Show #427 1986-04-29 (taped 1985-12-03) Regular

Contestants

Cliff Miles Katskee — an actor from Chicago, Illinois

Richard Schwartz — an astrophysicist from La Cañada, California

Frank Sanello — a journalist originally from Joliet, Illinois (whose 1-day cash winnings total $12,300)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Frank $100 $400 $-2,500 $-2,500
3rd place: Berkline Wall Away recliner
$-1,600
6 R, 7 W (including 1 DD)
Richard $900 $3,100 $4,900 $9,800
2nd place: trip on Delta to New York & stay at Milford Plaza Hotel
$4,900
18 R, 3 W
Cliff $1,300 $4,500 $11,000 $10,000
New champion: $10,000
$10,000
25 R (including 2 DDs), 3 W

Jeopardy! Round

NEW HAMPSHIRE GEMS STARTS WITH "N" SINGERS & SONGS TRADE NAMES SWAMP THINGS
$100 [11]
Casks of this, seized from the British by New Hampshirites in 1774, were used against British at Bunker Hill
gunpowder
Richard
$100 [10]
Known for minerals as well as potatoes, it's nicknamed the Gem State
Idaho
Frank
$100 [16]
5 cents would get you into these early movie theaters
nickelodeons
Frank
$100 [3]
The Muppets' Ernie hit the Top 40 in 1970 with this bathtub ballad
"Rubber Duckie"
Richard
$100 [1]
As Roosevelt was called Teddy, & motion pictures called movies, the new wheat flakes were named this
Wheaties
Richard
$100 [21]
In "Gentle Ben" Dennis Weaver played a game warden in this Florida swamp
the Everglades
Cliff
$200 [12]
Reason national attention turns to New Hampshire in early March, but only every 4 years
the first primary
Richard
$200 [25]
The Mogok area of Burma produces the world's finest specimens of these red stones
rubies
Frank
$200 [17]
The people most closely related to the deceased
the next of kin
Richard
$200 [7]
He hit the Top 10 on both pop & hospital charts singing the theme from "Dr. Kildare"
Richard Chamberlain
Cliff
$200 [2]
An Australian named this shoe polish, 1st sold in 1906, in honor of his wife, a New Zealander
Kiwi
Cliff
$200 [23]
Star of "Maude" who was pawed by the "Swamp Thing" in the 1982 film
Adrienne Barbeau
Cliff
$300 [13]
In 1800, the Navy's first shipbuilding yard was established in this N.H. port
Portsmouth
Richard Cliff
$300 [26]
The word gem comes from Latin "gemma", meaning this stage of a flower
a bud
Richard
$300 [18]
Title description of Marietta in film which featured the number "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp"
Naughty
Cliff
$300 [8]
The Springfields used "Silver Threads" & these to sew up a hit in 1962
Golden Needles
Richard
$300 [4]
1st brand of instant coffee, its name combines the manufacturer's & French for coffee
Nescafé
Cliff
$400 [29]
Beetle Bailey is stationed there
Camp Swampy
Richard
$400 [14]
Though he wasn't our only president named Franklin, he was our only president from New Hampshire
Franklin Pierce
Richard
$400 [27]
Opal & turquoise are found mostly in parts of world where there is little of this
water (rainfall, moisture)
Richard
$400 [19]
To take a sip or clip off the tip
nip
Cliff
$400 [9]
They like to spend "Nights In White Satin"
The Moody Blues
Richard
$400 [5]
White soap which got its name when Harvey Procter heard this word from a Psalm quoted in a sermon
Ivory
Cliff
$500 [30]
The 3 residents of "The Swamp" in the final season of "M·A·S·H"
Hawkeye, B.J. & Major Charles Winchester
Cliff
$500 [15]
Of the Ivy League colleges, the 1 in New Hampshire
Dartmouth
Frank Richard
$500 [28]
Often weighing thousands of carats, this birthstone for November is valued by quality, not size
the topaz
$500 [20]
The profession of Cherry Ames
nurse
Frank
$500 [22]
For Al Stewart, not the Chinese, 1977 was "The Year Of" this
"The Year Of The Cat"
Cliff
$500 [6]
Japanese for "three-diamond", this company's name can be seen in its symbol
Mitsubishi
Cliff
DD $1,200 [24]
Singer of thefollowing1971 song set in a swamp:"Yeah, here comes Amos / Now Amos Moses was a Cajun / He lived by himself..."
Jerry Reed
Cliff

