Friday, January 22, 2021

Countries and Postal Codes; Water “oover” the Whooville Dam; Signs of the “Kazoodiac?” Double your money by double-branding; Thumb through to “miss” in the thesaurus

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 3(7!) SERVED


Schpuzzle of the Week:

Double your money by double-branding


Write down a long-standing one-word brand name twice. 

Change a letter in the first instance of the name and delete a letter from the second instance of the name. 

The result is a two-word term that means “easy money.” 

What is this brand?


Appetizer Menu


Global Coding Appetizer:

Countries and Postal Codes

 

If you remove the first letter of Finland, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes (IN=Indiana, LA=Louisiana, ND=North Dakota).

1. What other countries have the property that if you remove the first letter, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes?

2. What countries have the property that if you remove the last letter, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes?

3. What country is a sequence of state postal codes?

(Global nations, no matter how landlocklocked or coastal

May have ties to a Code in the U.S. that’s Postal. 

LegoLambda) 









MENU


Synonymity Slice:

Thumb through to “miss” in the thesaurus


Remove the first two and last two letters from a synonym of “miss.” Place them next to each other to spell an antonym of  “miss.” 

Change one letter of what remains to an a and remove the middle two letters of the result, leaving a second synonym of “miss.” 

What are these two synonyms and one antonym?


Riffing Off Shortz And Reynolds Slices:

Water “oover” the Whooville Dam


Will Shortz’s January 17th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Gerry Reynolds of Chicago, Illinois, reads:

Name a national landmark in six and three letters. Add the name of a chemical element. Rearrange all the letters to name two states.
What are they?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Reynolds Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Name a puzzle-maker, first and last names. Add the name of a seven-letter chemical element. 

Rearrange these twenty letters to name a disorder that exists in laboratories where scientists sometimes too enthusiastically put certain rodents through their experimental
paces on treadmills and in mazes, thereby irritating the rodents. 

The disorder consists of three words of six, six and eight letters beginning with an O, G and S. 

Who is the puzzle-maker?

What is the chemical element?

What is the disorder?

ENTREE #2

Name a national landmark in six and three letters. 

Add the name of an eight-letter chemical element. 


Rearrange all the letters to name two states and the five-letter name of baseball leagues that were formed a century ago – leagues where players like Hank, Jackie, Josh and Sachel plied their trade.

What landmark and element are these?

What are the two states and the baseball leagues that were formed a century ago?

ENTREE #3

Name a national landmark in six and four letters. Add the name of a chemical element. 

Rearrange all the letters to name the title character (in 3 and 5 letters) in a tragedy written by a satirical English dramatist/novelist and the eight-letter surname of an American novelist. 

What landmark and element are these?

Who are the title character and the American novelist?

Hint: The first five letters in the English dramatist’s surname are the same as the last five letters in the surname of the American novelist’s most well known character. 

ENTREE #4

Name a national landmark in seven and four letters. Add the name of a chemical element with an atomic number that is a perfect number. 


Rearrange all the letters to name:

A. a six-letter world capital city,

B. a five-letter mineral that is an ore source of a
chemical element with an atomic number that is also a square number, and

C. a six-letter chemical element with an atomic number that is also a cube number. 

What landmark and element are these?

ENTREE #5

Name a national landmark in seven and four letters. 

Add the name of a chemical element that is a word in a Box Tops’ 45. 

Rearrange these 15 total letters to name a vessel and the first names of two young fictional friends surnamed Campbell and Algar. 

The first name of one of the friends is also the
first name of a country singer whose surname is a word for waterways the vessel might navigate.

What landmark and element are these?

What is the vessel and what are the names of the fictional friends?

ENTREE #6

Name a three-word national landmark in 15 letters. 

Add the name of a six-letter chemical element of which the landmark is constructed. 

Rearrange these 21 letters to spell a slogan you might see on a protest sign in Canada in
four words of 7, 3, 4, and 7 letters beginning with P, F, S and B.

What landmark and element are these?

What is the slogan?


Dessert Menu


Instrument Of Astrology Dessert:

Signs of the “Kazoodiac?”


Take the final five letters of a plural musical instrument. 

Move the fifth of these five letters to the beginning to spell the name of a fictional character that is a zodiac-sign creature.

Spell the remaining letters of the plural
instrument backward to spell a second zodiac-sign creature.

