P! SLICES: OVER (pe)3 – (e4 + p3) SERVED
Kiss this year adieu,
Loom frontiers anew.
Threads unraveled, spliced,
Puzzles still unsliced.
Plenty yet unseen…
Twenty-seventeen.
We are ringing out ten puzzles on our menus this last week of 2016, including four Shortz Rip-Offs that pertain to “fore!”
So, foreward toward our future. Please enjoy this wringing out of 2016
as we ring in 2017.
Hors d’Oeuvre Menu
Foretelling a memory
2016 was
certainly a memorable year. What would you say are two factors that made 2016 memorable?
Here is what we
would say:
1. Donald Trump’s improbable ascent to the presidency; and
2. The Chicago Cubs’ first world championship in more than a century.
1. Donald Trump’s improbable ascent to the presidency; and
2. The Chicago Cubs’ first world championship in more than a century.
Now fast-forward
one year from now. What would you say will be the two factors in 2017?
Morsel Menu
Jes’ kickin’ back with the Clauses
Mr. Santa and Mrs. Sandra Claus invite
some old college chums – Denzel and Daisy Sue Doozie from Cowcreek, Kentucky –
to their digs (shovels?) at the North Pole for some over-the-holidays fun and
relaxation. The Doozies speak Appalachian English.
On the day after New Year’s Day 2017,
the Doozies are kicking back with the Clauses at their polar chalet, watching
the Cotton, Rose and Sugar Bowls on the tube. (Santa pulls for Wisconsin, USC and Oklahoma
because they are clad in red, his signature hue.)
Daisy Sue and Denzel had been privileged to have the chalet
all to themselves for the past week, with Sandra and Santa having flown back in to the North Pole on Sunday evening from their annual weeklong post-Christmas junket to Las Vegas.
During that week to themselves, the Doozies had been
curious about the sounds of hammering, sawing and bustling emanating from the
nearby Santaland workshop/warehouse. Daisy Sue and Denzel had just assumed Santa’s helpers would have
accompanied the Clauses to Las Vegas for some well-deserved down-time. Instead,
it seemed as if they were getting a ridiculously premature jump on filling toy
orders for Christmas 2017.
On the Clauses’ return, the Doozies
pointed to the workshop and asked Santa about the apparent toy-making activity
still going on within, saying:
(Each set of parentheses represents a
word, with the number within indicating how many letters are in the word.)
Translated into Standard English, the
Doozies’ query would have read:
“Please explain, those helpers are
remaining at the workshop, manufacturing?”
During their Vegas junket
forty years earlier, in December of 1976, Santa and Sandra had attended Elvis
Presley’s final Vegas performance, at the Las Vegas Hilton Hotel. After Elvis’
second encore, the audience clamored for a third – ovationally standing,
rhythmically clapping and urgently chanting “Elvis! Elvis! Elvis!...”
After ten minutes of this mass
importunity, a Hilton security guard approached the emcee and whispered to him
pleadingly:
“(4), (4) (4) (5) (4) (3) (8)!”
As in the question the Doozies asked
Santa 40 years later, each set of parentheses in this exclamation represents a
word, with the number within indicating how many letters are in the word.
The 8-letter word and four 4-letter
words are identical in both the security guard’s exclamation and the Doozies’ question.
Add an “re” to the end of the 3-letter
word in the exclamation to form the second 5-letter word in the question.
Another way of saying what the security
guard said would be:
“Please, Let the audience know that Mr.
Presley departed our hotel.”
The question asked by the Doozies and
the exclamation expressed by the security guard 40 years earlier sound
amazingly alike.
What are this question and this
exclamation?
Appetizer Menu
Another nice “mexpression” we’ve gotten
you into solving
Name a three-word expression that means a “bad
state of affairs” or “mess,” or something to be reckoned with.” The expression
is a kind of kindred idiomatic spirit with Oliver Hardy’s catchphrase, “Well,
here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into.” (Indeed, Ollie might have well
substituted the three-word expression for the word “mess.”)
Lop off the top half of the final (lowercase) letter
in the expression, forming a new (lowercase) letter. Interchange that new letter with the
one preceding it, forming a new final word and thus, a new three-word phrase.
The new phrase describes a container you
might see around town during the end of the calendar year – one filled with
folding money of all the same denomination.
What are this three-word expression and
three-word phrase?
MENU
Ursa Major genius
Name a woman recently in the news whose
life’s body of scientific work deserves, at the very least, enthusiastically
favorable reviews.
An unofficial mascot at the university
where she pursued and completed her master’s studies is a bear.
Rearrange the four letters in a synonym
of “enthusiastically favorable” to form this scientist’s first name.
Rearrange the five letters in a synonym
of “bear” to form this scientist’s last name.
Who is this woman?
QBs square off in 2017
Find two positive integers. The sum of one
of these numbers squared plus the other number cubed equals 2,017.
What are these two integers?
What are these two integers?
