Friday, July 9, 2021

Mushrooms, classrooms & Olympic confusion; Thunderous clapping in Hollywood; Spoonerizing “plant placement” Animal numerical mnemonical; Burning the boob-tube at both ends

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Thunderous clapping in Hollywood

Name a native of a country, the people of a second country, and what people of a third country call their country.

(For example, a native of Turkey is a “Turk,” people of the Netherlands are called “Dutch” and the people of Germany call their country “Deutschland.”) 

Rearrange your combined letters to spell
three words associated with Hollywood that are often accompanied by clapping. 

What six words are these?

Hint: The three countries are in Europe.

Appetizer Menu

Worldplayful Appetizer:

Mushrooms, classrooms & Olympic confusion

Mushrooms in finance

1. 🍄A term used to characterize cash money, bearer bonds, pure gold, and the like begins with five letters that name life forms, such as
mushrooms, that are neither plant nor animal. What is the financial word?

Pre posit ion 

📘2. A fairly common four-syllable preposition is composed of three other words. 

What is the preposition?

University of XX State University

📚3. Many US states have two main state-affiliated universities. Often, one has the law and medical schools and the second specializes in more applied fields. For one such pair, take the respective towns where each is located. 

Remove the first syllable of one town and put it in front of the other town. 

Split the merged word into two words. If you
have the correct pair of towns, you will now have a number, a part of speech, and a word relating to ripoffs. What are these three words?

Confusion at the Olympics? 

🥇🥇4. At the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, NY, Hanni Wenzel of Liechtenstein won two gold medals in alpine skiing (woman’s slalom and women’s giant slalom).

 At the medal ceremonies for those events, British athletes and spectators might well have been confused. What could have caused this confusion?

MENU

Divide And Conquer This Slice:

Animal, numerical, mnemonical  

Two tricky spelling words are associated with “division.” 

A mnemonic device for each involves the
same animal. 

What are these tricky spelling words?

What is the animal?


Riffing Off Shortz And McClary Slices:

Spoonerizing “plant placement

Will Shortz’s July 4th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Todd McClary, a member of the National Puzzlers’ League, reads:

Think of a place where a plant might grow, in two words. Spoonerize it — that is, switch the initial consonant or consonants of the two words. The result will name another place where a plant might grow, and a plant that might grow in either place.

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And McClary Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Think of the name of a puzzle-maker. Anagram it to form the name of a leader of  “airmen from a lost planet” (using an abbreviated form of his title, or rank) and a three-letter abbreviated adjectival form of the
genre of country, rock and roll, Western swing, rockabilly, jump blues and boogie-woogie purveyed by these “airmen” and their leader.

Who is this puzzle-maker?

Who is the leader of  “airmen from a lost planet” and the three-letter form of the genre they purveyed? 

ENTREE #2

Think of a nine-letter plant with bright yellow, five-petaled flowers. Think also of a four-letter public recreational area where you might see it. 

Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonants. Divide the the nine-letter part into words of six and three letters. 

The resulting three words, in order, are two things seen on a public golf green and a third word heard, not likely when you are walking along a fairway dogleg but more likely any time you are just out walking your dog.

What are this plant and public recreational area?

What are the two things seen on a public golf green and the third word heard anytime you are just walking your dog?

Hint: The third word heard while walking your dog is also something you will see if you walk your dog in the public recreational area.

ENTREE #3

Think of two words — plants, in 4 letters, and a place where those plants might grow, in 5 letters. Spoonerize them — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. 

The result will sound like a 4-letter synonym of  “coxcombs” or “dandies” and a 6-letter
word that – when connected to either “well-” or “high-” – forms a hyphenated adjective that may describe the synonym of “coxcombs” or “dandies,” or the shoes he might wear.

What are these plants and a place where they might grow?

What is the synonym of  “coxcombs” or “dandies” and the hyphenated adjectives that may describe this synonym or his shoes?

Hint: The plants are associated with refreshing but intoxicating beverages.

