Friday, March 25, 2022

Saddlin’ up to track down bandits; Healing, humanity & history; Cowboys riding seahorses; Conventions, customs & conduct; The wheels on the train go “clickety-clack”

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Saddlin’ up to track down bandits

In the Old West, a sheriff would often round up groups of volunteers, asking them to saddle up to help him track down bandits and other such outlaws. 

The number of volunteers in these groups was determined by how vile the bandit was – double-figure-sized groups for the vilest bandits, but only single-figure-sized groups for less-dangerous, “petty” bandits.

One day, for example, Dodge City Sheriff Roy Omar prepared to enlist volunteers to help him track down a mild-mannered Dodge City Bank clerk who, according to the bank president, apparently had embezzled $500 and subsequently seemed to have vanished into thin air – “gotten out of Dodge,” so to speak. 

Sheriff Omar instructed his deputy, Cooper Flute, to initiate the rounding-up process.

“How many volunteers will we need?” Deputy Flute asked.

Sheriff Omar replied laconically, “He’s __ ___-_____-_____ _____?”

Fill in those blanks with words of 2, 3, 5, 5 and 5 letters – two adjectives followed by three nouns.

Those 20 letters can be anagrammed to spell the 5-word name (in 3, 4, 2, 3, and 8 letters) of a legendary Country & Western musical group.

What did Sherriff Omar reply?

What is the name of the legendary Country & Western musical group?

Hint: The name of the musical group is sometimes written without its first word.

Appetizer Menu

Delightfully Puzzley Appetizer:

Healing, humanity & history

A Comforting Cure Story

1.🥘Take a comfort food that doubles as a trusted cure, in three words. 

Replace one consonant with a consonant that sometimes sounds like that consonant that it is replacing. 

Mix up the result to get three words to fill in the blanks in the following vignette: 

“Recently chef James made it to the second round of Master Chef before he was ‘Ramsayed’ off the show. Happily however, it
was not too long before he landed a new gig at an Asian fusion restaurant. There, as a ___ chef, he spent some time in the _______, making ___ for his fiancee.”
 

What is this comfort-foodie cure? 

What three words to fill in the blanks (the last of which fills his fiancee’s belly!)?

Animal to Human 

2.🐕🐘👂👅Take an eight-letter animal body part that can be anagrammed to spell two words associated with greeting: 

* a three-letter gesture of respect or reverence, and

* a common five-letter word of salutation.

Replace the first syllable of this animal body part with something sweet. The result is a slang word for a human body part.

What are this animal body part and human body part? 

Wordplayful history

3.📜Take a “wordplay word” sometimes used in puzzle-making. 

Repeat a vowel and add an East Coast state postal code. 

Mix the result to get an important historical document in two words.

What are this “wordplay word” and historical document?

MENU

Collegiate Slice:

Conventions, customs & conduct

Take a two-word term  for the customs, conventions and code of conduct that may be instituted at a mixed-gender institution of higher learning. 

Reverse the order of the last two letters in
each word, then reverse the order of those new words to form a different kind of code. 

What are these two two-word terms?

Hint: One of the four words in the answer appears in the text of the puzzle.

Riffing Off Shortz And Lande Slice:

Cowboys riding seahorses

Will Shortz’s March 20th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, based on an idea by Jeff Lande of Minneapolis, Minnesota, reads:
 
If a BOY is 5,839, and a COW is 6,874, how much is a FISH?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Lande Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Move the four letters of a puzzle-maker one place earlier in the alphabet (ROT-25) to spell the first word in a French term that means “obsession.” 

Now take this puzzle-maker’s surname. Place a duplicate of the third letter an the end. Move
the letters of this result 17 places later in the alphaber (ROT-17) to spell a French term that means “dog tired.”

Who is this puzzle-maker?

What are these French terms?

ENTREE #2

If SOB is 508, BOO is 800, and an IBIS is 1,815, how much is a BOSS?

ENTREE #3

If a FOX is 304, and an ELK is 324, how much
is a PUMA?
 

ENTREE #4

If a SONNET is 619,983, and a STETSON is
7,382,619, how much is FESTOONS?

Hint: There are 16 possible correct answers. You need supply but one.

