Show #122 1985-02-26 (taped 1984-11-13) Regular

Contestants

Candy Carey — a horse trainer and breeder from Sun Valley, California

Tom O'Brien — a writer-researcher from Seattle, Washington

Leo Cullum — a magazine cartoonist originally from North Bergen, New Jersey (whose 1-day cash winnings total $6,600)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Leo $500 $2,000 $1,000 $2,000
2-day champion: $8,600
$1,000
15 R, 6 W
Tom $1,000 $2,100 $2,100 $50
2nd place: Armstrong bedroom suite & Dakotah bedroom ensemble
$900
16 R (including 1 DD), 7 W
Candy $400 $100 $2,400 $10
3rd place: Jules Jurgensen watches
$1,300
14 R (including 2 DDs), 7 W

Jeopardy! Round

WORLD HISTORY BIRDS DINING OUT FOOTBALL AUTO SLOGANS "BOYS" IN SONG
$100 [9]
In 1806, Australians rebelled against this British governor, the former H.M.S. Bounty captain
Captain (William) Bligh
Tom
$100 [1]
Icterus galbula or a Maryland baseball team player
an oriole
Leo
$100 [4]
Utensil you'd use to eat the potage du jour
a soup spoon
Candy
$100 [25]
None of the players are "paper" pussycats on this Detroit team
the Lions
Leo
$100 [12]
Car that gives one "o-o-oh, what a feeling"
Toyota
Tom
$100 [6]
Though no Boy George, Johnny Cash was this in '69
"A Boy Named Sue"
Leo Tom
$200 [15]
American Abraham Lincoln Brigade fought in this country's Civil War
Spain
Leo
$200 [2]
"Royal" bird of Antarctica
a (emperor) penguin
Leo
$200 [22]
In some exclusive restaurants, menus without these are presented to ladies
prices
Leo
$200 [26]
In '61, Ernie Davis was 1st Black college player to win this award
the Heisman Trophy
Leo
$200 [13]
They've "got a better idea"
Ford
Tom
$200 [7]
In '62 The Shirelles professed fidelity to this military recruit
"Soldier Boy"
Candy
$300 [16]
In 1916, this Mexican revolutionary shot up town of Columbus, NM, killing 17
Pancho Villa
Candy
$300 [3]
'65 Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Burton film; it's theme was "The Shadow Of Your Smile"
The Sandpiper
Leo
$300 [23]
Goat milk cheese associated with Greek cuisine
feta cheese
Tom
$300 [27]
The "zebras"
the referees (the officials)
Leo
$300 [14]
It was "awesome", but now it's Nissan
a Datsun
Leo
$400 [10]
In '48, it was a "strange & enchanted" million seller for Nat "King" Cole
"Nature Boy"
Tom
$400 [17]
War in which Germany lost its African colonies
World War I
Tom Candy
$400 [5]
A natural mimic, one in the wilds of S.C. could imitate 32 bird calls
a mockingbird
Tom Candy
$400 [24]
Of 2, 2.5 or 3.5, the number of times the average American eats out per week
3.5
Candy
$400 [28]
Made legal in 1906 to open up game & reduce injuries, it's now the Chargers' specialty
the forward pass
Leo Candy
$400 [20]
"Wouldn't you really rather have" this
a Buick
Leo Tom
DD $500 [8]
What The Manhattan Transfer "talked about" in thefollowing:"He's kind of tall / He's really fine / Some day I hope to make him mine, all mine..."
"The Boy From New York City"
Candy
$500 [18]
This last emperor of France, deposed in 1870, later died in England
Napoleon III (Louis Napoleon)
Leo Candy
$500 [19]
The only bird with only 2 toes on each foot
an ostrich
Tom
$500 [29]
In '73, this pro ran for over 2,000 yards
O.J. Simpson
Leo
$500 [21]
You can't "ask the man who owns one" because they aren't made anymore
a Packard
Tom
$500 [11]
'84 hit by Deniece Williams where she sounds like an M.C.
"Let's Hear It For The Boy"
Tom Candy

Double Jeopardy! Round

SHAKESPEARE NOTORIOUS PHOTOGRAPHY VAUDEVILLE WORD ORIGINS THE BIBLE
$200 [17]
Queen who gave her name to Shakespeare's age
Elizabeth I
Candy
$200 [12]
Mehmet Ali Agca, a suspected Bulgarian agent, is notorious for having done this
try and assassinate the pope
Candy
$200 [22]
A basic set of these includes normal, wide-angle & telephoto
lenses
Leo
$200 [2]
Born William Claude Dukenfield, he juggled his way out of Philadelphia
W.C. Fields
Leo
$200 [7]
Adopted by cowboys, this word is from the Spanish "la reata", the rope
a lariat
Tom
$400 [21]
Tree frond the masses used to welcome Jesus into Jerusalem
a palm
Leo
$400 [14]
Troubled Dane who is put to rest with "Goodnight, sweet prince"
Hamlet
Candy
$400 [13]
In 1940, he was killed with an ice pick by Soviet agents in Mexico City
Trotsky
Candy
$600 [25]
Among these settings are 2.8, 4, 5.6 & 8
f-stops
Leo
$400 [3]
"Banjo Eyes"
Eddie Cantor
Tom
$400 [8]
It's from the Old French "novel", from the Latin "nova", from the Greek "neos"
new
Tom
$600 [1]
His "Two Gentlemen" hailed from there
Verona
Tom
$600 [18]
"Hitler had the best answers to everything," said this head of a psychopathic "family"
Charles Manson
Candy
$800 [24]
In 1907, the Lumiere bros. of France took the first successful ones
color photographs
Leo Tom
$600 [4]
Louise, Hovick, Madame Rose's dancing daughter, later dropped her name & petals as this
Gypsy Rose Lee
Tom
$600 [9]
Our word for this blubbery mammal, is from the Danish, who thought it looked like a "whale horse"
a walrus
Leo Tom
$800 [15]
Very valuable first edition of Shakespeare's complete works is known by this name
the First Folio
Candy
$1,000 [20]
Victims of 1929 St. Valentine's Day Massacre had been working for him
Bugs Moran
Leo Candy
$1,000 [23]
What ASA stands for
American Standards Association
Tom Candy
$1,000 [6]
Originally called the "chalk line walk", this dance opened the door for Blacks in vaudeville
the cake walk
Tom Candy
$800 [10]
From Old Spanish for "one who shares a room", which many of these do in the Soviet Union
a comrade
Tom
$1,000 [16]
Royal war on which 4 of Shakespeare's histories were based
the War of the Roses
Candy
DD $1,700 [19]
Hindu cult that killed & robbed in honor of goddess Kali, name now synonymous with hoodlum
the Thuggee or the thugs
Candy
DD $2,000 [5]
Vaudeville "came to an end" when this theater "closed" Nov. 16, 1932
the Palace
Tom
$1,000 [11]
Latin for "to heap up", it's what you do when you "really pile it on"
exaggerate

Final Jeopardy!

20th CENTURY

In 1927, he was named "Time" magazine's first "Man of the Year"

(Charles) Lindbergh

Leo "Who was C. Lindbergh" — wagered $1,000
Tom "Who was Lenin?" — wagered $2,050
Candy "Who was Hover" — wagered $2,390

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