Show #3294 - Thursday, December 24, 1998

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Dave Argentar, an attorney from Chicago, Illinois

Devon Thomas, a librarian from Chelsea, Michigan

John Hurst, a musician from Swarthmore, Pennsylvania (whose 1-day cash winnings total $8,200)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

CRICKETS
PEOPLE & PLACES
DISNEY MOVIES
STORES WITHOUT WALLS
FISHY ANAGRAMS
LET'S GO TO A MUSEUM
    $100 18
When you hear the snowy tree cricket, count the chirps in 15 seconds & add 40 to get this
    $100 1
This term for a British person or British sailor comes from the citrus juice once drunk to ward off scurvy
    $100 4
Disney World has a miniature golf course named for this film that featured Mickey as the Sorcerer's Apprentice
    $100 9
Online, this mail-order "house" partly owned by Sony offers 12 CDs not for a penny but for free
    $100 23
Sometimes you feel like "a nut", sometimes you feel like this fish
    $100 15
You might find your invitation to her Deerfield, Illinois museum under your pillow, along with a dollar
    $200 20
For a 1-inch-long field cricket, it can be as far as 24 inches
    $200 2
The Walloons live in a region called Wallonia in the southern part of this country
    $200 5
Timothy Mouse, the Stork, & Mrs. Jumbo are all characters in this Disney classic
    $200 10
The site of FTD, these merchants' "Transworld Delivery", heats up around Valentine's Day
    $200 24
Even the most carefree swimmer harks when this predator is around
    $200 16
This Spanish museum's paintings are displayed in 2 buildings: The Villanueva Building & the Cason del Buen Retiro
    $300 21
Field crickets "sing" by rubbing these together, usually the right over the left
    $300 3
The people of this largest U.S. Indian tribe call themselves Dine, which means "the people"
    $300 6
The costumes Julie Andrews wore in this 1964 film were designed by her first husband, Tony Walton
    $300 11
You can buy tents & sleeping bags online at Idaho-based "A Happy" this
    $300 26
Lee prefers this slippery fish to any other
    $300 17
Check into a motel in Plano in this state, then check out the Cockroach Hall of Fame & Museum
    $400 29
Acheta domesticus is this common type of cricket, a name it shares with a fly & a mouse
    $400 12
Hibernians live on this island whose Latin name was Hibernia
    $400 7
According to the book "Disney A to Z", he's the youngest of the 7 Dwarfs
    $400 14
They're what's sold online by Who Needs Two? Inc.
    $400 27
Our list of "fish words" wouldn't be complete without this ocean dweller
    $400 19
The Ulster Museum in this capital city dates back to 1890
    $500 30
Keats' "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness", it's when most adult crickets die
    DD: $600 13
If you're living high in this highest world capital, you're a Paceno
    $500 8
After Mary Wickes died, Jane Withers helped complete her gargoyle dialogue for this 1996 film
    $500 25
This computer company founded by a man named Michael does $6 million of business online a day
    $500 28
You could call it a seashore equine
    $500 22
MOMA in N.Y. is the Museum of Modern Art & MOCA in L.A. is the museum of this

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

John Devon Dave
$200 $700 $1,300

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

John Devon Dave
$1,700 $1,200 $3,100

Double Jeopardy! Round

CRICKET
(Alex: Not pluralized.)
DECEMBER 24
(Alex: How appropriate!)
A CHRISTMAS POTPOURRI
19th CENTURY AMERICA
CAPITAL TOWNS
WORD PLAY
    $200 21
Like baseball's, cricket's scores are kept in these units; each team may have hundreds
    $200 16
Nixon said this man could get out of jail if he quit as Teamster boss; he was released December 24, 1971
    $200 30
The Christmas tree seen here stood tall in this city in 1995 (it's next to a 555-foot tall obelisk)
    $200 6
John Quincy Adams, who had left the White House in 1829, entered this "house" in 1831
    $200 1
Stock up on Breath Assure before heading to Gilroy, Calif., world capital of this pungent bulb
    $200 7
PE rest ACE
----------------------------------
This message may be etched in stone
    $400 22
In 1953 batsman Jack Hobbs became the first pro cricketer to receive this title from the monarch
    $400 17
This German rocket engineer launched the first surface-to-surface missile December 24, 1942
    $400 29
Tradition names this trio as Gaspar, Melchior & Balthazar
    $400 8
A 1998 law authorized the Parks Service to spend $500,000 a year to link sites on this 19th c. escape route
    $400 2
New Castle, Pa. is king of these, producing shows for the 1986 Statue of Liberty fete & every July 4
    $400 10
The word "DREAMS" split in two by a jagged line
----------------------------------
They're desired, but didn't work out
    $600 23
The player in this position initiates the action
    $600 18
This aviator-movie producer-rich guy was born December 24, 1905 in Texas
    $600 28
On Christmas Eve 1968, Borman, Lovell & Anders became the first men to circle this object
    $600 9
In 1860 Erastus Beadle began publishing a series of novels that sold for this price
    $600 3
Elkhart in this state is the world capital of band instruments & RV manufacturing
    $600 11
GNIKLAW
----------------------------------
Plennie L. Wingo is in the Guinness Book of World Records for doing this 8,000 miles
    $800 24
A striker can be declared out if he's LBW, "leg before" this
    DD: $1,000 19
Soviet troops invaded this country December 24, 1979
    $800 26
Dylan Thomas' "Child" had his title Christmas here
    $800 14
In the 1880s N.Y. tried to close sweat shops making these, & Oscar Hammerstein made a machine to roll them
    $800 4
It must be tough to park your car or walk your dog in Albertville, Alabama, the USA's capital of these
    $800 12
KISS +
E
K
A
M
----------------------------------
Something people do after an argument or two things you associate with Gene Simmons
    $1000 25
Term for an international match, or what its players are "put to"
    $1000 20
The Treaty of Ghent was signed by these 2 countries December 24, 1814
    DD: $1,000 27
In "A Christmas Carol", it's the name of Scrooge's late business partner
    $1000 15
In 1892, a national alliance of men in this job formed the Populist Party
    $1000 5
Clinton, in this Treasure State, treasures being the Rocky Mountain Oyster capital with a yearly festival
    $1000 13
ALL world
----------------------------------
Once this song's in your head, it's tough to get out!

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

John Devon Dave
$5,700 $8,400 $8,100

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

CLASSIC MOVIES & TELEVISION
Bert & Ernie of "Sesame Street" are named after characters in this classic Christmas film

Final scores:

John Devon Dave
$6,400 $599 $16,199
2nd place: Samsung 28-inch Stereo TV & Direct TV Satellite System 3rd place: Yamaha Clavinova Digital Piano New champion: $16,199

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

John Devon Dave
$6,300 $8,400 $7,900
19 R,
4 W
(including 1 DD)
17 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
21 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W

Combined Coryat: $22,600

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

Game tape date: 1998-11-03
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.