Show #1568 1991-05-29 (taped 1991-02-26) Regular

Game entered from audiorecording. Missing prizes.

Contestants

Beth Elliott — a writer and computer specialist from Oakland, California

Marc Remling — a paralegal originally from Syracuse, New York

Michael Vaughn — a mortgage banker from Jersey City, New Jersey (whose 1-day cash winnings total $15,201)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Michael $-100 $-600 $5,000 $9,500
2nd place
$5,000
15 R, 4 W
Marc $300 $600 $4,400 $2,300
3rd place
$4,000
16 R (including 2 DDs), 5 W
Beth $2,100 $3,400 $8,200 $10,100
New champion: $10,100
$7,000
20 R (including 1 DD), 2 W

Jeopardy! Round

THE OLD WEST SANDWICHES ANATOMY 1990s TV ECONOMICS NOT SO FAMOUS QUOTES
$100 [1]
As deputy marshal of Dodge City he was known for batting some of his enemies with his cane
Bat Masterson
Michael
$100 [16]
Comic character whose 1st sandwich April 16, 1936 had tongue, onion, mustard, sardines & horseradish
Dagwood (Bumstead)
Beth
$100 [3]
The flat panels on the sides of the head, or the places some head to pray
temples
Beth
$100 [14]
In 1990, this William Conrad series said aloha to Hawaii & returned to Southern California
Jake and the Fatman
Marc
$100 [9]
In "Das Kapital" he wrote that free enterprise would lead to depressions & revolution
Karl Marx
Marc
$100 [8]
Thomas Hardy said this "makes rattling good history, but peace is poor reading"
war
Marc
$200 [2]
These Indians called themselves Dakota, "allies", but the French called them this, for "enemy"
the Sioux
Beth
$200 [17]
The pocket bread that Middle Easterners stuff with all sorts of stuff
pita
Marc
$200 [4]
It's the joint that allows the foot to pivot up & down
ankles
Beth
$200 [15]
It's Sharon Gless' occupation on "The Trials of Rosie O'Neill"
an attorney
Michael Beth
$200 [10]
The government official who determines the value of your taxable valuables
an assessor
Marc
$200 [12]
This emperor reportedly described Talleyrand as "a silk stocking filled with mud"
Napoleon
Marc
$300 [19]
The nugget James Marshall found at this locale on the American River was the size of a dime
Sutter's Mill
Beth
$400 [22]
Grilled corned beef, Swiss cheese & sauerkraut on rye
a Reuben
Beth
$300 [5]
The stomach is part of this canal
the alimentary canal
Beth
$300 [24]
A 1989 John Candy film inspired this avuncular sitcom
Uncle Buck
Beth
$300 [11]
This company, D&B for short, is the leading firm hired for corporate credit investigation
Dun & Bradstreet
Beth
$300 [25]
Ralph Waldo Emerson said this "is not so short that there is always time for courtesy"
life
Beth
$400 [20]
A greenhorn in the old West, or the lowest rank of a Boy Scout
a tenderfoot
Michael Marc
DD $500 [18]
Popularized at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair it was named for a German seaport
a hamburger
Marc
$400 [6]
This part of the eye is the site of the greatest concentration of pain receptive nerves
the cornea
Marc Beth
$400 [13]
An authorized outlet that's a link in a business chain like a McDonald's or major league ball club
a franchise
Beth
$400 [26]
Ogden Nash wrote, "A dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" one of these
a door
Michael
$500 [21]
Term for an unbranded cow from a man who lost his cattle to rustlers by not branding them
a maverick
Beth
$500 [23]
This member of the mustard family is served on crustless bread to accompany a British tea
watercress
Marc
$500 [7]
In osteoarthritis this tissue disintegrates & bones rub against one another
the cartilage
$500 [28]
Insurance firms charging more to those living in high-risk areas are guilty of this colorful practice
redlining
Beth
$500 [27]
Percy Bysshe Shelley called this European country "thou paradise of exile"
Italy
Michael Marc Beth

