Friday, June 9, 2017

Faces in the “Loud Family”crowd; Topsy-turvy global history mystery; Jersey’s Christie! It’s Saintly Lewis! “I’ve just seen a face” Cap city tourist traps

P! SLICES: OVER (76 + 543) SERVED
  
Welcome to our June 9th edition of Joseph Young’s Puzzleria!

Most every week, we run a few “Ripping Off Shortz” puzzles as an homage to puzzlemaster Will Shortz’s NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle from the previous Sunday.

This week we also pay homage to the excellent “Ferris Wheel/Paris Deal” puzzle that appeared in last week’s Puzzleria! The puzzle was composed and contributed by Mark Scott of Seattle (screen name: skydiveboy). You will find our 5 “Rip-Offs” of Mark’s puzzle just below our main MENU, and just above our 4 Will Shortz Rip-Offs.  


Also on our menus this week are these 3 lip-smackers:
1. An Octo-Puss Hors d’Oeuvre,
2. An Appetizer that turns the world upside-down, and
3. A Two-Faced Fab-Four Dessert.

So, try tying together the strands of our nine rip-offs paying homage to our favorite “Ripcorder” and to our favorite “Puzzlermaster.” 
Please enjoy all 12 of this week’s puzzles. 

Hors d’Oeuvre Menu

Octo-Puss Hors d’Oeuvre:
Faces in the “Loud Family” crowd

Identify just one of the eight people whose faces appear in this image and you will have identified all eight!
Give the name and the number of the person you chose.
Extra Credit Bonus Points!:
Name just one of the remaining seven people in the image. (If Lego were solving this puzzle, he would have received no Extra Credit Bonus Points whatsoever for this question! He is not good with placing names with faces.)
  
Appetizer Menu

Uppercase Place Appetizer:
Topsy-turvy global history mystery

Take a shorthand name for a historical global event. Turn the first letter topsy-turvy, then slash it with a vertical “knife stroke” into two equal parts. Move one of those parts to the right of the second letter, keeping the other one where it is. Place duplicates of the final two letters at the beginning of this result and connect them with a horizontal line segment. Add a similar segment to each of the two “equal parts” flanking the original second letter.

The result is the name of a place that played a key role in the United States’ participation in the event.
What is this historical global event?
What is the name of the place?
Note: All letters in the name of the place are in UPPERCASE LETTERS.


MENU 

Ripping Off Mark Slices:
Cap city tourist traps

Mark Scott’s June 2nd NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle reads:
Name two world capital cities. Think of two words that could describe a bargain holiday in the first city and then find two words that rhyme with those words and describe a well-known tourist attraction in the second city.
What are they?
The answer: Paris deal, and “The Eye” (a big Ferris wheel, in London)

Puzzleria’s Riffing/Ripping Off Mark Slices read:
ONE:
Name a world capital city that is chock-full of tourist attractions. Think of three words (of 2, 2, and1 syllables, beginning with S, C and D) that identify the significance of the year 1512 as it pertains to a particular tourist attraction in the city.
Now name an actress, first and last name, 3 syllables each. Remove the final vowel sound from her first name, leaving just 2 syllables. 
The 5-syllable result will rhyme with the three words that identify the significance of the year 1512.
What are the world capital, the actress’s name and the 3 words that identify the significance of the year 1512?

TWO:
All four images pictured in this image are tourist attractions associated with one world capital city, but only two are actually situated in that city. Write a caption for the image, in 2-words of 1 and 3 syllables beginning with T and G.
Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what most professional athletes earn, beginning with G and S.
Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what “about 23” might represent on a nutrition label, beginning with D and C.
What is the image caption? 
What is what most pro athletes earn?
What might  “about 23” represent on a nutrition label?

THREE:
Name a tourist attraction in a world capital city, in two words of 2 syllables each.
Think of two words that rhyme with those words to name a caption for the image shown at the right.
What are this tourist attraction and this city?


FOUR:
Name a well-known tourist attraction, in two words of 2 and 1 syllables, in a world capital city. Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what some people who went to the polls last November may now be experiencing.
What is this tourist attraction, and what might the poll-goers be experiencing?

FIVE:
Name a well-known tourist attraction in country whose capital city sounds as if it is experiencing exponential growth. The attraction contains two words of 2 and 1 syllables. Write a caption for the image pictured at the right using two words that rhyme with those words.
What are the tourist attraction and the caption?


