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Created On Sat Jul 10, 04 12:55 AM by mikebell


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ppauper
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Sun Feb 27, 05 07:35 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:


Day 9 (Monday Feb 21): Mark Eckard advanced
2004 college champion Kerwin Fleming was almost on his way to pulling a huge upset in the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions Monday---until the fatal moment of Final Jeopardy!
Fleming played a steady game and held an $800 lead over former five-time champion Lance Johnson. Mark Eckard, a 2001 Tournament of Champions semifinalist, trailed the pack at $12,800.
Final Jeopardy! category: Foreign Words and Phrases. Answer: it's the more commonly used term for the practice of Chinese geomancy.
Eckard, despite a spelling flaw, was given credit for: what is feng shui? He took no prisoners and doubled his total to $25,600.
Johnson went for a different angle and missed with: what is tai chi? His $4,000 wager took him out of the game at $10,400 and left him with the $5,000 consolation prize.
The big moment for Fleming was not a good one. His question: what is fortune telling? His inconsequential wager of $13,601 left him with a third place total of $1,599

Day 10 (tuesday Feb 22): Michael Dupée advanced
Michael Dupée, a former Tournament of Champions winner, played a consistent game and went into the finale with an insurmountable $22,500.
Final category: Political Geography. Answer: the two island nations that are official members of the G-8 (Group of Eight).
Challengers Sandra Gore and Jack Archey both had to go home with the $5,000 consolation prize. They each missed the final opportunity, Archey bagging all of his $9,600 and Gore easing back $800 to $10,000.
Dupee had the only correct question with: what are Japan and the United Kingdom? However, with the game locked away, he wagered nothing to keep his $22,500.

Day 11 (Wednesday Feb 23): Jeff Richmond advanced
Attorney Jeff Richmond, who paid for his law school tuition with his original Jeopardy! winnings played Final Jeopardy by himself, after the other 2 contestants Bernard Holloway and Billy Baxter finished in the red.
With $11,800, Richmond faced the category of Bestselling Authors: in 2000, this writer, with more than 100 million copies of novels in print, had a new species of dinosaur named for him.
Richmond was right on the money with: who is Michael Crichton? He did not have to wager a cent but went for $11,500 to finish with $23,300

Day 12 (Thursday Feb 24): John Beck advanced
John Beck was the last of the five-time champions before unlimited winnings were allowed on Jeopardy!
Beck built an insurmountable lead going into Final Jeopardy!
Final category: The U.S. Census of 1790. Answer: it was the only state in the 1790 census to claim a slave population of zero.
All three contestants were incorrect
None of the trio were correct.
Tom Nosel blew all of his $9,100 on: what is New Hampshire?
CarolynCracraft wagered her entire $9,200 on: what is Rhode Island?
Beck went for Rhode Island as well but stood pat at $19,000 for his final total.

Day 13 (Friday Feb 25): Tad Carithers advanced
The battle was a classic: a game show contestant legend and former Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner head-to-head with a younger one-time Tournament of Champions runner-up.
In the end, 2001 T of C runner-up Tad Carithers pulled a major upset in eliminating 1992 Tournament of Champions winner Leszek Pawlowicz from the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions.
Final Jeopardy! category: Wood. Answer: the remarkable elasticity of yew led to this new weapon that made history at a 1346 battle.
Third place finisher Al Hin missed with: what is the crossbow? His wager sent him back to $3,201.
Pawlowicz, at $15,600, was correct with: what is the longbow? He bet $1,601, enough to give him a $1 lead over Carithers.
Carithers revealed a correct question and a $14,100 bet which would have defeated Pawlowicz, even if the former Win Ben Stein's Money champion had risked everything.
Carithers advanced to the round-of-54 with $31,300.

 
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ppauper
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 14 (Monday Feb 28): former Jeopardy! single-day recordholder Jerome Vered advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: College Libraries. Answer: built in memory of a victim of this tragedy, Harvard's Widener Library was opened in 1915.
All three players were correct with: what is the Titanic?
Jim Scott, a former Tournament of Champions winner, doubled his total to $14,400.
Michelle Clum, a former five-time champion, jumped to $21,501, $1 ahead of Vered.
With his wager of $6,101, Vered ended with $27,601 and a berth in the round-of-54 playoffs

Day 15 (Tuesday March 1): Bruce Borchardt advanced, winning by $1.
Diane Siegel was eliminated, being in negative territory before Final Jeopardy!
Final Jeopardy! category: Historic Quotations. Answer: in 1900 Teddy Roosevelt wrote, "I have always been fond of this West African proverb." Both remaining contestants were correct with: what is speak softly and carry a big stick?
Kevin Keach doubled his total to $19,200. Borchardt revealed the magic number: a $2,801 bet for $19,201 and the $1 victory.

Day 16 (Wednesday March 2): Ramen advanced.
Ramen Noodles Way to Runaway over Wu, Lassiter"Ramen Noodles Way to Runaway over Wu, Lassiter"

Day 17 (Thursday March 3): Ed Schiffer advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: 20th Century Americans. Answer: he was alive for the Wright Brothers' historic flight and was John Glenn's Senate colleague when Glenn returned to space.
Paul Boymel and Ed Schiffer were right with: who was Strom Thurmond? Boymel doubled his total to $1,600. Schiffer added $6,200 to finish at $17,400.
Andrew Garem had a forlorn expression when he revealed: who is (John) Danforth? He fell to $10,399 to join Boymel in settling for the $5,000 consolation minimum.

