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Check out
Quest
for more brain exercising.
The March cryptogram was:
WAR
IS
A
SERIES
OF
CATASTROPHES
THAT
RESULT
IN
A
VICTORY
GEORGES
CLEMENCEAU.
(Clemenceau, 1841-1929, French statesman and
prime minister.)
Correct answers came from
Delmar Burkitt,
Carla Darnell,
Andrzej Derdzinski,
Jeff Gerken,
Steve Herrick,
John Jackson,
Alma Litten,
Julia Minturn,
Kevin Skehan,
David Smith,
Dennis Tomlinson,
Dorothy Utendorf,
and
Sally Yocom.
In puzzle #2 the correct order of finish overall was ABCD.
Many interpreted overall as the results for each of the three races
(400 m = ACDB; 800 m = CABD; and mile = DBAC).
Either approach was credited if correct.
Correct answers came from
Delmar,
Andrzej,
Jeff,
Steve,
Alma,
Kevin,
Dennis,
and
Dorothy.
Puzzles 3 and 4 are Dudeney puzzles (from the 19th century
puzzle master).
#3 was the bell rope which turns out to be 32 feet, 1.5 inches,
or 385.5 inches.
In Puzzle #4, the number sought is 836, which when squared
gives 698896, a palindrome with an even number of digits.
Correct answers to both puzzles came from
Delmar,
Andrzej,
and
Steve,
while
Jeff,
Bob,
and
Dennis
each had one of the two correct.
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This month's first puzzle is the cryptogram.
Each letter stands for a different letter in the
decoded message.
Z R X I S M C
R T
X S S V H F S M C
L V R E
E I W
H V A Z H B C
S H X
X I S A M
W R J V F
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This puzzle is adapted from the column Enigma by Robert Eastaway in
the New Scientist by permission.
James noticed something odd in the last four digits of the phone numbers of four
of his relatives, Uncle Norman, Aunt Flora, Uncle David, and Aunt Sue.
All four numbers are different and none contain the digit nine.
If you add one to each digit of David's number, the result is Norman's number.
Similarly, one added to each digit of Flora's number results in Sue's number.
He also determined that the last four digits of the product of his two
uncles' numbers formed David's number, and that the product of the two
aunts' numbers ended in Flora's number.
Finally, he observed that the product of David's number and half the sum of its
digits equaled Flora's number.
What was Uncle Norman's number?
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This puzzle is adapted from the column Enigma by Robert
Eastaway in the New Scientist by permission.
"I don't know about that movie" said Edith, still somewhat dazed.
"These modern films do get so involved.
I don't know why they strangled that famous neurosurgeon
while he was in the shower."
That was because of the conversation he had with Boris
and the heroine's solicitor when they were flying in that damaged jet,"
replied George.
"Boris was the blond guy who later watched in horror as that
psychopathic psychiatrist fellow took the fatal plunge
from the multistory inferno..."
"No, no, that was Charlie."
"So who was the bald one who was running away from that UFO thingy?"
"Oh, he was the one who was savaged by the giant shark
after falling out of the boat."
"And that was Derek, wasn't it?"
"Wrong again, love.
Derek was the man from the CIA who was peering through the eyes
of that Rembrandt when somebody stabbed the man who was
mistaken for the lawyer."
"That means," said Edith, thinking hard, "that the one who lived
happily ever after must have been Alvin, the drug-smuggling baseball player."
"My love, you're getting very confused.
Remember, Alvin snuffed it shortly after the visit from
Charlie's widow."
There was a brief silence.
"So... how did Eric fit into all of this?"
Since Eric was one of only five men being described in the
conversation, I'm sure you can answer that, and also
work out the sequence in which the characters met their fate.
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