Ripping Off Shortz And Herbst Slices:
“Jersey’s Christie! It’s Saintly Lewis!”
(with thanks to ron and Chuck for providing “Saintly Lewis”)

Will Shortz’s June 4th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by David Herbst, reads:
Name a well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a famous 20th-century writer. The first word is something found in virtually every work by this author. What is the city and who is the author?
Puzzleria’s Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz Slices read:
ONE:
Name a well-known U.S. state with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the first name of a somewhat famous 20th-century writer. The first word is contained in a biblical verse (a verse that also contains the word “sun”) that some literary critics might say pertains to some of the works by this writer that appear to be plagiaristic.
What are the state and proverb, and who is the author?


TWO:
Name a somewhat well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a somewhat famous 20th-century writer.
The sixth, fifth and first letters of the first word spell out what one title character in a novel by the writer offered to do to the other title character’s shadow.
The fourth, second, third and sixth letters of the first word (if you insert a “t” between the third and sixth letters) spell out articles of apparel that a character in a play by the writer prefers wearing – as opposed, say, to knickerbockers. (The character is of the same nationality as the writer.)
What is the city and who is the author?
What did one title character offer to do to the other title character’s shadow? 
What articles of apparel did the character in the play prefer to knickerbockers?

THREE:
Name a well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a reasonably famous 20th-century writer. The first word is something found in virtually every work by this author.
What is the city and who is the author?
Note: The answer to this puzzle involves a bit of non-English language trickery. “The first word … found in virtually every work by this author” is an English word that (when translated into French) is a part of a 3-word French term for a certain genre of novel.

FOUR:
Name a somewhat well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a reasonably famous 20th-century British writer. The first word sounds like the last name of a somewhat famous 20th-century French composer and pianist.
The writer lived the final 24 years of his life just 7 miles up the road from the birthplace of the composer.
What is this city? Who are the writer and composer?
Extra Credit Bonus Points!!
According to a Puzzleria! fake news feed, the U.S. city in this puzzle has a “sister city” somewhere in the Eastern Hemisphere, also in two words.
The first word is formed by doubling the middle letter of the last name of a famous world leader and adding a “g” at the end;
The second word is a homophone of Phoebe and Holden’s late brother. 
What is this “alternatively factual” city?
Who is the famous world leader whose surname is tweaked to form the first word of this apocryphal sister city? Who is the brother of Phoebe and Holden? 


Dessert Menu


What Beatles songs title do the two faces of these clocks remind you of?

Hint #1: 
One of the clock faces involves a Beatles song title.
The other clock face involves a word in the lyrics of a Beatles’ song. The word in the lyrics does, however, rhyme with the title of the song.
Hint # 2: Songs on  albums recorded by the Fab Four are generally classified into one of three “Beatle Eras  Early, Middle and Late. The best of the three eras, ILUO (In Legos Unhumble Opinion) is the Middle Era – “Rubber Soul,” “Revolver” and “Yesterday and Today” etc.
Both answers to this puzzle are titles from the same era.

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.

27 comments:

  1. Hors d’Oeuvre:
    I think I can name two of them. They're side by side. I don't think either of them ever appeared on Friends.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Guess it's high time we break out our Entertainment Weekly and People magazines... or to hop into a reeaaaly slooow line at the supermarket. (Ignore the High Times magazines though... they just turn your brain into bubblegum.)

      LegoHasGoneTabloid!

      Delete
  2. I could identify one Hors D'O photo right away, and did some digging to identify another. However, I fail to see how that means I've identified all eight names...I totally do NOT get this puzzle!!

    However, chugging along nicely through the appetizer, on down through the fifth Mark RIp Off, except for #4 (thus far, anyway.)

    Haven't read below #5 yet, and have to go out, darn it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VT,
      When you hit on the correct one of the eight people, that is when you will have identified the other seven faces. But only one of the eight works.
      You will not be identifying the other seven faces in the gallery by their names but by who they are or, rather, by what they are known for. The person you are looking for does not share what the other seven have in common -- at least not in the same way.

      LegoJustTryin'ToKeepItReal

      Delete
    2. Do rhyming words have to have the same number of syllables?
      Might a particular tourist attraction be found in more than one capital city?

      Delete
    3. Paul,
      In my intended answers the rhyming words do have to have the same number of syllables (except for ROMS #ONE in which one must "remove the final vowel sound from her first name, leaving just 2 syllables."
      But, as you are aware, I welcome alternative answers... Syllable count be damned!