Day 18 (Friday March 4): Grace Veach advanced.
Heartbreak for Keith Williams who blew a $15,000 lead.
Final Jeopardy! category: U.S. Islands. Answer: Dutch for either "devil's whirlpool" or "spite the devil," Spuyten Devil Creek forms part of its northern border.
For 1990 undefeated champion John LeDonne, the math was still in the cards for a win but not after his question: what are the U.S. Virgin Islands? He blew his entire $6,200.
Veach, at $13,200, offered: what is Manhattan? Her correct question rendered a $13,000 bet and a $26,200 total.
Williams had to deliver. His question: what is New York? Too general, Williams lost $10,000 and ended with the $5,000 consolation, along with LeDonne.

 
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ppauper
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Sat Mar 12, 05 03:18 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 19 (Monday March 7): Ryan Holznagel advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Sports Phrase Origins. Answer: in 1939, an Illinois sports official wrote "a little" of this alliterative phrase may "contribute to sanity."
Correct question: what is march madness ? All 3 contestants missed.
John Kelly, with $7,000, knew March Madness too late to write it. He saved himself $100.
Barbara Anne Eddy, with no question, blew her entire $11,800 pot.
Holznagel, with $16,111, offered: what is "play ball?" He coughed up $7,887 but hung on to win with $8,224. Holznagel enters the round-of-54 with the $15,000 champion's minimum.

Day 20 (Tuesday March 8): Former Tournament of Champions winner Mark Dawson advanced.
Final Jeopardy! Category: The Science World. Answer: with Napoleon III's support, a physiological chemistry lab was created for him at the Ecole Normale Superieure.
All three players were correct with: who is Louis Pasteur?
That left the game in the hands of the wagers.
Elaine Zollner risked $4,000 to end with $11,800.
Chris Ward was curiously conservative with $5,100 to finish at $15,700.
Dawson's $4,900 bet took him to the win at $21,250 and a shot in the round-of-54.

Day 21 (Wednesday March 9): Michael Rooney advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: 20th Century Novels:
it begins, "'to be born again,' sang Gibreel Farishta tumbling from the heavens, 'first you have to die.'"
Mark Lowenthal's question: what is "The Prophet?" That cost him all but $1 of his $3,800.
Erik Larsen was correct with: what is "The Satanic Verses?" His $15,000 wager sent him to $32,600 and the lead.
Rooney, from Pasadena, revealed the correct question and an $11,201 bet. His final total of $35,201 is tops to date among the first-round winners.

Day 22 (Thursday March 10): Former College Champ Pam Mueller advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Ancient Writers. Answer: born in 43 B.C., his most famous work begins, "My intention is to tell of bodies changed to different forms."
The correct question of course was, "who was Ovid ?", with the work being "Metamorphoses", which I had the good fortune to read in its entirety during my latin classes in highschool. Mueller's challengers, former five-time champions Jay Rosenberg and Michael Day, were both correct with: who is Ovid? Rosenberg doubled his total to $4,400 and Day took a temporary $1 lead over the 2001 Tournament of Champions semifinalist at $30,600.
Mueller, who had a huge grin during the think music (for those of you who watch Springer instead of Jeopardy!, that's the music Springer's producer plays when guests take too long to answer a question) nailed the correct question as well. Her $1,601 wager sent her to a winning $32,201.

Day 23 (Friday March 11): Steve Newman advanced.
Going into Final Jeopardy!, Newman led closest challenger and former teen champion Andrew Westney $19,400-$15,600 in a highly competitive game. David Siegel, a 1995 T of C finalist, was not out of it at $9,800.
Category: Historic Brits. Answer: during the American Revolution, in his last moments he said, "It will be but a momentary pang."
Siegel briefly moved into a $100 lead with: who was Major (John) Andre? The expression on Westney's face told the tale. He questioned: who was Cornwallis? The actor/singer moved back to $10,600 and the $5,000 consolation check.
Newman was ready to explode with joy. His correct question nearly doubled his total. The $38,700 is now tops for a first-round winner (passing Rooney's earlier total mentioned above)


Edited: Mon Mar 14, 05 at 03:20 PM by ppauper
 
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ppauper
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Sun Mar 20, 05 07:36 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:
Day 24 (Monday March 14): Chris Miller advanced.
Trivia: The former five-time Jeopardy! champion dressed up as Ken Jennings on Halloween.
Miller had it locked up before Final Jeopardy.
Final Jeopardy! category: The 20th Century.
Answer: to allow people to communicate more quickly, on May 15, 1918, courtesy of the U.S. Army, this service began.
Correct question: what is air mail?
Dennis Donohue was correct but wagered nothing.
Mike Thayer missed with: what is national broadcasting?
Miller was on the money and offered a $2,899 bet to win with a convincing $21,799 and nail a berth in the round-of-54.

Day 25 (Tuesday March 15): Leah Greenwald advanced.
Plurals cost Doug Lach the contest.
Going into Final Jeopardy!, Lach had $26,400 but could not shake the determined Greenwald, who trailed by only $3,000. Financial analyst Matt Morris was virtually---but not technically---out of it with $4,000.
Final category: Artistic Masterpieces.
Answer: "Shouldn't the shining dots of the sky be as accessible as the black dots on the map of France?" the artist wrote of this work.
Morris blew everything with: what is Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jette?
Greenwald went for everything and nailed the question: what is "Starry Night?" She vaulted to the top total for any Ultimate tourney champ with $46,800.
Lach had a grim poker face, which could have indicated a correct question. Not this time. His offering: what is "Starry Nights?" The extra "s" cost Lach the game because of the answer leading to an exact title. His wager was academic but his $24,000 coughup knocked him back to $2,400.
A shocked Greenwald advanced to the round-of-54

Day 26 (Wednesday March 16): Jonathan Groff advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: The 2004 U.S. Elections.
Answer: this woman received the third-highest vote total of any candidate for all of the November 2004 elections.
Correct question: who is Barbara Boxer
Eddie Timanus was correct and went for it all and doubled his total to $19,200, taking the lead.
Jean Grewe had no answer and fell back to $4,000.
Groff had a big smile when he also said Boxer and his $6,001 wager was enough to advance to the round-of-54 with $24,001.

