Show #1071 1989-04-10 (taped 1988-12-13) Regular

Contestants

Jim Breed — a mechanical engineer from Kansas City, Missouri

Carol Mack — a banker from New York City, New York

Dusten Galbraith — a quality assurance specialist originally from Moline, Illinois (whose 1-day cash winnings total $1,799)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Dusten $1,400 $1,600 $2,400 $4,799
2nd place: Pulaski Ridgeway time tell table + Bob Mitchell wall coverings
$2,400
12 R, 2 W
Carol $400 $1,600 $-1,700 $-1,700
3rd place: Bernardaud Limoges porcelain dinnerware
$-200
9 R, 5 W (including 1 DD)
Jim $1,000 $5,300 $11,500 $11,499
New champion: $11,499
$9,200
22 R (including 2 DDs), 1 W

Jeopardy! Round

SHIPS MOVIE TRIVIA ANAGRAMS DRUMMERS LIBRARIES POT CLUCK
$100 [9]
Flying Cloud, Cutty Sark & Sea Witch are all examples of this mid 19th c. speedy merchant ship
a clipper ship
Dusten
$100 [19]
Patrick Curtis, who played Melanie's baby in this 1939 film, grew up to marry Raquel Welch
Gone with the Wind
Jim
$100 [2]
When she fell down in the soil, she asked Clark to help her up
Lois (from soil)
Jim
$100 [3]
You may not have heard of drummer Max Weinberg, but this guy's his "Boss"
Bruce Springsteen
Carol
$100 [4]
Ground breaking took place in 1988 in California for these 2 presidential libraries
the Nixon & the Reagan Libraries
Jim
$100 [1]
Chickens raised for egg production are called layers; those raised for their meat, this
a roaster (broiler)
Carol
$200 [10]
The Vikings improved the sailing ability of ships by adding this long, narrow piece to the underside
a keel
Carol
$200 [20]
This Woody Allen film was partially set in the Stardust hotel
Stardust Memories
Jim
$200 [24]
As a cartographer, Pam can make one of these in an hour
a map (from Pam)
Dusten
$300 [16]
Once a studio drummer, he later used pistols for percussion with his "City Slickers"
Spike Jones
Jim
$200 [5]
This London museum's huge circular reading room was a major innovation in library design
the British Museum
$200 [11]
Some sportsmen use the feathers from the back of the chicken's neck to make these
flies for fishing
Jim
$300 [21]
Charlton Heston starred in this film about the 1885 siege of the capital of the Sudan
Khartoum
Jim
$300 [25]
What a daughter named Meg may be to a lapidary
a gem (from Meg)
Carol
$400 [17]
Rolling Stones drummer who spent 1987 leading--or what is backing?--a 32-piece jazz orchestra
Charlie Watts
$300 [6]
The oldest of the 3 buildings which house the Library of Congress is named for this president
Thomas Jefferson
Jim
$300 [12]
Fed a special diet, Rosemary Farm's hens lay eggs that have about 1/2 the normal amount of this
cholesterol
Jim
$400 [22]
Susan Sarandon rubbed these on her body in "Atlantic City", as Burt Lancaster could tell you
lemons
Carol
$400 [26]
In Kenya, it's illegal to kill this animal with a gun
a gnu (from gun)
Jim
$500 [18]
Sal Mineo played this big band drummer in a 1959 biopic
Gene Krupa
Jim
$400 [7]
It's believed these manuscripts were part of a library kept by the Essenes, an ancient Jewish sect
the Dead Sea Scrolls
Dusten
$400 [13]
When Republicans promised this in 1932, the cost of cluck was 8 times chuck
a chicken in every pot
Dusten
$500 [23]
School girls disappeared mysteriously in "Picnic at Hanging Rock", filmed in this country
Australia
Carol
$500 [27]
If you practiced the ukulele a lot in Cambodia, you might now be "A UKE CHAMP" here
Kampuchea (from "A UKE CHAMP")
Jim
DD $1,500 [15]
1960s British Invasion drummer heardplaying here, he died in 1978:"I can see for miles and miles / I can see for miles and miles / I can see for miles and miles..."
Keith Moon
Jim
$500 [8]
Nicholas V started amassing manuscripts for this library the 15th century
the Vatican Library
Dusten
$500 [14]
Cornell U. found this composer's "Winter" concerto calmed chickens & "Spring" got them up & about
Vivaldi
Jim

