Friday, November 28, 2014

Cold Turkey Sandwich; "Luv" is just a three-letter word; Mr. Ill


























Welcome to Joseph Young’s Puzzle –ria! (The picture above pertains to the bonus [bone-us?] guest puzzle that appears about seven paragraphs down the page.)

Well, it began Thanksgiving Day evening at about sundown and will continue throughout most of Friday, until everything has been picked over and the best stuff is pretty much all gone from the shelves.

Black Friday? That annual bullheaded buyers’ bacchanalia with its deliria of door-busting deals?

Nope. Cold turkey! I’m talkin’ ‘bout the Thanksgiving turkey carcass and carved leftovers -- prime fodder for cold turkey sandwiches -- crammed into the fridge (along with stuffing, gravy, mashed potatoes and other microwaveable turkey-day bounty).

Of course, a bit more than a month from now, a different breed of cold turkey will gobble and wobble its way into our holidays. To wit, many of us will make promises to ourselves to “go cold turkey” on Marboros, Big Macs, Michelobs and other perceived vices on New Year’s (Resolution) Day.
 
Speaking of perceived vices, in their quest to achieve a clean 2015 slate, some may resolve to discard “playing stud poker (along with whiskers on kittens,” of course) from their few-of-my-favorite-things list... 

But probably not the six poker-playing guys described in the bonus puzzle below.

The puzzle was created by our “guest gourment French chef,” Monsieur Garcon du Parachutisme (aka “skydiveboy” on the Blainesville blog) He should be familiar to Puzzleria patrons, as we have posted his excellent puzzles in the past. This one is a kind of “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Poker Game.”

Bonus French Chef Slice:
52-Card Poker Pick-up

In a private gaming room at a posh Las Vegas casino six men are playing poker. Going around the table clockwise, Carl is a lawyer who enjoys fine wine. Dan is a banker and loves a dry martini. Ed is a pilot and likes his Jack Daniels neat. Frank is an accountant who prefers Scotch. George is an architect and insists his Manhattans are stirred—not shaken, and Jack is a dentist with a taste for fine cognac.
 
Each of these gentlemen take turns shuffling the cards, which of course are Bicycle, Rider Back, Poker 808, Standard Face alternating between Red and Blue backs. A fresh deck of opposing color is put into play at the end of six rounds, or upon request.
 
After several rounds, when it was his turn to shuffle again, one of these players managed to drop all of the cards face up on the floor. From this information can you determine who is all thumbs and why?


We give thanks to Monsieur Garcon du Parachutisme, our guest French puzzle chef


Here is our menu of this week’s Puzzleria! house slices:

Menu

Ripping Off Shortz Slice…
(aka: Easy As Day-Old Pumpkin Pie Slice):
Cold Turkey Sandwich

That post-Thanksgiving Day favorite, the “COLD TURKEY SANDWICH,” possesses a special alphabetic distinction. What is…

Wait, wait! Will Shortz already broadcast, in essence,  this same puzzle  last April on National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Sunday! We’d be ripping him off were we to continue with it…

So, we will challenge you instead with:
Explain how the following three sets relate to “COLD TURKEY SANDWICH”: {450, 650} { } {401, 601} 
What three sets be would you associate with “HOT TOFURKEY BURGER”?

Willy-Nilly Slice
Mr. Ill

Name a seven-letter synonym of one or more hyphenated words that begin with “ill-...” 

Reverse its third and fourth letters and change its fifth letter from a vowel to a consonant to form a word that sometimes modifies the word “bill.” 

What are these two words?


“Let’s Get Series” Slice
“Luv” is just a three-letter word

Consider the series of letters below:
E T E O V I E T N N ? ? ?
It begins with the three-letter French word for “summer,” then an O, a competitive and contentious three-letter English verb,  and a former American country music-oriented cable television network. 

The next three letters also spell out a word. What is it?
(Hint: It is not “LUV.”)




Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)

Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! Thank you.

Friday, November 21, 2014

"Take this giblet and stuff it!"; Centrifugal Synonyms; Greatful Books


Welcome to Joseph Young’s Puzzle –ria!

This week we would like to give thanks for… Thanksgiving. It is our favorite major American holiday. But why, you (“yam” backwards) ask, should we be thankful for Thanksgiving Day?