ENTREE #5

If OXEN are 2,617, and a TEXT is 8,368 how
much is a ROTOR?

ENTREE #6

“ThIS is AS hard as a ROCK or A BRICK!” exclaim some folks who tackle a CRYPTIC crossword puzzle created by Patrick J. Berry.

If a ROCK is 36,310, and a BRICK is 536,310, how much is CRYPTIC?

Dessert Menu

Pump Up The Vehicular Volume Dessert:

The wheels on the train go “clickety-clack”

Name a profession that is a seven-letter compound word. 

Spoonerize the two parts of the word to spell a kind of vehicle and a sound it makes. 

What profession is this?

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.

54 comments:

  1. White-collar crime shouldn't trigger a 911 call (if you get my drift).

    ReplyDelete
  2. Musical clue" I shot the sheriff, but i said it was in self defense."

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  3. Good Friday afternoon to all!
    About to go for a walk, just thought I'd check in a little earlier than usual. Mom is fine, about as fine as she can be at her age. BTW My birthday is coming up next month(two days before Easter, oddly enough), and we will be heading to the condo in FL to celebrate. Will check on P! when I can then.
    Now for this week's offerings.
    Between the two starting puzzles which have similar instructions, I was able to get the Schpuzzle, will need help with the Appetizer. The other two "Puzzley Delights" were no trouble, though I solved #3 faster than #2(took scanning a few lists of animal anatomy to get that one). The Slice was easy, too. Knowing the operative word that was not used really helped. My biggest concern will of course be the Entrees. I managed to get half of #1, but could not find the word for "dog tired" in French. As for the rest of them, I really must admit I couldn't solve last week's Sunday Puzzle challenge, can barely understand the answer, and will therefore need a miracle to get the Riff-Offs of said challenge. I also can't get the Dessert(another one requiring lists). Hope the hints will do the trick, because otherwise I got nothin'. I do appreciate the mention in Entree #6, though. Thanks, Lego.
    Good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and I hope you've all been vaccinated. On to my walk. Cranberry out!
    pjbKnowsHowMuchCrypticsMeanToHim,ButHe'sNeverExpressedItInNumbersBefore(Wouldn'tKnowHow)

    ReplyDelete
  4. I had more or less the same experience with this week's puzzles as pjb.....was going great guns on the Schpuzzle, all three Appetizers, and the Slice...and then hit those Entrees. While I was able to deal successfully with #1 and #2 [the 'warm up' as I saw it], the rest leave me bamboozled....I also had NOT solved the NPR puzzle, and had rather dreaded what the rip offs were going to be this week.

    And then tried and tried on the Dessert....but since the directions DO NOT say "sounds like", the only answer I could come up with can't be correct, since one letter would have to be changed to a 'sound alike letter.'

    ReplyDelete
  5. BTW, re the two French word translations for Entree 1, neither of them seems to be the main meaning in English as Lego indicates. I tried it every which way around, but the second French word was nowhere defined to be 'dog tired' that I could see.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Finally found the other French word! Albeit a rare word, it is in fact listed as meaning "dog-tired", though I also found another French word missing one of the letters that actually comes close to the general idea of "dog-tired".
      pjbGladThisWasNotATiresomeExercise,ThankGoodness

      Delete
    2. I will have to go see if I got the wrong French word...because no matter how I try in Google, nowhere is my word ever translated as dog-tired.

      Delete
  6. One of my favorite bands from my homestate is " Ray Talmadge and the Tailgaters." More a blues band,but they also do some country.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Too much to work with if you're trying to make an anagram from the whole thing. But then, the intended answer may look like a bit much to work with as well.
      pjbBelievesTheFirstPuzzleyDelightIsFarMoreDifficultAndWillDefinitelyNeedSomeHintsBeforeGoingAnyFurtherWithIt

      Delete
    2. App1. A famous scene from Seinfeld involves the animal body part for App2 while also mentioning something that is a hint for number one.So this is a two-fer.

      Delete
    3. Thanks, Plantsmith. Nice hints.

      LegoWhoRespectsPlantsmith'sFandomOf"RayTalmadgeAndTheTailgaters"ButWhoHimselfConfessesInsteadToBeAFanOf"IraTatorAndTheGatorTails"

      Delete
    4. Boy, P'th, I found which Seinfeld episode you were talking about, but for the life of me, I can't figure out which of the three words from your #1 (which I do have) is also mentioned in that particular episode.