      "Might a particular tourist attraction be found in more than one capital city?"
      I don't think so, but I am not 100% sure. One capital city does appear more than once in my answers, however.
      I recall that when I solved skydiveboy's ParisDeal/FerrisWheel puzzle I discovered that, besides London, the cap cities of Vienna and Singapore also feature "big wheels" that rival "The Eye" in the land of Bobbies and Brexit.

      Over on Blaine's blog, ecoarchitect just posted a link to Suzanne Vega's Luka (LasVegas/LossVega).
      I replied, thanking him for the link, and admitted that "jangle-pop" is one of my guilty pleasures.
      Then, signed off in a jangly fashion:

      LegoWallWatcherAsTheWorld'sGoneWild

      Delete
    4. Hey Lego, in the HORS D'O, I DID find a similarity between the people whose names I got.....but since I have no way to know WHO all the other six are, I don't see how I can find out if they fit in the presumed category.

      In better news, I solved Mark RIp Off #4, but will be making a comment about pronunciation which I'm thinking Ron might agree with, i.e. that the proper way to say the tourist attraction really doesn't rhyme with the poll-goers' feeling.

      Next, have bits and pieces of the next bunch of four Rip Offs (the Shortz-ian set)....i.e. have the VERSE for #1, but I'll be darned if i can come up with an author FIRST name for the second word in the state. None of the few possibilities qualifies.

      I do have #2 completely (the shadow was the big hint), and THINK I have #3, however I have no idea WHO that author is either [so it could be either of two cities, as far as I can tell].

      #4 remains a frustrating mystery...and believe me, I thought of / looked up ALL the French composers/pianists possible, and can't turn anyone of them into a first word, never mind the British author for the second word.

      Flunking out on all these authors, that's for sure....except #2.

      And I believe I solved the Dessert, although whatever is in the center of clock #1 is awfully hard to discern, so that's a guess.

      Delete
  3. Man I don't even know why I bothered!
    Here we've had to look after Mia Kate and Maddy for the evening(they're spending the night), and they were using our Kindles most of the time so I've been solving my puzzles on lower battery power than usual, and the Private Eye crossword was tougher than usual, and we're going back to Ft. Walton Beach a week from today(yesterday, technically)so I don't even know if I have another Puzzleria! in me, it's all so exhausting. I know some of the people, don't get the connection. The only Ripoff I could solve was Tourist Attraction Puzzle #5. I'm even stumped by the Beatles clock puzzle! Will accept any hints I can get, Lego, and they'd better be worth it. I'm a little too busy otherwise.

    ReplyDelete
  4. ViolinTeddy and cranberry,
    Yes, VT, I was concerned that the pronunciation of that tourist attraction might come up... and that I might be Violin(and ron)Teddited! I am pronouncing it, of course, the "Irish way."

    “Jersey’s Christie! It’s Saintly Lewis!” is a hint for ROSAHS #1.

    ROSAHS #3: The writer wrote a novel about a head of the Holy See.

    ROSAHS #4: The French composer/pianist is living. His music is pretty accessible. He collaborates often.
    (I would implore Paul to givea hint on this one. I believe he is in the process of solving it, from a comment he made recently at Blainesville.)

    JSD: Ignore what is in the center of clock #1. Concentrate instead on what the three hands say. For clock #2, concentrate on the silhoutte on the label.
    Clock faces #1 involves a Beatles’ song title.
    Clock face #2 involves the word in the lyrics of the Beatles’ song that rhymes with the title of the song.

    LegoWhoWentToAGradeSchoolNamedTheSameAsThe"IrishlyPronounced"TouristAttraction

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I really appreciate the hint for the fourth of the second set of Rip Offs....because I never heard of that French composer, so it took a LOT of hunting. Here I was focused on Satie, Debussy, Ravel, Saint-Saens,Messiaen.... none of which worked as a first word. What a relief!

      I finally found AN author for #3, but I fail to be able to put together the first word as being an item in all the person's works. (Which makes me wonder if I chose the wrong three-term french novel genre, but I just can't come up with anything else.)

      The #1 author is still defeating me. I can't figure out how the hint helps, either.

      Delete
    2. Oh, I forgot: I'm laughing at your Irish pronunciation comment....because I had thought of that location, of course, but didn't know how to talk about it without giving something away -- so you did figure out how to.

      Delete
    3. ROSAHS #1: The author's surname sounds somewhat the same with a domestic terrorist who was ratted out to the FBI by his brother.

      LegoStarr#15Favre#4AGuyWhoIsTheBrotherOfAGuyOnTheOcto-Puss#12...