ENTREE #4

Think of two words — a 6-letter place (filled with large shady plants) where 5-letter bloodsucking insects might thrive, and the insects themselves. Spoonerize them — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. 

The result will name the proprietor of a place where ornamental plants might grow, and payment for services the proprietor may render.

What is the place filled with shady plants and bloodsucking insects that might thrive there?

Who is the ornamental plant purveyor and payment for services rendered ?

ENTREE #5

Think of a place where crops grow and a particular crop that may grow there. Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonant sounds. 

The result, if you keep the vowel sounds the same, will sound much like what you may be
trying to achieve by purchasing thick woolen socks or insulated boots.

What are this crop-producing place and crop?

What may you be trying to achieve by purchasing thick woolen socks or insulated boots?

ENTREE #6

Think of a place where a plant might grow, in two words. 

Spoonerize it — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. 

The result will sound like a two-word
description of roller skates or inline skates.

What are this place and this description?

ENTREE #7

Think of a five-letter hardy perennial in the lily family that is native to eastern Asia and valued for its conspicuous foliage. Think also of a four-letter public recreational area where you might see this perennial. 

Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonants. 

The first, five-letter, part sounds like a word associatied with something celestial beings have on their heads besides haloes. The second, four-letter, part is a word sung by these celestial beings.

What are the perennial public recreational area where you might see it?

What is the word associated with something celestial beings have on their heads?

What is the word sung by these celestial beings?

Entree #8:

Think of the process in a plant that manufactures  wooden doors, sashes and trim. The process is a compound word. 

Spoonerize — that is, switch the consonants at the starts of — the two parts of the word. 

The result, if you retain the vowel sound of the second part, will be the 4-letter first name of a
New York-based table tennis master, and four letters that sound like a word for any one of the entertaining but “foggy” puzzles this master purveys daily in the New York Times and weekly on National Public Radio.

What is the process called?

What is the first name of the New York-based table tennis master, and four letters that sound like a word for any one of the entertaining but “foggy” puzzles this master purveys? 

Dessert Menu

Log Without The Rhythm Dessert:

Burning the boob-tube at both ends

Name a long-running TV series title. Remove a total of three letters from the ends. 

The result sounds like an abbreviaton of a mathematical term.

What are this TV series and math term?

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.

53 comments:

  1. A hostile takeover involving chopsticks?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes indeed, Paul. Perhaps a takeover...

      Lego(WhoContinues...FromAnItchyLothario!)

      Delete
  2. There's a joke about bell ringers that I might subject you to on Wednesday.

    ReplyDelete
  3. You're the second Paul I've had to deal with tonight that I couldn't totally understand.
    Good Friday evening to all here in the blog!
    Did my usual Friday stuff, plus I received another GAMES Magazine in the mail, so my puzzle cup runneth over today! All this after those WTF rebuses of eco's last week! I may need a breather after this weekend(or even before it starts!). Mom was able to fix one of those box meals for supper. She thought she'd discontinued those temporarily, but we still got a box a couple of days ago! She's been able to prepare two of the three meals included, but she says she'll have to skip the third, because she's not up to peeling carrots just yet, and I never have, so I'll most likely injure myself if I try. She did get a neighbor of ours to drive her to the beauty shop, so she has accomplished something today. Two things at least. Another week, and it's back to the doctor, and maybe things'll finally be back to normal(whatever that is!).
    Now for this week's puzzles.
    Tough ones this week! I've only solved the first two Worldplays, and all Entrees except #5, #7, and #8(I know who's playing table tennis, of course. No worries there.). Any hints will be greatly appreciated between now and "Hump Day". Lego, tell Mary et al. I send my love.
    Good luck in solving to all, and remember to stay safe, and if we have to be careful of the "Delta Variant", so be it. In closing, one appropriate cryptic clue:
    Travel with it---nada could come from this?(5,7)
    pjbAlmostReadyToHelpMomWithDialysisInALittleBit(CranberryOut!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Procedure for paring carrots:
      1. Take n carrots, where n is a positive even integer.
      2. Number the n carrots sequentially, from 1 to n.
      3. Group the numbered carrots in sets of 2, starting with carrot 1 and carrot 2. Continue with carrot i and carrot i + 1. When i = n - 1, the carrots are all pared.

