Welcome to Joseph Young’s Puzzle –ria!
Don't tell the “pizza police” or city health inspectors, but there seems to be lots of buzz about creatures, critters, varmints and vermin in this week’s puzzle slices. It’s kind of like the kind of name-calling that ricochets across the table during your typical six-person poker game. Speaking of which...
As we mentioned in Tuesday’s (December 2) comments, we are giving you an additional week to work on solving the fine puzzle created by our “guest gourment French puzzle chef,” Monsieur Garcon du Parachutisme (aka “skydiveboy” on the Blainesville blog).
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?
Now, the puzzle’s creator
and I don’t always see eye-to-eye (I think he’s probably taller than I), but we
do both agree that although this may seem like a difficult puzzle, with the right
approach it can be solved rather quickly. If one particular approach you are using is not
working, then we would suggest a careful re-reading and a different approach.
You will be very pleased with yourself when you do solve it. Don’t give up. The answer is in the cards.
Now here is this week’s menu of fresh Puzzleria! house slices:
Menu
City critters in our country!
Name a critter often associated with a
particular U.S. state.
Move one of the critter’s letters three places to the
right (replacing the letter that is there) to spell out the name of a city in
that state. (For example, if the letter you choose to move is the fifth letter,
it would replace the original eighth letter in the critter’s name.)
What are this critter and city?
Guitar and Dugout Heroes
Within the past decade an American League Baseball team traded its ace pitcher to a National League team for an
outfielder and three pitching prospects. The first name of the outfielder and
the last name of the ace can be combined to form the name of a rock/jazz
guitarist. Who are the pitcher, outfielder and guitarist?
Hint: Since the trade, another major
leaguer has emerged who shares both first and last names with the guitarist. The traded outfielder
is still active in the majors. The traded pitching ace, currently a free agent,
hopes to still be active.
Zoological Slice:
Name a mammal. Reverse three consecutive
interior letters and change one of them to a different vowel to form a word you
might see on a theater marquee. What mammalian creature is this? What is the
word?
Hint #1: Add the letters in the mammal’s
name to an alternative name for the mammal and rearrange this whole mess of alphabet soup to form, indeed somewhat fittingly, a three-word phrase (article, adjective and
hyphenated-noun) describing a deckhand aboard a Greenpeace ship during a
tempest.
Hint #2: Both the mammal and the
movie-marquee-theater word have much in common – indeed, 57-plus percent in
common – with a word appearing in this puzzle proper or its hints.
Hint #3: Place a man’s name in front of the mammal’s name (not the “alternative name” from Hint #1) to form what sounds like a word that one might think would crop up somewhere in Greenpeace International’s Core Values and Mission Statement, but does not.
(As you can see from the title of the Zoolical Slice puzzle immediately above, I tried to “s t r i n g out” the Greensleeves/Greenpeace links for as long as possible {including a surreal rendition involving harps and twins outstanding in their field!}. I’m afraid I was influenced by the frayed sleeves of my faded, threadbare, green Brett Favre Green Bay Packers jersey {not a new jersey like the one with Aaron Rogers printed on it!})
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.
I’ve been posting some Tom Rush tunes lately over on PEOTS where Scientific Steph and the gang are monitoring and keeping on top of Orion.
ReplyDeleteRush is an American folk music pioneer an underrated singer-songwriter. I’ve always enjoyed listening to this “generation-gap” song of his, which is rawer, folkier and funnier, than Cat Stevens’ “Father and Son” and Harry Chapin’s “Cat’s in the Cradle,” both much more radio-friendly and accessible songs.
Rush doesn’t possess the classic folksinger’s voice; his is a lush baritone. His 1968 “The Circle Game” was his breakthrough album, a classic.
Guess I’m just kinda chillin’ after postin’.
LegoFolkieAtHeart
Thanks for the shout-out to PEOTS, Lego.
DeleteGot the varmint. . .
Might Favre beans help some way with the Zoo Slice?! ;-)
Word Woman,
DeleteAlas poor Brett was knocked on his bean a few times to often during his career, I fear.