Hint: It
is possible that you might see these two numbers on the jerseys of opposing
quarterbacks in an American Football Conference playoff game, depending on the outcomes of this weekend ’s NFL games.
It is also possible (again depending on this weekend’s outcomes) that you might see
these two numbers on the jerseys of opposing quarterbacks in the Super Bowl.
If
this happens, it would be either the sixth Super Bowl appearance for both teams
or the sixth appearance for one team and the first for their opponent.
Linking words from the links
Will Shortz’s December 25th
NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, submitted by listener Peter Collins, reads:
Think of three words used in golf. Say
them out loud one after the other. They’ll sound like a group that was in the
news in 2016. What group is it?
Puzzleria’s Riffing Off Shortz And
Collins Slices read:
ONE: Think of three words used in golf.
Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a deadly “weapon” in a
1990’s cinematic dark comedy, with the first of the three words describing the
stuff the “weapon” is made of.
Name this “weapon.”
TWO: Think of two words used in golf, a
noun and a past-tense verb. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound
somewhat like the remorse, in two words, that the school bully might feel after
executing a dangerous prank involving undergarments.
What are these two golf words? Name the
kind of remorse the bully feels.
Hint: “The Donald was lying two – although his Trumplelist ball was buried deep in a bunker – on the par-5 eleventh hole at Whistling Straits. So he took the _____ from his Caddie (the Donald pooh-poohed golf carts, and instead always had his chauffeur drive him around the course in his Escalade) and ______ the hole by draining a blast from the sand trap for a 3.”
Hint: “The Donald was lying two – although his Trumplelist ball was buried deep in a bunker – on the par-5 eleventh hole at Whistling Straits. So he took the _____ from his Caddie (the Donald pooh-poohed golf carts, and instead always had his chauffeur drive him around the course in his Escalade) and ______ the hole by draining a blast from the sand trap for a 3.”
THREE: Think of the last names of two
female country singers. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like
a well-established American company that was in the news in 2016.
Think of a
word people associate with this company which is also the last name of a third
female country singer.
The last name of a fourth female country singer, if you
remove the last letter, is what the company “was in,” idiomatically, which led
to the news coverage.
Who are these four singers? What is the
company, the word associated with it, and what the company “was in”?
FOUR: Think of two words used in golf.
Put them in alphabetical order, capitalize the second word, and split the first
word into a personal pronoun and a capitalized first name.
The result is what might be a good title
for an autobiography of a member of a rock group that was in the news in 2016.
What group is it? Who is the member of
the group whose possible autobiographical title would echo golf terminology?
Hint: The autobiographical title would
also echo an actual book title by Isaac Asimov. Indeed, those two titles’ first
three letters would be identical.
FIVE: Think of four words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like what my dad used to call my not-so-powerful, 1970’s-era, front-engine, rear-drive, subcompact, three-door, hatchback Ford vehicle.
What did my dad call my car?
Hint: One of the four words is repeated... A hyphen is involved.
Note: The final golf term in the answer is a relatively obscure golf term for a certain part of a golf club. The term is also used as a verb in golf parlance.
SIX: Think of three words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a two-word substance used for furniture repair and refinishing or exterior siding refurbishing.
What is this substance?
SEVEN: Think of three words used in golf. Put two of them together to form a kind of camera. The third word is the last word in a phrase a photographer might employ (somewhat akin to “Say cheese!”) when taking photos of toddlers.
What are these three golf words?
FIVE: Think of four words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like what my dad used to call my not-so-powerful, 1970’s-era, front-engine, rear-drive, subcompact, three-door, hatchback Ford vehicle.
What did my dad call my car?
Hint: One of the four words is repeated... A hyphen is involved.
Note: The final golf term in the answer is a relatively obscure golf term for a certain part of a golf club. The term is also used as a verb in golf parlance.
SIX: Think of three words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a two-word substance used for furniture repair and refinishing or exterior siding refurbishing.
What is this substance?
SEVEN: Think of three words used in golf. Put two of them together to form a kind of camera. The third word is the last word in a phrase a photographer might employ (somewhat akin to “Say cheese!”) when taking photos of toddlers.
What are these three golf words?
Dessert Menu
Man of letters meets folksy lady
Name the title of a traditional folk
song, the melody of which you often hear around this time of year. Seven of
this title’s twelve letters are consonants. The other five are the same vowel.
The title is a compound word.
Take three consonants and one vowel
from the title and add a new different vowel to the mix. Rearrange these five letters to form a word for what “The
Inebriate” is an example of.
Take the four remaining consonants
from the folk song title, keeping them in order, and place a different new vowel in
the middle, creating a five-letter noun that the first five letters of the title describe.
The last six letters of the title form the surname of an Emmy-nominated comedic actress. A homophone of her surname and the noun (described by the title’s first five letters) appear in the title of an American author’s well-known poetry collection.
What is the title of the folk song? What
is the title of the poetry collection?
What is “The Inebriate” an example of?
What is the five-letter noun that the first five letters of the title describe?