      Delete
  4. PJB, I suggest you attempt paring carrots...it's not that hard. Just remember to peel AWAY from your hand. It takes multiple swipes for each carrot, so don't feel you have to do the entire length in one nice fell swoop.

    I agree re the toughness, anyway, of the Schpuzzle, the Dessert, and half the Slice...I managed to solve all Ken's. Appetizers, and all 8 entrees. And half, I THINK, of the Slice...but the rest, forget it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VT, congrats on solving Appetizer #3.

      Delete
    2. Thank you. It was a. matter of research.

      Delete
    3. or you could get a veg-i-matic.Millions sold.

      Delete
    4. Oh sure, Veg-o-Matic is fine for chopping carrots, but for slicing carrots you really need one of these!

      LegoJustPeelingAroundOnHisChopper

      Delete
    5. MY DIL has one you can make veggie pasta out of. A spiraliser? I am late for lunch.

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

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    7. #5.H. A recurring nemesis on "Big Bang Theory."

      Delete
  5. Hello, all,
    Have solved everything except the Schpuzzle.

    For the Dessert, I have 5 answers. Not sure if the last one is the intended answer but it fits better, as the answer sounds like the name of a mathematical operator (which, however, may not be familiar to those unfamiliar with higher math). The others all yield the conventional symbols for mathematical (or in one case) physical quantities. One answer gives the full name of a mathematical unit, not a "sounds like" answer.

    For Appetizer #2, I now have two equally valid answers. The alternate one is slightly shorter than the original (intended) answer.

    Appetizer #3 is, to me, an interesting scenario, which actually may have actually occurred. The only assumption is that there were British onlookers at the given Olympic event. The scenario is on a par with the (far more hypothetical) puzzle of the Indonesian vessel in Polish waters of some time back.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Correction: "Appetizer #3" in the above should read "Appetizer #4" (the Olympics one).

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

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    3. I'm afraid I am NOT going to hunt for a second answer to your Appetizer #2, geo!

      Delete
  6. I guess Mod Squad won't work for dessert? Believe it or not i was just paring carrots- by hand. I was trying to do the Julienne thing. Not as easy as it looks. Many are crooked- not straight. Oh well.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Per VT I started from the middle and shaved away from me, then turned it around and did the other side from the middle also.
    (Step one). So far so good.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Am glad to hear that you didn't pare yourself, PTSH!

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

    ReplyDelete
  9. Am I the only one who still remembers there are puzzles to solve? Hello?
    pjbNeedsHints,NotCookingTips

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's funny, even tho you didn't mean it to be!

      Delete
    2. All puzzles and no cooking makes Jake a hungry??

      Delete
  10. Schpuzzle of the Week:
    The native of a country rhymes with Mr. Cain or Mr. Hesse.
    The people of a second country are also a beverage.
    "Clapping is not applause! (at least not in this puzzle)
    Appetizer Menu

    Worldplayful Appetizer:
    (Hints courtesy of geofan himself)
    1. Are we having — yet?
    2. Think contracts and exclusions therein.
    3. Think lots and lots of red (not black or white) chess pieces.
    4. Think about the national anthems.

    Divide And Conquer This Slice:
    The first tricky spelling word is the kind of homework a student might complete with a pencil.
    The second tricky spelling word anagrams to a two-word (3-5) substance Vincent Van Gogh could have used to reattach what he lopped off.
    The animal is named Templeton in a delightful read.

