Show #1528 1991-04-03 (taped 1991-02-11) Regular

Contestants

Marilyn Goldwater — a school psychologist from Horsham, Pennsylvania

Michael Carroll — a lawyer from Morristown, New Jersey

Scott Rand — a podiatrist from Marlton, New Jersey (whose 1-day cash winnings total $10,601)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Scott $1,900 $3,200 $4,400 $4,300
3rd place: Samsung 27" TV & Nintendo Entertainment System with Wheel of Fortune , Jeopardy! & Fisher Price preschool games + Wheel of Fortune for Game Boy
$5,000
15 R, 3 W (including 1 DD)
Michael $400 $900 $7,300 $14,600
2nd place: trip on Malaysia Airlines to Singapore & stay at Mandarin Singapore
$7,300
16 R, 2 W
Marilyn $1,700 $3,100 $7,400 $14,601
New champion: $14,601
$7,500
23 R (including 2 DDs), 3 W

Jeopardy! Round

"C" IN COOKING LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY THE OLYMPICS DIAMONDS LYRICISTS COMMON BONDS
$100 [1]
To make dill pickles, start by soaking this member of the gourd family
a cucumber
Scott
$100 [25]
Sailing through the strait that bears his name, this European was the first to reach Chile
Magellan
Marilyn
$100 [13]
He threw his 1960 light heavyweight boxing gold medal into the Ohio River
(Muhammad) Ali
Scott
$100 [6]
The Jubilee Diamond was named in honor of her jubilee in 1897
Queen Victoria
Michael
$100 [15]
Dorothy Fields' first big hit song was "I Can't Give You Anything But" this, "Baby" in 1928
Love
Marilyn
$100 [8]
Benny, Bunker, Breed's
Hills
Michael
$200 [2]
This light, delicate pie doesn't contain the light, delicate fabric of the same name
chiffon
Marilyn
$300 [28]
After Evita died, she became Juan Peron's wife & later, the first woman president in the Americas
Isabel Peron
Marilyn
$200 [14]
The last Frenchman to schuss away with the gold in men's downhill was this man back in 1968
Jean-Claude Killy
Marilyn
$200 [7]
The Regent Diamond is so named because the Duke of Orleans, regent of this country, bought it in 1717
France
Scott
$200 [16]
He wrote the songs for "On A Clear Day You Can See Forever" with Burton Lane, not Frederick Loewe
(Alan Jay) Lerner
Michael Marilyn
$200 [9]
Rubber, green, postage
stamps
Marilyn
$300 [3]
The razor type of these bivalves resembles an old-fashioned straight razor folded up
a clam
Marilyn
DD $400 [27]
In 1494 the pope drew a line dividing Latin America between these 2 European countries
Spain & Portugal
Marilyn
$300 [18]
The games to be held in this city in 1916 were cancelled & it had to wait 20 years to get them back
Berlin
Marilyn
$300 [17]
In 1934 the Jonker Diamond was discovered on the ground after a storm in this African country
South Africa
Scott
$300 [21]
This lyricist for "The Fantasticks" has the same name as a Henry Fielding foundling
Tom Jones
Marilyn
$300 [10]
Umbrella, circus, pup
tents
Scott
$400 [4]
These small tomatoes with a fruity name can be stuffed & served as hors d'oeuvres
a cherry
Scott
$400 [29]
This general, who took the Alamo, was made president of Mexico 11 times between 1833 & 1855
Santa Anna
Michael
$400 [23]
The 4000-meter individual pursuit is part of this competition
bicycling
Scott
$400 [19]
The largest diamond ever found, it was cut into over 100 separate stones
Cullinan Diamond
Michael
$400 [22]
Of "Yip", "Yap" or "Yup", the nickname of the lyricist who wrote "Over The Rainbow"
Yip
Scott
$400 [11]
Building, alphabet, writer's
blocks
Marilyn
$500 [5]
From the French meaning little rib, it's a small slice of meat , cut from the leg or ribs
a cutlet
Marilyn
$500 [30]
Columbus discovered gold on this island now shared by Haiti & the Dominican Republic
Hispaniola
Scott
$500 [24]
After winning the decathlon & pentathlon in 1912, he was given a ticker-tape parade in NYC
Jim Thorpe
Michael Marilyn
$500 [20]
The Great Mogul Diamond was once owned by this Mogul emperor who built the Taj Mahal
Shah Jahan
$500 [26]
He & B. Comden made beautiful lyrics together for "On the Town" & "Wonderful Town"
(Adolph) Green
Marilyn
$500 [12]
Bachelor, liberal, house
a party
Scott

