Here are today's contestants:
- Jacqui Kaplan, a high school English teacher from Sandy Hook, Connecticut;
- Joseph Carlstein, a graduate student from Chapel Hill, North Carolina; and
- John Liu, a marketing analyst from Santa Monica, California. John is a one-day champ with winnings of $7,801.
Jeopardy!
HISTORIC AMERICANS // SHE'S GOT THE POWER // UTOPIA // WHERE TO GO WHEN... // 1980s CATCHPHRASES // SPEAKING REVERSIBLY
DD1 - $800 - HISTORIC AMERICANS - At his death in 1915 this school founder was laid to rest in a tomb built by students, on a hill overlooking the Tuskegee campus (Joseph doubled to $4,000.)
Scores at first break: John $200, Joseph $5,200, Jacqui $1,200.
Scores entering DJ: John $1,800, Joseph $5,600, Jacqui $2,800.
Double Jeopardy!
THAT'S A REALLY BIG DITCH! // FRENCH AUTHORS // "B" IN SCIENCE // NO, NOT THE DOG // SONGS // BEFORE & AFTER
DD2 - $2,000 - THAT'S A REALLY BIG DITCH! - This canyon sinks about 8,000 feet below the rim to the Snake River below on the Oregon-Idaho border (John dropped $2,000 from his score of $7,000 vs. $5,600 for Joseph.)
DD3 - $1,200 - NO, NOT THE DOG - Charles Darwin sailed around the world in this ship from 1831 to 1836 (Joseph added $2,400 to his total of $7,600 vs. $5,000 for John.)
John missed his lone DD opportunity while Joseph was correct on both of his, allowing Joseph to lead into FJ at $10,000 vs. $8,000 for Jacqui and $7,000 for John.
Final Jeopardy!
ARTIFACTS - Roughly, 180 of these were made & 50 remain; the man who created them was given a pension by the Archbishop of Mainz in 1465
Joseph and John were correct on FJ. Joseph added $6,001 to win with $16,001.
Final scores: John $13,999, Joseph $16,001, Jacqui $2,000.
Missing the layup: For a clue about automaker CEO Mara Barra's timetable for going all-electric, after John missed with Ford, his opponents didn't take a guess with General Motors.
Wagering strategy: By betting nearly everything from a close third place in FJ, John forced himself to be correct to have a chance to win, while with a much smaller bet, he could have won if both opponents missed without having to be correct himself.
Pedantry corner: In the FJ clue, they really didn't need a comma between "Roughly" and "180". Placing a comma there suggests the items were made in a rough manner.
Correct Qs: DD1 - Who was Booker T. Washington? DD2 - What is Hell's Canyon? DD3 - What is Beagle? FJ - What are Gutenberg Bibles?
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