    Riffing Off Shortz And McClary Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    "Hot Rod Lincoln"
    ENTREE #2
    The name of someone who had snuff and tobaccy, excellent jacky, scissors, watches,and knives.
    ENTREE #3
    A leaper, like Jordan, has the "4-letter plants." The plants might grow in a place called Wrigley.
    ENTREE #4
    Smokey Bear roams the place filled with large shady plants.
    The 5-letter bloodsucking insects have... well, they are leapers.
    ENTREE #5
    McDonald's place is where this crop gets harvested... and perhaps then shredded and boxed for breakfast!
    ENTREE #6
    More of the shredded stuff... this time surrounded by ivy vines!
    ENTREE #7
    The five-letter hardy perennial in the lily family that is native to eastern Asia and valued for its conspicuous foliage? It just be on the tip of your tongue!
    Entree #8:
    Find a synonym of “fog” that rhymes with "perk" to get what we might call one of this table-tennis master's puzzles that he purveys daily in the New York Times and weekly on National Public Radio.
    Or, just think of an abbreviated name for any Monterey, Montclair, Meteor, Marauder, Marquis, Montegro, Monarch, Mystique, Mountaineer, Mariner, Milan...

    Log Without The Rhythm Dessert:
    "Seek a deal" "Stake" "Invest" "Valuation" "Mr. Wonderful"

    LegoWhoNotesThatThePeopleOfTheSecondCountryAreAlsoATape!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Got the Schpuzzle, Entree #8, most of the Divide and Conquer Slice(not the first word or the mnemonic device, but the rest of it), and Worldplay #4, still struggling with #5 and #7 and the Dessert. With #7, I only know one word that rhymes with the plant, and it doesn't work.
      pjbIsJustHappyToKnowTheFamedTableTennisAficionado'sNameAtThisPoint!

      Delete
    2. Just got the Dessert(I think)!
      pjbThinksMathIsNothingMoreThanANumbers...AndTheBall'sInYourCourt!

      Delete
    3. "5.H Sheldon's frienemie. (sp?) Friendomie. Frenomee.

      Delete
    4. Hints: Entrees #5 and #7:

      ENTREE #5
      As FDR said, "The only thing we have to fear is 'cold tootsies' themselves!" ("Where's that damn hot water bottle!?")
      For the place where crops grow, anagram an oil filter brand.
      For the particular crop, use a syllable from the name of the actor who portrayed Gordie Lachance.
      ENTREE #7
      A celestial being (aka, an "angel") sports a halo in its head, sure, but also sports hair... angel hair.... angel hair that, in the context of cuisine, may be very thin, delicate and edible.
      Anagram the "five-letter hardy perennial in the lily family that is native to eastern Asia and valued for its conspicuous foliage" to get a character created by Alexandre Dumas, one of three of which are well-known.
      And, we all know the word that stereotypical angels named Harold sing... and it ain't "quark" or "narc."

      LegoWhoCongratulatescranberry(AndLikelyAllPuzzlerian!s)ForSolvingEntree#8

      Delete
    5. And to think i thought it was SNL?
      You talking about Angel hair pomodoro? A fave of mine. Such a foodie.

      Delete
  11. OK, I finally solved the Dessert, but not easily. It does help to have been a math major, as once my eyes finally fell on the correct series, I could see the math term inside.

    ReplyDelete
  12. It is likely that I have an alternate answer both for the Slice and for the Dessert. But IMHO if each is not the intended answer, each is as valid as the intended one.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Schpuzzle: [Schtymied]

    Appetizers:
    1. Fungible
    2. Notwithstanding
    3. [Stymied]
    4. The National Anthem of Liechtenstein has the same tune as the British National Anthem.

    DAC Slice: Mitosis & Meiosis; Cat

    Entrees:
    1. Todd McClary; Cmdr Cody & Alt
    2. Buttercup & Park; Putter; Cup & Bark
    3. Hope & Field; Fops & Heeled
    4. Forest & Fleas; Florist & Fees
    5. Farm & Wheat; Warm Feet
    6. Wheat Field; Feet Wheeled
    7. Hosta; Park & Pasta; Hark!
    8. Millwork; Will & Murk ("o" retains "u" sound)

    Dessert: MADtv - Mtv = ad (adjoint representation of a Lie group)

    Very clever, geo and Lego. A tip of the Scarlet visor. And, thanks, geo. Even though I didn't get all of yours, I think you made one of my submissions for consideration more socially acceptable than I originally thought it might be.