Double Jeopardy! Round

U.S. HISTORY LITERARY TITLES FAMOUS FEMINISTS GEOLOGY HATS & HEADGEAR AFRICA
$200 [6]
Though his 1964 election was a landslide, his name didn't even appear on the Alabama ballot
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Jim
$200 [11]
Its alternate title is "The Whale"
Moby-Dick
Dusten
$200 [21]
Told she didn't look 40 years old in 1974, this glamorous feminist said, "This is what 40 looks like"
Gloria Steinem
Dusten
$200 [1]
Alternate name of silicified wood, it sounds as if it was scared stiff
petrified wood
Dusten
$200 [12]
Some say its name is from the "galloon", or braid, around its crown; others say from how much it held
a 10-gallon hat
Carol
$800 [25]
Zaire, a country more than 3 times the size of Texas, has only some 25 miles of coast on this ocean
the Atlantic
Dusten
$400 [7]
The illegal leasing of oil reserves at this Wyoming site caused a tempest around Harding's administration
Teapot Dome
Dusten
$400 [17]
"Dread: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp" was her 2nd anti-slavery novel
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Carol
$400 [23]
Victoria Woodhull did this in 1872, though women couldn't even vote yet
run for president
Dusten Carol
$400 [2]
Term for one of the Earth's main land masses, by current count we have 7 of them
continents
Dusten
$400 [13]
A flat-brimmed straw hat worn by & named for fellows who enjoy a good row
a boater
Jim
$1,000 [24]
This South African desert covers half of Botswana & eastern Namibia
the Kalahari
Carol
$600 [8]
Name of the law enacted to enforce the 18th, or Prohibition, Amendment
the Volstead Act
Jim
$800 [19]
"The 42nd Parallel", "1919" & "The Big Money" form this trilogy
the U.S.A. trilogy
$1,000 [22]
Simone de Beauvoir wrote this definitive analysis of the secondary status of woman
The Second Sex
Jim
$600 [3]
Of the mesosphere, lithosphere or atmosphere the one you're standing on
the lithosphere
Dusten Jim
$600 [14]
The room in which you're most likely to see someone wearing a tall white hat called a "toque"
a kitchen
Jim
$800 [9]
Samuel Gompers, who practiced this trade, went on to lead the American Federation of Labor
a cigar maker
Carol
$1,000 [20]
The sequels to this Dumas classic were "Twenty Years After" & "The Viscount of Bragelonne"
The Three Musketeers
Carol
$800 [4]
A lot of island, mountains or volcanoes linked together in a row
a chain
Dusten
$800 [15]
A lacy head scarf worn by a lady of Spain
a mantilla
Carol
DD $2,000 [10]
He won the disputed 1876 election when awarded the votes of Fla., S.C. & La.
Rutherford B. Hayes
Jim
DD $1,500 [18]
This Stephen V. Benét story pitted a famous American lawyer against a certain Mr. Scratch
"The Devil and Daniel Webster"
Carol
$1,000 [5]
Fancy French term for a fissure, as in a glacier
a crevasse
Jim
$1,000 [16]
The tall headdress worn by bishops both on & off the chessboard
a miter
Jim

Final Jeopardy!

WORLD CITIES

With over 2 million people, it's the largest city in the West Indies

Havana, Cuba

Dusten "What is Havana?" — wagered $2,399
Jim "What is San Juan?" — wagered $1

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