the NBA, after the ball is whisteled dead when there's a substitute waiting | $600 - Jason (28) Probably developed in Holland in the 16th c. & also called a sugar pea, it's a component of Chinese stir-fries | (-$600) - Tom $600 - Jason (18) This word & "curious" describe the "volume of forgotten lore" pondered over by the narrator of "The Raven" |
(-$800) - Vane (4) 1841 DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $800 | $800 - Tom (9) First name of the title character Doonesbury | $800 - Vane (14) You can visit the Charles Darwin Research Station at Puerta Ayora on Santa Cruz in this island group | $800 - Triple Stumper (24) (Video) ... after what's represented by the meteorological symbol seen here | $800 - Vane (29) Peas belong to this large family of pod-bearing plants that includes alfalfa & peanuts | $800 - Vane (19) This flat ring used to pitch at stakes for points can be made of rope or metal |
$1000 - Jason (5) 1857 -1861 | (-$1000) - Vane (10) Dating back to 1934, it's been called "the mother (or grandmother) of all soap-opera strips" | $1000 - Tom (15) Marrakech, the "Pink City", is in the foothills of this mountain chain | $1000 - Jason (25) ... after a cry of "Opa!" in Papadakis' Greek Restaurant in San Pedro, Calif. (You may want to shield your face) | $1000 - Tom (30) In England in 1787 Thomas Knight began breeding experiments with peas, 69 years before this Austrian monk | $1000 - Vane (20) This eponymous term refers to a traitor who aids an invading enemy by serving in a puppet government |
Scores at the first commercial break:
Tom: $3,200
Jason: $2,000
Vane: -$200
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
Jason: $4,400
Tom: $4,200
Vane: $4,000
Click here for the correct responses.
ART
| TV NEWS
| GEOMETRY
| PANCHO VILLAGE
| NAME THE AUTHOR
| THE 7 DEADLY SIN-ONYMS
|
$400 - Vane (7) Over 30 years after starting the Sistine Chapel, he made his last paintings for the Vatican's Pauline Chapel | $400 - Vane (6) On this sitcom, Jack Klugman scored as Oscar Madison, a sports reporter for the New York Herald | $400 - Jason (1) In 1795 John Playfair simplified Euclid's axiom about these, still saying they never meet | $400 - Tom (21) Before heading U.S. forces in France in WWI, this General led a punitive raid into Mexico in pursuit of Pancho Villa | $400 - Tom (16) Giving up on that tease Beatrice, he married Gemma Donati in the late 1200s | $400 - Triple Stumper (23) "O, beware, my lord, of" this synonym for envy |
$800 - Tom (8) He painted "Costume Ball at the Moulin Rouge" & "Jane Avril Leaving the Moulin Rouge" | $800 - Vane (10) Ed Asner moved to California & became the gruff City Editor of the Los Angeles Tribune on this drama series | $800 - Vane (2) (Video of Sarah next to a blackboard) A prism has the same relationship to a pyramid as a cylinder does to this | $800 - Jason (22) A park named for Pancho Villa in Columbus in this state lies on the site of his 1916 raid into the U.S. | $800 - Vane (17) (Video) Chronicler of the South seen here | $800 - Vane (24) A talking Gecko might tell you it's a 5-letter synonym for avarice |
$1200 - Jason (9) This American illustrator described his work as "lovely-kids-adoring-their-kindly-grandpa sort of thing" | $1200 - Vane (11) The Daily Planet newspaper was just super as the employer of both the title characters on this 1990s drama | $1200 - Vane (3) Between 2 & 2:50 P.M., the minute hand on your watch covers this many degrees DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1200 | $1200 - Jason (28) After 1911, Pancho Villa used this Texas city of 600,000 on the Rio Grande as his headquarters | $1200 - Tom (18) He wrote the play "Tom Thumb" & the novel "Tom Jones" | $1200 - Triple Stumper (25) "Pride" synonym paired with "The Id" in a Freud title |
$1600 - Tom (14) Masterpieces by this Spaniard include "The Naked Maja" & "The 2nd of May 1808" | $1600 - Triple Stumper (12) As Tim O'Hara, Bill Bixby worked as a newspaper reporter for the Los Angeles Sun on this silly '60s sitcom | $1600 - Jason (4) A scalenohedron is a crystal of 8 or 12 faces, each of which is one of these shapes | $(-1600) - Tom (29) When the Mexican Revolution began, Villa joined the rebels against this dictator with the first name Porfirio | $1600 - Triple Stumper (19) This playwright was the illegitimate fils of a famed novelist | $1600 - Triple Stumper (26) For lust: a perfume from Alfred Dunhill |
$2000 - Tom (15) This Renaissance Master painted the fresco "The School of Athens" | (-$2000) - Vane $2000 - Tom (13) Harry Anderson left 'em laughing on this show as a witty Miami columnist working for the Record-Dispatch | (-$2000) - Jason (5) (Video of Cheryl | $2000 - Triple Stumper (30) This "Devil's Dictionary" author disappeared after going to Mexico, reportedly to write about Pancho Villa | $2000 - Triple Stumper (20) He created Private Eye Lew Archer | (-$1000) - Vane (27) Meaning sloth, it's from the Latin negative of dolere, "to feel pain" DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1000 |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
Tom: $11,000
Jason: $7,600
Vane: $7,400
MOVIE HEROES
|
Hiram Bingham, who rediscovered "the lost city of the Incas", Machu Picchu, was a model for this movie hero
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Vane: $7,400 + $1,000
Jason: $7,600 + $7,595
Tom: $11,000 + $4,201
Final Scores
|
| Tom: $15,201 (2-day total of $38,401)
Jason: $15,195 Vane: $8,400 |
| Tom: $11,000 (16 right, including 1 rebound; 2 wrong)
Jason: $7,600 (13 right, including 2 rebounds; 1 wrong) Vane: $9,200 (18 right, including 1 DD; 5 wrong, including 2 DDs) Total: $27,800
|
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