What are these two creatures?

What is the plural musical instrument?


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. 

49 comments:

  1. Just came to see the new P! and solved the Schpuzzle immediately. I am wondering if everyone else will, too?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow. Great job, ViolinTeddy. I thought this was a pretty challenging Schpuzzle.

      LegoWhoHopesOthersAreStumped(AtLeastForADayOrTwo)!

      Delete
    2. Before hitting the hay last night, I managed to also do the Appetizers, and the FIRST entree (which wasn't easy)....however, the Slice I could NOT solve.

      I have a feeling the rest of the Entrees are going to be a whole lot MORE difficult than they were last week...I haven't read them all yet, or Dessert.

      Delete
    3. Just read, and then did the Dessert! : O )

      Delete
  2. An examination of Jewish culture may be helpful in solving one of this week's puzzles.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Happy Friday to all in Puzzlerialand!
    Anybody else check out those Bernie Sanders memes? Hilarious! Definitely LOL! Mom and I just had supper, I heard the half-hour version of "Says You" and am currently in the middle of "Ask Me Another", and I've also watched "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" an hour ago. Haven't got to my other puzzles yet.
    Now about this week's puzzles here. The Entrees have proved to be the toughest, but despite my best efforts, I have solved #1 and #5. The trickiest is definitely #3, though. I thought I'd solved the literature part, both names, but then because I ended up with 16 letters total, and the landmark is 10, obviously you would think the chemical element would be six letters long, right? Well, imagine my surprise when NO six-letter elements could be derived from my names! And according to the hint, I must have the correct names! Lego, I'm pretty sure you have screwed up somewhere in this one, because it seems totally unsolvable after that! Also, why not put if these landmarks are two words?! The Sunday Puzzle had it like that! I only discovered the one in #5 was two words after the fact! You didn't even provide the number of letters for that landmark! Do you have any idea how hard it is to find national landmarks with one-word names on the Internet late at night when you should be getting to bed?! Pretty damn hard, I'll tell you! But back to #3. Ordinarily I just ask for hints to the ones I can't get. This time I need some clarification or any kind of explanation as to where either of us went wrong. To ensure I don't give anything away for the other bloggers, I'll "reveal" what I was able to get in a "cryptic"(not having to do with crosswords, necessarily)sort of way. Here goes:
    The title character's name is also that of a legendary entertainer. The type of entertainer he/she is can be found in the
    American novelist's surname, which itself can be obtained by inserting a man's nickname. And as I said before, no six-letter chemical elements can be made from the letters(the closest would be SILVER, but one letter is missing). There is an I and an M, but no U, so that really puts me at a disadvantage here. Not to mention there is also a J which must be in the landmark's name, but then what is it?! I've solved everything besides the Entrees, and quite frankly I don't want to fool with periodic elements any longer(for now anyway). Hints will, of course, be required. They usually are. As for #3, I'm somewhat disappointed by whatever flaw has hindered my solving it. In closing, as always, I wish you all good luck and good solving, please stay safe, and above all, keep wearing those masks! Cranberry out!
    pjbAdmitsBernieLooksTheWayIFeelLookingAt#3(MittensAndAll)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. cranberry,
      Sorry to put you "through the wringer," especially with Entree #3:
      There are 16 letters total, and the element is indeed 6 letters long, with a relatively low atomic number.
      The first three letters and final letter of the character's name spell the second word in the landmark.
      I apologize for being so stingy about word counts and letter counts in these Entrees. I will try to do a bit of helpful editing.

      LegoWorriesThatIfYouPutACranberry"ThroughTheWringer"YouMightEndUpWithCranberryJuice

      Delete
    2. BTW Entree #5 is eight and three letters, not seven and four like #4.
      pjbJustKeepingLegoHonest

      Delete
    3. Maybe an alternate? I have a seven and four.

      Delete
    4. I believe Plantsmith is correct about the possibility of an alternative answer, cranberry. My intended landmark for Entree #5 is 7 and 4 letters.

      LegoWhoHeard"Let'sGetThe"H"OuttaHere!"YelledByTheGetawayCarDriverAfterTheBankHeist

      Delete
    5. Isn't it amazing the intended answer and the one I got are anagrams of each other? Will reveal Wednesday.
      pjbStillCan'tBelieveTheAlternativeAnswerActuallyExistsButThereItIs!