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE HUMAN BODY INDIANS WORLD WAR I WEATHER THE ARTS SKIING
$200 [17]
The principal muscle used in breathing
the diaphragm
Richard
$200 [21]
The Choctaw, Cherokee, Creek, & Chickasaw tribes were all moved from the S.E. to what is now this state
Oklahoma
Richard
$200 [2]
Nobody wanted to be caught dead there, so area between forward & rear trenches was called this
no man's land
Cliff
$200 [8]
On a weather map of the Sahara, an "S" would stand for this in the air
sand
Frank
$200 [3]
Conducting only from memory, Eugene Ormandy led this city's orchestra from 1938-80
Philadelphia
Frank
$200 [13]
In 1200, troops of this country used skis at the Battle of Oslo
Norway
Frank Cliff
$400 [18]
The top vertebra, which holds up the head, is named after this mythological Greek known for hold-ups
Atlas
Richard
$400 [22]
"A majority of the Creek & Cherokee tribes backed this side in the Revolutionary War
the British
Cliff
$400 [1]
When this country declared war on Germany in April 1917, it didn't have a single combat aircraft
the USA
Cliff
$400 [9]
Weather phenomenon in title of song used for presidential entrances
hail
Cliff
$400 [4]
E.M. Forester used the title of a Walt Whitman poem for this 1924 novel
"A Passage to India"
Frank
$400 [14]
The name's the same for both of these championships, sought by soccer teams & Alpine skiers
the World Cup
Richard
$600 [19]
Of more, less or about the same as on sea level, amount of blood people living in high altitudes have
more
Frank Richard
$600 [23]
In its heyday this tribe sent out up to 75 medicine show companies, probably pushing their "Joy Juice"
Kickapoo
Cliff
$600 [7]
After World War I, this empire was divided among 7 nations
Austria-Hungary
Cliff
$600 [10]
High velocity winds occurring 4.7-7.5 miles above ground, not well known till WWII pilots flew thru them
the jet stream
Cliff
$800 [6]
Among the 9 paintings stolen in October 1985 "theft of the century" was his "Impression: Sunrise"
Claude Monet
Frank Cliff
$600 [25]
At Venice, a gondola is a boat; at Vail, it's this
the tram which takes you up to the top of the mountain (ski lift)
Cliff
$800 [20]
The smallest human muscle is located here, along with the tiniest bones
the ear
Richard Cliff
$800 [24]
Giving almost all their land to the gov't in 1854, they got a Nebraska city named for them "insuring" fame
the Omahas
Cliff
$800 [15]
In 1915, Germany 1st employed this now illegal weapon at the 2nd Battle of Ypres
poison gas
Cliff
$800 [11]
Gray rain cloud extending over entire sky, named from Latin for "cloud"
a nimbus
Frank Richard
DD $900 [5]
Architectural anomaly in common to the Pompidou Center in Paris & Beverly Center in Los Angeles
escalators on the outside
Frank
$800 [26]
According to the title, Robert Redford was one in 1969
a downhill racer
Richard
$1,000 [27]
An offshoot of the Shoshoni, this tribe was said to be more at home on a horse than on the ground
the Comanche
DD $1,100 [16]
The other person assassinated along with Archduke Ferdinand
his wife the Archduchess
Cliff
$1,000 [12]
Usually starting off coast of Peru, this "childish" condition may bring years of climatic change
El Niño
Cliff

Final Jeopardy!

WORLD GEOGRAPHY

Capital of this English-speaking country is southernmost national capital in the world

New Zealand

Richard "What is Wellington NZ?" — wagered $4,900
Cliff "What is Australia" — wagered $1,000

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