First: It is probably the most “inclusive” of our holidays. Giving thanks is universal, cutting across cultures and perhaps even species (for example, tail-wagging, purring, etc.).

People of all faiths and non-faiths can participate in Thanksgiving. You can thank God for blessing you with life and gifts. Or you can thank Grandma for preparing the turkey and trimmings, your brother Mike for repairing your antediluvian basement fusebox, your wife for sharing her life (and salted caramel ice cream) with you, or your pal Winthrop for sparing you embarrassment during his preprandial toast by not spilling the beans (and the bubbly) about the time you filched sherry and whiskey from your dads liquor cabinet. and prosheeded to turn all the digital clocksh in the housh up-shide down.
 
Second: Thanksgiving is the least commercial of our major holidays. Granted, the mercantile mayhem (marking the advent of Christmas shopping) known as Black Friday is bleeding backward into November’s fourth Thursday. But even so, Thanksgiving Day remains a relatively lean slice of deli turkey sandwiched between thick slabs of Halloween “Pumpkinickel” and Yuletide fruitcake.

Third: A long weekend! (Actually, four-sevenths of a week qualifies as more than just an “-end.”

Fourth: football, football, football… if you’re into that brand of mayhem.

Fifth: of bourbon…. No, no, wait! Fifth: On Thanksgiving Thursday (and every Thursday, for that matter), Puzzleria! looms just around the corner. As the weekend grows nigh, it seems folks just get hungry and “Thursday” for fine puzzle slices washed down with drinks of refreshing thinking..

But before this weeks main course is served, heres an appetizer-puzzler to whet your appetite. In the following passage, each string of uppercase letters can be rearranged to form a word or words associated with Thanksgiving. The number of words appears in parentheses after the uppercase letters.

If you are having difficulty solving these anagrams, here is a helpful link.


We always had to snowshoe over the frozen river and through the snowy woods to go to Gramps and Grammar Lambda’s house for Thanksgiving dinner. Their home was nestled like A NORDIC INN (2) on the north shore of northwestern Minnesota’s VAGABOND BIERS LAKE (3).

Each year, Grammar’s fur-dyed-fuchsia French poodle, MS. PINKIE PUP (2), would greet us at the door with yips of joy (or perhaps it was jealously?). Often her flapping jowls would betray the TINIEST DROOL (2), evidence that Cousin Yancey had once again this Thanksgiving slipped a whiskey mickey into her water dish.

Later, when the increasingly MUDDLING PUP (2) began to wobble, weave and slur her yips, Grammar, her mind still quick as a PYTHON TRAP (1), would unravel Yancey's mischief and proceed to track him down so that she could SOB, WHINE (1), kvetch and moan to his face. Yancey would eventually skulk away to Grampas den to sulk and nurse his own whiskey sour and Dutch Masters cigar, tail between his legs.

In the MEANTIME, EPIC (2) culinary activity is taking place in Grammar’s warm and aromatic kitchen. As Uncle Winthrop spices the beef for the GROUND ROAST, HE HEMS (2) and haws, trying to explain sheepishly to his fellow food preparers why hash is a dish preferable to turkey, or even mutton, say, on this august November day.

Aunt Gert checks on the status of her signature CEDAR SAP YAMS (2), bubbling in the oven at 325 degrees. In 1963 Gert thought that for a change she’d pay homage to the pilgrims’ and Indians’ first Thankgiving by making an Indian dish. She bought beans, rice, ginger and other spices from her local Piggly Wiggly. Alas the beans were rancid and many Lambda-family guests got nauseous eating her curry dish. After that BEAN CURRY SCARE (2), we are all thankful she has since forsworn Indian cuisine in favor of her more traditional signature yams!

Over by the back burner, Cousin Yancey (no longer sulking but still suckling on his stogie and sour) is demonstrating his LAID-BACK FRY (2) technique on beer-battered green beans, flipping them like flapjacks in his pan. Ms. Pinkie Pup scavenges at his feet, gobbling down any greasy floor-flopped flotsam that falls into her yap.

While Cousin Lulu stirs her pesto brown rice pilaf, Zuzu, the wife of our hosts’ pastor (who is related to a South-African archbishop!), heats up her spinach pesto pasta on the stovetop, thereby foreordaining that we must EAT TWO PESTO (2) dishes!