      Delete
    6. Yes, that is amazing, cranberry. On pins and (space) needles I anticipate your Wednesday revelation.

      LegoWhoRevelsInRevelations

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. Cement is perhaps more a "chemical compound"?

      LegoWhoIsNotExactlyProficientAtProvidingConcreteAnswers

      Delete
  5. Have you had one of the "Concrete Mixers" at Culvers? Very good.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hints:

    1. One of the countries sounds like a state. That state's postal code is in the other countries.

    2. One of the countries is near a country in #1. Another of the countries is near another country in #1.

    3. The country is in a different continent than the countries in #1 and #2.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 1. India sounds like Indiana. The postal code of Indiana is IN Finland and Spain.

      2. Denmark is near Finland and Spain. Nepal is near India.

      3. Malawi is in Africa, and the other countries are in Europe and Asia.

      Delete
  7. Ive' been meaning to ask: when you say NATIONAL landmarks, Lego, you mean AMERICAN ones, right? Because of course, the Eiffel Tower is a national landmark for France...etc etc etc

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Very good question, ViolinTeddy. It would have been very clever of me (some might say "devious") to include some unamerican landmarks, like the Eiffel Tower... alas I am not that clever!

      LegoWhoThanksBobbyForProvidingHintsToHisPuzzles

      Delete
    2. Thanks, Lego. These entrees are SO hard as it is, that if you HAD included international landmarks...well, hopeless is as hopeless does.

      Delete
  8. Yes some of the entrees leave me clueless and once again i could use some dessert topping.

    ReplyDelete
  9. A few Monday Hints:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Reynolds:
    ENTREE #1
    The chemical element consists of slang for "male friend" plus the last word in the title of the last song the Beatles recorded. (The title consisted of three pronouns. The song was penned by Mr. Harrison.)
    ENTREE #2
    The landmark has no association with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, though some folks thought it did.
    ENTREE #3
    It's a landmark that commemorates a president/general. The element might make you talk funny.
    ENTREE #4
    The national landmark is, for a change, actually is all it is cracked up to be! The chemical element with an atomic number that is a perfect number is one of the c's in the "cc" you see in emailing.
    ENTREE #5
    The national landmark, contrary to popular belief, is not parabolic. Without the chemical element Vegas as we know it would not be as we know it!
    ENTREE #6
    The landmark, because of the chemical element it is made of, is fitting three days after Pi Day.

    Instrument Of Astrology Dessert:
    The musical instrument is percussive.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. FINALLy worked out #6...actually HAD the correct landmark and element, but never would have come up with that four-word Canadian protest without the last set of hints, below.

      Delete
    2. Well i still don't have any dessert, but i was trying to cut back on sweets.

      Delete
  10. Got #4, don't exactly understand #6. I'd probably really rather have some kind of hint for the Canadian protest part.
    pjbGuessingItWouldn'tBeAnythingLike"TurnTheHoseOnThoseHosers!"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The four words of the slogan in Entree #6:
      1. "To _______ and to Serve" is the motto of the Los Angeles Police Department since 1963,
      2. Homophone of a synonym of "evergreen tree"
      3. What negotiators seek to do to a deal
      4. An anagram of what we all say on the Ides of March: "BYE TO PI!"

      LegoTheLambdaIotaPi(NotToBeConfusedWithLeoTheLIP!)

      Delete
    2. Have I missed any hint for the SLICE? Or am I the only one who still hasn't gotten that puzzle?

      Delete
    3. Finally got it! See y'all tomorrow!

      Delete
    4. 11th hour Slice Hint:
      The synonym of “miss” is also the 12-letter title of a magazine that had a 58-year lifespan. A young guest editor at the magazine in 1953 used that experience as the basis of her 1963 novel written under a pseudonym.

      LegoAlsoKnownAsVictorLucas

      Delete
  11. Cranberry you get that storm last night? Thunder woke me at 2:20am. Lots of it.Quite a storm.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It mostly got Fultondale, in Jefferson County. That's where Birmingham is. Thank God nothing as bad happened here in Jasper. The Hampton Inn in Fultondale was especially damaged, with part of its face ripped off! On the news they said a few people staying there were from Indianapolis, coming back from a trip to Florida. I'm sure they'll have an interesting story to tell when they return home.
      pjbAlsoThankingGodHeLivesInAPartOfAlabamaThatReallyDodgedABulletLastNight!

