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Mystery Hunt 2012 Recast: COMPLETE!!!
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novice
No harm. Pun intended!



PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 3:24 pm    Post subject: 761 Reply with quote

Assuming all "disks" are the same size:

4 - GROAN - A bad joke teller might receive this - ORGAN - A donation that can’t be returned
10 - BUDGE - Move the tiniest iota - DEBUG - Get the code running
4 - ROWDY - Like mosh pit dancers - WORDY - In need of an editor
10 - EARTH - Kwame’s superpower - HEART - Word with “break” or “attack”
4 - WARPS - Travels from World 1 to World 4 - WRAPS - Disguises a box’s contents
FALSE - A Boolean value - FLEAS - A dog’s worst enemies
CLEAN - Without potty language or innuendo - LANCE - Renaissance fair weapon
RATES - Gives two thumbs up, perhaps - STARE - Give the evil eye
BRAID - Time-bending video game from 2008 - RABID - Fanatic
ARISE - Get up - RAISE - Negotiation bargaining chipGet up
ARGUE - Don’t agree to disagree - AUGER - You might need it if you’re boring
KNITS - Makes a sweater - STINK - Evidence of needing a diaper change
BAGEL - You might smear a shmear on one - GABLE - Actor who once played a Butler
MERIT - Deserve (as a reward) - REMIT - Don’t punish
HINGE - Turning point? - NEIGH - It’s straight from the horse’s mouth?

Not sure if this yields enough variation.
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novice
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 3:50 pm    Post subject: 762 Reply with quote

Assuming letter index correlates to disk size, so a letter can only go on top of a letter originally to its left:

G R O A N - G R O AN _ - G R ON A _ - G R ON _ A - G R O N A - G R O _ AN - G R _ O AN - G _ R O AN - _ G R O AN - _ G RO _ AN - _ GO R _ AN - O G R _ AN - O G _ R AN - O _ G R AN - O _ GR _ AN - O R G _ AN - O R G N A - O R GN _ A - O R GN A _ - O R G AN _ - O R G A N

20? - GROAN - A bad joke teller might receive this - ORGAN - A donation that can’t be returned
BUDGE - Move the tiniest iota - DEBUG - Get the code running
ROWDY - Like mosh pit dancers - WORDY - In need of an editor
EARTH - Kwame’s superpower - HEART - Word with “break” or “attack”
WARPS - Travels from World 1 to World 4 - WRAPS - Disguises a box’s contents
FALSE - A Boolean value - FLEAS - A dog’s worst enemies
CLEAN - Without potty language or innuendo - LANCE - Renaissance fair weapon
RATES - Gives two thumbs up, perhaps - STARE - Give the evil eye
BRAID - Time-bending video game from 2008 - RABID - Fanatic
ARISE - Get up - RAISE - Negotiation bargaining chipGet up
ARGUE - Don’t agree to disagree - AUGER - You might need it if you’re boring
KNITS - Makes a sweater - STINK - Evidence of needing a diaper change
BAGEL - You might smear a shmear on one - GABLE - Actor who once played a Butler
MERIT - Deserve (as a reward) - REMIT - Don’t punish
HINGE - Turning point? - NEIGH - It’s straight from the horse’s mouth?
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gftt*
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 3:57 pm    Post subject: 763 Reply with quote

Maybe I'm misreading your notation, but shouldn't there only be three pegs, not 5?

Start with G on R on O on A on N, then ROAN-G-*, OAN-G-R, AN-G-OR, GAN-*-OR, GAN-O-R, RGAN-O-*, ORGAN-*-*. I count 7.
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novice
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 4:26 pm    Post subject: 764 Reply with quote

gftt* wrote:
Maybe I'm misreading your notation, but shouldn't there only be three pegs, not 5?

Start with G on R on O on A on N, then ROAN-G-*, OAN-G-R, AN-G-OR, GAN-*-OR, GAN-O-R, RGAN-O-*, ORGAN-*-*. I count 7.


Yeah that makes more sense. You're moving some disks two pegs and counting it as one move, though.
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novice
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 4:29 pm    Post subject: 765 Reply with quote

Also you're placing the O on the R, which is illegal since the O disk is larger than the R. That was the reason I used 5 pegs, since otherwise the solution would be illegal.
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 5:17 pm    Post subject: 766 Reply with quote

I think moving from one peg to another is always one move. Doesn't matter the "distance" between the pegs.