"Favra" beans may help with the ZS, but only if you're in a profession such as David's (see below).
LimaLambda
Some research allowed me to develop the EAPPS answer.
ReplyDeleteAlso got the TDS and ZS. Still don't know the GFCS, so I think "No" is at least technically the correct answer.
ReplyDeleteDavid,
DeleteOkay, piece of cake for you this week, and not just the Easy As Possum Pie Slice. I'm curious, did the hint help you with the TDS?
Lego...
The free agent pitcher piece led me to the answer, the remaining pieces of the hint were used as confirmation.
DeleteDavid, I feel your pain. If you think you can't solve it, then you are not going about it in a manner that will lead you to the answer.
DeleteThanks, David. I suspected you might get this one pretty quickly. You seem to keep current with baseball, and other sports, and other fields, and other... etc.
DeleteBTW, are you a teacher of some stripe. You need not spill the beans about what your field of expertise/profession is, if you prefer to maintain some degree of anonymity. But my curiosity has been piqued, prompted by your excellent, clearly stated response to my plea for help regarding the Let's Get Serious Slice.
Lego...
I'm an actuary, so my professional background is math.
DeleteDavid, I know those in your profession and other professions (such as CPAs etc.) who use advanced math extensively probably do not like being called “bean counters. It seems to be a derogatory term.
DeleteBut, that said, I think I (and perhaps Word Woman) have powers of prescience (I know WW has powers of -science sans the pre-!), and I can prove it!
At 12:15 PM Word Woman inquired about “Favre beans.” At 12:29 PM, I said you “need not spill the beans.” At 12:42 PM you posted that you are an actuary. I count these bean references as evidence of prescience!
But no offense intended (and hope none is taken) with my use of the term “bean counter.” Honest. I know what you do is stratospherically higher math: advanced probability, exponential and one-parameter distributions, finite sampling, regression analysis, applied stochastic processes, multivariate statistics
and such.
The only bean associated with you is filled with brains!
LegoOnlyHumanBean
Actuary
DeleteDavid,
DeleteWell anyway, I know at least one actuary who is not the least bit boring. And I'll bet your work is not so sleep-inducing either. Have you ever had an opportunity to guest-lecture a class? If so, how did it go?
Lego...
Lego, If David works for the CIA that may be class-ified.
DeleteYou seem to know a lot about the CIA, sdb… Hmmm.
DeleteI myself used to work for the PIA, the Peripheral Intelligence Agency. It employed agents who…, well, who weren’t really that intelligent.
Before that I was associated with the J. Edgar Hoover-era FBI. Indeed, I was in charge of organizing the FBI, the French-colonial Bureau of Intimate apparel, which J. Edgar Hoover kept in a library adjoining his office. My duties included sorting and folding slips, camisoles, gowns, bloomers and knickers. And, of course, vacuuming the carpet.
LegoDeclassified
I wouldn't say that I know a lot about the CIA, but they did try to hire me back in late 1966 after I got out of the army where I was trained in cryptography. The agent, T. L Culhane, from out of state arranged a clandestine meeting with me at a motel in our University District. He informed me my security clearance along with attachments was so high I would not have to go through any further investigation, or even take a lie detector test prior to going through their training at Langley. I have never regretted turning him down.
DeleteI'm having a rough time with almost all of these.
ReplyDeleteI really could care less, but is there some very subtle thing going on with 'managed'?
ReplyDeletePaul,
DeleteSorry but I am in the dark regarding "managed." Whatever is going on is too subtle for me, apparently. Can you clarify a bit? Thanks.
LegoAgingMan
People often say someone "managed" to do something when they really mean it happened by accident ( in the same way that they say "could care less" when they mean "couldn't" ). In the poker players puzzle, "managed" seems to refer to an accident, but I wonder how likely it is for all 52 cards to land face up without the intervention of intention.
DeletePaul,
DeleteIt sounds to me like you are getting a bit closer to solving this. I designed the puzzle to be misleading at first because that is the only way it works. It is not so much a logic puzzle as it looks, but more a detail puzzle. In other words, if you are following your assumptions from your initial reading, then I suggest you read the puzzle more carefully. Don't give up, I think you will get it. It can be solved both quickly and easily with the right approach.