      Delete
  12. The picts on the news are horiffic. Looks like a bulldozer went through.

    ReplyDelete
  13. INDIA - I = ND + IA
    DENMARK - K = DE + NM + AR
    MALAWI = MA + LA + WI

    MADEMOISELLE > MALE, DAMSEL

    GERRY REYNOLDS + BROMINE > ORNERY GERBIL SYNDROME
    HOOVER DAM + NITROGEN > IDAHO, VERMONT, NEGRO
    GRANT'S TOMB + HELIUM > TOM THUMB, SALINGER [CAUL(FIELD)ING]
    LIBERTY BELL + CARBON > BERLIN, BERYL, COBALT
    GATEWAY ARCH + NEON > WAYNE, GARTH, CANOE
    STATUE OF LIBERTY + COPPER > PROTECT FUR SEAL BIOTYPE [BIOTYPE was new to me]
    MARIMBAS > SIMBA (Leo), RAM (Aries)
    [JEWISH CULTURE is an anagram of JULIUS WECHTER, leader of the Baja MARIMBA Band, and composer of "Spanish Flea". Julius was, like Herb Alpert, of Jewish descent. Go figure.]

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Very cool. Love Marimba bands.

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    3. JEWISH CULTURE/JULIUS WECHTER is a nifty hint, Paul. (It went over my head, of course.)

      LegoWhoObservesThatTheFactThatHeIsSoFamiliarWith"TheSpanishFlea"DatesHim!

      Delete
  14. 1. India (ND=North Dakota, IA=Iowa), Spain (PA=Pennsylvania, IN=Indiana)

    2. Denmark (DE=Delaware, NM=New Mexico, AR=Arkansas), Nepal (NE=Nebraska, PA=Pennsylvania), Palau (PA=Pennsylvania, LA=Louisiana)

    3. Malawi (MA=Massachusetts, LA=Louisiana, WI=Wisconsin)

    ReplyDelete
  15. 1/27/21/ Temperature. 51 degrees
    Schpuzzle of the Week

    Buick, Quick buck


    Borderline Befuddling Appetizer

    1.India (-I nd,ia) North Dakota,Indiana
    2. Nepal( -l, Ne,pa, ) Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Palau- -u Pa,la Pennsylvanis, Louisiana

    3. Malawi, Massachusetts, Louisiana,Wisconsin

    Church Ceremonial Slice:
    Mademoiselle , Male,, Damsel

    Riffing Off Shortz And Flood Slices:
    ENTREE #1 Gerry Reynolds + bromine. O,G?, Syndrome
    ENTREE #2 Hoover Dam, Nitrogen, Idaho, Vermont, Negro leagues
    ENTREE #3 Grants Tomb, Helium ----- Tom Thumb -??? Mailer
    ENTREE #4 Liberty Bell- + Carbon, Berlin, Beryl, Cobalt
    ENTREE #5 Gateway Arch -Neon, Wayne and Garth, Canoe
    ENTREE #6 Statue of Liberty - Copper, Protect, fur, seal, biotypes




    Dessert Menu
    Siren- a percussion instrument in Brazil. ??


    Reply

    ReplyDelete
  16. SCHPUZZLE: BUICK BUICK => QUICK BUCK

    APPETIZERS:

    1. INDIA [North Dakota & Iowa]; SPAIN [Pennsylvania & Indiana]

    2. DENMARK [Delaware, New Mexico, Arkansas]; NEPAL [Nebraska, Pennsylvania]; PALAU [Penn, Louisiana]

    3. MALAWI [Massachusetts, Louisiana, Wisconsin]

    SLICE: ?CxxHE? [SA/LIVA/TE / SATE works for the first half, but not the second portion].

