Steve Hall, Nurse & Mr. Mom from Hamden, CT
Dave Fuller, High school teacher from Midlothian, VA (Returning 1-day champ with $32,000)
Tom Walsh, Writer from Washington, D.C. (Returning 7-day champ with $184,900)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
CONNECTICUT
| 1980
| VENTURE "A"
| SHAMPOO
| COLOR
| CUT
|
$200 - Dave (1) At the museum of these in Bristol, it gets very, very noisy on the hour, every hour | (-$200) - Dave $200 - Steve (2) The IRS said the cost of maintaining a cat trained to alert these people to possible dangers is tax deductible | $200 - Tom (11) Him, her, him, him, her ... doesn't matter who | $200 - Tom (27) This company's "No More Tears" baby shampoo comes in bottles ranging in size from 1.5 to 40 fl. oz. | $200 - Dave (14) Light brown, like a file folder; it's traced back to a Philippine seaport | $200 - Steve (21) For his "Redux" of this war film, Francis Ford Coppola added 49 minutes of footage not in the original cut |
$400 - Dave (3) Product that was the specialty of the bakery Harry Lender opened in 1927 in Connecticut | $400 - Tom (4) The only time he was knocked out (TKO) was on October 2, 1980 against Larry Holmes | $400 - Steve (12) It's also called a postmortem | $400 - Dave (28) This 1/4 moisturizer lotion soap now has a shampoo line with weightless moisturizers | $400 - Dave (15) Damson, a shade of purple ( & a heck of a plum), refers to this Syrian city | (-$400) - Tom (22) The trailer for this Hugh Grant - Sandra Bullock film included the "You love him," "I love him?" scene; the film didn't |
(-$600) - Dave (-$600) - Tom (5) Miss Porter's School in Farmington was the alma mater of this Long Island-born First Lady | $600 - Dave (8) (Video) Many fled their homes as a result of this May 18, 1980 event seen here | $600 - Dave (13) Sylvia Plath's "The Bell Jar" is described as this, as it's partially based on incidents in her own life | $600 - Steve (29) Dr. Ruth has shown up in commercials for this shampoo line from Clairol | $600 - Dave (16) Earth of this Tuscany town, raw or burnt, is used to make brown pigments | $600 - Steve (23) The musical number "Human Again", originally cut from this Disney fairy tale, was used in the stage version |
$800 - Tom (6) In the 19th century the ivory imported from Africa into Ivoryton, Connecticut was exported mainly as these DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $800 | $800 - Tom (9) In a race for the governorship of Arkansas Frank D. White beat this incumbent | (-$800) - Dave $800 - Tom (19) Get mad, get really mad | $800 - Dave (30) Its Pro-V line is enriched with pro-vitamin complexes | $800 - Dave (17) The royal family of the Netherlands is the House of this, a small principality now part of Vaucluse in France | $800 - Tom (24) For the "bootleg" director's cut he added 35 more minutes to his "Almost Famous" |
$1000 - Triple Stumper (7) It's about 40 miles from SoHo in Manhattan to SoNo, a commercial district in this Connecticut town | $1000 - Steve (10) Due to their unpopularity the U.S. Mint stopped making them, temporarily, less than a year after their introduction | (-$1000) - Steve (-$1000) - Dave (-$1000) - Tom (20) Bartolomeo Eustachio is considered a founder of the modern version of this science | $1000 - Dave (26) This brand's "Plus" is a "2-in-1" formula that combines shampoo & conditioner | $1000 - Tom (18) Gamboge is a yellow pigment that got its name from its origin in this southeast Asian country | (-$1000) - Tom (25) Her "You Are My Lucky Star" number was cut from "Singin' in the Rain", but it's back on the DVD |
Scores at the first commercial break:
Tom: $1,600
Dave: $1,600
Steve: $1,600
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
Dave: $3,400
Tom: $2,000
Steve: $2,000
Click here for the correct responses.