Paul,
DeleteThank you for you diligence in working on the Guest French Chef Slice (GFGS), "Fifty-two Poker Card Pick-Up." It is an excellent puzzle, IMO, that is worthy of your efforts.
I caught your intentional “I could care less” solecism, but whiffed on its connection to “managed.” I actually fine-tooth-combed through this week’s blog not one, not two, but three times in search of that elusive haystack needle (the word “mangaged,” that is), but came up grasping at straws after each attempt!
Then the cock crowed thrice and I gave up.
LegoSt.Peter
Lego,
DeleteAny non quiche eating, real man, knows that a mangage is an implement used by certain women to measure how much of a man she is dealing with. If you get the point.
sdb,
DeleteI always thought mang-age was the period of time it takes before a bunch of mangoes goes mangy. Or maybe it’s the half-life of manganese.
So methinks you be joshin’ me. I DuckDuckGoosed and Googled “mangage,” but to no avail. Your comments are known to be often glutted with gaggles of G-rated gags (G as in Guileful). But we wouldn’t want to have to slap a gag order on you!
Oh, and pass the quiche, please. I want seconds.
LegoGaggleGoogleLooseyGoosey
A mangoes into a bar...
DeleteThese people shuffle ... do they ever deal? Just askin'.
DeletePaul,
DeleteYes, each player, in turn both shuffles and deals. However, this line of attack is not going to get you to the answer. I would again advise you to VERY CAREFULLY read the puzzle question.
I like where Paul was going, and wondered myself if 'several rounds' was an overly literal integer number of rounds.
DeleteMy other guess was based on the definition of 'gentlemen,' ruling out all but the pilot and architect!
Without further ideas, "No" is my answer to the puzzle so far.
Mike,
DeleteI am pleased to see someone else is still working on my puzzle, but am surprised no one has solved it yet. You are not approaching it in a way that will reveal the answer. The puzzle had to be stated in a manner that would be both devious and misleading in order that it not be a childish give-away. I cannot stress enough that you must read the question asked by the puzzle description very, very carefully and ignore your assumptions that will lead you down the wrong road. When you go at it from that perspective you should be able to solve it quickly and easily.
mike_h.,
DeleteThanks for dropping by. Welcome! Make yourself at home. Thanks too for giving our Guest French Slice a nibble. I know, it has kind of tough crust, but it's still a tasty puzzle. Please, drop by any time!
Lego...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI have actually been working on the 52-Card Poker Pick-up puzzle off and on since it was published. I have printed it out and have reread it perhaps a dozen times.
ReplyDeleteA question which may determine if I'm heading in the right direction: Is the puzzle title not accurate?
David,
DeleteThat is an excellent question. I did not make up the title, that was Joe's work. I took a look at it again and see it as the titles to news articles in the newspaper. They are not made up by the journalist, but people hired just to make up titles. This is similar. I think it is a good title. It could actually be a subtle unintended hint. I do not think it in any way is misleading, but I would again suggest reading my above postings which I think are far more revealing than I ever intended. I hope that helps.
EAPPS:
ReplyDeleteARMADILLO>>>AMARILLO, TX. (“amarillo” Spanish for “yellow,” the YELLOW rose of Texas.)
ZS:
MANATEE>>>MATINÉE
Hint #1: MANATEE+SEA COW = A WET “ECO-SEAMAN.”
Hint #2: MARQUEE contains 4/7 (57%) (MAEE) of the letters in both “manatee” & “matinée.”
Hint #3: HUGH + MANATEE = HUMANITY.
TDS:
I do not watch baseball; I know nothing about baseball, so I did not even try this one...
For the TDS, Johan Santana / Carlos Gomez / Carlos Santana.
ReplyDeleteAgreed. I said I had a rough time with all the others. Get it?
DeleteThis is another post brought to you courtesy of McDonald’s. My wi-fi is phooey!