    ENTREES:

    1. Pre-hint: GERRY REYNOLDS & BROMINE => ORNERY GERBIL SYNDROME

    2. Pre-hint: HOOVER DAM & NIT[ROGEN] => VERMONT & IDAHO & NEGRO

    3. GRANTS TOMB & HELIUM => TOM THUMB [by FIELDing] & SALINGER [Holden CaulFIELD]

    4. Partially pre-hint: LIBERTY BELL & CARBON (6) => BERLIN & BERYL (beryllium, atomic number 4) & COBALT (27)

    5. Pre-hint: GATEWAY ARCH & NEON => GARTH & WAYNE & CANOE. [Had to do this backwards, of course]

    6. STATUE OF LIBERTY & COPPER => PROTECT FUR SEAL BIOTYPE

    DESSERT: MARIMBAS => SIMBA [Leo] => RAM [Aries]. PRE-HINT

    ReplyDelete
  17. Schpuzzle
    BUICK, QUICK BUCK
    Appetizer Menu
    1. AMERICA-A=ME(Maine), RI(Rhode Island), CA(California)
    INDIA-I=ND(North Dakota), IA(Iowa)
    SPAIN-S=PA(Pennsylvania), IN(Indiana)
    2. DENMARK-K=DE(Delaware), NM(New Mexico), AR(Arkansas)
    NEPAL-L=NE(Nebraska), PA(Pennsylvania again)
    PALAU-U=PA(yet again), LA(Louisiana)
    3. MALAWI(Massachusetts, Louisiana again, Wisconsin)
    Menu
    Synonymity Slice
    MADEMOISELLE, MALE, DAMSEL
    Entrees
    1. GERRY REYNOLDS+BROMINE=ORNERY GERBIL SYNDROME
    2. HOOVER DAM+NITROGEN=IDAHO, VERMONT, NEGRO
    3. GRANT'S TOMB+HELIUM=TOM THUMB, (J.D.)SALINGER
    4. LIBERTY BELL+CARBON=BERLIN, BERYL, COBALT
    5. GATEWAY ARCH+NEON=WAYNE, GARTH, CANOE
    6. STATUE OF LIBERTY+COPPER=PROTECT FUR SEAL BIOTYPE!
    Dessert
    MARIMBAS, SIMBA(The Lion King), RAM(Aries)
    I also found CARTHAGE WAY, which is an actual place in Arlington, TX. This explains my confusion in trying to get GATEWAY ARCH. -pjb(Party on, dudes!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great coincidence, cranberry.

      LegoWhoBelievesTheResidentsOfCarthageWayOughtToErectSomeTypeOfArchOverTheirThrorughfare

      Delete
  18. Hello, all.
    Didn't do so well as expected this week, even though almost all of the puzzle would seem to be custom-made for my set of skills. Also some other activities I have involved in have been cutting into my puzzle-solving time. Lego is aware of some of them.
    ---------------------------------------
    That said, here are my fragmental results:

    Schpuzzle: ???

    Appetizers:
    #1: FINLAND – F => IN, LA, ND; INDIA – I => ND, IA; SPAIN – S => PA, IN;
    TONGA – T => ON, GA [only if Canadian provinces allowed]
    #2: DENMARK – K => DE, NM, AR; PALAU – U => PA, LA;
    #3: MALAWI => MA, LA, WI

    Sensory Slice: ???

    Entrées
    #1: ???
    #2: ???
    #3: HELIUM, GRANT'S TOMB => ???
    #4: LONDON, WATER, COBALT => CARBON, +7, +4 LONDOWATELT
    #5: GATEWAY ARCH, NEON => GARTH, WAYNE, CANOE
    #6: STATUE OF LIBERTY, COPPER => PROTECT FUR SEAL BABIES TI O BEY, P

    Dessert: MARIMBAS – SIMBA => RAM

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Double your money by double-branding
      Write down a long-standing one-word brand name twice.
      Change a letter in the first instance of the name and delete a letter from the second instance of the name. The result is a two-word term that means “easy money.”
      What is this brand?
      Answer:
      Buick; ("quick buck")

      Appetizer Menu
      Global Coding Appetizer:
      Countries and Postal Codes
      If you remove the first letter of Finland, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes (IN=Indiana, LA=Louisiana, ND=North Dakota).
      1. What other countries have the property that if you remove the first letter, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes?
      2. What countries have the property that if you remove the last letter, then you will get a sequence of state postal codes?
      3. What country is a sequence of state postal codes?
      Answers:
      1. Denmark (DE=Delaware, NM=New Mexico, AR=Arkansas +K)
      2. Spain (S+ PA=Pennsylvania, IN=Indiana)
      3. Malawi (MA=Massachusetts, LA=Louisiana, WI=Wisconsin).