      Delete
    5. Perhaps ViolinTeddy has hit upon and alternative answer to your Appetizer #1, Plantsmith?

      Sunday Hints:

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      A Deputy on "Gunsmoke" sang lead, I believe, on one of the Country & Western group's biggest hits.

      Delightfully Puzzley Appetizer:
      (Please see Plantsmith's March 27, 2022 at 1:17 PM hints for Apps #1 and #2, above.)
      For App #3, the "wordplay word," I would estimate, plays a part in the plurality of all NPR and Puzzleria! puzzles.
      This word appears, albeit misspelled, in the purple text immediately above this Comments Section.

      Collegiate Slice:
      One of the four words in the answer is a surname of an inventor.

      Riffing Off Shortz And Lande Slice:
      ENTREE #1
      As you are aware by now, the French term that means “dog tired” is not chien-fatigue. I found the term on the "From Language to Language" website. The French word can be rearranged to spell a pair of three-letter words:
      1. "a mongrel or inferior dog," and
      2. "Geese's flying formation shape."
      ENTREE #2
      Type the numbers into an "ancient" digital display and ye shall find "solvation!"
      ENTREE #3
      I coined a new phrase in the process of creating this puzzle: "Jutting-Line-Segment-Index."
      B, O and D each have a JLSI of 0 (zero).
      An * has a JLSI of 5! (that's "5-exclamation mark, not 5-factorial).
      ENTREE #4
      This puzzle doesn't actually involve "A Rat In The House May Eat The Ice Cream..."
      It involves "All Criminals Reek Of Nastiness You May Smell!"
      ENTREE #5
      This puzzle doesn't actually involve "Angry Clouds Rise Over New York Mets Stadiums!"
      It involves "graB A cubiC blocK oR lassO teN friskY triM horseS."
      ENTREE #6
      Ignore the double-word- and triple-word scores. Just go with the face values on each tile.

      Pump Up The Vehicular Volume Dessert:
      The profession that is a seven-letter compound word has two syllables.
      Think Sam Malone, or "Joe" as portrayed by Jackie.

      LegoWhoAdmitsThat"GrabACubicBlockOrLassoTenFriskyTrimHorses"MakesNoSenseWhatsoever!

      Delete
    6. Got the Dessert, will take a lot more to get the Entrees.
      pjbWasn'tTooCrazyAboutLastWeek'sChallenge,AndStillDoesn'tFullyUnderstandTheAnswer,SoTrustMe,It'llTakeALotMoreForTheEntrees

      Delete
    7. More Monday AM Entree Hints:
      ENTREE #1
      Move the four letters of the first name a puzzle-maker (rhymes with "chef") one place earlier in the alphabet (ROT-25) to spell the first word in a French term that means “obsession.” (The second French word is "fixe.")
      When you ROT-17 the 5-letter surname, duplicating the 3rd letter and placing it at the end, the result is 123456. 142 spells the mongrel dog. 356 spells the first woman on Earth!
      ENTREE #2
      S on a digital display resembles 5, O resembles 0, B resembles 8.
      ENTREE #3
      The X in FOX = 4 because there are four "jutting stick-like projections" in the letter X. There are also four such projections in K, but only two such projections in L. (And, as a noted earlier, there are five such projections in * (although there are no asterisks in this puzzle... it's just an example that boasts five "projections.").
      ENTREE #4
      Six begins with an S, as does Sonnet. One begins with an O, which is the second letter in sOnnet...
      ENTREE #5
      O is the last letter in twO; X is the last letter in siX, etc.
      ENTREE #6
      Why does a ROCK = 36,310?
      R sounds like the word ARE. The Scrabble value of ARE = 1+1+1=3.
      O sounds like the word OWE. The Scrabble value of OWE = 1+4+1=6.
      S sounds like the word SEA (or SEE). The Scrabble value of SEA or SEE = 1+1+1=3.
      K sounds like the word KAY. The Scrabble value of KAY = 5=1=4=10.

      LegoAlphanumericallyYours!