    ReplyDelete
  14. LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION > GERMAN, SCOTCH, ITALIA
    (FUNGI)BLE
    NOTWITHSTANDING
    I didn't know Liechtenstein's national anthem was My Country 'Tis of Thee
    ?, SEPARATE / A RAT
    SHARK TANK > ARK TAN > ARCTAN(GENT)

    #################################

    Mushrooms are FUNGI. At first, thinking we were looking for an acronym. I googled FUNG Investments. Turns out it's an actual thing, and I can imagine a hostile takeover of or by the Fung organization being dubbed a "Fung coup", which is fun to chopstickerize (because you wouldn't want to spoonerize in Hong Kong).

    The old joke I remembered involved two competing families of bell-ringers, the Dings and the Dongs, star-crossed lovers Stanley and Stella, the annual Bellringers Ball (which Stella desperately wanted to attend), and her father's judgment on the matter.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The bottom line is: Stella Dong gets to go to the Bellringers Ball - not with Stan Ding.

      Delete
    2. "Fung coup" is fantastic, Paul...

      LegoWhoSuggests(NoDemands)ThatWillShortzStartGivingUsPuzzlesInvolvingChopstickerisms!

      Delete
  15. Schpuzzle: CROATIAN, SCOTS, FRANCE → OSCARS, ACTOR, FINANCE, T
    post-Tue-hint: GERMAN, SCOTCH, SUOMI (Finland) + DT → THUNDER, OSCARS

    Appetizer
    1: FUNGI, FUNGIBLE
    2: NOTWITHSTANDING (NOT, WITH, STANDING); CONSIDERING (CON, SIDE, RING)
    3: VERMILLION, BROOKINGS → MILLION, VERB, ROOKINGS
    4: At Olympic medal ceremonies, an instrumental version of the gold medal winner's country is played. The tune of the anthem of Liechtenstein (“Oben am jungen Rhein”) is identical to that of the UK (“God Save the Queen”).

    This same tune was also the anthem of Switzerland, Prussia, Germany, Russia, Iceland, and Hawaii at various times– but prior to the playing of anthems at Olympic ceremonies.

    Divide & Conquer Slice: SERGEANT, LIEUTENANT, each ends with ANT. Both ranks are in a DIVISION.
    post-Mon-hint: SEPARATE, ARITHMETIC (both contain A RAT) – but ARITHMETIC is not hard to spell.

    Entrées
    #1: TODD MCCLARY → CMDR CODY, ALT
    #2: BUTTERCUP, PARK → PUTTER, CUP, BARK (sound or “tree rind”)
    #3: HOPS, FIELD, FOPS, HIELD → HEELED
    #4: FOREST, FLEAS → FLOREST, FEAS sounds like FLORIST, FEES
    #5: FARM, WHEAT → WARM FEET
    #6: WHEAT FIELDS → FEAT WHIELDS sounds like FEET WHEELS
    #7: HOSTA, PARK → POSTA → (Angelhair) PASTA, HARK
    #8: MILLWORK → WILL, MORK → MURK

    Dessert: Numerous [pun intended] answers.
    In (1-3), both the “sounds like” and “abbreviation” criteria are fulfilled.
    (1) RUGRATS – RU, S → GRAT, sounds like grad = [gradient of a vector]
    (2) MARKER – M, ER → ARK, sounds like arc [segment of a circle, or “inverse function” prefix]
    (3) INSIGHT – IN, T → SIGH, sounds like psi [measure of an angle, along with theta; or wave function in Schrödinger equation]

    Other “almost” answers:
    (4) EXTANT – EX, T → TAN, abbreviation for tangent
    (5) 60 MINUTES – 60, S → MINUTE [not an abbreviation]
    (6) NCIS – NC, S → I [square root of -1]
    (7) NCIS – N, IS → C [a (general) constant, or the speed of light]
    (8) NOVA – NO, A → V [velocity]

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great Schpuzzle alternative answers, geofan, especially CROATIAN, SCOTS, FRANCE...