Uncle Alf sits in the corner, assiduously concocting his Lambda family-favorite GALLON-OF-PORT FLAMBE (4), hoping to make a dent in the monopoly enjoyed by each years deluge of dessert pies.

As we are about to gather round the dining room table to pray, Aunt Willa  a vegan, scurries past and plucks from the fridge freezer an ICY EGG, SARAN(2)-wrapped, hard-boiled and hard-frozen, then drops it atop Lulu’s pilaf to thaw, just as the REV. SHAMAN TUTU (2) begins to pray:

“Lord, the whirlwind we hast reaped HATH DUSTY FUROR (2). Refreshest thou our soil with thy rain and our souls with thy holy reign. COMPLY THOU ONLY (2) if we obeyest thy commands. Amen.”

Grammar thanks the parson and, as we all settle into our seats, we admire her familiar centerpiece that doubles as a relish dish, chock-full of peonies, posies, LILIES, YOGURT, BRIE cheese (2) and pickles. Before Grammar settles into her own seat, like a schoolmarm passing out an assignment, she hands to each of us a harvest print napkin to TUCK UNDER (1) our belts, which are about to be loosened a notch or two.

Look for answers next Tuesday. Now, here is this week’s main course, served Puzzleria!-style, of course.
Menu

Easy As Pumpkin Pie Slice:
Centrifugal Synonyms

Think of a word associated with Thanksgiving that has an odd number of letters. Picture the word as a “spinning propeller” with the central letter as its hub. Starting from the center, “centrifugally” spell out the letters of each of the two “blades,” from innermost to outermost, but do not include the “hub-letter.” You will form two words that are synonyms.

What are these synonyms and this Thanksgiving word?  


Literary Slice:
Greatful Books

Think of a word associated with Thanksgiving. Replace its first, fourth and sixth letters with three different letters, and divide the result in two to reveal an author’s last name followed by the title of a work of fiction written by that author. 

What are the word, the author and the work of fiction?


Occupational Slice:

Think of a word associated with Thanksgiving. Insert a letter in its middle, creating a new word which denotes an occupation practiced by three characters: one portrayed on a television series guest appearance by a two-time Best Actress Oscar winner; another portrayed by an actor who won five Emmy Awards in the role; and a third portrayed in a film by a member of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. 

What are these two words?

(Hint: The occupation has a synonym whose first letter has a Scrabble value three points greater than the Scrabble sum of its remaining letters.) 



David’s Run-of-the-miles Slice:
Kleinucopia

Take a word associated with the Thanksgiving Day feast. Remove one letter from the inside of the word and read inside-out in both directions from there. You will get two movie titles.

Hint: Although the puzzle instructs you to “remove one letter from inside of the word,” you may also “remove a mess of letters from the inside of the bird!”

Note: This puzzle was created by the Puzzleria! blog commenter (and exceptional long-distance runner) whose screen name is David. (His astute comments can also be found on other blogs such as Blaines Puzzle Blog  and An Englishman Solves American Puzzles, and Partial Ellipsis Of The Sun. We are giving him thanks for letting us “package” his puzzle here.) 
-- LegoLambda






 Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)

Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! Thank you.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Rabbit-eared pigs; "Night Train Lane"? "Broadway Joe"?; Tragic tales of two flights
























Welcome to Joseph Young’s Puzzle-ria!

We must pay pictorial tribute to this past week’s astoundingly outstanding comet landing. After a decade-long odyssey, the European Space Agency mission to land a shutterbugging robot probe (here at Puzzleria! we call that “piggybacking”) onto the Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, has been accomplished. 

The comet, which is hurtling sunward, reportedly resembles a rubber duck in shape. (I guess that would mean a rubber duck that exercises regularly and watches its diet.)

And so, this amazing astronomical feat (and we at Puzzleria! are specialists in (g)astronomical feats of puzzledom) has left me with two marks of “eggs-clamation” on my face… that is, a pair of crisply cooked and archly cocked bacon-strip eyebows  hovering over wide-open-with-wonder oval eggshell scleras surrounding yellow yolky irises. 

Will Shortzs National Public Radio four clock faces puzzle from last week, however, has left me just with egg on my face... and not sunny-side-up egg... rather, runny-side-down egg.

Yes, if I were the late John Entwistle (Who?), the yoke would be on me. I pretty much guaranteed that Will Shortz would reveal an answer different from what most bloggers seemed to be expecting from him. But I was wrong as rainbows in a black-and-white film.