ReplyDeleteFor the record, below are my intended answers, although y’all have nailed them all down (Great work!), save SDB’s poker puzzle. I am letting him decide how much longer to give you to solve it. It sounds like a couple of you might be close.
As I think I might have mentioned, I like his puzzle.
Easy as Possum Pie Slice:
City critters in our country!
Name a critter often associated with a particular U.S. state.
Move one of the critter’s letters three places to the right (replacing the letter that is there) to spell out the name of a city in that state. (For example, if the letter you choose to move is the fifth letter, it would replace the original eighth letter in the critter’s name.)
What are this critter and city?
Answer:
ARMADILLO, AMARILLO, Texas
Trade Deadline Slice:
Guitar and Dugout Heroes
Within the past decade an American League Baseball team traded its ace pitcher to a National League team for an outfielder and three pitching prospects. The first name of the outfielder and the last name of the ace can be combined to form the name of a rock/jazz guitarist. Who are the pitcher, outfielder and guitarist?
Hint: Since the trade, another major leaguer has emerged who shares both first and last names with the guitarist. The traded outfielder is still active in the majors. The traded pitching ace, currently a free agent, hopes to still be active.
Answer:
JOHAN SANTANA was traded for CARLOS GOMEZ;
baseball player CARLOS SANTANA shares the name of jazz-rock guitar legend Carlos Santana.
Zoological Slice:
“What creature is this, not yet laid to rest...”
Name a mammal. Reverse three consecutive interior letters and change one of them to a different vowel to form a word you might see on a theater marquee. What mammalian creature is this? What is the word?
Hint #1: Add the letters in the mammal’s name to an alternative name for the mammal and rearrange this whole mess of alphabet soup to form, indeed somewhat fittingly, a three-word phrase (article, adjective and hyphenated-noun) describing a deckhand aboard a Greenpeace ship during a tempest.
Hint #2: Both the mammal and the movie-marquee-theater word have much in common – indeed, 57-plus percent in common – with a word appearing in this puzzle proper or its hints.
Hint #3: Place a man’s name in front of the mammal’s name (not the “alternative name” from Hint #1) to form what sounds like a word that one might think would crop up somewhere in Greenpeace International’s Core Values and Mission Statement, but does not.
Answer:
MANATEE, MATINEE
Hint #1: The letters in “manatee” and “sea cow” can be rearranged to form the phrase “a wet eco-seaman,” which is somewhat fitting because Greenpeace ships have been involved in preserving manatees (as well as whales, baby seals, etc.)
Hint # 2: Four of the seven letters (57.143 percent) in MAnatEE, MAtinEE and MArquEE are the same and share the same positions in their respective words.)
Hint # 3: HUGH + MANATEE > HUMANITY
Lego…PostingAmidstHamburgers
My comment "Some research allowed me to develop the EAPPS answer" referred to "research and development (R&D)", the letter in the answer that moved (R) and the letter that was replaced (D).
ReplyDeleteMANATEE >>> MATINEE
ReplyDeleteMy Brett Favre (beans) comment referred to the Minnesota Vikings where Favre played for a season and the Minnesota Manatees diving club is located (Go ahead, Duck Duck Go(ose) it!)
As to the poker game, I believe it was Carl who dropped the full box of cards while they were new and still in the box. They could then be all facing up. The puzzle asks for the player whose turn it was to shuffle. This occurs after six rounds and a return to the first player.
But a new deck can be requested at any time! And did the cycle necessarily start with Carl just because he's the first one listed?
DeleteMost interesting posts there, but I repeat again, don't pay attention to your assumptions. Rather, analyze what the puzzle is actually asking.
DeleteNo human being is literally "all thumbs". Maybe a sea cucumber is, that's a matter of interpretation.
DeleteI do suffer fools gladly. But I have my limits.
The player who dropped the cards is all thumbs. Duh!
DeleteAlso, I just opened a pack of Bicycle, Rider Back, Poker 808, Standard Face (?), red playing cards. There were the 52 poker cards, 2 jokers and 2 other cards, which is why I asked if puzzle title, "52-Card Poker Pick-up" was not accurate. (56-Card Poker Pick-up?)