      Delete
    4. OKie dokie, Lego, I NEVER would have come up with that author (whoever heard of HIM? Certainly not ME) without the latest direct hint. At least, it turned out to be the state I was the most suspicious of as the answer!

      Delete
  5. ROSARS #1 has been solved. I think I got part of the Dessert too, but just part of it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. cranberry,
      My guess is that you solved the #2 part of the Dessert, with #1 yet unsolved?
      If so, the #1 song is one of the earliest songs the boys performed -- in Liverpool in the pre-Ringo days. It was probably written about 60 years ago.

      LegoAddsThatThisSongIsNotAsOldHoweverAs"DannyBoy"

      Delete
    2. Finally, stumbled upon the title for the first part of Dessert, which has to be correct! Natch, I'd never heard of this very old Beatles song! Would never have found it without (once again) the above hint. I'd had all sorts of other ideas (mostly to be with 'sun' or 'moon.')

      Delete
  6. I still need more hints, though I'm too busy this week and have other things weighing more heavily on my mind as it is.

    ReplyDelete
  7. HORS D'O: KELLY CLARKSON (#1) who won American Idol; Extra: PARVATI SHALLOW (#8), who won some Survivor show. #6 is REALITY WINNER, the NSA leaker. So indeed, the thing in common is "WINNER of a REALITY show." WHO in heck are the other five people?

    APPETIZER: W W I I => HAWAII

    RIP OFF MARK SLICES:

    1. ROME/VATICAN CITY => SISTINE CHAPEL DATE => CHRISTINA APPLEGATE

    2. LONDON: Caption: TATE GALLERIES => GREAT SALARIES => DATE CALORIES [There are 23 calories in a single date.]

    3. PARIS: EIFFEL TOWER => Caption: RIFLE FLOWER

    4. PARIS: NOTRE DAME => VOTER SHAME [Properly pronounced in French, 'Notre' (Note-ruh Daaahhhm) As noted already in prior discussion, Notre Dame University does the rhyming.

    5. DUBLIN, IRELAND: BLARNEY STONE => BARNEY PHONE


    RIP OFF SHORTZ SLICES:

    1. VERSE: "There is nothing new under the sun." STATE: NEW JERSEY [Author: JERZI KOSINSKI]

    2. WILKES-BARRE, PA => J. M. BARRIE => SEW (the shadow back on to Peter Pan); Clothing: KILTS

    3. KEY WEST, FL => ROMAN A CLEF [Author: MORRIS WEST]

    4. COMPOSER: Claude BOLLING ; WRITER: Graham GREENE => BOWLING GREEN, KY; EXTRA CREDIT: PUTTING ALLEY [PUTIN and Allie]

    DESSERT: 1. "ONE AFTER 909"; 2. EVOLUTION (From "REVOLUTION")

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hors d’Oeuvre:
    I think #6 is Reality Winner and the others are reality (TV show) winners. In particular, #7 looks like Richard Hatch, the ugly naked guy who won the first Survivor.

    Appetizer:
    WWII > HAWAII

    ROMS:
    ONE: Sistine Chapel Date > Christina Applegate
    TWO: Tate Galleries > great salaries > date calories
    THREE: Eiffel Tower > rifle flower
    FOUR: Lots of places have a FLORAL CLOCK. I saw one at Niagra Falls when I was a kid. Wikipedia claims the first one appeared in Edinburgh, which is the capital of Scotland, which may or may not qualify as a 'world capital', but there's also one in Tehran, so that works. For a rhyme, I have ELECTORAL SHOCK or MORAL SHOCK, but apparently I don't have the intended answer.
    FIVE: Blarney Stone (Dublin/doublin') > Barney phone

    ROSAHS:
    ONE: New Jersey; There is nothing new under the sun (Eccl. 1:9); Jerzy Kozinski

    TWO: ? THREE: ?

    FOUR: Bowling Green > (Claude) Bolling, (Graham) Greene [Hadn't heard of Bolling before; more familiar with the work of Graham Greene the actor than Graham Greene the author.]
    Allie Caulfield - ?

    Dessert:
    1. One After 909
    2. (R)evolution

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great work, both ViolinTeddy and Paul. Tough puzzles, but not for you two.
      Paul, Glock makes pistols, but I guess you could convert to a Glock "rifle" also. Ergo: FLORAL GLOCK!

      LegoWondersIfAPitchForAustrianSemiAutomaticPiatolIsA"GlockenSpeil?"

