Suggest correction - #5659 - 2009-03-26

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    $200 1
"Come Together" & "Get Back" aren't calls at a square dance; they're opposite-sounding No. 1s from this band
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Show #5659 - Thursday, March 26, 2009

Contestants

Mark Lock, an attorney and privacy consultant from Detroit, Michigan

Sonia Chawla, a grad student from Boston, Massachusetts

Fred Beukema, a structural engineer from Minneapolis, Minnesota (1-day champion whose cash winnings total $21,800)

Jeopardy! Round

SCIENCE HISTORY
SONG DICHOTOMY
PUTTING ON THE DOG
I LIKE...ME!
WHAT SIGN ARE YOU?
STARTS WITH "SCH"
    $200 16
In 1797 Smithson Tennant showed that charcoal has the same composition as this gem
    $200 1
"Come Together" & "Get Back" aren't calls at a square dance; they're opposite-sounding No. 1s from this band
    $200 21
(Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from the American Kennel Club.) Like something you'd find on a fishing hook, it's the object or treat that show handlers use to focus the dog's attention & keep it alert in the ring
    $200 26
After supervising George W. Bush's search for the 2000 VP slot, he decided he was the best man for the job
    $200 6
You're a 7' tall red octagon with white letters; you tell folks to do this, & dang it, you mean it
    $200 11
You can still visit this Hollywood drugstore seen in "Sunset Blvd."--at Universal Studios Florida, that is
    $400 17
Using the ultramicroscope, Jean Perrin estimated the size of this as one hundred millionth of a centimeter
    $400 2
It's hard to swallow their rebellious song "I Get Around" after picturing them as loners in "In My Room"
    $400 22
In 1889 a Siberian wolfhound in the WKC show had quite a pedigree; its breeder was listed as the czar of this country
    $400 27
Merely Taj Mahal or Plaza Hotel & Casino wasn't enough; to him, the buildings needed this name to complete them
    $400 7
You're a triangle pointing down; you were yellow & black, now you're red & white; you want folks to be nice & do this
    $400 12
A sailing vessel
    $600 18
Michael Faraday named oxygen as a "permanent gas" he couldn't turn into this state; Mike, just make it a lot colder
    $600 3
From their songs "Marlena", "Ronnie" & "C'mon Marianne" they begged a lot of women to stay; but they told Dawn to go away
    $600 23
(Sarah of the Clue Crew is with a cocker spaniel.) In dog shows, some cocker spaniels are ASCOB,
which stands for any solid color other than this
    $600 28
Bartlett's says this athlete's slogan, "I am the greatest", was inspired by wrestler Gorgeous George
    $600 8
You're a white X (or "crossbuck"); your arms say these 2 words
    $600 13
2 words: "fool" & "unlucky person" (as mentioned in the "Laverne & Shirley" intro)
    $800 19
Nutbrain Soviet scientists adopted the discredited 19th c. theory of Lamarck that said acquired traits could be this
    $800 4
Their first hit? "Hold On"... their second hit? "Release Me"... C'mon, ladies, make up your minds
    $800 24
2008's Best in Show winner at Crufts was one of these dogs whose name is from the German for "snout"
    $800 29
This handsome young man of myth fell in love with his own reflection, spurning
Echo's love
    $800 9
You're a horizontal black rectangle containing a white arrow; all you have to say is these 2 words
    $800 14
Kirschwasser, for one
    $1000 20
The unit of this in electricity is named for Georg Ohm; it's also what Ohm ran into when he published his ideas
    $1000 5
Going by their first releases, they were "Lost in Love" & then a few months later, "All Out of Love"; that was quick
    DD: $1,000 25
(Sarah of the Clue Crew is at the American Kennel Club.) American Kennel Club judges evaluate how close dogs come to this, an 8-letter term for a written description of the ideal specimen of the breed
    $1000 10
You're a red rectangle with white letters; you tell folks to look out! They're going this!
    $1000 15
Excessively sentimental, like a soap opera

