Show #3897 2001-07-10 (taped 2001-03-21) Regular

Contestants

Kelly Suber — a client services consultant from Lexington, Massachusetts

Michael Hall — a graduate student originally from Irwin, Pennsylvania

Pat Phillips — an administrative assistant from Brea, California (whose 3-day cash winnings total $15,302)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Pat $1,900 $2,800 $4,100 $8,199
2nd place: a Forever Resorts Northern California houseboat vacation
$3,700
18 R (including 1 DD), 4 W (including 1 DD)
Michael $1,800 $2,900 $7,600 $12,600
New champion: $12,600
$7,100
19 R (including 1 DD), 4 W
Kelly $800 $1,600 $6,200 $200
3rd place: Pinseeker golf clubs
$6,200
14 R, 1 W

Jeopardy! Round

WORLD CAPITALS HIT SONGS AMERICAN HISTORY GRAPE JAM CHRISTIAN NAMES DOUBLE "E"
$100 [11]
King Juan Carlos' main home, Zarzuela Palace, lies just outside this capital
Madrid
Pat
$100 [21]
"Smoke On The Water" was a 1973 hit for this British band
Deep Purple
$100 [6]
After his 1859 hanging, Civil War troops sang of this abolitionist's body "mouldering in the grave"
John Brown
Kelly
$100 [26]
In an Aesop tale this animal decided the grapes he couldn't reach had to be sour
the fox
Michael
$100 [16]
This name belongs to the last martyred Pope & to actor Sheen
Martin
Pat
$100 [1]
The jubilant delight with which Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer's friends shouted
glee
Kelly
$200 [12]
Pyongyang is the capital of North Korea; this is the capital of South Korea
Seoul
Michael
$200 [22]
In 1987 jazz vocalist Al Jarreau had a pop hit with the theme from this Cybill Shepherd-Bruce Willis series
Moonlighting
Pat
$200 [7]
In 1913 the 16th Amendment was passed allowing Congress to collect taxes on this
income
Michael
$200 [27]
A form of this company's grape & apple logo, seen here, dates back to 1851
Fruit of the Loom
Pat
$200 [17]
An apostle, or a son of Queen Elizabeth II
Andrew
Pat Michael
$200 [2]
A hoarse whistling sound produced by breathing
wheeze
Kelly
$300 [13]
Augustus Caesar said he found it "A city of bricks and left it a city of marble"
Rome
Pat
$300 [23]
This group's gold records include "After the Love has Gone", "Boogie Wonderland" & "Let's Groove"
Earth, Wind & Fire
Kelly
$300 [8]
Plessy vs. Ferguson, which upheld segregation, was overturned by this 1954 case
Brown v. Board of Education
Pat
$300 [28]
Mae West's famous order in "I'm No Angel"
"Peel me a grape!"
Michael
$300 [18]
Meaning "harvester", it was the name taken by one of the most famous nuns of the 20th century
Mother Teresa
Pat
$300 [3]
They're the periods each fall, winter & spring when TV ratings are collected so that ad rates can be reset
sweeps
Pat
$400 [14]
It's served by Saddam International Airport
Baghdad
Michael
$400 [24]
This group made its U.S. Top 40 debut with "Brass in Pocket" in 1980
The Pretenders
$400 [9]
During WWII America won its 1st major victory over Japan in this naval battle, about 1,200 miles from Hawaii
Midway
Pat
$400 [29]
This dentist & prohibitionist began selling his "unfermented wine" in 1869; in 1890 he renamed it "Grape Juice"
Thomas B. Welch
Pat
$400 [19]
"Speak out" with this given name of the noted Christian seen here
Oral Roberts
Michael
$400 [4]
It means strange & frightening, but it sounds like a big lake
eerie
Kelly
$500 [15]
This Ecuadorian capital is located near the foot of the volcano Pichincha
Quito
Michael
$500 [25]
What a delight! This band's "Afternoon Delight" topped the charts & went gold
the Starland Vocal Band
Kelly
$500 [10]
Bushrod, the favorite nephew of this president, became a Supreme Court justice in 1798
George Washington
Pat
DD $500 [30]
1939 book dedicated in part "to Tom who lived it"
The Grapes of Wrath
Pat
$500 [20]
The original name of St. Peter & the name of Mr. Pure in an 18th century play
Simon
Michael
$500 [5]
Emma Peel's John on TV's "The Avengers"
steed
Michael