      Delete
    8. Let's see....the hint confirmed that I had the correct French word. I will look forward to more specific directions as to HOW you and pjb managed to find the dog-tired definition. I had tried again, with no luck.

      Re App #1, perhaps the word mentioned in the Seinfeld episode is from the three-word food phrase, not the three other words for the blanks?

      Re Dessert: the hint would seem to indicate that I have the correct occupation. Howeer, I am still mystified as to why there isn't a "sounds like" indication for one of the letters.

      Delete
    9. Figured out all the entrees now...but brother, that 6 would never have been solved without the hints!

      Delete
    10. Congrats VT. Sorry this week's offerings were kinda tough and confusing...
      Here, alas, is perhaps a compounding of the confusion:
      More Monday Hints:

      DOG-Tired Mystery:
      Conflicting "Dueling Banjo" Web results:
      This...
      and that.
      Sorry, it's the best I can do. I am no French scholar.

      Re App #1:
      The word mentioned in the Seinfeld episode is a compound word consisting of what winds do and "what you dig yourself into."
      Regarding: "perhaps the word mentioned in the Seinfeld episode is from the three-word food phrase, not the three other words for the blanks?"
      ...I wouldn't dwell so much on any connection between Apps #1 and #2.
      (Perhaps the sole connection between App #1 and Seinfeld is the Soup Nazi saying: "No soup for you!")

      Regarding the Dessert: the profession can be anagrammed to form something dogs do (sometimes annoyingly, but sometimes helpfully) and something a cats do in a litter box.

      LegoAllHintedOut!

      Delete
    11. "The sea was angry that day...."

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    12. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    13. Thanks for the translation links.....I hadn't tried that second one (even tho you had mentioned it in a prior hint)....I have always used the Google translator if necessary (and after all my years studying French, I'd never heard of this word, thus my attempt at translation). Re the App words, I HAD been trying to make sense out of the connection between #1 and #2....the #2 hint had jibed with what I'd already solved, but I had hoped to figure out if IN THE SAME EPISODE, there was an App #1 word....that was my only question. Now you are saying there isn't a connection? [Other than the giveaway sentence above, that is!)

      P'th: I read about George's monologue that was written in the middle of the night, and which he then performed perfectly on the first take, with NO rehearsal whatsoever. Pretty amazing. I need to go try to see if You Tube has it, because I can't actually remember it.

      Delete
    14. Lego: I saw that the Dessert answer anagrams into the two words you suggested above. However, that still doesn't solve my problem with ONE letter being a 'sounds like." Am I wrong somehow?

      Delete
    15. There is a connection to one of the words in the cure. Blank words are 4-7-3. I have not laughed like that in a long time when i listened to it. I don't remember it, if i ever did see it. That's what happens when you pretend about your occupation.

      Delete
    16. I shall look forward to finding out which word (in the cure) is indeed in the Seinfeld episode in discussion.

      Delete
    17. Never mind, P'th...I just watched a You Tube of the speech, and saw/heard the word.

      Delete
    18. I did not realize who actually said the word in the clip.
      Really all things in life eventually return to Seinfeld.

      Delete
    19. Yeah, Jason Alexander is really talented.

      Delete
  7. A1. Sorry for the Red Herring VT.You must have the right word after all Campbell's sells it.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Dessert- Womanizer is a profession?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There are so many good replies to that, P'Smith; but I'd hate to get banned this early in the week.

      Delete
    2. Too bad 'izer' isn't a word (since answer has to be compound. But pretty funny, P'th!

      Delete
  9. After this one, who else is looking forward to the April Fools' Day edition?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am not so sure I am, GB...

      LegoAddsHoweverThatWeAreFeaturingSomeGreatlyAppetizingPuzzlesByOurFriendChuck(You'llBeConundrumbstruck!)

      Delete
    2. Anagram of APRIL FOOL'S DAY:
      IS PARODY OF ALL?
      pjbJustGladHeWasBornOnThe15th(IncomeTaxDayIsn'tAsBadToHaveToLiveWith,ByComparison)

      Delete
    3. I hope it is not too taxing for you. Your birthday that is.Sorry, i could not resist that. BTW- my poor wife is being driven insane by turbo tax.

      Delete
    4. April 15: Tax Day, Titanic sank; Lincoln died. Is there a theme? I think the corkscrew was invented that date too. Makes sense. Could be pjb broke the curse?