What is “The Inebriate” an example of?
What is the five-letter noun that the first five letters of the title describe?
Every Friday at Joseph Young’s
Puzzleria! 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 Wednesdays 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 Puzzleria! Thank you.
Greetings all, this New Year's Eve eve. Shame on me, I've been up all night, and here I am glued to the new Puzzleria. : o (
ReplyDeleteA question, Lego: re the Ursa Major Slice, wouldn't it be more accurate to say that the synonym (needed to rearrange for the first name) should be a verb, rather than an adjective, i.e. "to enthusiastically favor"?
ALso, I'm wondering if on the Hors D'O, we are meant to anagram the words in color? Rather than just make wild predictions, that is?
I'm glad the dessert question only asks for the song and poetry collection titles. I have a few five-letter words applicable to The Inebriate, but none of them fill the bill very well. The best one, perhaps, might also be a tricky, not very helpful hint for one of the other puzzles.
ReplyDeleteI suspect that Lego MEANT to also ask for the two-five letter words, otherwise, why even have those questions in the puzzle at all?
DeleteI was disappointed to read in my local paper that the appetizer containers in the area were not as full as they might have been.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if the H. H. ever served anything which sounded like the U. M. genius?
ReplyDeleteI am undoubtedly extremely tired, but to what are you referring, Paul? WHat U.M. genius? is that in a puzzle somewhere?
DeleteVT,
Delete"U.M. genius" is just short for "Ursa Major genius."
LegoAdds:AsForPaul's"H.H."Reference,ItIsPossibleHeMayHaveMeant"HashHouse"ButThatIsDubious
"HashHouse" is actually better than what I had in mind.
DeleteAh, there I go again getting messed up by those ' initials' designating particular puzzles [even though the whole genius word was there]! I had finished that puzzle already, and obviously dismissed the TITLE of it from my poor brain.
DeleteI am still stumped, I hate to mention, as to what H.H. refers to. Don't see that anywhere in the puzzle, and doesn't relate to the answer, that I know of. I'd been lucky in that elsewhere online a day or two ago, I had seen something about this woman in the news, so her name came right to me.
How shall I put this delicately?
DeleteThe H.H. was featured a time or two in a sitcom that was featured two weeks ago in this blog. It would probably qualify as a hash house. There's a(n) M.D. which would certainly qualify as a hash house and is the primary setting of a different sitcom.
Sometimes restaurants name menu items after people.
Ah yes, Paul. (Herman) Melville's Fine Seafood, above cheers, is where you'd find hoity-toities like Frasier and Lilith dining. The H.H., however, was more Normie's cup of meat.
DeleteLegoBelievesThatTooMuchOfAHealthyAppetiteAtTheH.H.WillProbablyResultInAHuskyHolstein
I was thinking that the way the Dessert was worded (the directions of what to do with various letters) was very confusing. I muddled through it, but thought initially one was supposed to NOT use the 'removed' letters to form the category for "The Inebriate", if you see what I mean. What you really meant was: "Take and use three of the consonants and one vowel from the song title, and form the five-letter word....." Same thing for the next part: "Take the remaining four consonants in order...etc" I thought you might want to alter the wording to make it easier to comprehend.
ReplyDeleteThank you greatly, "ViolinTedditor." Those are great editing suggestions. Thus I have taken them to heart, taken "blue pencil" in hand and made some (I hope) clarifying changes to the Dessert text.
DeleteYou also made an excellent point in your earlier post about the Ursa Major Slice:
Indeed, the synonym for "enthusiastically favorable" is not normally an adjective. It can be a verb or noun, according to my Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition, but NOT an adjective. More recently, however, especially in the realm of movie, theater, book and music criticism, this four-letter word has often functioned as an adjective. For example, "The play opened to ____ reviews."
Eventually, all nouns will also function as adjectives!
As for the Hors d'Oeuvre, I do NOT intend for you to anagram the words in color. But neither do I intend for you to make wild predictions... unless you want to, of course.
In other words, the Hors d'Oeuvre involves what we in the puzzle business like to call "a trick."
LegoWhoHasAtTimesBeenDescribedAsA"Stark'EnthusiasticallyFavorably'MadLunatic"
Yes, LegoLuncatic, I realize what you are saying about the word in question being malleable in its usage!
DeleteI am now mystified as to what the 'trick' could be for the Hors D'O.
I think I figured out all the female country singers. Now I don't feel so dumb.
ReplyDeleteYou're ahead of me there, Paul. I'm stumped on the first THREE RIp-Offs, including said country singers....although I got Rip-Off #4....and everything else, except now the tricky Hors D'O.
DeleteI can withdraw 3/4 of what I just wrote above, Paul, because the company in question suddenly hit me, so I was able to Google backwards, and get the first two singers (only one of whom I'd ever heard of), as well as figure out what said company "is in" and find a matching singer name. The "associated word" and matching singer still elude.