Day 27 (Thursday March 17): Brian Moore advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Words.
Answer: this six-letter word can mean both a bright light above someone's head and a dark cloud above our heads.
Correct question: what is nimbus
John Zhang offered: what is shadow? He blew everything.
Dan Katz and Moore were both correct with: what is nimbus? Katz increased his total to $20,000 but still has to settle for the $5,000 consolation.
Moore put another $3,000 on the board and keeps his total of $32,000.

Day 28 (Friday March 18): Robert Slaven advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: European Languages.
Answer: in this language spoken by 120 million worldwide, all of the days of the week but one end with the same three letters.
Correct question: what is german
(mittwoch = wednesday being the exception, although I was taught that sonnabend was used rather than samstag for saturday in parts of germany)
Bill Pitassy was correct and doubled his total to $6,000.
Russ Schumacher had the frustrated look. His question: what is Russian? His $2,101 wager to fall to $12,299 kept him with the hope of a Slaven miss on a big wager.
Slaven did not go tilt. His German question was followed by a $12,301 bet and a winning $28,801.

Edited: Wed Mar 23, 05 at 03:10 PM by ppauper
 
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ppauper
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Tue Mar 29, 05 04:41 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 29 (Monday March 21): Shane Whitlock advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Islands. Answer: in 2004, Brenda Christian became the first woman mayor of this island with a population of about 47.
Ryan would not have won but frustrated himself with a crucial spelling error: what is Pictcairn Island? The additional "c" cost Ryan all of his money.
Both Wexler and Whitlock were right with: what is Pitcairn? Wexler went for everything and reached $19,600. Whitlock enjoyed the magic of his 1996 college title and wagered a safe $2,000 to win with $20,400.

Day 30 (Tuesday March 22): Michael Daunt advanced.
This was a sqeaker, winning by one dollar.
Final Jeopardy! category: Cyber-Glossary. Answer: in computerese, this word from the Hindu faith means an icon of a user in virtual reality.
Correct question: what is an avatar.
All three were correct and the game came down to the wagers.
Jamie Weiss doubled his total to $4,400. Jeff Stewart doubled his to take the lead at $24,800.
Revealing his correct question, Daunt bet enough to take the $1 victory with $24,801.

Day 31 (Wednesday March 23): Steve Berman advanced.
Final category: Major League Baseball. Answer: the team names of these two expansion clubs start with the same three letters; one might catch the other.
Berman was the only player to correctly question: who are the Marlins and the Mariners?
His wager of $7,401 allowed Berman to take home $20,801 and await his shot in the next round

Day 32 (Thursday March 24): Finerman advanced

Day 33 (Friday March 25): John Cuthbertson advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: 12-Letter Words.
Final answer: a chemist in the 1920s coined this term after finding lavender oil not only hid the odor of his burnt hand but also healed it.
Correct question: what is aromatherapy?
Everyone struck out, leaving the game in the hands of the wagers.
Bruce Ikawa offered: what is analgesic? (about three letters short). He kept $1.
Bob Blake went blank. His $8,000 wager left the 1990 Tournament of Champions winner at $10,200 and, momentarily, a wish he had been more conservative.
Cuthbertson had the obligatory: what is?


 
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ppauper
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Sat Apr 02, 05 04:23 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 34 (Monday March 28): India Cooper advanced.
She had it locked up before Final Jeopardy!, which was just as well because she got it wrong (as did the others)
Final Jeopardy! category: U.S. Presidents.
Answer: he's the only U.S. President to serve in the Senate after leaving the White House.
Correct question: who is Andrew Johnson?
All three players missed.
Bill Sloan and Cooper both chose: who is John Quincy Adams?
1992 teen champion-turned-investment banker Fraser Woodford blew everything on: who is (James K.) Polk?
Sloan coughed up all of his $7,000 but a token $100. Cooper conservatively only risked $200 to end with a $16,000 payoff.

Day 35 (Tuesday March 29): Kyle Hale advanced.
One of the losers was Bernie Cullen who came into the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions with a legitimate shot to become television's biggest winner of all-time. Ken Jennings can keep his crown on ice for now. Cullen, a former five-time Jeopardy! champion who went on to win $1 million on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, had the lead over Hale going into Final Jeopardy!
Final Jeopardy! Tuesday by virtue of an adjusted answer.
Final Jeopardy! category: Historical Plays
Final answer: "If I were to dress as a woman, they would think of me as a woman...what would become of me?" is a line from this 1923 play.
Correct question: what is "Saint Joan?" (George Bernard Shaw)
All 3 players missed, and it came down to bad wagering on Cullen's part.
Former five-time winner Pat Healy offered: what is "Major Barbara?", but wagered nothing.
Hale's question: what is "The Iceman Cometh?" and he fell back from $17,000 to $14,999.
Cullen tried to scratch out: what is "Some Like It Hot?" That was a bit late for 1923. Cullen's wager knocked him into a deep third place

Day 36 (Wednesday March 30): Rick Knutsen advanced.
It was neck-and-neck-and-neck going into Final Jeopardy!
Knutsen $13,200, Craig Barker $11,600, Amy Fine $9,400
Final Jeopardy! category: Vocabulary.
Answer: this term for a sudden piece of good fortune literally refers to fruit blown to the ground.
Correct question: what is windfall?
All 3 were correct.
Fine doubled her total to $18,800. Barker wagered a dollar short of $10,000 to go to $21,599. Knutsen sealed away the victory with a bet of $10,001 and a winning total of $23,201.