      Delete
  10. BTW-I could use another Slice. As i am not sure gender bender fits the bill according to my neighbor here Mr. De Santis.In the Sunshine State.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Schpuzzle: ". . . no ten-horse-posse thief" & The Sons of the Pioneers

    Appetizers:
    1. Hot Chicken Soup; Sous, Kitchen, Pho (c sounding like s sometimes)
    2. Blowhole (Bow & Hello); Cakehole
    3. Anagram; Magna Carta (repeat a & add CT)

    C Slice: Coed Mores & Morse Code

    Entrees:
    1. Jeff Lande; Idee fixe & Creuve
    2. 8055
    3. 1022
    4. 58721197
    5. 42824
    6. 33125363 (Sea, Are, Why, Pea, Tea, Eye, See)

    Dessert: Barkeep (Car; Beep)

    I do confess that without decoding hints this week my guesses would have been wilder than usual. Anyway, good ones, Plantsmith & Lego. Now on to April Fool's Day.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Schpuzzle: NO TEN-HORSE-THIEF → THE SONS OF THE PIONEERS

    Appetizers
    #1: HOT CHICKEN SOUP – C + S → SOUS, KITCHEN, PHO
    #2: BLOWHOLE → BOW, HELLO; – BLOW + PIE → PIEHOLE
    #3: ANAGRAM + CT + A → MAGNA CARTA

    Slice: COED MORES → MORSE CODE

    Entrées
    #1: JEFF LANDE → IDEE, CREUVE should be CREVÉ
    #2: 8,055 (shape similarity)
    #3: 1,222 (number of “single ends” on each letter, as opposed to “angles” or “bends”)
    #4: 58,621,196 (initial letters)
    #5: 42,824 (final letters)
    #6: SEA/SEE=3, ARE=3, WYE/WHY=9/12, PEE=5, TEA=3, EYE=5, SEA=3 →
    3,395,353 or 33,125,353 [post-Mon-giveway]

    Dessert: BARKEEP → KARBEEP → CAR, BEEP [post-Sun-hint]

    ReplyDelete
  13. 3/28/22 -74 degrees AM- Stormy.

    Schpuzzle of the Week: So not worth going after.( Wrong way-)
    The sons of the Pioneers.


    App 1. Hot chicken soup/ change c- t s. - Sous- kitchen- pho
    App2-2. Blow hole–pie hole (slang for mouth)
    App-3. Anagram+A+Ct - Magna Carta

    Slice ???

    ENTREE #1 L=Jeff Lande–Idee- Creuve
    Entree #2.8055

    ENTREE #3 Puma 1043

    ENTREE #4 Festoons- 48,’631, 196
    ENTREE #5 Rotor 48,824
    Entree #6 ??

    Dessert Menu
    Bar keep-(K) Car– beep

    ReplyDelete
  14. SCHPUZZLE: NO TEN-HORSE-POSSE THIEF => THE SONS OF THE PIONEERS

    APPETIZERS, all Pre-hint:

    1. HOT CHICKEN SOUP, change ‘C' to ’S' => SOUS, KITCHEN, PHO

    2. BLOWHOLE => BOW, HELLO; PIE HOLE

    3. ANAGRAM & “A” & CT => MAGNA CARTA

    SLICE: COED MORES => MORSE CODE [Pre-hint]

    ENTREES:

    1. JEFF => IDée; LANDE => LANDEN => CREUVé [Pre-hint]

    2. BOSS = 8055 [Pre-hint]

    3. FOX 304 ELK 324 PUMA = 1242? [Not sure how many JLSI’s “M” actually has.]

    4. FESTOONS = 48631196 OR 58631196 [F = four or five] ETC. [Actually, I had this correct even before the hints]

    5. ROTOR = 42824 [N = 7, X = 6, T = 8, E = 1 OR 3, therefore R = 4.]

    6. ROCK = 363(10); BRICK = 536310; CRYPTIC = 33,125,363
    C + 3; R = 3; Y/WHY = 4 + 4 + 4 = 12; P/PEA = 3 + 1 + 1 = 5; T/TEA = 1 + 1 + 1 = 3; I/EYE = 1 + 4 + 1 = 6;