DeleteAttention, Puzzlerians!:
ReplyDeleteI just added a hint (appropriately, in green text) for the second "Ripping Off Shortz And Collins Slice." I felt guilty because this one was a bit of a stretch.
LegoSuspectsThatYouPuzzlerians!AreTooCleverByHalf(OrPerhapsEvenTooCleverByTwoThirds!)ForHisPuzzlesThisWeek
Just got the Morsel, the first Menu puzzle, all the Ripoff puzzles and the Dessert! And I did have to look up the scientist's name once I came up with the bear synonym. The female country singers puzzle was much easier.
ReplyDeleteI've got something for all of them, now, except the 1990's dark comedy deadly weapon. All I have for that is a suspicion that it might have something in common with a 1980-ish TV cop show. Please tell me I'm wrong.
ReplyDeleteI suspect you are wrong, Paul, but not with much certainty. If I were playing Jeopardy!, I would not be saying "1980-ish cop shows for a thousand please, Alex!" until the very end of the round!
DeleteHint for the deadly weapon: Think my neck of the woods (which, for those of you who do not know, is Packerland/Vikingland), or a skosh westward.
By the way, I just added three more Shortz Rip-Offs into our mix. You Puzzlerians! are solving this week's puzzles much too easily!
LegoWhoseNephew,WhenHeWasABravesBatboy,UsedToSay"HereIsYourBat,Mr.Jones!"
I am equally stuck on the weapons rip off. Have tried to find the right 1990s movie, with no luck. Had several ideas, including one that MIGHT agree with your latest geographic hint (am not absolutely sure), but can't find any unusual weapon that would fit the bill from that movie.
DeleteOther than not having figured out the Hors D'O trick, I seem to have solved everything else, so on to your three NEW Rip Offs, since you want to torture us! HA HA
Happy New Year, All! Some live streaming to go with the flow. . .
ReplyDeleteNice streaming, Word Woman.
DeleteHow does that work? It's on YouTube, obviously, but is it difficult to upload? Is there a site telling how to do it?
When you panned down from the stream, I initially thought Maizie was just one more fluffy clump of the streamside snow. But Noooo!
LegoWhoInKeepingWithThisWaningJewishHolidayWouldLikeToWishEveryoneMaizielTov!
Hi Lego, thanks!
DeleteIt's easy if you have a smart phone. Record your video, choose the little branching icon and select "upload to Youtube." You need a YouTube account first. You can set the privacy to share publicly (as I did here), only to those who you have sent the link to, or private (just for you).
Maizie says Maiziel Tov back to you and Smitten!
Really enjoyed your LIVE STREAMING, WW...but it was much too short as far as I am concerned, and the glimpse of Maizie was way too brief. I was hoping you'd go back to showing her, running around, or sniffing the stream or something.
ReplyDeleteI have Ripoffs #6(I think)and #7, but I can't get the fourth word of #5. Still need hints for the puzzles I haven't solved. See previous post for details on what I did solve.
ReplyDeleteSheer determination, plus the conviction that I probably WAS looking at the right movie's info, and finally it came together all of a sudden, so Rip Off #1 is now in the bag, at least for me.
ReplyDeleteI believe I have the new #7, and 2/3 of #6, but now #5 is stumping me. I mean, I wrote down 3 words that COULD apply, but nothing comes together to make any sense.
MORE EVIDENCE THAT PUZZLERIA! IS A CLAIRVOYANT PUZZLE BLOG!
ReplyDeleteThe Alabama Crimson Tide will attempt to defend its national title against the Clemson Tigers in the College Football Playoff National Championship on January 9, 2017. It will be a rematch of last January's championship game. Clemson lost to Alabama 45-40 in last year's title game.
In October of 2014, Puzzleria! published this Sporty Slice: “Which team is which?”
We rest our case.
LegoClemsonAndCloverOverAndOver
Holidazzling Hints:
ReplyDeletePOCHO:
"What would you say will be the two factors in 2017?"
..."will be" and "always were."
VLVM:
The exclamation spoken by the security guard in 1976 (translated as “Please, Let the audience know that Mr. Presley departed our hotel”) echoes what has since become a catchphrase, punchline and even a movie title.
LAHA:
Some guys just don't have a pot to put Picses in!
But Paul gave a great hint at December 30, 2016 at 5:59 AM:
"I was disappointed to read in my local paper that the appetizer containers in the area were not as full as they might have been."
RAFS:
Another great hint by Paul at December 30, 2016 at 6:15 AM:
"I wonder if the H. H. ever served anything which sounded like the U. M. genius?"
Also, to piggyback on Paul's hint, the U. M. genius shares her first name with the beloved wife of the creater of the character H.H. (in which each H. stands for the same name).
SLIS:
It's probably advisable to just forget all the playoffs and quarterbacks nonsense... Easier just to do the math.
ROSACS:
ONE: The dark comedy made fun of the way I say stuff!
