Show #1070 1989-04-07 (taped 1988-12-12) Regular

Contestants

John Dietrich — a graduate student from Arlington, Texas

Dusten Galbraith — a quality assurance specialist originally from Moline, Illinois

Carol Young — a stage manager originally from Easton, Connecticut (whose 2-day cash winnings total $12,600)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Carol $0 $1,900 $5,300 $0
3rd place: Lucien Piccard his & hers watches
$5,300
16 R, 2 W
Dusten $500 $2,600 $6,200 $1,799
New champion: $1,799
$5,200
17 R (including 1 DD), 1 W
John $1,000 $1,300 $3,300 $100
2nd place: trip on Continental to Honolulu & stay at the Waikiki Marina Hotel
$3,800
13 R (including 1 DD), 3 W (including 1 DD)

Jeopardy! Round

STARTS WITH "DI" SCIENCE RELIGION '70s TV WORD ORIGINS "GOOD" PEOPLE
$100 [16]
Mae West gave a "gem" of a performance in the title role of this play which she'd written
Diamond Lil
Dusten
$100 [4]
In the 1st century A.D. the Chinese invented the 1st seismometer to detect these
earthquakes
Dusten
$100 [9]
The Druids believed this was immortal & passed at death from one person to another
the soul
Dusten
$100 [15]
"Galactica 1980" was a sequel to this 1970s series
Battlestar Galactica
Carol
$100 [14]
The Dutch word for "donkey" or "ass" gave us this word for a support used by an artist
an easel
Dusten
$100 [1]
At age 20, this Mets pitcher became the youngest player ever to receive the Cy Young Award
Dwight Gooden
$200 [18]
In a fight a boxer might take one, & after losing the match he might get drunk in one
a dive
Carol
$200 [5]
The outbreak of fire without application of heat from an external source
spontaneous combustion
John
$200 [10]
This Protestant denomination became the official Danish religion in 1536
Lutheranism
John
$200 [17]
1 of the 2 current network prime time soaps that debuted in the '70s
Dallas (or Knots Landing )
Carol
$200 [24]
This word for fabric fuzz is short for the Latin for "linen cloth"
lint
John
$200 [2]
He was chief counsel for the NAACP before being appointed to the Supreme Court
Thurgood Marshall
John
$300 [19]
Ned Buntline's books for example
dime novels
Dusten
$300 [6]
Pythons don't use their teeth for chewing but for this
holding
Dusten
$300 [11]
The current holder of this religious title was born in China in 1935 & fled to exile in India in 1959
the Dalai Lama
John
$300 [20]
When "Rhoda" ended in 1978, he was the only "Mary Tyler Moore Show" character left on TV
Lou Grant
Carol Dusten John
$300 [25]
From the Latin for "earth", it's a deep covered dish used to serve soup
tureen
Carol
DD $300 [3]
Rubber manufacturer who was named for Benjamin Franklin
B.F. Goodrich
John
$400 [23]
Legend says he searched Athens by day with a lighted lantern saying, "I am looking for an honest man"
Diogenes
John
$400 [7]
The Mohorovicic discontinuity separates the crust from this middle layer of the Earth
the mantle
John
$400 [12]
In this folk religion, the "Loa" deities can be African gods or Catholic saints
Voodoo
$400 [21]
The kids in this TV family were named Tracy, Chris, Danny, Laurie & Keith
the Partridge Family
Dusten
$400 [26]
From the Greek word for "getting out", it's a performer who gets out of her clothes
an ecdysiast
Dusten
$400 [28]
This "Goode" guy is the mayor of Philadelphia
Wilson Goode
Carol
$500 [29]
This adjective means fine or delicate of texture, like chiffon
diaphanous
Carol
$500 [8]
In 1895 J.J. Thomson discovered this small particle of the atom
the electron
$500 [13]
This island country is the most populous Muslim nation in the world
Indonesia
$500 [22]
In "Switch", Eddie Albert played the ex-cop, & he starred as the ex-con man
Robert Wagner
Carol
$500 [27]
A Latin word for a worm gives us this term for gilded bronze, copper or silver
vermeil
$500 [30]
CBS Radio corr. Charles who occasionally reads news commentary in rhyme from his "File"
Charles Osgood
Dusten

