Show #461 1986-09-15 (taped 1986-08-06) Regular

Roger Storm game 2.

Contestants

Thomas Bernhard — a technical writer from Fremont, California

Kay Guesdon — a housewife from Sherman Oaks, California

Roger Storm — a teacher from Fairview Park, Ohio (whose 1-day cash winnings total $3,799)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Roger $900 $2,100 $7,500 $7,801
2-day champion: $11,600
$7,100
23 R (including 1 DD), 3 W
Kay $400 $2,300 $3,900 $2,900
2nd place: Lane Action recliner & Stiffel table lamps
$3,700
11 R (including 1 DD), 3 W
Tom $600 $1,000 $200 $100
3rd place: KitchenAid portable dishwasher
$1,200
10 R, 5 W (including 1 DD)

Jeopardy! Round

POLITICAL PARTIES KIDDIE LIT SHIPS POP MUSIC EQIUVALENCIES DOUBLE TALK
$100 [3]
Though party traces its origins to Jefferson, Andrew Jackson was 1st president to be called this
Democrat
Roger
$100 [14]
In one version, Hendrik was the name of the boy who kept his finger there
the hole in the dike
Kay Tom
$100 [5]
In "Tales of a Wayside Inn", Longfellow compares brief encounters to "ships that" do this
pass in the night
Tom
$100 [25]
In '70s song titles this word preceded "Down", "Wonderland", & "Oogie, Oogie"
boogie
Roger
$100 [8]
Soviet equivalent of these are "New Year's trees"
Christmas trees
Roger
$100 [1]
While the Flintstones named their daughter Pebbles, the Rubbles named their boy this
Bamm-Bamm
Roger
$200 [15]
Founders of this minor 1870s party would be pleased to learn our dollar is no longer backed by gold
Greenback
Kay
$200 [16]
Peter Pan's basic credo was his refusal to do this
grow up
Tom
$200 [10]
In 1830, an Oliver Wendell Holmes poem prevented scrapping of this ship, now a Boston shrine
Old Ironsides (USS Constitution)
Roger
$200 [26]
Drum-pounding Prince protege, her "E." stands for Escovedo
Sheila
Tom
$200 [9]
Italian variation of Chinese won ton
ravioli
Kay
$200 [2]
In title of Ian Fleming book, words which follow "Chitty, Chitty,"
Bang Bang
Tom
$300 [17]
In '68, this group's "non-leader" Abbie Hoffman said it's "A party--not a political movement"
Yippies
Tom
$300 [19]
Among the confectionary workers at his factory are the Oompa-Loompas
Willy Wonka
Roger
$400 [23]
1st steamship to cross Atlantic & 1st nuc. powered merchant ship both bore name of this Georgia city
Savannah
Roger
$300 [27]
He said he changed his name because "Stuart & the Ants" didn't sound right
Adam Ant
Kay
$300 [11]
A British corporation isn't "Inc.", but this
limited (Ltd.)
Tom
$300 [4]
In the Playmates' 1958 hit, it's the sound the Little Nash Rambler made
Beep Beep
Kay
$400 [18]
Abraham Lincoln served in Congress as a member of this party
Whig
Roger Tom
$400 [20]
He's Dr. Dolittle's mythical 2-headed llama-like creature
pushmi-pullyu
Tom
DD $500 [22]
Ship referred to in the title of this song:
the sloop John B
Kay
$400 [12]
A silver eagle is insignia for both a Navy captain & this equivalent Army rank
colonel
Roger
$400 [6]
According to Guinness Book of College Records, it's the college song most often sung in movies
"Boola Boola"
Kay
$500 [21]
He said, "I've run away from a little old woman, a little old man & I can run away from you, I can"
the Gingerbread Man
Kay
$500 [24]
In early 1986, this, the British royal yacht, was used to evacuate foreigners from South Yemen
Britannia
Kay
$500 [13]
This country's equivalent of our House of Representatives is the Dail
Ireland
Roger Kay
$500 [7]
From Singhalese word for "weakness", it's disease caused by lack of B vitamins
beri beri
Roger

Double Jeopardy! Round

SHAKESPEARE FORMER CAPITALS TV NOSTALGIA BUSINESS & INDUSTRY RELIGION "KING"s & "QUEEN"s
$200 [1]
Scorning astrology, Cassius says, "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in" these
the stars
Roger
$200 [24]
In 1960, Brazil's capital was moved from this city to Brasilia
Rio de Janeiro
Tom
$200 [2]
With no VCRs in 1951, most 8 P.M. Tuesday viewers chose his variety series over Frank Sinatra's
Milton Berle
Roger
$200 [20]
In 1941 this company began sponsoring its "Cavalcade of Sports", which provided a sharp move
Gillette
Roger
$200 [7]
He's made the Moral Majority a subsidiary of the new group he's founded, Liberty Federation
Jerry Falwell
Roger
$200 [12]
King who's been called the "Queen of Tennis"
Billie Jean King
Roger
$400 [17]
The Earl of Essex used a performance of "Richard II" to incite a revolt during this monarch's reign
Queen Elizabeth I
Roger Tom
DD $1,000 [25]
1 of 2 former capitals of Pakistan
Karachi or Rawalpindi
Tom
$400 [3]
Billie Jo, Bobbie Jo, Betty Jo and Uncle Joe "slipped" into sitcom success in this CBS series
Petticoat Junction
Roger
$400 [21]
They didn't get to be the world's best-selling beer by just horsing around
Anheuser-Busch
Roger
$400 [8]
Term for sacred pictures used in the Eastern Orthodox churches
icons
Roger
$400 [13]
He sat in the House of Lords after developing modern rules of boxing
Marquis of Queensbury
Kay
$600 [18]
This title character calls life "A tale told by an idiot, full of sound & fury, signifying nothing"
Macbeth
Roger
$800 [5]
A plastic TV screen overlay let young viewers draw rescue devices for this cartoon hero
Winky Dink
Roger Tom
$600 [22]
America's 2nd-biggest selling brand of bandages, made by Colgate-Palmolive
Curad
Tom
$600 [9]
The Canadian Armed Forces allow soldiers who belong to this Indian religion to wear their turbans
Sikhs
Roger
$600 [14]
In 1948, at age 19, he was ordained a Baptist minister
Martin Luther King
Tom
$800 [19]
"Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety," Shakespeare wrote of her
Cleopatra
DD $1,000 [4]
When his series was cancelled, Rex Randolph moved from Bourbon St. to this Hollywood address
77 Sunset Strip
Roger
$800 [23]
From Hebrew for "faith", this Iowa company founded by German settlers makes refrigerators
Amana
Roger
$800 [10]
He told Newport, R.I. Jews, U.S. govt. "Gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance"
George Washington
Kay
$800 [15]
Frederic Dannay & Manfred B. Lee
who wrote as Ellery Queen
$1,000 [6]
Bishop Sheen won an Emmy in 1953 for his series on this fourth network
the Dumont Network
Roger
$1,000 [26]
With plants in Everett, Renton, & Seattle, it's Washington state's biggest private employer
Boeing
Kay
$1,000 [11]
Single Arabic word for Muhammad's flight from Mecca to Medina in 622, which began Muslim era
the Hejira
Kay
$1,000 [16]
He served as prime minister of Canada longer than anyone else
William Lyon Mackenzie King

Final Jeopardy!

FRUITS & VEGETABLES

According to Guinness Book of Records, the heaviest fruit or vegetable ever grown is 1 of these

pumpkin

Tom "What is a squash?" — wagered $100
Kay "What is a watermelon?" — wagered $1,000
Roger "What is a pumpkin?" — wagered $301

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