DeleteDavid,
DeleteVery clever and interesting, but nope. Pick up the cards again. I posted above, as did Joe, "The answer is in the cards!" You don't realize how close you are to solving it.
Got it.
DeleteI congratulate you!!! I never thought it would be so difficult. When I wrote it I thought I was including too many hints that would give it away, but apparently I was wrong. I will post the answer fairly soon, or Joe will. I hope you are satisfied with the answer.
DeleteI am. If only you had mentioned the Air-Cushion Finish.
DeleteWell then I would have opened myself to being accused of being an old softy.
DeleteI noticed your "I got it" post came one minute after my post which makes me think perhaps you solved it before reading my post @ 4:21 PM.
No, I read your post before solving.
DeleteIt came quickly then!
DeleteSo I've gotta go out and spend money on a deck of cards I'll probably never use again ... I don't think so!
DeleteBut Paul, look on the bright side. You apparently didn't have to go out and buy a digital clock and upend it in order to solve Will Shortz's puzzle. :-)
DeleteInteresting point.
DeletePaul: Fortunately, Google can be helpful enough to negate the need to buy a new deck!
DeleteOK got it with the extra hints. A slight groan, but overall legit. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteAnd that included a few extra hints straight-away in the first paragraph -- clever!
DeleteANSWER TO CARD PUZZLE
ReplyDeleteThe Jack of Clubs, because on most decks of standard/poker size playing cards he is depicted with only his thumbs showing on the staff he is holding. I thought it would be impolite if I didn’t introduce all of those present; I certainly did not mean to confuse or mislead you.
That is the answer I wrote back when I made up the puzzle. David's ? mark was in regard to the way I described the cards in the puzzle. Standard Face is not listed on some packs and 808 and Ryder Back is not listed on the other. Other than that there appears to be no difference in the cards. I had to combine both in order to give you all the best chance of solving the puzzle. I realize it is a bit devious, but I could not have done it any other way without it being a crappy, easy to solve puzzle. I hope you now understand what I meant by not following your assumptions. The puzzle never asked who dropped the cards, but it seemed to due to the idiom, all thumbs. But, of course, sneaky me was using this term literally. I sincerely do hope it did provide some fun amusement and I also realize some may have had no chance to solve it unless their brand of cards had the Jack of Clubs convention with his thumb and no fingers showing. I did the best I could to deal (oh god another pun) with this problem. If you should happen to look back at the top of the screen you will notice Joe by accident has a Jack of Clubs in his photo. I provided him with most of the other photos, including those of the dogs playing poker, and perhaps you will see this as an admission that the puzzle was a bitch, although they all seem to be male dogs. Thanks for playing.
Sorry I am late to this party. The poker puzzle is solved!
ReplyDeleteThanks to Monsieur Garcon du Parachutisme (aka skydiveboy) for creating it. Thanks to all Puzzlerians! for your diligence and patience in grappling with this devious puzzle. You all did well, and did yourselves proud!
I have just uploaded an image of the Jack of Clubs, embedding it in the text of the "52-Card Poker Pick-up" Guest French Chef Slice on this week's blog (above these comment threads).
Bravo!
LegoThumbda
More proof of Puzzleria! prescience:
ReplyDeleteDecember 5: We post the Trading Deadline Slice, "Guitar & Dugout Heroes," with its answer including Carlos and Johan Santana.
December 7: Will Shortz broadcasts his anagram puzzle, with its answer, "Santana" Fe, New Mexico.
LegoJohanSantanaClauseInHisThreeYearContract
Still more proof:
ReplyDeleteJohan Santana just signed a four-year contract with the Minnesota Twins today. Actually, he goes by the name Ervin Santana, changing it from his birth name Johan in 2003 so as not to be confused with Minnesota Twins pitcher Johan Santana, who the Twins traded to the New York Mets in 2008 for Carlos Gomez and three pitching prospects (none of whom was named Johan Santana).
LegohanRamonLambtana
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete