Gary Conley, Controller from Reynoldsburg, OH
Sara Uehlein, Law librarian from Alexandria, VA
John Lindquist, Attorney from Marietta, GA (Returning 1-day champ with $17,200)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
THE LARGEST IN AREA
| RHYTHM & BOOZE
| WEIGHTS & MEASURES
| DEM BONES
| GLOBAL KITCHEN
| "E"ASY DOES IT
|
$200 - Gary (1) South Africa, Sudan, Somalia | $200 - Sara (6) His beach bum anthem "Margaritaville" made its Top 40 debut in 1977 | $200 - John (11) To convert this scale into Kelvin, just add 273.15 | $200 - Sara (24) The largest & strongest of these bones that make up the spine are labeled L1 to L5 | $200 - Gary (21) Shrimp cooked with garlic, butter & lemon are known by this Italian term | $200 - John (16) One of the 2 official languages of the Pacific island kingdom of Tonga |
$400 - John (2) Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh | $400 - John (7) This 1958 hit by The Champs with a liquor as its title has been covered by numerous artists | $400 - John (12) A champagne bottle holding 20 bottles worth, or a Biblical King of Babylonia | $400 - John (27) Its name is from the Latin for "upper arm"; what could be funnier? | $400 - John (22) Ivory-colored shoots of this plant of the Genus Arundinaria are often used as a complement in Asian cooking | $400 - John (17) The obelisk in St. Peter's Square was brought to Rome by Caligula from Heliopolis in this country |
$600 - John (3) Australia, Brazil, China | (-$600) - Sara (-$600) - John (8) "Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Lovin' on Your Mind)" is a classic song by this First Lady of Country Music | $600 - John (13) (Video) Unit of resistance symbolized here | $600 - Sara (28) You have 2 of these long, slender, curved bones -- one to support each shoulder | $600 - Triple Stumper (23) "No dinner without bread" goes a Russian saying & usually it is bread made from this grain, | $600 - Sara (18) The birthstone for the month of May |
$800 - John (4) Fiji, Iceland, Madagascar | $800 - Gary (9) This country legend recorded the hits "Fifteen Beers" & "Take This Job and Shove It" | (-$800) - John (14) In ancient Rome a pace was 5 feet long, so if you walked mille passus you went this many feet DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $800 | (-$800) - John (29) Your knee is the joint where these 2 bones meet the patella | $800 - John (25) The crust of this traditional English "pie" is made with mashed potatoes | $800 - Sara (19) (Video) Despite an investment of over $250 million, this car model seen here did not sell well in the United States |
$1000 - John (5) Argentina, Ecuador, Peru | $1000 - Triple Stumper (10) Willie Nelson often begins his live shows with his 1979 hit about this alcoholic "River" | (-$1000) - Sara (-$1000) - Gary (15) In typography one of these is equivalent to 12 points | (-$1000) - John (30) It's the medical term for the shoulder blade | $1000 - Gary (26) Rice & ground meat wrapped in these leaves make up Dolma, a traditional Greek dish | $1000 - Triple Stumper (20) Her biography is subtitled "From Sharecropper's Daughter to Surgeon General" |
Scores at the first commercial break:
John: $3,000
Gary: $0
Sara: -$1,400
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
John: $3,400
Gary: $1,200
Sara: $800
Click here for the correct responses.
SHOW ME THE WAY
| A BRAND NEW DAY
| SHADES OF GRAY
| WHAT DID YOU SAY?
| I'M HERE TO PLAY
| COME WHAT MAY
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$400 - John (1) His father Nicolo & Uncle Maffeo took him on their second trip to China, not their first | $400 - Gary (6) This computer brand founded in 1982 used a "Q" in its name so that it could be trademarked | $400 - Sara (11) Start with "a clean" one of these & it's still gray | $400 - John (16) Referring to Wilson's 14 points, Georges Clemenceau said, "The good Lord had only" this many | $400 - Sara (26) On "Frasier" Martin once had to pretend he was gay on this romantic holiday | $400 - John (21) On May 31, 1938 viewers saw what may have been TV's first game show when the BBC broadcast this type of "bee" |
$800 - Sara (2) Like his father Thorvald, who was banished from Norway, he was banished from Iceland around 980 | $800 - John (7) Looking for something Mattel could make for boys, Elliot Handler came up with this die-cast car line | (-$800) - John (12) This fireplace residue gave its name to a fairy tale stepsister & to a shade of gray | (-$800) - Sara $800 - John (17) 19th century author who wrote, "They have their Hamlets, but we have our Karamazovs!" | $800 - Triple Stumper (27) It's high hijinks on the high seas in this 2003 film as Cuba Gooding , Jr. pretends to be gay | $800 - Sara (22) This auto race dates back to May 30, 1911 |
(-$1200) - Sara $1200 - Gary (3) In his 1938 book "Alone" he describes the 5 months he spent alone near the South Pole | $600 - John (8) The name of these tortilla chips is roughly Spanish for "little bits of gold" DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $600 | $1200 - John (13) GM is associated with this Michigan city that some find a striking shade of gray | $1200 - John (18) In "Solitude" Ella Wheeler Wilcox followed this line with "Weep, and you weep alone" | $1200 - CLUE NOT REVEALED FOR LACK OF TIME | (-$1200) - Sara (23) In May 2002 this paper put up on e-Bay some of its "Dot Heads", the portraits it uses on its front page |
(-$1600) - Gary (4) After Britain took his ship The Half Moon, he should have quit; but no, he got The Discovery & sailed off to his death | (-$1600) - Sara $1600 - Gary (9) Dow's VC plastic wrap was renamed this after a tree in India because it was short & had no negative connotations | $1600 - Sara (14) Birds that come up on the Random House word menu's list of grays include the pelican & this "peaceful" one | $1600 - Gary (19) Sir James Dewar is quoted, "Minds are like" these safety devices; "they only function when they are open" | $1600 - CLUE NOT REVEALED FOR LACK OF TIME | $1600 - Gary (24) In May 1991 Fidel Castro removed his troops from this country |
$2000 - Triple Stumper (5) In 1884 the U.S. sent Robert Peary to survey a route for a canal through this country, not Panama | (-$2000) - Sara (-$2000) - John (10) As its sugar cubes resembled certain game pieces, the American Sugar Refining Company named its product this | $2000 - John (15) From the Latin talpa, "mole," comes this shade of gray | $2000 - Gary (20) This poet wrote "One's-Self I Sing", I Hear America Singing" & "I Celebrate Myself, and Sing Myself" DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2000 | $2000 - CLUE NOT REVEALED FOR LACK OF TIME | (-$2000) - Sara (25) A female suicide bomber assassinated this candidate for Prime Minister of India May 21, 1991 |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
John: $8,400
Gary: $8,000
Sara: -$4,000
LEGENDARY RULERS
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He's been written about by Aneirin in "The Gododdin" around 600 A.D. & by Fay Sampson in the "Daughter of Tintagel" series
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Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Gary: $8,000 + $7,900
John: $8,400 + $7,601
Final Scores
|
| John: $16,001 (2-day total of $33,201)
Gary: $15,900 |
| John: $9,800 (22 right, including 1 DD & 1 rebound; 6 wrong, including 1 DD)
Gary: $8,000 (10 right, includes 1 DD & 2 rebounds; 2 wrong) Sara: -$4,000 (10 right; 8 wrong) Total: $13,800
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