    DESSERTS: BARKEEP => CAR BEEP [Pre-hin

    ReplyDelete
  15. Schpuzzle
    THE SONS OF THE PIONEERS, NO TEN-HORSE-POSSE THIEF
    Appetizer Menu
    1. HOT CHICKEN SOUP, SOUS, KITCHEN, PHO
    2. BLOWHOLE, BOW, HELLO, PIEHOLE
    3. ANAGRAM+A+CT=MAGNA CARTA
    Menu
    Collegiate Slice
    COED MORES, MORSE CODE
    Entree #1
    JEFF LANDE, IDEE, CREUVE
    Dessert
    BARKEEP, CAR, BEEP
    Sorry I haven't revealed my answers earlier than now, but we've had another "Weather Alert Day", complete with straight-line winds, thunderstorms, and tornadoes. Thank God the Tornado Warning for Walker County until 10:30PM was cancelled way before then! I also apologize for not getting any other Entrees, but if I didn't get last week's Sunday Puzzle challenge(even after scanning the answer after the fact), I probably wasn't going to get the Riff-Offs either. I was preoccupied with the weather today(and tonight), and besides, I'm better with letters than I am with numbers. Never was good at algebra either. I trust I'll have better luck next time.-pjb

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Straight line winds? Here we have sheets of rain,but no sirens yet.

      Delete
    2. T-Bumpers due here just before High Noon. Nasty sky out there now. Too many big trees in the Three-Quarter Acre Wood to care much for high wind gusts.

      Delete
    3. Sure, cranberry...
      but at least algebra also includes some letters.

      LegoA-SquaredPlusB-SquaredEqualsC-Squared

      Delete
  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Saddlin’ up to track down bandits
    In the Old West, a sheriff would often round up groups of volunteers, asking them to saddle up to help him track down bandits and other outlaws. The number of volunteers in these groups was determined by how vile the bandit was – double-figure-sized groups for the vilest bandits, but only single-figure-sized groups for less-dangerous, “petty” bandits.
    One day, for example, Dodge City Sheriff Roy Omar prepared to enlist volunteers to help him track down a mild-mannered Dodge City Bank clerk who apparently had embezzled $500, according to the bank president, and subsequently seemed to have vanished into thin air – “gotten out of Dodge,” so to speak.
    Sheriff Omar instructed his deputy, Cooper Flute, to initiate the rounding-up process.
    “How many volunteers will we need?” Deputy Flute asked.
    Sheriff Omar replied laconically, “He’s __ ___-_____-_____ _____?”
    Fill in those blanks with words of 2, 3, 5, 5 and 5 letters – two adjectives followed by three nouns.
    Those 20 letters can be anagrammed to spell the 5-word name (in 3, 4, 2, 3, and 8 letters) of a legendary Country & Western musical group.
    What did Sherriff Omar reply?
    What is the legendary Country & Western musical group?
    Hint: The name of the musical group is sometimes written without its first word.)
    Answer:
    "The Sons of the Pioneers"
    "(He's) no ten-horse-posse thief."
    Hint: "The Sons of the Pioneers" is sometimes written as "Sons of the Pioneers"

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    Appetizer Menu
    Delightfully Puzzley Appetizer:
    Healing, humanity & history

    A Comforting Cure Story
    1. Take a comfort food that doubles as a trusted cure, in three words. Replace one consonant with a consonant that sometimes sounds like that consonant that it is replacing. Mix up the result to get three words to fill in the blanks in the following vignette:
    “Recently chef James made it to the second round of Master Chef before he was ‘Ramsayed’ off the show. Happily however, it was not too long before he landed a new gig at an Asian fusion restaurant. There, as a ___ chef, he spent some time in the _______ making ___ for his fiancee.”
    What is this comfort-foodie cure?
    What three words to fill in the blanks (the last of which fills his fiancee’s belly!)?
    Answer:
    Hot Chicken Soup; Sous, Kitchen, Pho.
    (Hot Chicken Soup - C + S => Sous+Kitchen+Pho
    *consonants