Day 37 (Thursday March 31): Bruce Naege advanced.
Entering the finale, Tom Halpern was still ahead $17,600-$14,200 with Graham Gilmer virtually out of it at $5,200.
Final category: English Literature.
Answer: this 17th Century poetic follow-up begins, "I who ere while the happy garden sung, by one man's disobedience lost..."
Gilmer missed with: what is "Paradise Found?" He fell back to $100.
Naegeli would be the only correct questioner with: what is "Paradise Regained?"
The Arizonan's nailing the followup to John Milton's "Paradise Lost" advanced him to $21,600.
Halpern's heart sank as he revealed: what is "Kingdom Won?" His $10,801 wager dropped him to a distant second at $6,799.

Day 38 (Friday April 1): Matt Zielenski advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Automotive History.
Answer: in 1959, the ad firm of Doyle Dane Bernbach began using the slogan "ugly is only skin-deep" for this import model.
Kurt Bray and Zielenski were both right with: what is the Volkswagen Beetle? Bray jumped to $5,500.
Bob Fleenor, down $20,200-$17,800, left off the Beetle from his question and was ruled incorrect. His $4,200 wager slid him back to $13,600.
Zielenski took a big risk but added $15,401 to his total for a winning $35,601.




 
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ppauper
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 39 (Monday April 4): April McManus advanced.
Incidentally, she's a "homemaker" in England these days.
Final Jeopardy! category: Presidents and the Movies.
Answer: this President arranged the first film showing in the White House when he had "The Birth of a Nation" screened there.
Correct Question: "who is woodrow wilson".
One had to think of World War I to nail this one.
Paul Thompson added $5,000 to his total to finish at $10,400 with: who is Woodrow Wilson?
Larry Cloud, still with a chance, blew it with: who is William Howard Taft? He fell back to $5,400 with a $6,000 wager.
McManus first questioned Taft, scratched it out and was on the money with Wilson. She would have won regardless with her $5,801 bet but ended at $22,801 to advance to the round-of-54.

Day 40 (Tuesday April 5): Lan Djang advanced.
Final category: Historic Places.
Answer: the towns of Vierville-Sur-Mer and Colleveille-Sur-Mer entered history with this two-word area named for a U.S. city.
Correct question: "what is Omaha Beach ?"
Dave Willis was close with: what is Omaha? He needed two words in the question and lost all of his cash.
Andrew Hutchings scratched out a question interpreted by Alex Trebek as: what is Peter Nero? That sent him back to $2,000.
Only a monumental math error on a wrong answer would have destroyed Djang's chances. He was right with: what is Omaha Beach? His $5,650 wager gave him the victory with $28,650.

Day 41 (Wednesday April 5): Paul Gutowski advanced.
1999's Tournament of Champions winner Dave Abbott was amongst the losers.
Final Jeopardy! category: Famous Places.
Answer: the appearance of this famous site gave England its old name of Albion.
Correct question: "what are the White Cliffs of Dover?"
Challenger Mark Born, from the 1990-91 season, was correct with. However, his $2,799 finish was hopelessly out of the running.
Gutowski's correct question on an $8,802 bet gave him a $2 lead over Abbott.
The former T of C king was sporting no poker face. He groaned as he revealed: what is Stonehenge? Abbott fell back to $17,599, ceding a berth in the Fabulous 54 round to the overjoyed Gutowski.


Day 41 (Thursday April 6): Lara Robillard advanced.
Final Jeopardy! category: Notable African Americans.
Answer: in 1980, Marva Collins declined this cabinet post in favor of keeping her regular job.
Correct question: "what is Secretary of Education?"
Michael Braun offered: what is H.U.D.? ,His unusual wager of $91 still kept him with a chance at $9,109.
Robillard was correct but wagered nothing, staying at at $11,200.
Bill Dickenson developed the fatal headshake. His question was the same as Braun's and his $7,801 bet sent him sinking into third with $6,799.

Day 43 (Friday April 7): Phil Yellman advanced.
He won by one dollar !
Final Jeopardy! category:Children's Literature:
Dr. Seuss wrote this book to win a bet that he couldn't write a book using only 50 different words.
Correct question: what is "Green Eggs and Ham?"
Josh DenHartog and Trevor Huffman both doubled their money, while Yellman, bet more cautiously, and $5,001 wager propelled him to a $1 victory at $25,601.






Edited: Sun Apr 10, 05 at 09:28 PM by ppauper
 
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ppauper
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Sat Apr 16, 05 03:18 PM
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The Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 44 (Monday April 11): Scott Gillispie advanced.
Went from worst to first !
All three players missed Final Jeopardy!
Category: Arlington's Tomb of the Unknowns:
sentinels at the tomb walk exactly this many steps at a time before they stop and turn.
Correct question: what is 21 (dovetailing with a 21-gun salute)?
First up, was Gillispie, who was wrong. His $4,400 wager kept him in the game at $7,200.
Steven Popper of Topanga, Cal., a 1988 Tournament of Champions semifinalist, questioned: what is 50? He went for the burn and fell from $12,200 to $299.
The game was in the hands of leader David Venderbush, a 1993 five-time champion. He questioned: what is 10? Venderbush was not conservative, coughing up $9,000, dropping from $15,500 to $6,500 and handing the win and the $15,000 top prize to Gillispie

Day 45 (Tuesday April 12): Steve Chernicoff advanced and is the last qualifier for the fabulous 54!
Final Jeopardy! category: Astronomy.
Answer: it's the colorful two-word term used to describe the motion of galaxies coming toward us, like Andromeda is.
Ben Lyon and Roy Holliday both offered: what is the red shift (which means galaxies moving away from us)? Lyon blew his entire $9,400. Holliday dropped from $10,600 to $1,200.
Chernicoff, a 1994 Tournament of Champions semifinalist, was on the money with: what is the blue shift? He jumped from $16,300 to $21,201 and the victory.




