Show #2405 1995-02-03 (taped 1994-11-09) Regular

Contestants

Peter Rowe — a newspaper columnist from San Diego, California

Daryl Kinney — a doctoral candidate from Los Angeles, California

Charlie Garfink — a cafe owner from San Rafael, California (whose 1-day cash winnings total $3,400)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Charlie $1,500 $3,100 $10,200 $10,000
2-day champion: $13,400
$9,300
28 R (including 2 DDs), 2 W
Daryl $200 $1,500 $4,700 $5,000
2nd place: trip to Washington, D.C.
$4,700
13 R, 2 W
Peter $-300 $500 $1,900 $3,800
3rd place: Artisan House "Flame" sculpture
$1,900
8 R (including 1 DD), 5 W

Jeopardy! Round

FAMOUS SPEECHES 1970s TELEVISION GUINNESS RECORDS U.S.A. POTENT POTABLES FOREIGN WORDS & PHRASES
$100 [13]
Famous line following Patrick Henry's "I know not what course others may take, but as for me,..."
"give me liberty or give me death"
Charlie
$100 [1]
It was the nickname of Andrew Squigman on "Laverne and Shirley"
Squiggy
Charlie
$100 [24]
The largest example of this animal ever recorded was a Suffolk ram that weighed 545 pounds
a sheep
Charlie
$100 [8]
It's now 18.4¢ per gallon
the federal gas tax
Peter
$100 [19]
One recipe for this drink calls for 3 oz. of rum & 3 tbsp. each of coconut milk & crushed pineapple
a pina colada
Charlie
$100 [5]
The Dutch know this day of the week as Zondag
Sunday
Daryl
$200 [14]
In 1934 this Italian leader said, "We have buried the putrid corpse of liberty"
Mussolini
Charlie
$200 [2]
In 1978 comedian Tim Conway won an Emmy for his work on this variety series
The Carol Burnett Show
Charlie
$200 [25]
This Soviet dictator holds the record for most statues raised to himself--about 6,000
Stalin
Charlie
$200 [9]
This river's name came from an Indian name recorded by John Smith in 1608, Patawomeck
Potomac
Charlie
$200 [20]
Made from fermented rice, it's considered one of Japan's national drinks
sake
Daryl
$200 [6]
A Swedish seamstress might use one of these, a fingerborg
a thimble
Charlie
$300 [15]
In "Panegyricus" Isocrates advocated unification of this country's city-states against the Persians
Greece
Peter
$300 [3]
A Feb. 11, 1979 bio of this rock legend starring Kurt Russell topped "GWTW" in the ratings that night
Elvis Presley
Charlie Daryl
$300 [26]
The largest harem was the winter harem of the grand seraglio at Topkapi in this Turkish city
Istanbul
Daryl
$300 [10]
This landmark gets about 800,000 hikers a year & about 350,000 people view it by helicopter
the Grand Canyon
Charlie
$300 [21]
It's the base liquor in a margarita
tequila
Charlie
$300 [17]
In Finnish this relative is a tati; in Norwegian, she's a tante
an aunt
Peter
$400 [16]
In 1960 he said, "The new frontier of which I speak is not a set of promises"
John Kennedy
Daryl
$400 [4]
An interview with Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter was featured on her first ABC special Dec. 14, 1976
Barbara Walters
Daryl
$400 [27]
This game played in a fronton has the fastest projectile speed of any ball game—about 188 mph
jai alai
Peter
$400 [11]
This new hockey team's cheerleaders are called the Decoys
the Anaheim Ducks
Charlie
$400 [22]
Produced in the Normandy region of France, Calvados is a type of this liquor made with apples
Brandy
Charlie Peter
$400 [29]
The Italian term for this sport is il ciclismo
bicycling
Daryl
DD $500 [18]
In an 1852 speech this former slave asked, "What, to the American slave, is your Fourth of July?"
Frederick Douglass
Peter
$500 [7]
On this sitcom Ruth Gordon played the mother of Carlton the Doorman
Rhoda
Charlie Peter
$500 [28]
This country has the youngest reigning queen, Margrethe II, born in 1940
Denmark
Peter
$500 [12]
One of the oldest conservation organizations in the U.S. is named for this fishing book author
Izaak Walton
$500 [23]
Creme de Rose is flavored with rose petals & Creme Yvette is flavored with these purplish flowers
violets
Charlie
$500 [30]
Castanuelas is the Spanish word for these, which just may "click" with you
castanets
Peter