I think one can either do it with 5 pegs but different size disks, or 3 pegs with same size disks (if one is to anagram a tower of 5 disks they all have to be able to go on top of one another). I guess it's a judgment call as to which feature of the original Towers of Hanoi game is more important to maintain, the 3 pegs or the different sizes.
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 5:51 pm    Post subject: 767 Reply with quote

gftt* wrote:
I think moving from one peg to another is always one move. Doesn't matter the "distance" between the pegs.


Hm, you're right. I think that means the five-peg solutions are trivial and probably not the right approach.
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novice
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 5:59 pm    Post subject: 768 Reply with quote

OK, three pegs and equal-sized disks:

budge,.,.
udge,.,b
dge,.,ub
ge,.,dub
e,g,dub
de,g,ub
de,ug,b
de,bug,.
e,bug,d
.,ebug,d
.,debug,.

7 - GROAN - A bad joke teller might receive this - ORGAN - A donation that can’t be returned
10 - BUDGE - Move the tiniest iota - DEBUG - Get the code running
7 - ROWDY - Like mosh pit dancers - WORDY - In need of an editor
8 - EARTH - Kwame’s superpower - HEART - Word with “break” or “attack”
6 - WARPS - Travels from World 1 to World 4 - WRAPS - Disguises a box’s contents
10 - FALSE - A Boolean value - FLEAS - A dog’s worst enemies
10 - CLEAN - Without potty language or innuendo - LANCE - Renaissance fair weapon
9 - RATES - Gives two thumbs up, perhaps - STARE - Give the evil eye
6 - BRAID - Time-bending video game from 2008 - RABID - Fanatic
4 - ARISE - Get up - RAISE - Negotiation bargaining chipGet up
9 - ARGUE - Don’t agree to disagree - AUGER - You might need it if you’re boring
5 - KNITS - Makes a sweater - STINK - Evidence of needing a diaper change
10 - BAGEL - You might smear a shmear on one - GABLE - Actor who once played a Butler
7 - MERIT - Deserve (as a reward) - REMIT - Don’t punish
8 - HINGE - Turning point? - NEIGH - It’s straight from the horse’s mouth?
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novice
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 6:28 pm    Post subject: 769 Reply with quote

In a different line of investigation, here are the classes of anagrams involved:

abcde-cbade
GROAN-ORGAN
ROWDY-WORDY
MERIT-REMIT

abcde-ceabd
BUDGE-DEBUG

abcde-eabcd
EARTH-HEART

abcde-acbde
WARPS-WRAPS

abcde-acebd
FALSE-FLEAS

abcde-bdeac
CLEAN-LANCE

abcde-ecbad
RATES-STARE

abcde-bcade
BRAID-RABID

abcde-bacde
ARISE-RAISE

abcde-adceb
ARGUE-AUGER

abcde-edcba
KNITS-STINK

abcde-cbaed
BAGEL-GABLE

abcde-cebda
HINGE-NEIGH
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PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2012 7:07 pm    Post subject: 770 Reply with quote

Looking at some of those numbers I think maybe you were right initially with the assumption that disks are of different sizes. With same-sized disks you can't get numbers that are very high, whereas with different-sized disks you can go up to at least 31. (Classical Towers of Hanoi with n disks is 2^n - 1 moves.)

Now, how to determine disk sizes? Note that KNITS and STINK are exactly reverse so it can't be just left-to-right order of letters.
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gftt
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 1:30 am    Post subject: 771 Reply with quote

OK, how about using alphabetical order as the disk size? Every word that I've looked at has only one way that it can be placed on the pegs if letters that are earlier alphabetically have to be on top of letters that are later. For instance GROAN has to go G on R, O, A on N, whereas ORGAN must go O on R, G, A on N. To go from GR, O, AN to OR, G, AN takes these steps:
GR, O, AN
GR, AO, N
R, AO, GN
R, O, AGN
OR, *, AGN
AOR, *, GN
AOR, G, N
OR, G, AN
So 7 again = G

BU, DG, E
U, BDG, E
EU, BDG, *
EU, DG, B
DEU, G, B
BDEU, G, *
BDEU, *, G
7 to move to U, * BDEG
*, U, BDEG
B, U, DEG
B, DU, EG
*, BDU, EG
E, BDU, G
E, DU, BG
DE, U, BG
DE, BU, G
I count 21 = U

R, OW, DY
R, DOW, Y
*, DOW, RY
3 to *, W, DORY
W, *, DORY
W, D, ORY
OW, D, RY
DOW, *, RY
DOW, R, Y
2 to W, OR, DY
12 = L

E, ART, H
2 to *, RT, AEH
R, T, AEH
7 to AEHR, T, *
AEHR, *, T
7 to R, AEH, T
*, AEH, RT
3 to *, H, AERT
H, *, AERT
3 to H, E, ART
26 = Z. Yuck.