      LegoAdds:AndForTheDessertYouHaveSurelySetANewRecordForTheNumberOfAlternativeAnswers!

      Delete
  16. Schpuzzle
    "LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION!"(GERMAN, SCOTCH, ITALIA)
    Appetizer Menu
    1. FUNGI, FUNGIBLE
    2. CONSIDERING(CON, SIDE, RING)
    4. The Liechtenstein National Anthem("Oben am Jungen Rhein", or "High On The Young Rhine")is sung to the tune of "God Save The King/Queen", the Anthem for the United Kingdom.
    Menu
    SEPARATE, "A RAT"
    Entrees
    1. TODD McCLARY, CMDR. CODY, ALT(alternative)
    2. BUTTERCUP, PARK, PUTTER, CUP, "BARK!"
    3. HOPS, FIELD, FOPS, HEELED
    4. FOREST, FLEAS, FLORIST, FEES
    5. FARM, WHEAT, WARM FEET
    6. FIELD, WHEAT, WHEELED FEET
    7. HOSTA, PARK, PASTA, "HARK!"
    8. MILLWORK, WILL(Shortz, of course), MURK
    Dessert
    SHARK TANK, RKT.("racket math?")
    We're having Applebee's tonight via DoorDash. Hope it all works out better than the last time!-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  17. The "clapping" comes from the sound of the marker that's used for each take while filming(or taping).
    pjbStillPatientlyWaitingForHisSupperToArrive

    ReplyDelete
  18. SCHPUZZLE: DANE; SCOTCH/RUSSIANS?;
    ITALIA/ POLSKA/ CESKA/ NORGE/ BELGIE/ OSTERREICH? => DANCE?

    APPETIZERS:

    1. FUNGI / FUNGIBLES

    2. CONSIDERING [CON, SIDE, RING]

    3. VERMILLION & BROOKINGS (SD) => MILLION, VERB, ROOKINGS

    4. BECAUSE LIECHTENSTEIN’S NATIONAL ANTHEM USES THE SAME MUSIC AS DOES GREAT BRITAIN’S.


    SLICE: SEP(ARAT)E [Had this word, pre-hint]; PREP(ARAT)ION?


    ENTREES:

    1. TODD MCCLARY => CMDR CODY & ALT

    2. BUTTERCUP & PARK => PUTTER/CUP & BARK

    3. HOPS & FIELD => FOPS & HEELED

    4. FOREST & FLEAS => FLORIST & FEES

    5. FARM & WHEAT => WARM FEET

    6. WHEELED SHOES => SHEELED/SHIELD WOODS

    7. HOSTA & PARK => PASTA [as in macaroni hair for crafted angels] & HARK

    8. MILLWORK => WILL & MURK

    DESSERT: SHARK TANK (finally!) => ARCTAN

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought it was three letters from both ends.
      pjbActuallyFoundSuchAThingAs"RacketMathEquations"Listed,SoHeJustAssumed...RightShow,Though!

      Delete
  19. TEchically, according to what I had looked up, SCOTCH is not what the inhabitants of Scotland are called; it's SCOTS.

    I am confused why the first word is "German", when the hint said it rhymes with "CAIN"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Herman Cain was a talk show host out of Atlanta?? Now deceases.

      Delete
    2. Yes, Herman Cain (of "9-9-9" fame) and Herman Hesse.
      Scotch

      LegoBagpiping

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    3. Geez, that never occurred to me, i.e. the first name, Herman. Phooey

      Delete
    4. 9-9-9? VT are you close to Corvalis, Ore? I did my freshman year of college there at Oregon state.

      Delete
  20. 7/14/21 86 degrees in hotlanta.

    Schpuzzle: German, for Herman Cain then ???

    Appetizers:
    1. Fungible
    2. ??
    3. ??
    4. The National Anthem of Liechtenstein has the same melody as the British National Anthem.