    Animal to Human
    2. Take an eight-letter animal body part that can be anagrammed to spell two words associated with greeting:
    * a three-letter gesture of respect or reverence, and
    * a common five-letter word of salutaion.
    Replace the first syllable of this animal body part with something sweet. The result is a slang word for a human body part.
    What are this animal body part and human body part?
    Answer:
    Blowhole (whale's nostril); Piehole (human's mouth)
    Blowhole=> Piehole
    (BOW+HELLO=BLOWHOLE)

    Wordplayful history
    3. Take a “wordplay word” sometimes used in puzzle-making. Repeat a vowel and add an East Coast state postal code. Mix the result to get an important historical document in two words.
    What are this “wordplay word” and historical document?
    Answer:
    Anagram; Magna Carta
    (Anagram +a +CT-(Connecticut)=Magna Carta.


    MENU

    Collegiate Slice:
    Conventions, customs & conduct
    Take a two-word term for the customs, conventions and code of conduct that may be instituted at a mixed-gender institution of higher learning.
    Reverse the order of the last two letters in each word, then reverse the order of those new words to form a different kind of code.
    What are these two two-word terms?
    Hint: One of the four words in the answer appears in the text of the puzzle.
    Answer:
    Coed Mores; Morse Code

    Lego...

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  18. This week's official answers for the record, part 3

    Riffing Off Shortz And Lande Slice:
    Cowboys riding seahorses
    ENTREE #1
    Move the four letters of a puzzle-maker one place earlier in the alphabet (ROT-25) to spell the first word in a French term that means “obsession.”
    Now take this puzzle-maker’s surname. Place a duplicate of the third letter an the end. Move the letters of this result 17 places later in the alphaber (ROT-17) to spell a French term that means “dog tired.”
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    What are these French terms?
    Answer:
    Jeff Lande; Idee (fixe); creuve
    ENTREE #2
    If SOB is 508, BOO is 800, and an IBIS is 1,815, how much is a BOSS?
    Answer:
    8,055
    BOSS on a digital display resembles the number 8055.
    ENTREE #3
    If a FOX is 304, and an ELK is 324, how much is a PUMA?
    Answer:
    1,222
    The letter P has 1 "jutting line segment," U has 2, M has 2 and A has 2.
    ENTREE #4
    If a SONNET is 619,983, and a STETSON is 7,382,619, how much is FESTOONS?
    Hint: There are 16 possible correct answers. You need supply but one.
    Answers:
    48,621,196;
    Four
    Eight
    Six
    Two
    One
    One
    Nine
    Six
    48,621,197;
    48,631,196;
    48,631,197;
    48,721,196;
    48,721,197;
    48,731,196;
    48,731,197;
    58,621,196;
    58,621,197;
    58,631,196;
    58,631,197;
    58,721,196;
    58,721,197;
    58,731,196;
    58,731,197;

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  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 4
    Riffing Off Shortz And Lande Slice, continued:
    ENTREE #5
    If an OXEN is 2,617, and a TEXT is 8,368 how much is a ROTOR?
    Answer:
    42,824
    fouR
    twO
    eighT
    twO
    fouR
    ENTREE #6
    “ThIS is AS hard as a ROCK or A BRICK!” exclaim some folks who tackle a CRYPTIC crossword puzzle created by Patrick J. Berry.
    If a ROCK is 36,310, and a BRICK is 536,310, how much is CRYPTIC?
    Answer:
    33,125,363
    ROCK=
    ARE (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    OWE (with a Scrabble value of 6)
    SEA (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    KAY (with a Scrabble value of 10)
    BRICK=
    BEE (with a Scrabble value of 5)
    ARE (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    EYE (with a Scrabble value of 6)
    SEA (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    KAY (with a Scrabble value of 10)
    CRYPTIC=
    SEA (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    ARE (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    WHY (with a Scrabble value of 12)
    PEA (with a Scrabble value of 5)
    TEA (with a Scrabble value of 3)
    EYE (with a Scrabble value of 6)
    SEA (with a Scrabble value of 3)

    Dessert Menu

    Pump Up The Vehicular Volume Dessert:
    The wheels on the train go “clickety-clack”
    Name a profession that is a seven-letter compound word.
    Spoonerize the two parts of the word to spell a kind of vehicle and a sound it makes.
    What profession is this?
    Answer:
    Barkeep; Car, beep

    Lego!

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