PSALMS PSUMMARY
| ON THE RADIO
| CLARK BAR
| HOLEY
| FOR BIRD BRAINS
| "CON" GAME
|
$400 - Dave (1) Psalm 3 is "A psalm of" him, "when he fled from Absalom his son" | $400 - Dave (16) The 20th century's top song in U.S. airplay, this one by the Righteous Brothers has been heard over 8 million times | $400 - Dave (19) This "Bandstand" & "Pyramid" host didn't help build the Pyramids; the almanac only carbon-dates him back to 1929 | $400 - Dave (26) According to J.R.R. Tolkien, "In a hole in the ground there lived" one of these | $400 - Triple Stumper (3) One of the practices the "Kama Sutra" says men should master is training these birds to speak | $400 - Steve (2) When it comes to cars, ragtop is slang for this |
$800 - Tom (12) These silver & gold objects that some worship "have mouths, but they speak not; eyes ... but they see not" | $800 - Dave (17) In 1984 L.A.'s KDAY became the USA's first station devoted to this genre of music | $800 - Dave (20) Though considered a co-captain with his partner Meriwether Lewis, he was actually a lieutenant | $800 - Dave (27) You put your Dixon Ticonderoga into a hole called a "chuck" in this device | $800 - Steve (4) Whooping cranes whoop it up mainly on this continent | $800 - Dave (8) Cortes & Balboa were 2 of the most famous of these Spanish military adventurers |
$3000 - Tom (13) Like Psalm 23, Psalm 80 begins by comparing God to this worker DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $3000 | $1200 - Steve (18) Terry Gross' interview show from WHYY in Philadelphia is a breath of this, its title | $1200 - Dave (21) In 1987 she became president of the Mystery Writers of America | $1200 - Steve (28) It was the Indian dungeon in which over 100 British soldiers reputedly perished in June 1756 | $1200 - Steve (5) In 1993 a flock of these followed an ultralight plane from Ontario to Virginia | $1200 - Dave (9) He was the first Roman Emperor to convert to Christianity |
$1600 - Tom (14) In Hebrew Psalm 34 is one of these: its verses begin with the letters alef, bet, gimel ... | $1600 - Tom (24) It airs each Saturday; June 21, 2003's topic was Iraq, June 28's Medicare | (-$1600) - Dave $1600 - Tom (22) A director of London's National Gallery, he introduced the world to art in his TV series "Civilisation" | $1600 - Steve (29) This famous hideout used by Butch Cassidy lent its name to his outlaw gang | $2000 - Steve (6) Once moving in flocks of over a billion, enough to darken the skies, they've sadly been extinct since 1914 DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2000 | $1600 - Tom (10) It's the point where 2 or more rivers join to flow as one |
$2000 - Tom (15) Psalm 37 includes this point about humble people, also made by Jesus on the mount | $2000 - Tom (25) Starting in 1940, the longest continuous sponsorship in broadcast history is this co.'s of The Met on the radio | $2000 - Tom (23) In 1967 he replaced Nicholas Katzenbach as LBJ's Attorney General | $2000 - Steve (30) In children's tales, Winnie the Pooh got stuck in one & Alice fell through one | $2000 - Dave (7) (Video) Named for a prominent feature, it's the bird seen here | $2000 - Triple Stumper (11) (Video) Seen here, this one at the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas is exquisite |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
Tom: $18,200
Steve: $12,400
Dave: $11,000
WORLD GEOGRAPHY
|
This country's coastline, on the Gulf of Aden & the Indian Ocean, is the longest on the African continent
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Dave: $11,000 - $11,000
Steve: $12,400 + $12,400
Tom: $18,200 - $6,600
Final Scores
|
| Steve: $24,800
Tom: $11,600 Dave: $0 |
| Tom: $16,400 (17 right, including 2 DDs & 2 rebounds; 4 wrong)
Steve: $12,000 (14 right, including 1 DD & 1 rebound; 1 wrong) Dave: $11,000 (22 right; 5 wrong) Total: $39,400
|
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