    Entrees:
    1. Todd McClary; Cmdr Cody & Alt
    2. Buttercup Park, Putter; Cup & Bark
    3. Hops, Field; Fops & Heeled
    4. Forest , Fleas; Florist & Fees
    5. Farm , Wheat; Warm Feet
    6. Wheat , Field; Feet Wheeled
    7. Hosta, Park & Pasta; Hark,
    8. Millwork; Will & Murk /
    Drill wood- Will and drood. Distant cousin of Druid clan.

    Dessert: Mod Squad- Modulus
    Maverick-- Averi- Average.
    Chips--ip

    ReplyDelete
  21. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Thunderous clapping in Hollywood
    Name a native of a country, the people of a second country, and what people of a third country call their country. Rearrange their combined letters to spell three words associated with Hollywood that are often accompanied by clapping. What six words are these?
    Hint: The three countries are in Europe.
    Answer:
    German, Scotch, Italia (Germany, Scotland, Italy)
    Lights, camera, action
    (A German is a native of Germany; Scotch are the people of Scotland; Italia is what Italians call their homeland.)
    ("Lights, camera, action," which is often accompanied by the clapping of a clapperboard, is spoken during movie-making; Hollywood is a movie-making mecca.)

    Appetizer Menu
    Worldplayful Appetizer:
    Mushrooms, classrooms & Olympic confusion
    Mushrooms in finance
    1. A term used to characterize cash money, bearer bonds, pure gold, and the like begins with five letters that name life forms, such as mushrooms, that are neither plant nor animal. What is the financial word?
    Answer:
    FUNGI, FUNGIBLE
    Pre posit ion
    2. A fairly common four-syllable preposition is composed of three other words. What is the preposition?
    University of XX State University
    Answer:
    NOTWITHSTANDING (NOT, WITH, STANDING); CONSIDERING (CON, SIDE, RING)
    3. Many US states have two main state-affiliated universities. Often, one has the law and medical schools and the second specializes in more applied fields. For one such pair, take the respective towns where each is located. Remove the first syllable of one town and put it in front of the other town. Split the merged word into two words. If you have the correct pair of towns, you will now have a number, a part of speech, and a word relating to ripoffs. What are these three words?
    Answer:
    VERMILLION, BROOKINGS → MILLION, VERB, ROOKINGS
    Confusion at the Olympics?
    4. At the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, NY, Hanni Wenzel of Liechtenstein won two gold medals in alpine skiing (woman's slalom and women's giant slalom). At the medal ceremonies for those events, British athletes and spectators might well have been confused. What could have caused this confusion?
    Answer:
    At Olympic medal ceremonies, an instrumental version of the gold medal winner's country is played. The tune of the anthem of Liechtenstein (“Oben am jungen Rhein”) is identical to that of the UK (“God Save the Queen”).

    MENU
    Divide And Conquer This Slice:
    Animal, numerical, mnemonical
    Two tricky spelling words are associated with “division.”
    A mnemonic device for each involves the same animal.
    What are these tricky spelling words?
    What is the animal?
    Answer:
    Arithmetic, Separate, "A rat"
    A Rat In The House May Eat The Ice Cream = ARITHMETIC
    sepARATe contains "A RAT"