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE CONSTITUTION SCIENTISTS GEOGRAPHY FAMILIAR PHRASES BRITISH ROYALTY CLERGYMEN IN LITERATURE
$200 [1]
Number of the Congress that proposed amending the Constitution with the Bill of Rights
the 1st
Marilyn
$200 [2]
He used the money from selling the rights to his potato to move from Massachusetts to Calif. in 1875
Luther Burbank
Marilyn
$200 [16]
Budapest is in Hungary, & Bucharest is in this country
Romania
Michael
$200 [11]
It's the suit you're said to be wearing when you're as naked as the day you were born
your birthday suit
Marilyn
$200 [18]
This beautiful princess became president of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1989
Princess Di
Scott
$200 [26]
These lovers were secretly married by Friar Laurence
Romeo & Juliet
Scott Marilyn
$400 [4]
Article III, Section 1 authorizes many inferior courts & one of these
the Supreme Court
Michael Marilyn
$400 [3]
She shared a Nobel Prize in 1903, & her daughter Irene shared one in 1935
Marie Curie
Michael
$400 [17]
This country whose capital is Monrovia collects big bucks from merchant ship registrations
Liberia
Marilyn
$400 [12]
A flip in the crypt
spinning (turning over) in your grave
Michael
$400 [22]
This Stuart queen, a heavy drinker, was known derisively as "Brandy Nan"
Queen Anne
$400 [27]
"The Agony and the Ecstasy" tells the story of this artist's conflicts with Pope Julius II
Michelangelo
Marilyn
$600 [5]
The Constitution sets no limit on the number of these, so in 1913 Congress set it at 435
the number of congressmen
Michael
$600 [7]
The entries for these 2 polio vaccine inventors are close to each other in the encyclopedia
Salk & Sabin
Michael
$600 [19]
The cultural & economic center of this country is in the Katmandu Valley
Nepal
Scott
$600 [13]
To stay awake late at night to study or work, even in these days of electricity
burning the midnight oil
Scott
$600 [23]
He was king of England for 60 years, but in the last decade of his life he was violently insane
King George III
Michael
$600 [28]
Mystery writer H. Kemelman's title clergyman, who "Slept Late" on Friday & "Took Off" on Monday
Rabbi
Scott
$800 [6]
Approval by this fraction of the states is necessary to amend the Constitution
three-quarters
Marilyn
$800 [9]
He entered the Univ. of Glasgow in 1834 at age 10; we know he never got an absolute zero on a test
Kelvin
Scott
DD $600 [20]
The temples of Ramses II & Nefertari were moved to higher ground so they wouldn't be under this lake
Lake Nasser
Scott
$800 [14]
This French term comes from the custom of parading a fat ox through the streets of Paris on Shrove Tues.
Mardi Gras
Marilyn
$800 [24]
This king died at Whitehall in 1685; his father had been executed there in 1649
Charles II
Scott
DD $700 [30]
The novel in which the high lama seeks to pass his position on to a visitor to Shangri-La
Lost Horizon
Marilyn
$1,000 [8]
Article I forbids this type of bill, passed by a legislature to punish someone without trial
a bill of attainder
Michael
$1,000 [10]
To make billiard balls, J. W. Hyatt invented the 1st synthetic plastic, which he called this
celluloid
$1,000 [21]
The Firth of Forth, an arm of this sea, extends into the Scottish Lowlands
the North Sea
Michael
$1,000 [15]
To make an irrevocable decision, from action taken by Julius Caesar, touching off war in Rome
to cross the Rubicon
Michael
$1,000 [25]
This queen who reigned for only 5 years, 1553-58, was the second wife of a Spanish prince
Queen Mary
Michael
$800 [29]
In Sinclair Lewis' book, he's an ex-football player who also scores as an evangelist
Elmer Gantry
Michael Marilyn

Final Jeopardy!

U.S. CURRENCY

The 2 non-presidents on the fronts of currently issued bills

Hamilton & Franklin

Scott "Who are Ben Franklin & Chase?" — wagered $100
Michael "Who are Hamilton & Franklin" — wagered $7,300
Marilyn "Who are Hamilton & Franklin?" — wagered $7,201

« Back to Games