This guy is very strategic
Brendan Neary
Where we are right now
1402
iphone
Steve Jobs
This Connecticut town—home to a major submarine base today—was the 1816 birthplace of a future Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice.
What is Groton?
The number of questions I had left to write when Christina asked me how close I was to finishing this jeopardy
3
While not from the navy, this man can be described as an anchor.
Alex Zhu
Albert Bourla's exact location
40.7128° N, 74.0060° W
money
Jerome Powell
Before college, many New Englanders prepped at this Groton school named for benefactor Pierpont Bacon.
What is Bacon Academy?
host of the game awards
Janelle Kamba
The birthplace of the famous board game by Larry Harris, Axis and Allies
Groton, Connecticut
robbery

Backing Henry Clay and internal improvements, this 1850s political party put many jurists on Pennsylvania benches.
What is the Whig Party?
Known as “Satchmo,” this trumpeter’s gravelly voice and hit “What a Wonderful World” made him one of jazz’s most beloved figures.
Who is Louis Armstrong?
He graduated
Mekhi Amos or David Rodriguez
430 to 447 light-years away from Earth, this bright star in the Ursa Minor (Little Bear) constellation, famous for its near-perfect alignment with Earth's rotational axis, making it appear almost stationary as the northern sky rotates around it.
Polaris
pfizer
Charles Pfizer
In 1868, Governor John W. Geary filled a high‑court vacancy created when this Pennsylvanian joined the U.S. Supreme Court.
Who is William Strong?
A wound where the bone pierces the skin.
Compound fracture
our very own adeptus mechanicus servitor techpreist
Dust II
(January 20, 1816 – February 19, 1877) was an American jurist who was a justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania from 1868 until his death in 1877.
Early life
Born on January 20, 1816, in Groton, Connecticut, this individual was one of ten children (four sons and six daughters) born to Warren and Elisabeth Stanton (Gallup) Williams. They prepared for college at the Bacon Academy and Plainfield Academy and graduated from Amherst College in 1837. Following graduation, they spent one year as the principal of the Southwick Academy in Southwick, Massachusetts.
Legal career
In 1838, they moved to Pittsburgh and studied law in the office of Walter H. Lowrie. Admission to the bar occurred on May 24, 1841.
In 1851, they were the Whig candidate for judge of the district court of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, defeating Democratic nominee Charles Shaler and later being reelected without opposition in 1861. In 1867, they were the Republican nominee for the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania but were defeated by George Sharswood by 927 votes. United States Senator John Scott recommended them to President Ulysses S. Grant for a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, but they declined. From 1863 until their death, they served as a professor of law at the Western University of Pennsylvania.
In August 1868, Governor John W. Geary appointed them to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania caused by William Strong's appointment to the Supreme Court of the United States. They took office on October 26, 1868, and in 1869 were elected to a fifteen-year term.
Personal life
In 1840, they joined the Third Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh. From 1858 to 1874, they were an elder of the church and a member of the General Assembly of the New School Presbyterian Church in 1859, 1865, 1866, and 1867. In 1870, they played a role in resolving the Old School–New School controversy and reuniting the two branches of the Presbyterian Church.
On May 20, 1846, they married Lucy J. Stone of Petersburgh, New York. They had three sons and three daughters.
Death
They died on February 19, 1877, in Pittsburgh and were survived by their spouse and five of their children. James P. Sterrett succeeded them on the Supreme Court.
Henry Warren Williams (1816–1877)
A church statesman’s work in 1870 helped end this long‑running Presbyterian split by reuniting “Old School” and “New School.”
What is the Old School–New School controversy?
This 19th‑century mathematician wrote the first algorithm intended for a machine, earning the title “the world’s first computer programmer.”
Ada Lovelace?