TWO: Can't do any better than:
Hint: “The Donald was lying two – although his Trumplelist ball was buried deep in a bunker – on the par-5 eleventh hole at Whistling Straits. So he took the _____ from his Caddie (the Donald pooh-poohed golf carts, and instead always had his chauffeur drive him around the course in his Escalade) and ______ the hole by draining a blast from the sand trap for a 3.”
THREE:
(what Smitten is, or a poker pot) and
(feminine form of our prez-elect's 1st name);
(Johnny and June's progeny);
(1st part of the 1st name of our prez-elect's mouthpiece)
FOUR: "StoneFace"
The Isaac Asimov title was made into a movie about a dozen years ago.
FIVE: The fourth golf word is also a human extremity. If you can't solve this puzzle, you don'y know beans about golf, or bad cars.
SIX: Often called "filler" instead of [the second and third golf words]. The the second and third golf words sound like Elaine's beau.
SEVEN: First 2 words: Sometimes used for watching solar eclipses
3rd word: (Jesse) Pearson role
ID: The song title echoes the surname of a Captain Kangaroo character.
The actress's character took a journey down the Niles.
The poetic collection pops up in lyrics of the pop group America's "Another Try."
LegoSays"AndSpeakingOfWordsThatBeginWith"H"(AndNamesForWill'sPuuzzleThisWeek)WhatAbout"DeweyDanny&Gerry"?
I have just now noticed that there is a connection between two of my Ripping Off Shortz puzzles: The "dark comedy" in #ONE and one of the country singers in #THREE.
ReplyDeleteLegoHopesThisHintWillGoFarInAidingYourSolvingEfforts
Yeah, of course!!....why didn't one of US realize that? It's obvious!!
DeleteIt is Wednesday, isn't it?
ReplyDelete3PM caught me napping, but what's everyone else's excuse?
Oh well, here's a copy of what I had, before Lego published his hints, I think, so there are a few deviations from what will be the "official' answers:
2017 x 1
The new year is a prime time for unity.
"Pray tell, them elves is left there, building?"
"Pray, tell them Elvis left the building!"
kettle of fish / kettle of fins (five-dollar bills)
The hint I dared not use...
Vera Rubin
The Hungry Heifer might have (in my fantasy world) named a couple of sandwiches after Norm and his wife Vera. The NormBurger and the Vera Reuben, perhaps. Mel might also have named one of his diner specialties the Vera Reuben. I'll let you guess the name of Flo's dish.
list
10 FOR X=1 TO 99
20 FOR Y=1 TO 99
30IF (X*X)+(Y*Y*Y)=2017 THEN PRINT X,Y
40 NEXT X
50 NEXT Y
Ok
run
17 12
Ok
1990's dark comedy deadly weapon 3 golf words?
Suspicion confirmed by Lego, sort of:
wood+chip+par >> wood chipper
Fargo had not occurred to me, though. Besides, I kinda thought Carl was already dead before he got to the w.c., so I question its 'weapon' status. The TV show I was thinking of was CHiPs (1977-1983), but I feared the weapon in question might be a cowpie catapult of some sort, and did not wish to pursue that path unless absolutely necessary.
wedge eagled >> wedgie guilt?
what about:
wedge eagle tee >> wedgie guilty?
Miranda Lambert >> Warner-Lambert? NO
Swift's Premium meat products? NO
Terri Clark >> Kimberly-Clark? UH-UH
It's gotta be:
Kitty Wells & Donna Fargo >> Wells Fargo
Wells Fargo wagon? NOPE
Wells Fargo WEST, Dottie West
Wells Fargo found itself in a pickle last year.
Here's Kellie Pickler in a tough spot of her own.
Nathan may have tricked Kellie, but Kellie can't trick me. She's not the first one to use that act.
iron wood >> I, Ron Wood (Rolling Stones)
Greensleeves
Franklin Evans; or The Inebriate, is a temperance novel by Walt Whitman first published in 1842. I don't think either EVANS or NOVEL satisfy the mechanics of the puzzle. An inebriate can be GROSS; trust me, I've encountered a few (and even been one, on occasion). I'm going with GROSS, because twelve cubed ISN'T gross. Jane Leeves hasn't WON an Emmy? How can that be?
Walt Whitman also wrote Leaves of Grass, and grass is ... verdant.
***************************
ADD-ONS
***************************
pin toe-? ??
sand blast sand?
pin hole birdie
Notes:
DeleteWells Fargo Cash (Rosanne, probably) although Johnny and June had no daughters, only one son, and they didn't name him Sue
Put-putt pin toe
Wood putt tee
I didn't know Mrs. Nabokov's name was Véra.
Nice solving, Paul, as usual.
DeleteI had forgotten that the name of Norm's (unseen?) wife was Vera. That makes your proposed "Vera Ruben" on the menu of the Hungry Heifer an even more delicious coincidence.
Denzel and Daisy Sue Doozie hail from Cowcreek, Kentucky. In her "Alice" spin-off, Flo opens "Flo's Yellow Rose" in Cowtown, Texas.
Flo's signature dish at Mel's Diner: Belgian WafFlos?
Point well taken about a "iron wood-chip-par" (I probably shoulda gone with just "wood-chipper") not being a weapon. As you implied, the chipper functioned less as a killer and more as an up-coverer of evidence in "Fargo."
Your fine links:
Wow, Kellie Pickler (unless it is an act) really seems to be as intelligent as a pickle! At any moment, I expected her to break into a rambling muddle about the worldwide need for maps!
Wow, Laugh-in's Dan Rowan was more clairvoyant than even I! (Berlin Wall? Prez Reagan? Impressive!)
I didn't know Roseanne Cash wasn't June Carter's daughter.
I believe Vera had first-edit dibs on Vlad's copy. Not sure though, think it's something I read once.
LegoAndGimmeARootBeerFLOatWithThosBelgianWafFLOsPlease!
HORS D'OEUVRE: Anagramming (even though that's not what we are supposed to do): 1. DUMP DARN LOT; and 2. CHICS GO CUBA
ReplyDeleteMere Prediction: Trump is removed from the Presidency, either by Impeachment or the 28th (was it, according to Keith Olberman?) Amendment....we can dream, can't we?;
MORSEL: "PRAY TELL, THEM ELVES IS LEFT THERE, BUILDING?" & "PRAY, TELL THEM ELVIS LEFT THE BUILDING!"
APPETIZER: KETTLE OF FISh => KETTLE OF FINS [FIVES] Never heard this term until I looked it up!
MENU:
URSA MAJOR SLICE: RAVE => VERA; BRUIN => RUBIN
SUPER BOWL LI SLICE: 17 squared + 12 cubed = 289 + 1728 = 2017
RIPPING OFF SLICES:
1. "WOOD", "CHIP", "PAR" => WOOD CHIPPER (FARGO)
2. "WEDGE" and "EAGLED" => "WEDGIE GUILT"
3. "KITTY WELLS" and "DONNA FARGO" => "WELLS FARGO BANK"; CASH => ROSEANNE CASH; "KELLIE PICKLER" => "PICKLE"
4. "IRON & WOOD" => "I, RON WOOD"; "ROLLING STONES"
5. GREEN? DRIVE? HAZARD? TURKEY? TOE [Indeed, I don't know (green) beans about golf or bad cars!!!]
6. "WOOD" "PUT" "TEE" => WOOD PUTTY (David Puddy) [I thought at first that two of the words were SAND and BLOCK]
7. "CLOSED CIRCUIT" & (Watch the "BIRDIE")
DESSERT: GREENSLEEVES => NVLE + 0 = NOVEL; GRSS + A = GRASS; LEEVES => LEAVES OF GRASS [by WHITMAN. who also wrote The Inebriate]
VT,
DeleteThey are not my intended answer, but I love your Hors d'Oeuvres answers/predictions/hopes-for-2017.
Very solvific and wound-salving!
LegoMuses:YesButTrumpImpeachedMeansPrezPenceAndThatIsNoDream,ThatIsANightmare
I appreciate the appreciation, LegoMuser. What is now funny to ME is that I, of course, dealt with the fact in the math puzzle that 2017 was a prime number (i.e. factors of only itself and 1), but then never made the LEAP to the Hors D'O "trick" that you were asking for factors of 2017. Oh well, you woudln't want me to have eliminated the alternate answers that you liked!
DeleteMorsel
DeletePRAY TELL, THEM ELVES IS LEFT THERE, BUILDING?
PRAY, TELL THEM ELVIS HAS LEFT THE BUILDING!
Menu
RAVE, BRUIN, VERA RUBIN
Ripoffs
1. WOOD+CHIP+PAR=WOOD CHIPPER(from "Fargo")
2. WEDGE, EAGLED, "WEDGIE GUILT"
3. (Kitty)WELLS(Donna)FARGO,(Rosanne)CASH,(Holly)DUN(N)
4. IRON WOOD(I, Ron Wood)
5. FORE+BYE+FORE+TOE=FOUR-BY-FOUR TOW
6. WOOD+PUTT+TEE=WOOD PUTTY
7. PIN+HOLE=PINHOLE, (Watch the)BIRDIE
Dessert
GREENSLEEVES,(Jane)LEEVES, NOVEL, GRASS, LEAVES OF GRASS(by Walt Whitman)
Sorry I'm so late. We had to go grocery shopping, and then I forgot it was answer day.pjb
This week's official answers for the record, Part 1:
ReplyDeleteHors d’Oeuvre Menu
Piece Of Cake Hors d’Oeuvre:
Foretelling a memory
2016 was certainly a memorable year. What would you say are two factors that made 2016 memorable?
Here is what we would say:
1. Donald Trump’s improbable ascent to the presidency; and
2. The Chicago Cubs’ first world championship in more than a century.
Now fast-forward one year from now. What would you say will be the two factors in 2017?
Answer:
1 and 2017
The two factors in the number 2017 will be, are, and always have been the number 1 and the prime number 2017. Because 2017 is a prime number, those are the only two factors.