Not to beat a dead ox (oh, okay, lets go ahead and beat a dead ox!) but Will's November 2 offering read:

Write down the following four times: 3:00, 6:00, 12:55 and 4:07. These are the only times on a clock that share a certain property (without repeating oneself). What property is this?

The answer Will revealed on NPRs November 9 Weekend Edition Sunday is that the position of the hands on those four clock faces resemble the Roman numerals L (3:00), I (6:00), V (12:55) and C (4:07).

That is the answer many solvers across the blogosphere suspected Will would reveal, although he received only 50 correct entries. It is a clever idea, the angle of the clock hands forming letters. 

But what bugs me about the puzzle (and led me to believe a different, and perhaps better, answer was in the offing) is the wording in the following sentence:
These are the ONLY times on a clock that share a certain property (without repeating oneself). {Uppercase and boldness added for emphasis.}

First off, I have no clue whatsoever what the parenthetical without repeating oneself might mean.

But my main gripe is that these are not the only times” that share the property of forming Roman numerical letters. To wit, 3:00 Looks Like an L, but so does 3:01 or 2:59. 6:00 is a fine I, but midnight or noon are also I-shaped. 12:55 is a V, but so are 12:54, 12:56 or, for a wide-stance V, 1:50. And 4:07 (which is a pointy C resembling a V rotated 90 degrees clockwise) might just as well be 1:20, 1:19, 4:06, 4:08, etc.

The remaining Roman numeral letters X, D and M cannot be formed by clock hands (unless, as commenter Paul mused tongue-in-cheekily on the AESAP blog, the second hand somehow comes into play!) Indeed, the only other uppercase letter of the alphabet formable by two hands is probably a pointy J (10:00).

Please let me know if I am missing something. I often do.

That said (and vented), I had a blast solving this puzzle, the process of which prompted me to create the piggyback puzzle titled Four Clocks Redux posted on last Fridays November 7 Puzzleria!

I have done the same type of piggybacking with this weeks easier-to-solve NPR puzzle. The NPR puzzle reads:
Name a well-known clothing company. Move each of its letters three spaces earlier in the alphabet and rearrange the result. You'll name something you don't want in an article of clothing. What is it?

My piggyback puzzle reads:

Porcidorsal Slice:
Walruses, Tigers and Golden Bears, Oh My!

A Tiger, Walrus and Golden Bear might well sport apparel manufactured by the the well-known clothing company in the NPR puzzle. Name something (in two words) that the members of this menagerie do for fun and profit. Move each letter of what they do three spaces earlier in the alphabet and rearrange the result to form something historically linked to both Paradise Lost and Blood Transfused. What do they do, and what do you form?

And how do you do? Fine, we hope. And we hope youll do just fine too on this ensuing menu of spicy puzzle slicery:

MENU

Celestial Slice
Tragic tales of two flights

In the 1970s, news outlets covered a story about an object that might have been visible against Alaskan skies. In the 1990s, news outlets covered a story about an object that was definitely visible against Alaskan skies (and skies elsewhere). Each object had a tail, and each object’s flight was tainted by tragedy.

Remove the final letter of the name of a person associated with the earlier flight. Change the remaining second-last and last letters to their mirror images and delete the curvy ends of their descending tails. (Important! Use the font in which this puzzle is printed, not the Times New Roman font that is normal on this web page, and is used in the second part of this sentence!) Replace a space with a punctuation mark. The result is the name of the 1990s object.

What are the names of the person and the 1990s object?

(Hint: A person associated with National Public Radio is also associated with the person in the 1970s tragedy.)


Pearls Of Swinedom Slice
Rabbit-eared pigs

What current television show, if it is punctuated and spaced appropriately, might name a possible advertising campaign sponsored by the National Pork Producers Council?

Sporty Slice
Night Train Lane? Broadway Joe?

Two professional athletes – one retired, the other active  have the same last name but are not related. Both were first-round draft picks of professional teams. In the course of competition, each achieved the same coveted honor (you know, something like an NPR lapel pin!). Their collegiate team nicknames both begin with a B.

One of the athletes has a three-syllable nickname. The first two syllables, when spoken aloud, sound very similar to, but not exactly like, the other athlete’s first name.

Who are these athletes?

(Hint: A two-word summation of all vowels in both players’ last names is often used as a playground taunt that is an alternative to a taunt involving Coke bottles.)


Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)


Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your puzzle-loving and challenge-welcoming friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! 

Friday, November 7, 2014

My Notna; Two bits, four bits, six glitzy-bitsy sequins; String Theory-ter




Welcome to Joseph Young’s Puzzle-ria! We have been serving up fresh puzzle slices now for more than half-a-year. (More than 80 slices served! And much more to come.)

For those of you who may be new to our blog, we create and purvey word and number puzzles similar to the ones with which puzzlemaster Dr. Will Shortz challenges National Public Radio listeners weekly on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday broadcast.

Will’s November 2 offering was especially intriguing. He said:

Write down the following four times: 3:00, 6:00, 12:55 and 4:07. These are the only times on a clock that share a certain property (without repeating oneself). What property is this?

(Note: Only three of the four clocks at the top of this blog page pertain to this NPR puzzle. So please refer instead to the four clocks shown below. Ignore the thin blue second hand. Concentrate instead only on the green and gold {Packer colors!}minute and hour hands.)



I am far from the best and the brightest puzzle solver on Earth (or even the Blogosphere) but I can usually solve Will’s puzzles. This one, however, tied me in knots. I wasn’t alone. Other puzzle lovers commented on Blaine’s puzzle blog and on An Englishman Solves American Puzzles blog that they also found this “four-clock” puzzle quite challenging.

The deadline for submitting one’s puzzle answers to NPR is 3 p.m. Eastern Time on the Thursday following the Sunday broadcast. After that deadline has passed it is common for bloggers on puzzle sites to post their guesses regarding Will Shortz’s intended answer for that week’s puzzle. Usually there is unanimity about the assumed correct answer. But no one actually knows what Will’s answer is until he reveals it on the following Sunday’s broadcast.

After the Thursday deadline this week, people on both Blaine’s and AESAP’s blog pretty much agreed on what they thought Will’s intended answer was. But few if any deemed that answer to be a reasonably suitable or satisfying solution, given how the puzzle was presented and worded.

Some, however, admitted that perhaps the answer most of us assume is correct is not Will’s intended answer after all. I am in that group.

I believe this to be one of those rare weeks when no one either at Blainesville or on the AESAP website has solved the NPR puzzle. We will find out on Sunday.

In the meantime, for your solving pleasure I have created a “porcidorsaline puzzle” (that is, one that is similar to, or “piggybacks” upon, another puzzle -- in this case, Will’s puzzle) . The  wording of my puzzle somewhat mirrors the NPR  four clocks puzzle.

I hope you can enjoy and solve it. If you have trouble, I (and perhaps other Puzzlerian! commenters) will provide clues and hints over the weekend.

And, as always, we will give the answers to all our puzzle “slices” on Tuesday afternoon.

Porcidorsal Slice:
Four Clocks Redux
Write down the following four times: 3:00, 6:00, 12:55 and 2:05. These four times on a clock are especially timely for most Europeans and North Americans during this time of year. Explain why.

(Note: The illustration of four clocks at the very top of this web page pertains to this puzzle. As in the NPR puzzle illustration more immediately above, ignore the thin blue second hand. Concentrate instead only on the green and gold minute and hour hands. And, go Packers!)

But that was merely an appetizer. Here is this week’s meat-and-potato menu of puzzle slices:

Menu

Symmetrical Slice:

Take a common first name that is a palindrome (a word that reads the same forward and backward) and add a letter to both ends to form a word that is also palindromic. Replace those two added letters with two other letter-twins to form a palindromic string of letters. Add a letter at the beginning of this string to form an antonym of the first word. What is this name and what are these antonyms?

Integral Slice:
Two bits, four bits, six glitzy-bitsy sequins…

Name the next number in this sequence of integers:
2, 4, 6, 30…





Hi-string-onic Slice:
String Theory-ter
Name something you might hear someone do on a stage. Remove all letters except for the first four and the seventh, eighth and ninth, leaving a string of seven letters. Write down the first four letters in the string. Write down the last five letters in the string. Add the same letter to the end of each to form new words that are often considered antonyms.

What is this something you might hear someone do on stage? What are these two new words?
(Hint: A three-letter word is often considered an antonym of both new words.)



Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)

Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We plan to serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your puzzle-loving and challenge-welcoming friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzle -ria! Thank you.