Show #5013 - Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Nathan Meyers, a software developer from Medford, Massachusetts

Steve Friedman, a writer from Los Angeles, California

Eric Dolansky, a Ph.D. student in marketing from Toronto, Ontario, Canada (whose 2-day cash winnings total $46,402)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

U.S. COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES
CARTOON MICE
COMPLETES THE PLAY TITLE
LIQUIDS
THE SEA OTTER
HOT "BUN"s
    $200 26
The 2 founders of Yahoo! & the 2 founders of Google all attended this California school
    $200 15
On Nov. 18, 1928 this American icon made his film debut at NYC's Colony Theatre
    $200 6
John Guare's
"Six Degrees of..."
    $200 17
Byron wrote, "Let us have" this "and women, mirth and laughter, sermons and soda-water the day after"
    $200 7
Unlike other marine mammals, the sea otter does not have this layer of fat to keep it warm
    $200 1
This folklore hero was so big, as a child he rocked in his cradle & caused a 75-foot tide in the Bay of Fundy
    $400 27
Texas Lutheran University is in Seguin; this school founded in 1873 is in Fort Worth
    $400 18
This red-caped Terrytoons rodent has been saving the day on TV since 1955, with operatic flair
    $400 12
Eugene O'Neill's
"Strange..."
    $400 22
Whether autumn leaves turn fiery amber, vivid gold or dull brown depends on the composition of this thick liquid
    $400 8
As seen here, the sea otter wraps itself in this "marine" material to anchor itself while it rests
    $400 2
A con game, or the police squad that breaks it up
    DD: $2,800 28
Recovering from Katrina, it scheduled a makeup "lagniappe semester" starting in May 2006
    $600 19
This "fastest mouse in all Mexico" has a cousin, Slowpoke Rodriguez
    $600 13
Neil Simon's
"The Prisoner of..."
    $600 23
The Quaker State Company was founded in 1931 in a Pennsylvania city named for this liquid
    $600 9
There are about 2,500 Southern sea otters off the California coast & 50,000 Northern sea otters off this state
    $600 3
In this early American courting custom, a couple lay fully clothed on a bed & exchanged endearments
    $800 29
The North Carolina university founded in this town in 1834 is now in Winston-Salem
    $800 20
In 1975 Grape Ape & Mumbly teamed with this Hanna-Barbera cat & mouse duo but by December, the ape was out
    $800 14
Beth Henley's
"Crimes of the..."
    $800 24
The rounded area of a ship's hull, dividing bottom from sides, or the yucky water that collects there
    $800 10
4-letter term for an otter's skin, the demand for which once almost made them extinct
    $800 4
2-word term for the 30,000-pound precision-guided bombs used to destroy underground command centers
    $1000 30
It's the northernmost Ivy League School
    $1000 21
First name of young Mr. Mousekewitz, voiced by Phillip Glasser in "An American Tail"
    $1000 16
Oscar Wilde's
"A Woman of No..."
    $1000 25
The cholesterol doctors measure is called this "cholesterol", for the fluid part of whole blood
    $1000 11
Sea otters feed on clams, crabs, abalone & these creatures seen here
    $1000 5
Born Edward Z.C. Judson, he was the originator of the 19th century dime novels, many featuring Buffalo Bill Cody

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 15):

Eric Steve Nathan
$1,200 $1,800 $2,400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Eric Steve Nathan
$1,000 $4,800 $6,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

PHYSICAL SCIENCE
ALL THAT JAZZ
THAT'S SO CONVENTIONAL!
CLEANING UP
YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED
EMBRACE THE "ORB"
    $400 3
(Kelly and Jon of the Clue Crew play with water in a laboratory; Kelly reads.) Run a comb through your hair & hold it here--the water is drawn to the comb because of this accumulation of electrical charge
    $400 21
The instrument seen here was played by this swingin' bandleader who was at home with classical too
    $400 9
During the 1968 Democratic Convention in this city, antiwar protesters clashed violently with police
    $400 23
To fight this, from the Latin for "stain", after surgery, John Charnley devised air tents to keep things sterile
    $400 16
Victories by Garibaldi in 1860 led to this largest Mediterranean island being joined to Italy
    $400 1
The quality of being able to take in liquids
    $800 7
Phosphorescence is defined as giving off light with little or none of this
    $800 22
Charlie Christian, 1916-1942, was one of the first to electrically amplify this instrument
    $800 12
In 2004 the 2 major U.S. political parties held their conventions in these 2 cities
    $800 26
In 1887 Johnson & Johnson was incorporated in part to improve upon this man's study of antisepsis
    $800 17
It was declared a protectorate February 1, 1893; a treaty to annex it to the U.S. came 2 weeks later
    $800 2
He's the moody crooner heard here

"You can bet that I've been crying..."
    DD: $5,000 8
(Jon of the Clue Crew explains the diagrams on the monitor.) For 5 out of 10 carbon-11 atoms to decay into boron-11, it takes 20 minutes, which is this measure for the carbon-11 isotope
    $1200 24
This bandleader from D.C. traveled with an electric piano, now in the Smithsonian, so he wouldn't wake hotel guests
    $1200 13
George H.W. Bush electrified the Republican Convention in this year when he declared "No new taxes"
    $1200 29
To be a cleaner of this, you may need to put on a HAZMAT suit & hope the criminal doesn't return to it
    $1200 18
Israel formally annexed this strategic upland region in 1981
    $1200 4
Scurvy is caused by a lack of this "acid" found in citrus
    $1600 10
In 1911 a physicist first observed superconductivity when he found no resistance in this slippery element at 4.2 kelvin
    $1600 25
This giant of the jazz vibraphone passed away in his 90s in 2002
    $1600 14
He gave his famous "Cross of Gold" speech at the 1896 Democratic Convention
    $1600 28
In 1898 Caleb Johnson sold this soap named for 2 types of oil used to make it; later the co. merged with Colgate
    $1600 19
Bolivia became landlocked when this country took over its only coastal territory after a 19th c. war
    $1600 5
In December 1991 he gave Yeltsin the nuclear codes
    $2000 11
(Sarah of the Clue Crew swirls water in a bottle.) I'm creating a small version of this, a mass of fluid in a swirling motion; whirlpools, tornadoes & sunspots are bigger versions
    $2000 30
There's a distinctive left-hand pattern in this style of piano playing, also a word meaning "walk"
    $2000 15
This bespectacled NBC newsman was forcibly removed from the floor of the 1964 GOP Convention in San Francisco
    $2000 27
Because of a clean-up effort, Bernard Rayner became the last to sell pigeon food in this British plaza
    DD: $2,000 20
Under the 1792 Treaty of Jassy, the Ottoman Empire agreed to Russia's taking over control of this peninsula
    $2000 6
From Turkish for "cool drink", it's a frozen dessert made from fruit syrup

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Eric Steve Nathan
$5,800 $15,800 $14,400

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

AFRICA
In January 2006 this country swore in Africa's first elected female president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Final scores:

Eric Steve Nathan
$11,598 $2,799 $15,801
2nd place: $2,000 3rd place: $1,000 New champion: $15,801

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Eric Steve Nathan
$5,800 $9,800 $14,400
12 R
(including 1 DD),
5 W
19 R
(including 2 DDs),
5 W
17 R,
1 W

Combined Coryat: $30,000

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

Game tape date: 2006-03-30
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.