Double Jeopardy! Round

OPERA ART SUPPLIES DIRECTORS 8-LETTER WORDS GEOLOGY PEOPLE EAT THAT?
$200 [21]
Henry Purcell wrote operas about "The Faery" one & "The Indian" one
Queen
Pat
$200 [7]
It's the type of paper used in the artwork seen here
tracing paper
Kelly
$200 [2]
"E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial"
Steven Spielberg
Michael
$200 [1]
Having no idea, like Alicia Silverstone in a 1995 movie
clueless
Michael
$200 [26]
The mineral Andalusite was discovered in & named for a region in this country
Spain
Pat
$200 [12]
We wonder if this variety meat tastes you while you're tasting it
tongue
$400 [22]
In 1829, after his move to Paris, this Italian composer wrote "William Tell"
Gioachino Rossini
Pat Kelly
$400 [8]
A pad of paper for quick drawings, it appears in a Washington Irving title along with Geoffrey Crayon
a sketch book
Kelly
$400 [3]
"Fargo"
Joel Coen
Pat Michael
$400 [17]
This buttoned sweater & a matching shell usually make up a twin set
a cardigan
Pat
$400 [27]
Fluvial is a term that refers to these geographic features
rivers
Michael
$400 [13]
Don't put your PB&J on this--it's the thymus gland or pancreas of a calf
sweetbread
Pat
$600 [23]
Lorenzo Da Ponte supplied composers with over 40 librettos, including "Cosi fan tutte" for this man
W.A. Mozart
Michael
$600 [9]
This Hunt Corporation brand seenherehas been on the cutting edge for over 50 years
X-Acto Knife
Kelly
$600 [4]
"Paper Moon"
Peter Bogdanovich
Pat Michael
$600 [18]
This wood, seen here, gives a room a solid feeling
mahogany
Kelly
$600 [28]
Granite is composed mainly of feldspar & this transparent crystalline material
quartz
Kelly
$800 [15]
A sausage made out of trotters is made from these parts of a pig or a sheep
the feet
Pat Michael Kelly
$800 [24]
He was in his 70s when he composed "Otello" in 1887 & "Falstaff" in 1893
Giuseppe Verdi
Michael
$800 [10]
A smooth, heavy cardboard is called this "board", after a city west of London
Bristol board
$800 [5]
"The Apostle"
Robert Duvall
Michael
$800 [19]
A type of anesthesia used during childbirth, or the space around the spinal cord where it is injected
epidural
Kelly
$800 [29]
A 79 A.D. letter about the death of this "Elder" scientist had the first accurate description of a volcanic eruption
Pliny
Michael
$1,000 [16]
Often sauteed with onions (probably to mask the taste), this brownish large organ has great nutritional value
the liver
Kelly
DD $1,500 [25]
After his 1711 opera "Rinaldo" made his name, he immediately moved from Hanover to England
G.F. Handel
Michael
$1,000 [11]
This term for Plaster of Paris mixed with glue to prepare a surface comes from the Latin "gypsum"
gesso
$1,000 [6]
"Dead Man Walking"
Tim Robbins
Michael
$1,000 [20]
This type of chemical bond can be polar, nonpolar, single, double, triple or coordinate
a covalent bond
$1,000 [30]
In 1812 this German scientist devised a scale to measure the hardness of minerals
Frederich Mohs
Michael
DD $1,500 [14]
This word for beef stomach lining has become a slang term for "rubbish"
tripe
Pat

Final Jeopardy!

ORGANIZATIONS

"A Simple, Decent Place to Live" is Millard Fuller's book about the history of this organization

Habitat For Humanity

Pat "What is Habitat For Humanity?" — wagered $4,099
Kelly "What is the YMCA?" — wagered $6,000
Michael "What is Habitat For Humanity?" — wagered $5,000

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