 
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ppauper
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We're now onto the next round !
Quote

The 45 winners of the first round will be added to the nine players receiving byes (a tenth, television's all-time winner Ken Jennings, is an automatic qualifier for the three-show finals in late May) in the Fabulous 54 round. Daily winners receive a guarantee of $20,000 and advance to the Terrific 18. Losers take home $10,000.


Day 1 (Wednesday April 13) Berkeley Prof Dan Melia advanced
Quote

Alex Trebek said it all Wednesday when he told the opponents of Dan Melia the Cal-Berkeley professor "turned in a Ken Jennings performance" in the opening game of the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions Fabulous 54 round.
Melia nailed the first four answers, seven of the first nine and nine of the first 12 to defeat former college champion Kyle Hale and past five-time winner Rick Knutsen in a cakewalk Wednesday.
Final Jeopardy! was moot, as was the case in 64 of Jennings' victories last year, as Melia lapped the field. The 1998 Tournament of Champions winner was up by $3,000 over Knutsen at the first break and was overseas by the end of Jeopardy! with $13,000 to $2,800 for Knutsen and $1,600 for Hale.

Final Jeopardy! category: 16th Century Names.
Answer: as a foe of the Spanish, he's been called "The Queen's Pirate" & a "Gran Luterano."
All three players were correct with: who is Sir Francis Drake? Knutsen stayed pat and Hale only wagered a token $1.

Day 2 (Thursday April 14) Steve Chernicoff advanced
Final category: Ancient Cities.
Answer: it sided with Sparta in the Peloponnesian War and the Bible includes two letters to its Christians.
All three players were correct with: what is Corinth (based on the apostle Paul's two letters 1 and 2 Corinthians).
India Cooper doubled her total to $13,200, Scott Gillispie almost doubled to finish at $21,500 and Chernicoff bet safely enough for a win at $21,601.

Day 3 (Friday April 15) Michael Rooney---a professor from Pasadena--- advanced
(anyone know if he's Caltech ? doesn't say if he lives in pasadena or works there)
Final category: British Royalty.
Answer: when his tomb was opened in 1102, a fragrance filled the air and his body was perfectly preserved.
Rooney was correct with: who is Edward the Confessor? His $4,500 wager gave him $10,500.
Fred Ramen was also on the money but his conservative wager of $706 took him out of the game with $9,103.
Tom Walsh revealed his answer of: who is Edward I? Wrong Edward. His $7,695 bet sent him sliding back to $1,405 and a $10,000 consolation prize, along with Ramen.
 
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ppauper
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Round 2 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 4 (Monday April 18) accountant Michael Daunt advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: Invented Words.
Answer: in works by Lewis Carroll, this word means "four in the afternoon; the time when you begin broiling things for dinner."
Third place competitor Bruce Borchardt and Daunt were both right with: what is brillig? Borchardt stayed pat at $8,400. Daunt's $6,801 wager sent him to the lead at $22,801.
BobHarris had an erroneous answer: what is tea time?

Day 5 (Tuesday April 19) Shane Whitlock advanced.
All 3 missed on Final Jeopardy! and the amount gambled was the deciding factor
Final Jeopardy! category: The Cabinet. Answer: a top member of the Reagan cabinet, he was also labor secretary and treasury secretary under Richard Nixon. Correct question: who is George Schultz?
Whitlock risked only $4,000 of his $11,600 to come from behind for the victory over Steve Berman, a former undefeated champion. Eric Newhouse who had a bye to this round finished third.

Day 6 (Wednesday April 20) Brian Moore advanced.
He was shooting to become the biggest winner in the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions Wednesday but $37,600 going into the finale, he could afford his miss in Final Jeopardy!
All 3 contestants missed again.
Final category: Literary Inspirations.
Answer: this real man inspired a 1719 novel character and a poem that says, "I am monarch of all I survey."
Correct question: who is Alexander Selkirk?
Vanita Kailasanath's question: who was Richard II? Her $3,200 only dwindled to $2,903---good enough for second after Mark Eckard's erroneous question (who is Louis XIII?) and wager costing him all but $100 of his $11,400.
Moore, going for $50,000 with a $12,400 bet, missed with: who is Louis XIV? He ended with $25,200 and an easy berth in the quarterfinals.

Day 7 (Thursday April 21) Jerome Vered advanced.
This was the guy who held the one-day record before Jennings ($35K to Jennings' $75K)
Final Jeopardy! category: 20th Century Asia.
Answer: in 1942, Aung San, commander of this country's Independence Army, married nurse Khin Kyi.
All three players were correct with: what is Burma?
Sean Ryan (the first six-time champion after the 5-game cap was lifted) doubled his total to $18,000.
Leah Greenwald played an interesting wager of $1,499 to go to $15,999.
Vered let out a big sigh with his $9,000 bet to carry him to an even $30,000, a two-game tournament total of $57,601 and a berth in the Elite 18.