Morsel Menu
Viva Las Vixen Morsel:
Jes’ kickin’ back with the Clauses
Mr. Santa and Mrs. Sandra Claus invite some old college chums – Denzel and Daisy Sue Doozie from Cowcreek, Kentucky – to their digs (shovels?) at the North Pole for some over-the-holidays fun and relaxation. The Doozies speak Appalachian English.
On the day after New Year’s Day 2017, the Doozies are kicking back with the Clauses at their polar chalet, watching the Cotton, Rose and Sugar Bowls on the tube. (Santa pulls for Wisconsin, USC and Oklahoma because they are clad in red, his signature hue.)
Daisy Sue and Denzel had been privileged to have the chalet all to themselves for the past week, with Sandra and Santa having flown back in to the North Pole on Sunday evening from their annual weeklong post-Christmas junket to Las Vegas.
During that week to themselves, the Doozies had been curious about the sounds of hammering, sawing and bustling emanating from the nearby Santaland workshop/warehouse. Daisy Sue and Denzel had just assumed Santa’s helpers would have accompanied the Clauses to Las Vegas for some well-deserved down-time. Instead, it seemed as if they were getting a ridiculously premature jump on filling toy orders for Christmas 2017.
On the Clauses’ return, the Doozies pointed to the workshop and asked Santa about the apparent toy-making activity still going on within, saying:
“(4) (4), (4) (5) (2) (4) (5), (8)?”
(Each set of parentheses represents a word, with the number within indicating how many letters are in the word.)
Translated into Standard English, the Doozies’ query would have read:
“Please explain, those helpers are remaining at the workshop, manufacturing?”
During their Vegas junket forty years earlier, in December of 1976, Santa and Sandra had attended Elvis Presley’s final Vegas performance, at the Las Vegas Hilton Hotel. After Elvis’ second encore, the audience clamored for a third – ovationally standing, rhythmically clapping and urgently chanting “Elvis! Elvis! Elvis!...”
After ten minutes of this mass importunity, a Hilton security guard approached the emcee and whispered to him pleadingly:
“(4), (4) (4) (5) (4) (3) (8)!”
As in the question the Doozies asked Santa 40 years later, each set of parentheses in this exclamation represents a word, with the number within indicating how many letters are in the word.
The 8-letter word and four 4-letter words are identical in both the security guard’s exclamation and the Doozies’ question. Add an “re” to the end of the 3-letter word in the exclamation to form the second 5-letter word in the question.
Another way of saying what the security guard said would be:
“Please, Let the audience know that Mr. Presley departed our hotel.”
The question asked by the Doozies and the exclamation expressed by the security guard 40 years earlier sound amazingly alike.
What are this question and this exclamation?
Answer:
“(4) (4), (4) (5) (2) (4) (5), (8)?” =
"Pray tell, them elves is left there, building?"
“(4), (4) (4) (5) (4) (3) (8)!” =
"Pray, tell them Elvis left the building!"
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, Part 2:
ReplyDeleteAppetizer Menu
Laurel And Hardy Appetizer:
Another nice “mexpression” we’ve gotten you into solving
Name a three-word expression that means a “bad state of affairs” or “mess,” or something to be reckoned with.” The expression is a kind of kindred idiomatic spirit with Oliver Hardy’s catchphrase, “Well, here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into.” (Indeed, Ollie might have well substituted the three-word expression for the word “mess.”)
Lop off the top half of the final (lowercase) letter in the expression, forming a new (lowercase) letter. Interchange that new letter with the one preceding it, forming a new final word and thus, a new three-word phrase.
The new phrase describes a container you might see around town during the end of the calendar year – one filled with folding money of all the same denomination.
What are this three-word expression and three-word phrase?
Answer:
"kettle of fish"
"kettle of fins"
This puzzle could have been better if, instead of a Cowboy, a Dolphin (aka "Fin") would have jumped into this Salvation Army kettle.
MENU
Reviews Are Favorable Slice:
Ursa Major genius
Name a woman recently in the news whose life’s body of scientific work deserves, at the very least, enthusiastically favorable reviews.
An unofficial mascot at the university where she pursued and completed her master’s studies is a bear.
Rearrange the four letters in a synonym of “enthusiastically favorable” to form this scientist’s first name.
Rearrange the five letters in a synonym of “bear” to form this scientist’s last name.
Who is this woman?
Answer:
Vera Rubin
The synonym of “enthusiastically favorable” is "rave."
The synonym of “bear” is "bruin." The Cornell Bear is an unofficial mascot.
Superbowl LI Slice:
QBs square off in 2017
Find two positive integers. The sum of one of these numbers squared plus the other number cubed equals 2,017.
What are these two integers?
Hint: It is possible that you might see these two numbers on the jerseys of opposing quarterbacks in an American Football Conference playoff game, depending on the outcomes of this weekend’s NFL games.