Double Jeopardy! Round

ART U.S. CITIES CHILDREN'S LITERATURE EMPRESSES MOVIE CLASSICS "BAD" PEOPLE
$200 [1]
He carved the "Florence Pietà" for his own tomb
Michelangelo
Dusten
$200 [2]
Treasure Island in this city's bay was built for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition
San Francisco
John
$200 [10]
One of his 1st fairy tales was "The Princess & the Pea", & he wrote 167 others
Hans Christian Andersen
John
$200 [26]
Agrippina was Claudius' wife, Caligula's sister & the mother of this alleged fiddler
Nero
Carol
$200 [16]
Rock Hudson's only Oscar nomination was for this "big" 1956 film set in Texas
Giant
Carol
$200 [5]
In some versions, this "Arabian Nights" sailor tells his story to a character named Hindbad
Sinbad
Dusten
$400 [3]
Kinetic art is designed to do this
move
John
$400 [15]
The Creole Queen & Cotton Blossom are paddle-wheelers offering short cruises near this major U.S. city
New Orleans
Carol
$400 [11]
If you threatened him, the Cowardly Lion might tell you this author's first name was Lyman
L. Frank Baum
Carol
$400 [27]
When he became emperor in 1926, his wife, Princess Nagako, became an empress
Hirohito
Carol
$400 [17]
Edward G. Robinson held Bogart & Bacall captive on this state's "Key Largo"
Florida
Dusten
$400 [6]
Natasha Fatale was this cartoon character's henchperson
Boris Badenov
Carol
$600 [4]
His real name was Tiziano Vecellio, & he's famous for using an auburn shade that was named for him
Titian
Carol
$600 [23]
City located just north & across the river from Windsor, Ontario
Detroit
Dusten
$600 [12]
This book about a Dutch boy was 1st published the year our Civil War ended
The Silver Skates ( Hans Brinker )
John
$600 [28]
Her misrule while her husband was away during WWI contributed to the downfall of imperial Russia
Alexandra
Carol Dusten
$600 [18]
At the end of this 1953 film set in 1941, Deborah Karr threw her leis overboard as she left Hawaii
From Here to Eternity
Carol
$600 [7]
"Ev'ry morning at the mine you could see him arrive, he stood 6-foot-6 & weighed 245..."
Big Bad John
Dusten
$800 [13]
This comedian, the son of a circus clown, paints portraits of circus clowns
Red Skelton
Dusten
$1,000 [25]
John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil in this city on Lake Erie
Cleveland
John
$800 [20]
He 1st wrote about Dr. Dolittle in letters he sent home to his children during WWI
Hugh Lofting
$800 [29]
This Caribbean cutie narrowly escaped the guillotine but lived to become Napoleon's 1st empress
Josephine
John
$800 [19]
1942's "This Gun for Hire" was the 1st film that teamed Alan Ladd with this slinky blonde
Veronica Lake
$800 [8]
Last name of sisters Angela & Hermione who played servants, one on "Upstairs Downstairs", the other on "Maude"
Baddeley
Carol
DD $800 [14]
After these two 19th century lithographers died, their sons continued the partnership
Currier & Ives
John
DD $1,800 [24]
This city's name is a combination of the Sioux word for water & the Greek word for city
Minneapolis
Dusten
$1,000 [21]
This 17th century French critic's collection of fairy tales popularized the story of Cinderella
Charles Perrault
$1,000 [30]
By our count, this empress married 2 counts after her husband Napoleon died
Marie Louise
$1,000 [22]
Hitchcock's favorite film, "Shadow of a Doubt", starred this man as Teresa Wright's murderous uncle
Joseph Cotten
$1,000 [9]
Actress Mary of "To Kill a Mockingbird" & director John of "Saturday Night Fever" share this last name
Badham

Final Jeopardy!

U.S. PRESIDENTS

The 3 presidents, besides Bush, whose last names contain only 4 letters

William Taft, Gerald Ford & James Polk

John "Who are Taft, Polk, and ?" — wagered $3,200
Carol "Who are Polk, Ford and" — wagered $5,300
Dusten "Who were Taft," — wagered $4,401

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