Double Jeopardy! Round

WORLD LITERATURE TRANSPORTATION 1776 TEXTILES EUROPEAN RIVERS AN EMBARRASSMENT OF RICHs
$200 [13]
Heinrich Mann, this novelist's brother, wrote the novel on which the film "The Blue Angel" was based
Thomas Mann
Daryl
$200 [6]
In 1984, after more than 20 years in production, this company rolled out its last 727
Boeing
Charlie
$200 [1]
This Northern California city was founded as Yerba Buena by the Spanish in 1776
San Francisco
Charlie
$200 [26]
Some believe this coarse fabric was named when a London merchant misread the word tweel
tweed
Charlie
$200 [18]
Paris landmarks on the left bank of this river include the Latin quarter & the Luxembourg Gardens
the Seine
Charlie
$200 [11]
"Last of the Big City Bosses" is a nickname of this longtime Chicago mayor
(Richard) Daley
Daryl
$400 [14]
This Russian playwright's 1888 story "Steppe" won him the Pushkin Prize
Chekhov
Charlie
$400 [7]
Races with these two-wheeled vehicles were introduced to the Olympics in the 7th century B.C.
chariots
Daryl
$400 [2]
Now famous for its cliff divers, this Mexican city was destroyed by an earthquake in 1776
Acapulco
Charlie
$400 [27]
Nylon is a hydrophobic fiber, which means that it does not absorb this
water
Charlie
$400 [19]
Ireland's largest hydroelectric plant lies on this river, between Lough Derg & Limerick
the river Shannon
Charlie Peter
$400 [12]
Richard Burbage was the star in this playwright's company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men
William Shakespeare
Peter
$600 [15]
Eileen Duggan, who was born on South Island in 1894, was one of this country's most famous poets
New Zealand
Daryl
$600 [8]
This Ford classic was introduced in the form of a two-seat sports car in 1955
the Thunderbird
Charlie
$600 [3]
He published "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations"
Adam Smith
Peter
$600 [28]
This fiber is retted, a form of rotting, before it is used to produce linen
flax
$800 [21]
Europe's longest river, it rises in the Valdai Hills north of Moscow & flows 2,290 miles to the Caspian Sea
the Volga
Daryl
$600 [23]
He married 28-year-old Pat Ryan in 1940
Richard Nixon
$800 [16]
The 2 colors in the title of this Stendhal novel represent the military & the clergy
The Red and the Black
Peter
$800 [9]
It's the only luxury liner that makes regular transatlantic crossings
the Queen Elizabeth 2
Charlie
$800 [4]
This Bahamas city named for William III's family was held briefly by American revolutionists
Nassau
Charlie
$1,000 [22]
This river forms Liechtenstein's western border with Switzerland
the Rhine
$800 [24]
His 1972 discoveries in Kenya supported the view that genus Homo coexisted with Australopithecus
Richard Leakey
Charlie
$1,000 [17]
The epic poem "Raghuvamsa", which traces the lineage of Rama, was written in this classical language
Sanskrit
Daryl
DD $1,100 [10]
2 of the 4 Space Shuttles that are currently in commission
(2 of) Atlantis , Endeavor , Columbia & Discovery
Charlie
$1,000 [5]
On July 4, 1776 the Congress appointed Franklin, Adams & Jefferson to design this
The Great Seal of the United States
Daryl
DD $1,400 [20]
It reaches its northernmost point at Regensburg in Bavaria & then flows southeast to Vienna
the Danube
Charlie
$1,000 [25]
This American photographer worked for Harper's Bazaar 1945-1965 & on staff for Vogue 1966-1970
(Richard) Avedon
Daryl

Final Jeopardy!

BIOLOGY

In humans the red hemoglobin contains iron; in mollusks the blue hemocyanin contains this metal

copper

Peter "What is copper?" — wagered $1,900
Daryl "What is copper?" — wagered $300
Charlie "What is zinc?" — wagered $200

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