Show #3279 - Thursday, December 3, 1998

Andrew Maly game 4.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Jayne Stallons, a school-to-work coordinator from Waldport, Oregon

Marc Danziger, a self-employed businessman from Redondo Beach, California

Andrew Maly, an environmental engineer from Bel Air, Maryland (whose 3-day cash winnings total $21,700)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

THE OCEAN BLUE
WORLD CUP '98
(Alex: Let's see if you remember that event!)
FAIRIES & WEE FOLK
300 YEARS AGO
BODY LANGUAGE
FABULOUS BAKER BOYS
    $100 6
It may go plankton-crustacean-herring-haddock & be only as strong as its weakest link
    $100 16
There were an average of 2.67 of these a game, not enough for some bored U.S. viewers
    $100 17
This four-leafed plant, a symbol of luck, has the power to break some fairy spells
    $100 1
In 1698, this comet discoverer took a ship called the Paramour Pink on the first purely scientific sea voyage
    $100 11
In days past, a young punk often put "a chip on" this, & dared others to knock it off
    $100 26
Perhaps best known for "Walking Tall", he's more recently been seen in "GoldenEye"
    $200 7
The extension of a land mass to about 500' underwater; it gives way to the Continental Slope
    $200 19
This country's win over the "Great Satan" knocked the U.S. out of contention for the second round
    $200 18
Pixies frolic in southwestern England, especially in this part where the Cornish people live
    $200 2
In 1698, colonists from this European country got refreshment by making Pensacola....Florida, that is
    $200 12
To sense something intuitively is to "feel it in" these calcium storehouses
    $200 27
He won one Pulitzer Prize in 1979 for his New York Times column & one in 1983 for his autobiography
    DD: $500 8
(Hi, I'm Michael Newman of Baywatch.) It's the Japanese term for seismic sea waves, sometimes 100 feet high, that can bring lots of tsuris
    $300 20
Argentina didn't "kick" about this controversial tie-breaking method after using it to beat England
    $300 23
Resembling trolls, trows live in these Scottish islands famous for their small ponies
    $300 3
This architect who rebuilt London after the Great Fire of 1666 saw his work on Whitehall Palace burned in 1698
    $300 13
When you act out of pique & harm yourself in the process, you "cut off" this "to spite your face"
    $300 28
Type of hit that won Frank Baker his nickname when he hit 2 in the 1911 World Series
    $400 9
The photic zone is the upper ocean layer, with enough sunlight to allow this plant process
    $400 21
Only in France: the pre-game show at the final was a tribute to this "saint"ly fashion designer
    $400 24
Of all Shakespeare's plays, this one has the most fairies
    $400 4
In 1698 this Russian czar founded Taganrog; 5 years later he founded a better-known port
    $400 14
A fearsome foe is said to be "armed to" these body parts -- scary!
    $400 29
Trumpet-playing Baker seen here
    $500 10
As you'd expect, they're the 2 most abundant chemical elements in the dissolved solids found in seawater
    $500 22
It was a good July for this country: they reached the World Cup semis & Goran Ivanisevic made the Wimbledon final
    $500 25
You might want to hobnob with these mischiefmakers whose name begins with "hob"
    $500 5
Thomas Savery patented the first practical version of this machine, intending to use it in mines
    $500 15
Insincere words not backed up by deeds are this type of "service"
    $500 30
He's the Baker who played drums for Cream

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 13):

Andrew Marc Jayne
$1,400 $2,400 $0

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Andrew Marc Jayne
$4,100 $3,800 -$300

Double Jeopardy! Round

CANTERBURY TALE TELLERS
MAY-DECEMBER MOVIES
MEDICINE
TRAVEL EUROPE
"N" THE DICTIONARY
FABULOUS BAKER GIRLS
    $200 18
The prioress wears a brooch inscribed with a Latin phrase meaning this "conquers all"
    $200 11
Middle-aged Marlon Brando & young Maria Schneider are lovers in this 1972 Bertolucci work
    $200 1
This symbol on a prescription is thought to represent the Latin word "recipe"
    $200 16
This Swiss city's Clock & Watch Museum on Rue de Malagnou is open daily except Tues., 10 A.M. - 5 P.M.; be punctual
    $200 6
It's a female goat, whether or not she takes care of your children
    $200 26
Rather than a souffle, George Washington's mom made this spice bread when Lafayette came calling
    $400 19
The wife of Bath, 5 times a widow & a world traveler, has made 3 trips to this holy Mideast city
    $400 12
This 1971 cult film's title characters were a 20-year-old (Bud Cort) & a 79-year old (Ruth Gordon)
    $400 2
Today, most commercial varieties of this antibiotic are produced by the mold p. chrysogenum
    $400 17
Locals call this capital's Kurfurstendamm Street Ku'damm for short
    $400 7
Bedtime headgear, or a bedtime beverage
    $400 27
In 1949 Theodora Smafield's water-rising twists won the first of these competitions
    $600 20
The first to tell a tale is this medieval fighting man, & it's one to remember
    $600 13
In "Atlantic City", Burt Lancaster watches her rub herself with lemons & falls in love
    DD: $1,000 3
The 2-word name of this disorder comes from Greek & Latin words meaning "without appetite" & "nervous"
    $600 21
Due to damage caused by air pollution & tourism you can't go inside this temple atop the Acropolis
    $600 8
Attention, Mister Rogers: Nabe, which is slang for a local movie theater, is short for this
    DD: $1,000 28
Margaret Rudkin named this company after her family's farm in Connecticut
    $800 24
John, the nun's priest, tells the tale of Chanticleer, one of these animals
    $800 14
In 1985's "Murphy's Romance", this actor romanced Sally Field
    $800 4
In 1543 this Flemish anatomist published his "On The Structure of the Human Body"
    $800 22
You'll find Seville & Granada in this region of southern Spain
    $800 9
Tidy, or how I like my whiskey
    $1000 25
An album by Sting had 10 of his tales; the Chaucer book, 1
    $1000 15
The 1955 film "Daddy Long Legs" paired Fred Astaire & this French actress 32 years younger
    $1000 5
In the 2nd century, this Greek showed that arteries carry blood, not air as had been thought
    $1000 23
While in Florence try a cono or coppa of this, Italian for "ice cream"
    $1000 10
Hunt for a synonym for "hunter" & you'll find this hunter mentioned in Genesis 10

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Andrew Marc Jayne
$6,100 $6,000 $900

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

HOLIDAYS
It's observed on March 7 in California, March 26 in Spain & April 22 in Nebraska

Final scores:

Andrew Marc Jayne
$12,100 $2,000 $1
4-day champion: $33,800 2nd place: Trip to Atlantis Resort & Casino, Paradise Island, Bahamas 3rd place: Panasonic DVD Player

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Andrew Marc Jayne
$5,500 $7,000 $900
20 R
(including 2 DDs),
3 W
20 R,
3 W
(including 1 DD)
6 R,
3 W

Combined Coryat: $13,400

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

Game tape date: 1998-10-07
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.