Suggest correction - #5113 - 2006-11-29

Fill in your contact information if you would like to be notified when your correction has been reviewed.
On the left you see the clue as it is currently displayed. Enter your correction on the right by editing the text directly. The top left field is the clue's value, either as given on the board, or, if a Daily Double, the value of the contestant's wager. If the clue is a Daily Double, check the checkbox to the right of this field. The top right field is the clue order number representing the order of the clue's selection amongst other clues in the round. The large blue field is for the clue text, which should be entered as closely as possible to how it appears on the show, with the exception that the words should not be all caps. Links to media clue files should be entered with HTML-style hyperlinks. Next come the nicknames of the three contestants in the form of response toggles: single clicks on the name change its color from white (no response) to green (correct response) to red (incorrect response) and back. Below this should be typed the correct response (only the most essential part--it should not be entered in the form of a question). The bottom field on the right is the clue comments field, where dialog (including incorrect responses) can be entered. (Note that the correct response should never be typed in the comments field; rather, it should be denoted by [*].)
    $400 14
From the '20s, this title character of Araby is the "I" in "At night when you're asleep into your tent I'll creep"
#
 
WARNING: A previously submitted correction suggestion for this clue has already been rejected. Further correction suggestions for this clue cannot be submitted anonymously.

Show #5113 - Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Contestants

Alexia Henke, a singer from Brooklyn, New York

David Maynard, a coffee shop manager from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Ryan Friedman, a GIS planner from Londonderry, New Hampshire (2-day champion whose cash winnings total $32,099)

Jeopardy! Round

MONTHS
WHO'S THE MAN
(Alex: You have to name the actor who played each role we will give you.)
AIRPORT CODES
GOVERNORS
HE SAID, SHE SAID
BIG MOUTH
    $200 8
Flanders & Swann sang that it "brings the sweet spring showers--on and on for hours and hours!"
    $200 19
Spartacus
    $200 2
Get a real Rocky Mountain high here:
DEN
    $200 14
This governor played Prince Hapi in Jackie Chan's 2004 film "Around the World in 80 Days"
    $200 13
In "The Mysterious Affair at Styles" she wrote, "Every murderer is probably somebody's old friend"
    $200 1
Proceed down to the mouth of the Congo & you wind up on this ocean
    $400 9
It's the only month for which the U.S. can have a President-elect from beginning to end
    $400 20
Patch Adams
    $400 4
Hopefully its code isn't an omen for your checked bags:
MIA
    $400 15
This son of Greek immigrants was elected governor of Massachusetts 3 times in the '70s & '80s
    $400 16
One of her hints to Abelard was "Riches and power are but gifts of blind fate"
    $400 3
The Rio Grande, aka the Rio Bravo, lands in this body of water
    $600 10
It's National Military Appreciation Month; we remember fallen soldiers near the end of it
    $600 21
Texas Ranger J.J. McQuade
    $600 5
It's actually in Virginia (though its full name says otherwise):
IAD
    $600 17
When it became a state in 1912, William C. McDonald was its governor
    $600 25
Sydney Smith was quoted as saying "There are 3 of" this palindromic word--males, females "and clergymen"
    $600 28
The Yangtze flows into the "East" this "Sea"; the Mekong into the "South" this "Sea"
    $800 11
It's the first month of the year named for a number
    $800 23
Lieutenant Frank Drebin
    DD: $1,000 6
It's named for Sen. Ted Stevens:
ANC
    $800 18
While New York governor, this Republican ran twice for the presidency in the 1940s
    $800 26
One of her book reviews said, "This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force"
    $800 29
Yukon see this sea at the mouth of the Yukon
    $1000 12
In the musical "Carousel", it's the month of the first clambake of the year
    $1000 24
Sergeant Tom Sharky
    $1000 7
Its McNamara Terminal is also the Northwest Airlines World Gateway:
DTW
    $1000 22
Charles Bryan, brother of William Jennings, was governor of this state from 1931 to 1935
    $1000 27
He said his "Social Contract" was undertaken "without thinking of the limitations of my powers"
    $1000 30
The port city of Kismaayo sits on the mouth of the Juba River on this ocean