Double Jeopardy! Round

FILE UNDER "Z" SPAIN OPERETTAS HISTORY PHOTOGRAPHY NAME THE AUTHOR
$200 [1]
The B.F. Goodrich Co. coined this name for Whitcomb Judson's fly fasteners
zippers
Michael
$200 [6]
To usher in this day the Spanish eat a grape for each stroke of the clock at midnight
New Year's
Marc
$200 [26]
It completes Sigmund Romberg's title "The Student"
Prince
Marc
$200 [13]
This dynasty's name comes from one of its 1st castles, Habichtsburg, or Hawk's Castle, in Switzerland
Hapsburg
Michael
$200 [15]
This company introduced the Brownie camera in 1900, pricing it at $1
Kodak
Michael
$200 [8]
"How I Found Livingstone"
Stanley
Michael
$400 [2]
The national one is maintained by the Smithsonian Institution & located along Washington D.C.'s Rock Creek
a zoo
Michael
$400 [7]
The correct Spanish word for this is torero, not toreador
a bullfighter
Beth
$400 [27]
Ko-Ko, Poo-Bah, Yum-Yum & Peep-Bo are not just baby talk but characters in this operetta
The Mikado
Beth
$400 [14]
In the 6th century B.C. the lawmaker Solon arranged this Greek city's citizens into 4 classes by income
Athens
Beth
$400 [16]
Photographic image in which the light areas appear dark & vice versa
a negative
Marc
$400 [9]
“The Choir Boys"
(Joe) Wambaugh
Michael
$600 [3]
From 1810-1812 it was Ohio's capital
Zanesville
Michael
$600 [22]
Tapas bars specialize in serving this course of food
hors d'oeuvres (appetizers)
Michael
$600 [28]
Offenbach wrote one of the first operettas about this character's adventures in the underworld
Orpheus
Beth
$600 [17]
Protestant Dutch ruler invited by political leaders in 1688 to take the English throne
William of Orange
Michael
$600 [23]
One early form of this was magnesium powder poured in a trough & fired by a percussion cap
a flash bulb (flash)
Michael
$600 [10]
"Murder in the Supreme Court"
Margaret Truman
Michael
$800 [4]
He started in the penny arcade business in 1903, some 13 years later, he took charge of Paramount Pictures
Adolph Zukor
Michael Marc
DD $1,000 [20]
Spain's oldest surviving epic poem is about the exploits of this hero who died in 1099
El Cid
Marc
$1,000 [30]
This title heroine helped her lover escape by singing the "Indian Love Call"
Rose-Marie
Marc
$800 [18]
Charlemagne spent Christmas Day 800 in this city
Rome
Michael
$800 [24]
It describes photos taken with too much light, or someone whose photos are seen too much in the press
overexposed
Marc
$800 [11]
"Scruples"
Judith Krantz
$1,000 [5]
The Tower of Babel may have been one of these temple towers
a ziggurat
Michael Marc
$1,000 [21]
This wild coast in Spain's northeast is one of Europe's most popular resort areas
the Costa Brava
Marc
DD $2,000 [29]
Naughty Marietta is wooed at her window by Captain Dick singing this song:
"Ah, Sweet Mystery Of Life"
Beth
$1,000 [19]
In 911, Charles III of France gave Rollo the Viking this duchy
Normandy
Marc
$1,000 [25]
Aptly, this Sierra Club's director's 1st portfolio was 1927's "Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras"
Ansel Adams
Beth
$1,000 [12]
"Crossings"
Danielle Steel

Final Jeopardy!

U.S. PRESIDENTS

He served as president during the 49th, 50th, 53rd & 54th Congresses

Grover Cleveland

Marc "Who is Ronald Reagan?" — wagered $2,100
Michael "Who was Grover Cleveland?" — wagered $4,500
Beth "Who was Grover Cleveland?" — wagered $1,900

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