GULZ...?

W, AR, PS
W, R, APS Huzzah, one move only! = A.

F, ALS, E
2 to AF, ELS, *
2 to *, AELS, F
3 to *, LS, AEF
L, S, AEF
7 to AEFL, S, *
AEFL, *, S
2 to FL, E, AS
18 = R

GULZAR is at least an Indian poet.

CL,E,AN
2 to L, AE, CN
2 to EL, *, ACN
3 to ACEL, *, N
ACEL, N, *
3 to EL, ACN, *
L, ACN, E
3 to L,AN,CE
15 = O

R,AT,ES
2 to AR, ET, S
2 to *, AET, RS
3 to *, T, AERS
T, *, AERS
7 to T, AER, S
ST, AER, *
3 to ST,AR,E
19 = S

GULZAR OS... OK, now I'm worried too.


Last edited by gftt on Wed May 09, 2012 2:09 am; edited 3 times in total
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 1:56 am    Post subject: 772 Reply with quote

I like the idea, but I'm worried about the results.

I just checked, and none of the words would make identical towers:

Code:
ARGUE-AUGER   14352   15324
ARISE-RAISE   14352   41352
BAGEL-GABLE   21435   41253
BRAID-RABID   25143   51243
BUDGE-DEBUG   15243   23154
CLEAN-LANCE   24315   41523
EARTH-HEART   21453   32145
FALSE-FLEAS   31452   34215
GROAN-ORGAN   25413   45213
HINGE-NEIGH   34521   51423
KNITS-STINK   23154   45132
MERIT-REMIT   31425   41325
RATES-STARE   31524   45132
ROWDY-WORDY   32415   42315
WARPS-WRAPS   51324   53124

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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:00 am    Post subject: 773 Reply with quote

Starts GULZA and 15 letters? GULZARILAL NANDA

Unfortunately, I don't see a Woodstock band with the initials GN...
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gftt
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:03 am    Post subject: 774 Reply with quote

Suspence wrote:
I like the idea, but I'm worried about the results.

I just checked, and none of the words would make identical towers:


Could still have the same # of moves from one to the next. Or am I misinterpreting your concern?
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:05 am    Post subject: 775 Reply with quote

It wasn't a concern, just a shortcut. If any were identical, it would have saved you some work.
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gftt
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:06 am    Post subject: 776 Reply with quote

Suspence wrote:
It wasn't a concern, just a shortcut. If any were identical, it would have saved you some work.


You could help too, you know. Wink
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:09 am    Post subject: 777 Reply with quote

I stink at this kinda stuff.

I think I know where this is headed given the Wikipedia page for GULZAR and the necessary Woodstock connection, but I don't want to undermine your hard work with a guess.

Yep, that OS seems right on track Cannibal
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Last edited by Suspence on Wed May 09, 2012 2:11 am; edited 1 time in total
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gftt
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:11 am    Post subject: 778 Reply with quote

Oh, I get it. GULZAR OSCAR SONG, probably. Call in JAI HO. Jimi Hendrix, undoubtedly. (I don't mind guesses if they can get me out of tedious work!)
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:16 am    Post subject: 779 Reply with quote

Yeah, that's why I hinted at my guess...you deserved the solve credit. You were busy with the real work while I was waiting for your updates trying to solve the whole thing.
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LordKinbote
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:17 am    Post subject: 780 Reply with quote

gftt wrote:
Oh, I get it. GULZAR OSCAR SONG, probably. Call in JAI HO. Jimi Hendrix, undoubtedly. (I don't mind guesses if they can get me out of tedious work!)


JAI HO is correct. Sorry it was tedious...it was meant to be parallelizable during the actual Hunt. Anyway, there's another two rounds before another of my puzzles pops up.