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

Fred Sonia Mark
$5,000 $3,800 -$200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Fred Sonia Mark
$9,400 $3,400 -$400

Double Jeopardy! Round

BOOK CROOK
LEAN SCREEN
PLANET SPAN IT
FOOD DUDE
OCEAN O' LOTION
(Alex: And the common link...)
RHYME TIME
    $400 11
This Sherlock Holmes nemesis might have been a brilliant mathematician but "a criminal stain ran in his blood"
    $400 1
King Hussein of Jordan offered David Lean camel-riders of the desert patrol as extras for this 1962 epic
    $400 6
The Huey P. Long bridge spans this mighty river
    $400 16
This Jamie Oliver nickname refers to his minimalist style of cooking (it also fits in a nude dude category)
    $400 21
Over-the-counter remedies for this teen affliction should have resorcinol, salicylic acid or benzoyl peroxide
    $400 26
Someone who sells Waring liquid-mixing appliances
    $800 12
The murder of 2 Supreme Court justices begins this author's "The Pelican Brief"
    $800 2
Early Lean films included adaptations of this man's plays "Brief Encounter" & "Blithe Spirit"
    $800 7
The King Fahd Causeway links the island nation of Bahrain to this country
    $800 17
Ethnicity of the "Muppet Show" chef whose little song ended, "bork bork bork"
    $800 22
Clotrimazole is an anti-this type of drug, effective against ringworm & athlete's foot
    $800 27
A joint Democratic/ Republican craftsperson
    $1200 13
Auric is the first name of this 1959 Ian Fleming villain; he later got a snazzy movie theme song
    $1200 3
Of this Lean film's 8 Oscar nominations, the only one to lose was Sessue Hayakawa for supporting actor
    $1200 8
The Bridge of Sighs in this city links the Doge's palace to the old state prison
    $1200 18
The name of this famed Wolfgang Puck eatery is Italian slang for spaghetti
    DD: $1,000 23
This principal constituent of oil of peppermint can be an ingredient in both cigarettes & lotions
    $1200 28
Gave refuge to the right side of a ship
    $1600 14
A vicious teenage gang commits random acts of brutality in this 1962 Anthony Burgess novel
    DD: $2,000 4
Tarek Sharif played this title character as an 8-year-old in Lean's 1965 epic
    $1600 9
The Pont Neuf & the Pont Notre-Dame span this river
    $1600 19
Emeril Lagasse began shouting this 3-letter word years ago to jolt cameramen to attention
    $1600 24
(Kelly of the Clue Crew stands in front of a table.) The leaves of this plant are used in traditional remedies as a topical ointment; cutting open the leaves produces an easily applied clear gel
    $1600 29
A splendid, brilliantly shining person against whom legal action is brought
    $2000 15
Patricia Highsmith's series about this charming sociopath starts with "The Talented Mr." him
    $2000 5
Lean adapted the script for this, his last movie, from a work by E.M. Forster
    $2000 10
The Vasco da Gama bridge spans the Tagus river near this capital city
    $2000 20
Bad boy of the culinary scene with the book "Kitchen Confidential" & the TV show "No Reservations"
    $2000 25
The pink powder hemimorphite is also known as this, from which a soothing lotion is made
    $2000 30
An Easter- or Passover-time rogue

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Fred Sonia Mark
$25,000 $10,000 $6,800
(lock game)

Final Jeopardy! Round

16th CENTURY THINKERS
In 1517 he wrote, "The treasures of indulgences are nets with which they now fish for the wealth of men"

Final scores:

Fred Sonia Mark
$28,000 $13,601 $10,001
2-day champion: $49,800 2nd place: $2,000 3rd place: $1,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Fred Sonia Mark
$25,600 $10,200 $6,800
28 R
(including 1 DD),
1 W
(including 1 DD)
16 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
8 R,
4 W

Combined Coryat: $42,600

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