Show #1099 - Thursday, May 18, 1989

1989 College Championship final game 1.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Linda Krisak, a sophomore from Case Western Reserve University

Alex Yang, a senior from Tulane University

Tom Cubbage, a senior from Southern Methodist Univeristy

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

STARTS WITH "B"
BIRDS
SEE THE USA
PSYCHOLOGY
FASHION HISTORY
THE SPORT PLAYED
    $100 21
Despite its name, you don't have to be single to earn one of these degrees
    $100 20
The ancient Romans thought this TV network symbol a great delicacy roasted & served in its feathers
    $100 9
Famous home, now a museum, that's located on Elvis Presley Boulevard in Memphis, Tenn.
    $100 11
Carl Jung thought this "Father of Psychoanalysis" had a father complex
    $100 4
In the 1700s fashionable men wore three-cornered ones
    $100 1
Michael Jordan, Larry Bird & Earvin "Magic" Johnson
    $200 22
It commonly precedes hound, lust & sucker
    $200 27
A 56 ft. one of these atop a fast food restaurant in Marietta, Ga. is a local landmark
    $200 12
You can see Mister Rogers' sweater & this TV character's leather jacket at the Smithsonian
    $200 16
This term for thought-reform through propaganda & intimidation is from the Korean War era
    $200 5
The cardinal was a hooded cloak of this color, as its name suggests
    $200 2
Matt Biondi, Janet Evans & Kristin Otto
    $300 24
In Ancient Egypt both kings & queens wore false metal ones as a sign of sovereignty
    $300 28
Branch of zoology that's the scientific study of birds
    $300 13
London Bridge was falling down, so it was moved & rebuilt in this state's Lake Havasu City
    $300 17
Pavlov's dogs exhibited this conditioned reflex at the sound of a bell
    $300 6
This fancy term for ladies' underwear comes from the Latin meaning "made of linen"
    $300 3
Jose Canseco, Roger Clemens & Darryl Strawberry
    $400 25
This word can refer to an Irish accent or an Irish shoe
    $400 29
The most expensive commercial leather from a bird comes from this one
    $400 14
The famous 17-Mile Drive is located on this California peninsula
    DD: $400 18
French for "already seen", it's that funny feeling you've lived through something before
    $400 10
Short skirts, bobbed hair & extremely low waistlines 1st came into style in the U.S. during this decade
    $400 7
Eric Dickerson, Bernie Kosar & Joe Montana
    $500 26
A glass vessel designed to cover & protect, it's also the title of a Sylvia Plath novel
    $500 30
The name of this chattering crow is partly from a nickname for Margaret
    $500 15
Signs warning hikers in these N.H. Mts. say, "Stop. The area ahead has the worst weather in America"
    $500 19
The false belief that everybody's picking on you
    $500 23
Elizabethans wore rabatos, which were wide, lace-edged ones stiffened to stand up high in the bak
    $500 8
Rick Mears, Bobby Allison & Richard Petty

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 16):

Tom Alex Linda
$2,100 $600 $300

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Tom Alex Linda
$3,700 $1,500 $2,200

Double Jeopardy! Round

PRESIDENTS
ENGLISH LITERATURE
TECHNOLOGY
LAKES & RIVERS
CLASSICAL MUSIC
FAMOUS STUDENTS
    $200 11
Wilson was our last president born in Virginia, & he was our first
    $200 5
He wrote "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", a children's story as well as the James Bond novels
    $200 26
Each year, Idaho sends samples of this crop to California's Camp Pendleton to be tested for disease
    $200 21
If the new London bridge in England, not Arizona, fell down. it would fall into this river
    $200 6
Type of fairy that Tchaikovsky set a-dancing in "The Nutcracker"
    $200 14
She was at UCLA on a basketball scholarship when Bob Kersee discovered her track & field talents
    $400 12
He was the 1st president to only serve one term
    $400 7
This country's 1930s civil war was the setting for Graham Greene's "The Confidential Agent"
    $400 27
Also called an electronic oven, it uses high-frequency electromagnetic waves to heat food
    $400 22
To get to Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral you have to cross a bridge over this river
    $400 4
The Hallelujah Chorus is found at the end of Part II of this Handel work
    $400 16
At his academy he reiterated what he'd learned from Socrates & sometimes adapted his ideas
    $600 13
While serving as this man's vice president, Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton
    DD: $1,000 8
The title of this 1872 Samuel Butler novel, published anonymously, is an anagram for "nowhere"
    $600 28
In Jan. 1988 this company announced it would sell VHS format VCRs in addition to Betamax
    $600 23
This lake on the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border sounds like a watering hole for Santa's sleigh team
    $600 3
Bach's set of repetitive pieces designed to show contrapuntal technique is called "The art of" this
    $600 18
He studied directing at NYU under M. Scorsese & was an "absolutely mahvelous" student
    $800 15
Teddy Roosevelt became president upon his assassination
    $800 9
Mr. Lockwood, a tenant of Thrushcross Grange, narrates this Emily Bronte story
    $800 29
In 1978 the Double Eagle II became the 1st gas-filled craft of this type to cross the Atlantic
    $800 24
During the 16th c. Ivan IV claimed all of this great river's valley for Russia
    DD: $1,000 2
Spanish city in the title of the opera that gave us the following aria...
    $800 19
At Cornell, "Gravity's Rainbow" author Thomas Pynchon studied under this author of "Lolita"
    $1000 17
The only president whose father was a signer of the Declaration of Independence
    $1000 10
Her 1st novel "Sense & Sensibility", was published 2 years before "Pride & Prejudice"
    $1000 30
Some 85% of water used in the western U.S. is used for this purpose
    $1000 25
Though the Nile is longer, this 2nd longest river in Africa carries more water
    $1000 1
This composer died before finishing "The Tales of Hoffmann"; Ernest Guiraud finished it
    $1000 20
In Yale, he was in Robert Penn Warren's creative writing class; now he runs NBC TV

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Tom Alex Linda
$11,700 $8,100 $5,400

Final Jeopardy! Round

EUROPE
Alphabetically it's the 1st member of both the European Community & NATO

Final scores:

Tom Alex Linda
$17,400 $10,100 $3,400

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Tom Alex Linda
$11,300 $7,900 $5,400
28 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
14 R
(including 1 DD),
0 W
15 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W

Combined Coryat: $24,600

[game responses] [game scores] [suggest correction]

Game tape date: 1989-04-09
The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.