Next: Of Course! by Patrick Blindauer
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:20 am    Post subject: 781 Reply with quote

A GIRL LIKE YOU - First tune on “Groovin’” by the Young Rascals (1, 4, 4, 3)
COMFIER? - More cozy (7)
Locomotive ridden to meet another locomotive (10, 5)
HOMICIDE - It may be justifiable (8)
INFANCY GOSPELS? - Stories about the childhood of Jesus (7, 7)
IREX - iLiad maker (4)
MAR DEL PLATA - City that hosted the Davis Cup finals in 2008 (3, 3, 5)
SUPPLANTED? - How the superseded act (10)
RAW SIENNA - Yellowish-brown Crayola color available since 1958 (3, 6)
SATORI - Sudden enlightenment in Zen Buddhism (6)
THE PASSWORD IS - Whispered phrase on a TV game show originally hosted by Allen Ludden (3, 8, 2)
TUDOR - Dynasty from 1485 to 1603 (5)
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Last edited by Suspence on Wed May 09, 2012 2:32 am; edited 7 times in total
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LordKinbote
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:24 am    Post subject: 782 Reply with quote

Suspence wrote:
HOMOCIDE - It may be justifiable (8)


I know I'm not supposed to comment during a solve, but that's just offensive! Revenge most foul!
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:26 am    Post subject: 783 Reply with quote

You're right. I've fixed the typo... Embarassed
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:43 am    Post subject: 784 Reply with quote

LordKinbote wrote:
gftt wrote:
Oh, I get it. GULZAR OSCAR SONG, probably. Call in JAI HO. Jimi Hendrix, undoubtedly. (I don't mind guesses if they can get me out of tedious work!)


JAI HO is correct. Sorry it was tedious...it was meant to be parallelizable during the actual Hunt. Anyway, there's another two rounds before another of my puzzles pops up.

Next: Of Course! by Patrick Blindauer


It was a cute concept and not really that tedious (especially if I had had help), I just wanted something to gripe about. Revenge most foul!
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:47 am    Post subject: 785 Reply with quote

Suspence wrote:
A GIRL LIKE YOU - First tune on “Groovin’” by the Young Rascals (1, 4, 4, 3)
COMFIER? - More cozy (7)
Locomotive ridden to meet another locomotive (10, 5)
HOMICIDE - It may be justifiable (8)
INFANCY GOSPELS? - Stories about the childhood of Jesus (7, 7)
IREX - iLiad maker (4)
MAR DEL PLATA - City that hosted the Davis Cup finals in 2008 (3, 3, 5)
SUPPLANTED? - How the superseded act (10)
RAW SIENNA - Yellowish-brown Crayola color available since 1958 (3, 6)
SATORI - Sudden enlightenment in Zen Buddhism (6)
THE PASSWORD IS - Whispered phrase on a TV game show originally hosted by Allen Ludden (3, 8, 2)
TUDOR - Dynasty from 1485 to 1603 (5)


The rest of the answers are in alphabetical order so I'm guessing SUPPLANTED is wrong.
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LordKinbote
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:48 am    Post subject: 786 Reply with quote

gftt* wrote:
LordKinbote wrote:
gftt wrote:
Oh, I get it. GULZAR OSCAR SONG, probably. Call in JAI HO. Jimi Hendrix, undoubtedly. (I don't mind guesses if they can get me out of tedious work!)


JAI HO is correct. Sorry it was tedious...it was meant to be parallelizable during the actual Hunt. Anyway, there's another two rounds before another of my puzzles pops up.

Next: Of Course! by Patrick Blindauer


It was a cute concept and not really that tedious (especially if I had had help), I just wanted something to gripe about. Revenge most foul!


Puzzle trivia: "Towers" was the very first puzzle to make it completely through the creative process (creation, and successful rounds of testing). It originally had both columns in order and the first part was deemed too easy, so I mixed up the second column. It's a shame, because I had been writing matching clues ("Creates a sweater" was originally paired with the clue "A sweater creates it", and "Kwame's superpower" was paired with "Ma-Ti's superpower", among others).
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 2:53 am    Post subject: 787 Reply with quote

OVERRIDDEN?
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novice
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 4:56 am    Post subject: 788 Reply with quote

CONNECTING TRAIN?
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Scurra
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 9:23 am    Post subject: 789 Reply with quote

gftt wrote:
OK, how about using alphabetical order as the disk size?
That was the aha I missed, despite spending actual hours on this one. I must have tried about six or seven different arrangement and moving systems, but not the correct one...