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

    Riffing Off Shortz And McClary Slices:
    Spoonerizing “plant placement”
    ENTREE #1
    Think of the name of a puzzle-maker. Anagram it to form the name of a leader of “airmen from a lost planet” (using an abbreviated form of his title, or rank) and a three-letter abbreviated adjectival form of the genre of country, rock and roll, Western swing, rockabilly, jump blues and boogie-woogie purveyed by these “airmen” and their leader.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    Who is the leader of “airmen from a lost planet” and the three-letter form of the genre they purveyed?
    Answer:
    Todd McClary; Cmdr. Cody, alt (short for the "alternative" genre of music the group purveyed)
    ENTREE #2
    Think of a nine-letter plant with bright yellow, five-petaled flowers. Think also of a four-letter public recreational area where you might see it. Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonants. Divide the the nine-letter part into words of six and three letters.
    The resulting three words, in order, are two things seen on a public golf green and a third word heard not when you are walking along a fairway dogleg but simply anytime you are just walking your dog.
    What are this plant and public recreational area?
    What are the two things seen on a public golf green and the third word heard anytime you are just walking your dog?
    Hint: The third word heard while walking your dog is also something you will SEE if you walk your dog in the public recreational area.
    Answer:
    Buttercup, Park; Putter, cup, bark
    Hint: You will hear your dog bark during the walk but will also see bark on the park's trees.
    ENTREE #3
    Think of two words — plants, in 4 letters, and a place where those plants might grow, in 5 letters. Spoonerize them — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. The result will sound like a 4-letter synonym of “coxcombs” or “dandies” and a 6-letter word that – when connected to either “well-” or “high-” – forms a hyphenated adjective that may describe the synonym of “coxcombs” or “dandies.”
    What are these plants and a place where they might grow?
    What is the synonym of “coxcombs” or “dandies” and the hyphenated adjectives that may describe this synonym?
    Hint: The plants are associated with refreshing but intoxicating beverages.
    Answer:
    Hops, field; Fops, (well- or high-) heeled
    hops plural : the ripe dried pistillate catkins of a perennial north-temperate zone twining vine (Humulus lupulus) of the hemp family used especially to impart a bitter flavor to malt liquors
    https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/fop
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fop
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/well-heeled
    Hint: Hops

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  23. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Riffing Off Shortz And McClary Slices (continued):
    ENTREE #4
    Think of two words — a 6-letter place (filled with large shady plants) where 5-letter bloodsucking insects might thrive, and the insects themselves. Spoonerize them — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. The result will name the proprietor of a place where ornamental plants might grow, and payment for services the proprietor may render.
    What is the place filled with shady plants and bloodsucking insects that might thrive there?
    Who is the ornamental plant purveyor and payment for services rendered ?
    Answer:
    Forest fleas; Florist fees
    ENTREE #5
    Think of a place where crops grow and a particular crop that may grow there. Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonant sounds. The result will sound much like what you may be trying to achieve by purchasing thick woolen socks or insulated boots.
    What are this crop-producing place and crop?
    What may you be trying to achieve by purchasing thick woolen socks or insulated boots?
    Answer:
    Farm, wheat; Warm feet
    ENTREE #6
    Think of a place where a plant might grow, in two words. Spoonerize it — that is, switch the initial consonant sounds of the two words. The result will sound like a two-word description of roller skates or inline skates.
    What are this place and this description?
    Answer:
    Wheat field; Feet wheeled
    ENTREE #7
    Think of a five-letter hardy perennial in the lily family that is native to eastern Asia and valued for its conspicuous foliage. Think also of a four-letter public recreational area where you might see this perennial.
    Spoonerize these two words — that is, switch their initial consonants.
    The first, five-letter, part sounds like a word associatied with something celestial beings have on their heads besides haloes. The second, four-letter, part is a word sung by these celestial beings.
    What are the perennial public recreational area where you might see it?
    What are the word associatied with something celestial beings have on their heads band the word sung by these celestial beings.
    Answer:
    Hosta, park; Pasta, Hark!
    Entree #8:
    Think of a place where a plant might grow, in two words. Spoonerize it — that is, switch the consonants of the two words. The result, if you retain the vowel sound of the second part, will be the 4-letter first name of a New York-based table tennis master, and five letters that sound like a plural word for the entertaining but “foggy” puzzles this master purveys daily in the New York Times and weekly on National Public Radio.
    Where might a plant grow?
    What is the first name of the New York-based table tennis master, and five letters that sound like a plural word for the entertaining but “foggy” puzzles this master purveys?
    Answer:
    Mill works; Will (Shortz), murks

    Dessert Menu
    Log Without The Rhythm Dessert:
    Burning the boob-tube at both ends
    Name a long-running TV series title. Remove a total of three letters from the ends.
    The result sounds like an abbreviaton of a mathematical term.
    What are this TV series and math term?
    Answer:
    "Shark Tank"; arctan (abbreviation of "arctangent")

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