It is also possible (again depending on this weekend’s outcomes) that you might see these two numbers on the jerseys of opposing quarterbacks in the Super Bowl.
If this happens, it would be either the sixth Super Bowl appearance for both teams or the sixth appearance for one team and the first for their opponent.
Answer: 17 squared (289) plus 12 cubed (1,728) equals 2,017
Hint: In the AFC playoffs, Nwew England Patriot QB Tom Brady wears jersey #12, and Houston Texan QB Brock Osweiler and Miami Dolphin QB Ryan Tannehill wear jersey #17. So, look for a Pat/Texan or Pat/Fin match-up.
In the NFC playoffs, Green Bay Packer QB Aaron Rodgers wears jersey #12. So, look for a Pack/Texan or Pack/Fin Super Bowl match-up. The Texans have not yet been to a Super Bowl. The Packers and Dolphins have each been there five times.
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, Part 3:
ReplyDeleteRipping Off Shortz And Collins Slices:
Linking words from the links
ONE: Think of three words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a deadly “weapon” in a 1990’s cinematic dark comedy, with the first of the three words describing the stuff the “weapon” is made of.
Name this “weapon.”
Answer:
iron + wood + chipper = iron wood chipper
TWO: Think of two words used in golf, a noun and a past-tense verb. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound somewhat like the remorse, in two words, that the school bully might feel after executing a dangerous prank involving undergarments.
What are these two golf words? Name the kind of remorse the bully feels.
Hint: “The Donald was lying two – although his Trumplelist ball was buried deep in a bunker – on the par-5 eleventh hole at Whistling Straits. So he took the _____ from his Caddie (the Donald pooh-poohed golf carts, and instead always had his chauffeur drive him around the course in his Escalade) and ______ the hole by draining a blast from the sand trap for a 3.”
Answer:
Wedge + eagled = Wedgie guilt
THREE: Think of the last names of two female country singers. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a well-established American company that was in the news in 2016.
Think of a word people associate with this company which is also the last name of a third female country singer.
The last name of a fourth female country singer, if you remove the last letter, is what the company “was in,” idiomatically, which led to the news coverage.
Who are these four singers? What is the company, the word associated with it, and what the company “was in”?
Answer:
Kitty Wells; Donna Fargo; Rosanne Cash; Kellie Pickler
Wells Fargo
Cash
pickle - r = pickle
FOUR: Think of two words used in golf. Put them in alphabetical order, capitalize the second word, and split the first word into a personal pronoun and a capitalized first name.
The result is what might be a good title for an autobiography of a member of a rock group that was in the news in 2016.
What group is it? Who is the member of the group whose possible autobiographical title would echo golf terminology?
Hint: The autobiographical title would also echo an actual book title by Isaac Asimov. Indeed, those two titles’ first three letters would be identical.
Answer:
Rolling Stones;
Ron Wood, who might write an autobiography titled "I, Ron Wood." (iron + wood)
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, Part 4:
ReplyDeleteRipping Off Shortz And Collins Slices:
Linking words from the links
CONTINUED
FIVE: Think of four words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like what my dad used to call my not-so-powerful, 1970’s-era, front-engine, rear-drive, subcompact, three-door, hatchback Ford vehicle.
Hint: One of the four words is repeated... A hyphen is involved.
What did my dad call my car?
Answer: Putt-putt Pinto
(putt + putt + pin + toe)
SIX: Think of three words used in golf. Say them aloud one after the other. They’ll sound like a two-word substance used for furniture repair and refinishing or exterior siding refurbishing.
What is this substance?
Answer: Wood putty (wood + putt + tee)
SEVEN: Think of three words used in golf. Put two of them together to form a kind of camera. The third word is the last word in a phrase a photographer might employ (somewhat akin to “Say cheese!”) when taking photos of toddlers.
What are these three golf words?
Answer: pin + hole + birdie
pinhole camera; "Watch the birdie!"
Lego...
Dessert Menu
Inebriating Dessert:
Man of letters meets folksy lady
Name the title of a traditional folk song, the melody of which you often hear around this time of year. Seven of this title’s twelve letters are consonants. The other five are the same vowel. The title is a compound word.
Take three consonants and one vowel from the title and add a new different vowel to the mix. Rearrange these five letters to form a word for what “The Inebriate” is an example of.
Take the four remaining consonants from the folk song title, keeping them in order, and place a different new vowel in the middle, creating a five-letter noun that the first five letters of the title describe.
The last six letters of the title form the surname of an Emmy-nominated comedic actress. A homophone of her surname and the noun (described by the title’s first five letters) appear in the title of an American author’s well-known poetry collection.
What is the title of the folk song? What is the title of the poetry collection?
What is “The Inebriate” an example of?
What is the five-letter noun that the first five letters of the title describe?
Answer:
"Greensleeves"
"Leaves of Grass"
“The Inebriate” is a "novel" by Walt Whitman.
"Grass" is the noun described by "green"
The comedic actress is Jane Leeves
Lego...