Day 8 (Friday April 22) Robert Slaven advanced.
For Gainesville, Fla., attorney Michael Dupée, the day was on a par with a college basketball team leading all the way until the final 30 seconds of a game and blowing it on a late turnover.
For Canadian Robert Slaven, Friday was an example of how one can never give up in a game of Jeopardy!.
Dupée led virtually all the way in the Fabulous 54 elimination of the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions before falling in Final Jeopardy!
Going into Final Jeopardy! Slaven had $11,200, Eugene Finerman had $13,200 and Dupée had a comfortable lead at $21,700.
Final category: New Laws.
Answer: CEOs must personally certify their corporate books following a July 2002 law named for these two men.
Slaven offered: who are (Paul) Sarbanes and (Michael) Oxley? How about that, he was correct. Slaven doubled his money to $22,400.
Finerman blew his entire wad on: who are Feingold and McCain? (campaign finance reform, not corporate governance).
For Dupee, who had driven the track without blowing a tire, a trip was coming to the pits as he duplicated Finerman's question. His $4,701 wager sent him back to $16,999 with a stunning loss as Slaven vaulted from worst to first.





Edited: Thu Apr 28, 05 at 03:12 PM by ppauper
 
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Round 2 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 9 (Monday April 25) Matt Zielenski (who reportedly never smiles) advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: U.S. Cities.
Final answer: in 1790, this Midwest city was named for a society that had been named for a Roman citizen-soldier. (Hamilton around ?)
Robin Carroll and Zielenski were both correct with: what is Cincinnati?
Carroll all but doubled her total to $9,599.
Zielinski wagered just enough to shut out the Kennesaw, Ga., resident with $9,601.
Steve Newman, who played an impressive first-round game, showed anguish on his face. His question: what is Council Bluffs? A conservative wager would have kept him as champion but he was counting on Zielenski to go for everything. His $5,201 bet sent him back to third at $7,199 and handed the 1995 teen champion the victory.
Carroll's loss extends the record to 0-4 for former champions seeded automatically into the Fab 54 round. Her $25,000 consolation as a seeded player keeps her as the series' all-time top winner among female contestants with $244,100 in cash.

Day 10 (Tuesday April 26) Chris Miller advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: In the Dictionary.
Answer: much in the news of the world at the end of June 2004, it's the only English word to contain "gnt" consecutively.
Dave Traini had no answer and lost a third of his total to $6,000.
Ryan Holznagel gave a stab with: what is knighted?
Miller nailed it with: what is sovereignty? His risky $10,445 wager gave him a total of $22,045, a huge grin, and the berth in the quarterfinals.


Day 11 (Wednesday April 27) Lan Djang advanced
Final category: Religious History
From the Greek, the name of his movement of the early Christian era means that its members had knowledge of God.
Correct question: what is Gnosticism?
Jeff Richmond doubled his total to $3,200.
Mark Dawson did the same to finish at $21,200, forcing Djang to at least wager $2,401 to win. He did. The health policy analyst won by $50 with $21,250.

Day 12 (Thursday April 28) Brad Rutter (the sixth all-time top winner in American television history) advanced
Final Jeopardy! category: British Military History.
Answer: he commanded the forces that rescued the survivors of the infamous Black Hole of Calcutta.
Ironically, only Bruce Naegeli (in 3rd place) was correct with: who was Robert Clive?
He doubled his score to $14,000 and ended with the runner-up consolation of $10,000 and $31,600 for his two-game total.
John Beck said he had never heard of Clive. Resisting the temptation to use the name of his hometown favorite Ric Flair, Beck questioned: who is Nelson? He blew everything but also took away a $10,000 check to give him $29,000 for the tournament.
Rutter's question: who is Kitchener? Attempting to near the $50,000 mark with his wager, Rutter scaled back to $18,200, still a winning total. For his television quiz show career, Rutter now has earnings of $1,175,102.


Day 13 (Friday April 29) Grace Veach advanced
Brian Weikle, the former single-day recordholder ($52,000) surprisingly lost.
Final Jeopardy! answer: some versions of this painting based on a Bible verse show William Penn making a treaty with the Indians in the background. All three players missed, making the wagers the deciding factor.
Michael Rankins' question: what is "The Lion and the Lamb?" He stayed pat at $2,000.
Veach offered: what is "Peaceful Broth?" Based on her Daily Double gambles, one might have expected her to go for all $24,000. Instead, the surprise: only a $500 wager, keeping her at $23,500.
Weikle, a noted trivia competitor, had one of those expressions which did not hide his emotions. His question: what is "Crossing the Nile?"
Figuring Veach would go for it all, Weikle risked $24,000 and fell back to third at $400. Correct question: what is "A Peaceable Kingdom?"
A big grin flashed Veach's face as she realized she will advance to the Elite 18 round. Her two-game tourney winnings stand at $49,700.
Rankins, with his $10,000 consolation prize, wound up with $41,600 for the tournament. Weikle's loss left all-star players seeded with byes into the Fabulous 54 round with a surprising 1-5 mark. He earns $25,000---$15,000 for the minimum awarded a first-round winner and the $10,000 Fab 54 consolation. That ups his overall career Jeopardy! cash winnings to $230,801.

 
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Round 2 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 14 (Monday May 2) former college champion Pam Mueller advanced.
Mueller came from $100 behind in Final Jeopardy! to defeat Arthur Phillips.
Final category: World Cities.
Answer: capital of the Ancient Roman province of Galatia, it became a modern national capital in 1923. The sort of question Hamilton would appreciate.
Eric Terzuolo was correct with: what is Ankara, Turkey? He gained a brief lead at $12,400.
Mueller was also right and played an interesting math wager of $6,699 to go to $18,699.
Phillips turned his back as if he wanted to walk out of the building. His question: what is Beirut? He risked all but $5, giving the victory to Mueller.