      MENU
      Synonymity Slice:
      Thumb through to “miss” in the thesaurus
      Remove the first two and last two letters from a synonym of “miss.” Place them next to each other to spell an antonym of “miss.”
      Change one letter of what remains to an a and remove the middle two letters of the result, leaving a second synonym of “miss.”
      What are these two synonyms and one antonym?
      Answer:
      Mademoiselle; Damsel; Male
      MADEMOISELLE-->MALE+DEMOISEL-->DAMOISEL-->DAMSEL

      Delete
  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Reynolds Slices:
    Water “oover” the Whooville Dam
    ENTREE #1
    Name a puzzle-maker, first and last names. Add the name of a chemical element. Rearrange these twenty letters to name a disorder that exists in laboratories where scientists sometimes too enthusiastically put certain rodents through their experimental paces on treadmills and in mazes, thereby irritating the rodents.
    The disorder consists of three words of 6, 6 and eight letters beginning with an O, G and S.
    Who is the puzzle-maker?
    What is the chemical element?
    What is the disorder?
    Answer:
    Gerry Reynolds, bromine; "Ornery Gerbil Syndrome
    ENTREE #2
    Name a national landmark in six and three letters.
    Add the name of an eight-letter chemical element.
    Rearrange all the letters to name two states and the five-letter name of baseball leagues that were formed a century ago – leagues where players like Hank, Jackie, Josh and Sachel plied their trade.
    What landmark and element are these?
    What are the two states and the baseball leagues that were formed a century ago?
    Answer:
    Hoover Dam, Nitrogen; Idaho, Vermont; Negro (Leagues)
    ENTREE #3
    Name a national landmark in six and four letters. Add the name of a chemical element.
    Rearrange all the letters to name the title character (in 3 and 5 letters) in a tragedy written by a satirical English dramatist/novelist and the eight-letter surname of an American novelist.
    What landmark and element are these?
    Who are the title character and the American novelist?
    Hint: The first five letters in the English dramatist’s surname are the same as the last five letters in the surname of the American novelist’s most well known character.
    Answer:
    Grant's Tomb, Helium;
    Tom Thumb ("The Tragedy of Tragedies; or, The Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great"); (J.D.) Salinger (who created the character Holden Caulfield)

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  20. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Riffing Off Shortz And Reynolds Slices (continued):

    ENTREE #4
    Name a national landmark in seven and four letters. Add the name of a chemical element with an atomic number that is a perfect number.
    Rearrange all the letters to name:
    A. a six-letter world capital city,
    B. a five-letter mineral that is an ore source of a
    chemical element with an atomic number that is also a square number, and
    C. a six-letter chemical element with an atomic number that is also a cube number.
    What landmark and element are these?
    Answer:
    Liberty Bell; Carbon;
    Berlin, Beryl, Cobalt
    ENTREE #5
    Name a national landmark in seven and four letters.
    Add the name of a chemical element that is a word in a Box Tops’ 45.
    Rearrange these 15 total letters to name a vessel and the first names of two young fictional friends surnamed Campbell and Algar.
    The first name of one of the friends is also the
    first name of a country singer whose surname is a word for waterways the vessel might navigate.
    What landmark and element are these?
    What is the vessel and what are the names of the fictional friends?
    Answer:
    Gateway Arch, Neon (The Box Tops recorded a single titled "Neon Rainbow");
    Canoe; Wayne, Garth (Campbell and Algar, from the "Wayne's World" franchise)
    A canoe might navigate "brooks." Garth Brooks is a country singer.
    ENTREE #6
    Name a three-word national landmark in 15 letters.
    Add the name of a six-letter chemical element of which the landmark is constructed.
    Rearrange these 21 letters to spell a slogan you might see on a protest sign in Canada in
    four words of 7, 3, 4, and 7 letters beginning with S, F, S and B.
    What landmark and element are these?
    What is the slogan?
    Answer:
    Statue of Liberty, copper;
    "Protect Fur Seal Biotype"

    Dessert Menu

    Instrument Of Astrology Dessert:
    Signs of the “KaZoodiac?”
    Take the final five letters of a plural musical instrument. Move the fifth of these five letters to the beginning to spell the name of a fictional character that is a zodiac-sign creature.
    Spell the remaining letters of the plural instrument backward to spell a second zodiac-sign creature.
    What are these two creatures?
    What is the plural musical instrument?
    Answer:
    Lion (Simba), Ram; Marimbas

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete