Show #474 1986-10-02 (taped 1986-08-13) Regular

Contestants

John Waukechon — a teacher originally from Lafayette, Indiana

Carl Brady — a U.S. Navy flight officer originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Anne Summers — a housewife originally from Calgary, Canada (whose 1-day cash winnings total $7,000)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Anne $400 $-100 $4,100 $4,100
2nd place: trip on Eastern to the Caribbean & stay at the Bahamas Princess Resort & Casino
$4,100
12 R, 5 W
Carl $1,100 $1,300 $6,100 $6,000
New champion: $6,000
$6,100
17 R (including 1 DD), 4 W (including 1 DD)
John $200 $300 $3,000 $0
3rd place: Frigidaire washer & dryer
$3,300
9 R, 3 W (including 1 DD)

Jeopardy! Round

BOOKS & AUTHORS TRIVIA VIRGINIA THE CALENDAR SILLY SONGS "GIVE" & "TAKE"
$100 [1]
Richard Condon novel about a hit man & a hit woman that became a movie hit
Prizzi's Honor
John
$100 [8]
When a phonograph record is playing, it turns in this direction
clockwise
Anne
$100 [21]
He was born in Virginia, but became 1st President of Texas, where a city bears his name
(Sam) Houston
Carl John
$100 [2]
In 1986, it began at 2 a.m. April 27
daylight saving time
Anne
$100 [15]
Completes Little Anthony & the Imperials' title, "Shimmy, Shimmy,..."
"Ko-Ko-Bop"
$100 [3]
An aircraft's initial ascent
takeoff
John
$200 [9]
In his novel "The Lost World", explorers face dinosaurs & missing links, but not Dr. Moriarty
Dr. Conan Doyle
Anne
$200 [11]
Born Jan. 7, 1978, Emilio Palma was the 1st person born on this continent
Antarctica
Carl
$200 [22]
"Falcon Crest" creator Earl Hamner's ancestors came to Va. to start a winery for this tall president
Thomas Jefferson
Carl
$200 [16]
There's a minimum of one Friday the 13th a year & a maximum of this many
3
Anne John
$200 [4]
The moniker you get at birth
your given name
Carl
$300 [10]
Leon Uris novel whose title refers to a London law court--a "Queen's Bench"
QB VII
Carl
$300 [12]
Member of The Beatles who's now a grandfather
Ringo Starr
Anne
DD $200 [24]
Richmond siblings born 3 years apart who won Oscars 2 years apart, he for directing, she for acting
Warren Beatty & Shirley MacLaine
Carl
$300 [17]
2 of the 3 months named for goddesses
(2 of) April, May & June
John
$300 [5]
What fathers do with brides & game show hosts do with prizes
give them away
Anne
$400 [13]
Georgi Markov, author of "The Truth that Killed", was murdered with a poison-tipped version of this
an umbrella
Anne
$400 [19]
Same day Lou Gehrig's 2130 consecutive game streak ended, this 1939-40 event opened in New York
the New York World's Fair
Anne Carl
$300 [23]
Aptly born at Studley Plantation, this Revolutionary orator had 17 children
Patrick Henry
Anne Carl
$400 [18]
The Gregorian calendar is referred to as "the new style" while this calendar is "the old style"
the Julian calendar
Anne
$400 [6]
Small as it may be, it's your wages after deductions
take home pay
Carl
$500 [14]
A good ear for the angst of suburban dialog characterizes this author's "Rabbit" novels
John Updike
John
$500 [20]
The 1st national exposition of these was held in Madison Square Garden in 1900
automobiles
$500 [7]
A type of informatory bid or call in bridge
a takeout double

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE MILITARY SPAIN HISTORIC NAMES WEATHER ACTORS & ROLES IN OTHER WORDS...
$200 [2]
1st U.S. ground troops used in Vietnam were from this service
the U.S. Marines
Carl
$200 [22]
Salad dressing named for the capital of the isle of Minorca, Mahon
mayonnaise
John
$200 [16]
He came to power in Italy 11 years before Hitler did in Germany
Mussolini
Carl
$200 [21]
In the U.S., thunderstorms are most frequent during this season
summer
Anne
$200 [1]
In 1983, she & Richard Burton exposed their "Private Lives" on Broadway
Elizabeth Taylor
Carl
$200 [7]
Ill tidings cover ground quickly
bad news travels fast
Anne
$400 [3]
Total military strength of U.S., about 2 mil., is well below this country's strength of over 5 million
the Soviet Union
Carl
DD $300 [24]
City for which this song is named:["Instrumental music plays"]
Granada
John
$400 [17]
One of his most famous acts of civil disobedience was scooping up sea water to make salt
Gandhi
Carl
$400 [12]
Don Ameche's 1-word answer when asked if any of his pre-"Cocoon" films should have won an Oscar
No
John
$400 [8]
Battle combustion by using combustion
fighting fire with fire
Carl
$600 [4]
Current name of service branch started in 1907 with 1 officer & 2 enlisted men as part of Army Signal Corps
the United States Air Force
Carl
$400 [23]
Madrid's national museum of painting & sculpture is known by this name
the Prado
John
$600 [18]
While Margaret Thatcher is Britain's "Iron Lady", he was Germany's "Iron Chancellor"
Bismarck
Anne
$600 [13]
Charlton Heston thinks this distinctive part of his anatomy helped win him the role of Moses
his nose
Anne
$600 [9]
Excuse this person, lad, could yonder object be a train to Tennessee's 4th largest city?
Pardon me, boy, but is that the Chattanooga Choo Choo
Carl
DD $1,000 [5]
Harold Brown, Elliot Richardson, & Clark Clifford
Secretaries of Defense
Carl
$800 [25]
Capital of Republican Spain for much of the Civil War, its Jan. 1939 fall assured Franco victory
Barcelona
$800 [19]
He worked as a candlemaker on Staten Island, N.Y. before returning to Italy to help reunify it
(Giuseppe) Garibaldi
Anne
$800 [14]
The 3 Barrymore siblings, they co-starred in "Rasputin & the Empress", their only film together
Ethel, John & Lionel
Anne
$800 [10]
Precipitation, precipitation, disappear, return on a different 1/365 of a year
rain, rain, go away, please come again another day
Carl
$1,000 [6]
The lowest rank among admirals in the U.S. Navy
rear admirals
John
$1,000 [20]
While living in NYC, Jose Marti, "Apostle of Latino Nationalism," worked for this country's freedom
Cuba
Carl
$1,000 [15]
As an Indian in 1922's "Last of the Mohicans" he bared his chest, but he gained fame baring his fangs
Bela Lugosi
John
$1,000 [11]
Homo sapiens bids, the supreme being rids
man proposes, God disposes
Anne Carl

Final Jeopardy!

THE UNITED NATIONS

City in which the United Nations Charter was signed in 1945

San Francisco

John "What was Paris?" — wagered $3,000
Anne "What was San Francisco?" — wagered $0
Carl "What is The Hague" — wagered $100

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