Day 15 (Tuesday May 3) John Cuthbertson advanced.
Entering the finale, Cuthbertson held a tenuous $100 lead ($14,500 to $14,400) over Tad Carithers. Bob Verini had still mathematically alive at $3,000.
Final Jeopardy! category: Words from Mythology. Answer: it refers to a mythical bird that clamed waves, or to past happy "days," spelled differently, it is a sleeping pill.
Those of us who remember Bush41's medical problems knew the answer to this.
Verini drew a blank but stayed pat at $3,000.
Carithers missed with: what is Sylvan? Emulating the strategy of Grace Veach against seeded contestant Brian Weikle last Friday, the New Yorker only wagered $500 to stay at $13,900.
The conservative bet did not stand up this time. Cuthbertson nailed the question with: what is Halcyon? His $8,400 wager gave him a winning $22,900 and a shot in the Elite 18.
Verini and Carithers---who won $31,300 in upsetting 1992 great Leszek Pawlowicz in the opening round---took the $10,000 consolation prizes. Verini left with $25,000 (seeded players take the winner's $15,000 minimum from round one) and Carithers with $41,300.
Cuthbertson enters the quarterfinals with $37,900.

Day 16 (Wednesday May 4) Frank Spangenberg advanced
Fifteen years ago, Frank Spangenberg set a five-day record for winnings on syndicated Jeopardy!. Wednesday, he made a step toward a showdown with the man who became a quiz show legend after the series' five-day limit was lifted.
Final Jeopardy! category: Vocabulary.
Answer: its original meaning was a resident of a certain wealthy city; now it means one who indulges in luxury.
Paul Gutowski connected with: what is sybarite? He added $4,597 to his total, advancing to $9,197.
Bev Schwartzberg missed with: what is Cosmopolitan?" She lost $1,100 to finish at $4,700.
Spangenberg also was on the money with sybarite. He picked up $7,000, running his total to $25,800.

Day 17 (Thursday May 5) Phil Yellman advanced
Final category: Female Firsts.
Answer: after 285 years, in 1945, this British organization inducted its first women, including Kathleen Lunsdale.
Chuck Forrest went for everything with: what is the Royal Academy of Sciences? He missed to earn the $25,000 guarantee for the seeded players.
Yellman was on the money with: what is The Royal Society? His $14,000 wager took him to $28,200.
Lara Robillard matched Forrest's answer and fell to $12,999. Her $10,000 consolation prize gave her $25,000 for the tournament.
With another match ahead, Yellman's tourney total stands at $53,801.

Day 18 (Friday May 6) April McManus advanced.
She is the final qualifier for the elite eighteen.
Final Jeopardy! category: Fictional Animals.
Answer: the name of this character, introduced in 1894, is from the Hindi for bear.
Jonathon Groff drew one of the biggest laughs of the season when he questioned: what is Pooh? He blew all of his money but told Alex Trebek, "At least I got to say Pooh."

As every schoolboy knows:
Quote

During World War I, a Canadian lieutenant named Harry Colebourne was on his way to Europe when he bought a female black bear cub whose mother had been killed by a hunter. He named her Winnipeg (Winnie for short), after his hometown.
The cub accompanied the unit to Britain and became the brigade's mascot. When Colebourne was sent to France, he gave Winnie to the London Zoo. It was here that Christopher Robin Milne, son of author A.A. Milne, met and fell in love with the bear. He visited her often at the zoo and renamed his teddy bear (a male originally named Edward Bear) Winnie-the-Pooh. (The "Pooh" part was the name of a real swan). Inspired by his son's beloved stuffed animals, A.A. Milne wrote Winnie-the-Pooh, which was published in 1926.

Ed Schiffer duplicated Groff's question and lost all but $600.
McManus was on the money. She recognized the Indian bear (also made famous by Disney) who sheltered Mowgli in "The Jungle Book." Her question: what is Baloo? The $2,101 wager gave her a runaway game-winning $18,001, adjusted to the minimum Fabulous 54 round share of $20,000.
Groff's two-game tournament winnings totaled $34,001. Schiffer went home with $27,400.
McManus enters the Elite 18 with $42,801.





Edited: Sun May 08, 05 at 07:23 PM by ppauper
 
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The elite eighteen begins on monday, and lasts 6 shows, with a minimum $30,000 to each Elite 18 winner

This weeks matchups are:
(Monday) Brad Rutter-Steve Chernicoff-Michael Cooper
(Tuesday) Pam Mueller-Brian Moore-Phil Yellman
(Wednesday) Frank Spangenberg-Grace Veach-Shane Whitlock
(Thursday) John Cuthbertson-Robert Slaven-April McManus
(Friday) Matt Zielenski-Chris Miller-Lan Djang
(next Monday) Dan Melia-Jerome Vered-Michael Daunt
 
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Jennings the game:
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Ken Jennings Intros Can You Beat Ken? at Toys 'R' Us
Television game show winnings king Ken Jennings will introduce his new trivia board game on the same day he begins his three-show challenge in the finals of the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions.
Jennings, the 74-day champion and $2.52 million winner on the series last year, will appear at Toys 'R' Us on Times Square in New York City May 23.
The new game, Can You Beat Ken? from University Games, will be introduced on level two of the store at 1514 Broadway (at 44th Street).
Jennings will autograph the games from 5:30-7 p.m. From 5-5:30, customers will vie for a chance to play in a live Can You Beat Ken? challenge and a head-to-head showdown with the Jeopardy! phenom.
The game features 880 trivia questions from different categories including sports, science, contemporary music and history. Nothing is in the game about Sprint phones or Allstate Insurance, two of Jennings' current endorsements.
Jennings turns 31 on the day of the promotion. A hotline is available for detailed information at (646) 366-8855. A special link is online at toysrustimesquare.com.
Contestants in the love Can You Beat Ken? challenge must be at least 12. Interested challengers should line up at 4:30 p.m. A limited number will be selected. No memorabilia other than the games will be signed.

 
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This week, there's going to be a number of questions on CNN:
Quote

CNN-Jeopardy
Source: CNN Pressroom
CNN 25? becomes a special category on Jeopardy! this month as CNN celebrates its 25th anniversary of 24-hour news. From Monday, May 9, through Friday, May 13, contestants will test their knowledge of the world with Jeopardy! questions, some using CNN video of historic events and people over the years.
As part of the featured ?CNN 25? category, CNN anchors Christiane Amanpour, Anderson Cooper, Nancy Grace, Sanjay Gupta and Paula Zahn will appear in taped segments on Jeopardy! to question contestants about news events they have covered for CNN both domestically and internationally.



Edited: Mon May 09, 05 at 03:36 PM by ppauper
 
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Round 3 of the Ultimate Tourney:

Day 1 (Monday May 9) Brad Rutter advanced.
He rallied from -$1,000 in Double Jeopardy! to win a berth in the Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions Super Six by $1.
Host Alex Trebek, in introducing the Final Jeopardy! category of People and Places, said: "I suspect wagering strategies will be extremely crucial in this round." Trebek was right.
Final answer: this Mediterranean island shares its name with President Garfield's nickname for his wife.
Rutter, needing a miracle, wrote: what is Malta? He then scratched it out and scribbled "Crete" at the last second. The change was correct ("Crete" was the nickname for Lucretia Mott Garfield). He added just $800 to get to $6,400 and hang onto a slim hope.
Michael Rooney went with Malta. He lost $3,599 to eliminate himself at $5,601.
Steve Chernicoff's question: what is Rhodes? A wager of less than $6,000 would still ensure victory. Playing the odds against Rooney's total, Chernicoff risked $6,001 to fall to $6,399 and a $1 loss to Rutter.
The game show millionaire added another $30,000 for the win, giving him $50,000 for the tournament and topping the $1.2 million mark in career earnings ($1,205,102). He is the only player remaining in the tournament who could potentially surpass Ken Jennings, if he reaches the finals, as television's all-time game show winner.
Chernicoff and Rooney tacked on the additional $15,000 consolation checks. Chernicoff ended the tournament with $57,802 while Rooney wound up with $70,201.

 
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Round 3 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 2 (Tuesday May 10) Pam Mueller advanced:
Final Jeopardy! category: 20th Century Authors.
Answer: born of Norwegian descent in 1916, he was given the first name of a famous Norwegian at the time.
Phil Yellman missed with: who is Caldwell? He lost $3,000 back to $8,000.
Brian Moore coughed up everything with: who is Ibsen?
Mueller, who had her classic grin the moment she wrote her answer: who is Roald Dahl?
The author was named for the Norwegian who had been first to the South Pole in 1911: Roald Amundsen.
With a $10,401 wager, Mueller easily won with $25,201, adjusted to the minimum $30,000 for the Elite 18 round. For the tournament, she has $80,600.
Yellman retired with $68,801 after his $15,000 consolation check was added. Moore left with $69,200.



Edited: Thu May 12, 05 at 02:59 PM by ppauper
 
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Round 3 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 3 (Wednesday May 11) NYPD Lt. Frank Spangenberg advanced:
Final Jeopardy! category: Famous Pairs.
Answer: now meaning nearly identical, these two names were applied to rivals Handel and Bononchini in a 1720s verse.
Grace Veach went first and came up with nothing. She lost it all to take home $15,000 in consolation money.
Spangenberg came up with: "what are Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dee?" He gambled almost everything -- $17,199 -- and soared to $34,399.
Shane Whitlock fell short with: what are Tit and Tat? That cost him $16,001 and Spangenberg's mouth dropped open in astonishment as he sewed up a spot in the Super Six.
Spangenberg now has $60,199 in two tournament games.

Edited: Thu May 12, 05 at 03:02 PM by ppauper
 
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Round 3 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 4 (Thursday May 12) John Cuthbertson advanced:
April McManus, a homemaker from Herefordshire, England, benefited from a scoring change in Thursday's Ultimate Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions quarterfinal round and was given $4,000 extra to wager in Final Jeopardy!
However, John Cuthbertson, who missed the same question as McManus, was also given $2,000. That proved enough to hold off McManus and Robert Slavin to advance to next week's Super Six semifinal round
Final Jeopardy! category: Literary Musical Theatre.
Answer: songs in this 1956 show include "Oh Happy We," "You Were Dead, You Know," and "The Best of All Possible Worlds."
McManus made a last minute change to: what is "Candide?" She was on the money and nearly doubled her score to $22,300.
Cuthbertson, however, eliminated her with a correct question and a bet carrying him to $22,401.
Robert Slaven was sick. His question: what is "Our Town?," was incorrect, dropping him $10,601 to $4,399.
Cuthbertson earned the adjusted $30,000 winner's share. Slaven ended the tournament with $66,201 and McManus with $57,201 after their $15,000 consolations.
 
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Round 3 of the Ultimate Tourney continues:

Day 5 (Friday May 13) Chris Miller advanced:
Final Jeopardy! category: National Anthems.
Answer: novel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore wrote the national anthems of these two countries.
Matt Zielenski, with virtually no chance, blew everything with: what are India and Sri Lanka?
Lan Djang, who shook his head unhappily as the think music played its last notes, had the same question and lost $8,650 to $950.
Miller pulled out another correct Final Jeopardy! with: what are India and Bangladesh? He safely wagered $1,001 for a $19,201 final total but earned the $30,000 minimum for an Elite 18 winner.
Miller enters next week's two-show Super Six playoff with $73,844 for he tournament. Djang left with $63,100 and Zielenski with $55,200.

 
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