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

Ryan David Alexia
$600 $3,800 $2,200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Ryan David Alexia
$3,600 $4,000 $3,600

Double Jeopardy! Round

"NOV"EMBER
THE 19th CENTURY
DOCTOR!
BRING OUT YOUR FRED
LET'S SING
A LITTLE DEITY
    $400 1
Anesthetic you're grateful for on a visit to the dentist
    $400 22
After his band of outlaws was decimated trying to rob a bank in 1876, he & his brother Frank formed a new one
    $400 3
In 1954 440,000 schoolchildren became guinea pigs in a test of his polio vaccine
    $400 4
The 18th century monarch once quipped, "God is always with the strongest battalions"
    $400 14
From the '20s, this title character of Araby is the "I" in "At night when you're asleep into your tent I'll creep"
    $400 26
This god was also called Dionysus & Liber--makes sense, as he liberated people from calm & sobriety
    $800 2
The process of turning a film into a book
    $800 23
(Cheryl of the Clue Crew stands on an Irish seashore at a Martello tower in Dublin, Ireland.) Martello towers were built by the British in the early 19th century to defend against an invasion by this man
    $800 5
(Sarah of the Clue Crew strolls through a parlor in Vienna, Austria.) I'm in the waiting room of this man's office in Vienna, restored to how it looked in the early 1900s
    $800 7
Born in Berlin in 1901, this composer was known for his collaborations with Alan Jay Lerner
    $800 18
John Lennon song with the lyrics "We all shine on like the moon and the stars and the sun"
    $800 30
He's the Titan & friend of mankind seen here in a 17th-century painting
    $1200 11
Cape Breton Island is part of this Canadian province
    $1200 24
On Dec. 17, 1819 this liberator was made president of the new Republic of Gran Colombia
    $1200 6
This physician & author has been called "the man who reared 50 million kids"
    $1200 8
In deteriorating health, he gave his last public piano recital in London at an 1848 benefit for Polish refugees
    $1200 19
"Fly Me To The Moon" says, "Let me sing among those stars, let me see what spring is like on" these 2 planets
    DD: $5,001 29
This god was upset to find that the mortal girl Apemosyne could outrun him
    $1600 12
From the Latin for "nine", it's a series of devotional prayers over a 9-day period
    $1600 25
On March 17, 1861 the Kingdom of this country was declared with Victor Emmanuel as its king
    DD: $1,000 15
He decided against a general medical practice & chose a military career, entering the Army Medical Corps in 1875
    $1600 9
Northern readers got the lowdown on slavery in 1845's "Narrative of the Life of" this former slave & orator
    $1600 20
It's the mister you don't mess with in "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive"
    $1600 27
An Egyptian fertility goddess, or what the Thames is called as it runs through Oxford
    $2000 13
This city of about 250,000 was a capital of early Russia
    $2000 16
Francis II, who abdicated this title in 1806, was the last Hapsburg to hold it
    $2000 17
We don't just presume, we know that he studied theology & medicine in Glasgow in the 1830s
    $2000 10
In 1989 he became president of South Africa; a few years later, he was deputy president
    $2000 21
In the song heard here, it's the title place that won't be revisited
    $2000 28
This handsome, ill-fated son of Odin was the most beloved among the Norse gods

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Ryan David Alexia
$14,801 $10,800 $14,800

Final Jeopardy! Round

MODERN LANGUAGES
An estimated 100,000-plus people speak this language whose nouns have no gender & end with -O

Final scores:

Ryan David Alexia
$29,601 $14,801 $21,601
3-day champion: $61,700 3rd place: $1,000 2nd place: $2,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Ryan David Alexia
$12,000 $10,600 $14,800
18 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W
(including 1 DD)
16 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
15 R,
0 W

Combined Coryat: $37,400

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

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.