      Delete
  9. I basically got BARNEY PHONE/BLARNEY STONE;DUBLIN/DOUBLING, "nothing new under the sun" from Ecclesiastes;NEW JERSEY/JERZY KOZINSKY, and EVOLUTION/REVOLUTION. But I don't really think either Beatles song was from the pre-Ringo days. Unless they only recorded "1 after 909" much later, but had performed it in concert much earlier. I also almost forgot to check Puzzleria!, as I was doing a little yard work with Mom. BTW see y'all in Florida!-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  10. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 1:

    Hors d’Oeuvre Menu

    Octo-Puss Hors d’Oeuvre:
    Faces in the “Loud Family” crowd
    Identify just one of the eight people whose faces appear in this image and you will have identified all eight!
    Give the name and the number of the person you chose.
    Extra Credit Bonus Points!:
    Name just one of the remaining seven people in the image. (If Lego were solving this puzzle, he would have received no Extra Credit Bonus Points whatsoever for this question! He is not good with placing names with faces.)
    Answer:
    The name of # 6 is Reality Winner.
    Extra Credit Bonus Points!
    Each of the other seven faces is a reality (show) winner:
    1. Kelly Clarkson
    2. Terry Fator
    3. Marie Picasso
    4. Jordan Rodgers
    5. Will Kirby
    7. Richard Hatch
    8. Parvati Shallow

    Appetizer Menu

    Uppercase Place Appetizer:
    Topsy-turvy global history mystery
    Take a shorthand name for a historical global event. Turn the first letter topsy-turvy, then slash it with a vertical “knife stroke” into two equal parts. Move one of those parts to the right of the second letter, keeping the other one where it is. Place duplicates of the final two letters at the beginning of this result and connect them with a horizontal line segment. Add a similar segment to each of the two “equal parts” flanking the original second letter.
    The result is the name of a place that played a key role in the United States’ participation in the event.
    What is this historical global event?
    What is the name of the place?
    Note: All letters in the name of the place are in UPPERCASE LETTERS.
    Answer:
    WWII (World War Two);
    HAWAII
    WWII >> MWII >> IIMWII >> HAWAII

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  11. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 2:

    MENU

    Ripping Off Mark Slices:
    Cap city tourist traps
    ONE:
    Name a world capital city that is chock-full of tourist attractions. Think of three words (of 2, 2, and1 syllables, beginning with S, C and D) that identify the significance of the year 1512 as it pertains to a particular tourist attraction in the city.
    Now name an actress, first and last name, 3 syllables each. Remove the final vowel sound from her first name, leaving just 2 syllables.
    The 5-syllable result will rhyme with the three words that identify the significance of the year 1512.
    What are the world capital, the actress’s name and the 3 words that identify the significance of the year 1512?
    Answer:
    Rome;
    Christina Applegate;
    Sistine Chapel Date (of completion was 1512)
    TWO:
    All four images pictured in this image are tourist attractions associated with one world capital city, but only two are actually situated in that city. Write a caption for the image, in 2-words of 1 and 3 syllables beginning with T and G.
    Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what most professional athletes earn, beginning with G and S.
    Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what “about 23” might represent on a nutrition label, beginning with D and C.
    What is the image caption?
    What is “what most pro athletes earn?”
    What might “about 23” represent on a nutrition label?
    Answer:
    Tate Galleries;
    Great Salaries;
    Date Calories;
    THREE:
    Name a tourist attraction in a world capital city, in two words of 2 syllables each.
    Think of two words that rhyme with those words to name a caption for the image shown at the right.
    What are this tourist attraction and this city?
    Answer:
    Eiffel Tower;
    Rifle flower
    FOUR:
    Name a well-known tourist attraction, in two words of 2 and 1 syllables, in a world capital city. Find two words that rhyme with those words to describe what some people who went to the polls last November may now be experiencing.
    What is this tourist attraction, and what might the poll-goers be experiencing?
    Answer:
    Notre Dame (in Paris)
    Voter shame (because they may feel remorse for voting for a canidate who is a fool)
    FIVE:
    Name a well-known tourist attraction in country whose capital city sounds as if it is experiencing exponential growth. The attraction contains two words of 2 and 1 syllables. Write a caption for the image pictured at the right using two words that rhyme with those words.
    What are the tourist attraction and the caption?
    Answer:
    Blarney Stone (situated in Ireland, the capital of which sounds like its population is "doublin'"/Dublin)
    Barney Phone

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  12. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 3:

    Ripping Off Shortz And Herbst Slices:
    “Jersey’s Christie! It’s Saintly Lewis!”
    (with thanks to ron and Chuck for providing “Saintly Lewis”)
    ONE:
    Name a well-known U.S. state with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the first name of a somewhat famous 20th-century writer. The first word is contained in a biblical verse (a verse that also contains the word “sun”) that some literary critics might say pertains to some of the works by this writer that appear to be plagiaristic.
    What are the state and proverb, and who is the author?
    Answer:
    New Jersey;
    "There is nothing new under the sun."
    Jerzy Kozinski
    TWO:
    Name a somewhat well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a somewhat famous 20th-century writer.
    The sixth, fifth and first letters of the first word spell out what one title character in a novel by the writer offered to do to the other title character’s shadow.
    The fourth, second, third and sixth letters of the first word (if you insert a “t” between the third and sixth letters) spell out articles of apparel that a character in a play by the writer prefers wearing – as opposed, say, to knickerbockers. (The character is of the same nationality as the writer.)
    What is the city and who is the author?
    What did one title character offer to do to the other title character’s shadow?
    What articles of apparel did the character in the play prefer to knickerbockers?
    Answer:
    Wilkes-Barre (PA)
    J.M. Barrie
    Wendy Darling offered to SEW (12:09)Peter Pan's shadow back on.
    "...No linen garments for John, nor flannels, nor even knickerbockers; he envies the English way of dressing for trees and lawns, but is too Scotch to be able to imitate it; he wears tweeds, just as he would do in his native country where they would be in kilts. Like many another Scot, the first time he ever saw a kilt was on a Sassenach; indeed kilts were perhaps invented, like golf, to draw the English north..." (from Barrie's play "What Every Woman Knows" Act IV)
    THREE:
    Name a well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a reasonably famous 20th-century writer. The first word is something found in virtually every work by this author.
    What is the city and who is the author?
    Note: The answer to this puzzle involves a bit of non-English language trickery. “The first word … found in virtually every work by this author” is an English word that (when translated into French) is a part of a 3-word French term for a certain genre of novel.
    Answer:
    Key West (FL);
    Morris West, whose novels were often "romans a clef" (French for "novels with a key")

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  13. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 4:

    Ripping Off Shortz And Herbst Slices (continued):
    FOUR:
    Name a somewhat well-known U.S. city with two words in its name. The second word sounds like the last name of a reasonably famous 20th-century British writer. The first word sounds like the last name of a somewhat famous 20th-century French composer and pianist.
    The writer lived the final 24 years of his life just 7 miles up the road from the birthplace of the composer.
    What is this city? Who are the writer and composer?
    Extra Credit Bonus Points!!
    According to a Puzzleria! fake news feed, the U.S. city in this puzzle has a “sister city” somewhere in the Eastern Hemisphere, also in two words.
    The first word is formed by doubling the middle letter of the last name of a famous world leader and adding a “g” at the end;
    The second word is a homophone of Phoebe and Holden’s late brother.
    What is this “alternatively factual” city?
    Who is the famous world leader whose surname is tweaked to form the first word of this apocryphal sister city? Who is the brother of Phoebe and Holden?
    Answer:
    Bowling Green (KY);
    Graham Greene; Claude Bolling
    Extra Credit Bonus Points!!
    "Putting Alley"
    Vladimir Putin;
    Allie Caulfield, late brother of Holden and Phoebe from J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye."

    Lego...

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  14. Where's the answer to the Dessert? I hope nothing happened to Lego!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, cranberry. Sorry all.
      This week's official answers, for the record, Part 5:
      Janus Hyssop Dessert:
      “I’ve just seen a face”
      What Beatles songs title do the two faces of these clocks remind you of?
      Hint #1:
      One of the clock faces involves a Beatles’ song title.
      The other clock face involves a word in the lyrics of a Beatles’ song. The word in the lyrics does, however, rhyme with the title of the song.
      Hint # 2: Songs on albums recorded by the Fab Four are generally classified into one of three “Beatle Eras” – Early, Middle and Late. The best of the three eras, ILUO (In Lego’s Unhumble Opinion) is the Middle Era – “Rubber Soul,” “Revolver” and “Yesterday and Today” etc.
      Both answers to this puzzle are titles from the same era.
      Answer:
      The #1 clock's title is "One after 909" (or 9:10 on the clock face).
      The #2 clock's title is "Revolution" which rhymes with "evolution," on the label, the "ascent of man (or Ascent of Beatle)" across Abbey Road.
      "One after 909" is one of the Fab Four's earliest songs, but it appeared on their "Let It Be" album. "Revolution appeared on "The Beatles" (White Album).

      Lego...

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