For the current puzzle, the answers are different lengths.

Code:
IREX
TUDOR
SATORI
COMFIER
HOMICIDE
RAWSIENNA
 <- 10 letters beginning with O ->
MARDELPLATA
AGIRLLIKEYOU
THEPASSWORDIS
INFANCYGOSPELS
CONNECTINGTRAIN


I can see the message IT'S CHROMATIC down the initial letters.
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Scurra
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 10:00 am    Post subject: 790 Reply with quote

And they've all got Solfege syllables in them for the chromatic scale.

TUDOR
THEPASSWORDIS
IREX
SATORI
HOMICIDE
INFANCYGOSPELS
COMFIER
<- 10 letters beginning with O and containing SOL! ->
RAWSIENNA
MARDELPLATA
AGIRLLIKEYOU
CONNECTINGTRAIN
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Elethiomel
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 10:19 am    Post subject: 791 Reply with quote

OBSOLETELY - How the superseded act (10)
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 11:14 am    Post subject: 792 Reply with quote

Code:
 T UDOR
T H EPASSWORDIS
IR E X
SAT O RI
HOMI C IDE
INFAN C YGOSPELS
COMFIE R
OBSOLET E LY
RAWSIENN A
MARDELPLA T A
AGIRLLIKEY O U
CONNECTINGT R AIN


THE O.C. CREATOR

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josh_Schwartz

CALL IN JOSH SCHWARTZ

For the meta, Josh Schwartz goes with John Sebastian.
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Scurra
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 11:20 am    Post subject: 793 Reply with quote

Any chance of amplifying that a little?

edit: oh, wait. I see it now. D'oh. I looked there during the increasing lengths bit, but didn't think to look there there again...

edit2: oh, you've done it anyway.
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 11:22 am    Post subject: 794 Reply with quote

Of Course! Revenge most foul!
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Scurra
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 11:24 am    Post subject: 795 Reply with quote

Into the Woodstock (in no particular order)

KINGS HIGHWAY BRIDGE - Keef Hartley Band
REST STOP - Ravi Shankar
JACK CARDIFF - Joe Cocker
GO DUTCH - Grateful Dead
RUSH HOUR - Richie Havens
BAKING SODA - Bert Sommer
TERRY GENE BOLLEA - The Grease Band
CHRIST CHURCH REGATTA - Credence Clearwater Revival
JERRY WEXLER - Johnny Winter
JAI HO - Jimi Hendrix
JOSH SCHWARTZ - John Sebastian
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LordKinbote
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 11:55 am    Post subject: 796 Reply with quote

JOSH SCHWARTZ is correct. You have no idea how many teams called in "CHROMATIC" or variations thereof. Every time, I thought "Do you really think the Hunt would have a puzzle with no theme whatsoever that just required ordering by length?"

Next: Sounds Good to Me by by Seth Schoen and Vera Yin, with input from C. Scott Ananian and typographic help by Michael Constant
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Suspence
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PostPosted: Wed May 09, 2012 12:16 pm    Post subject: 797 Reply with quote

The opening Greek string - νοτα βενε - appears to point to this Latin phrase:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nota_bene

The rest - νον σεκυιτυρ λινγυα Ιαπονικα - appears to say "non sequitur lingua Japanese"

So, something like "Take Note: Japanese language does not follow" in Latin, translated into Greek.

There's another Greek string in the middle of all the Japanese characters. I found it translated here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Greek%E2%80%93English_Lexicon

ἐκβουτῠπόομαι - to be changed into a cow
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PostPosted: Thu May 10, 2012 2:44 am    Post subject: 798 Reply with quote

So the fact that this is not Japanese but the title is "Sounds good to me" indicates maybe that sounding out the characters will give something in a different language (in the same way that the Greek letters spelled something in Latin)...? I tried a sentence but couldn't discern anything, but maybe it's in Greek.
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PostPosted: Thu May 10, 2012 12:28 pm    Post subject: 799 Reply with quote

The very first bit is とき!

と= to
き= ki

TOKI - allowing Google to detect and translated TOKI gives OF COURSE in Finnish.
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jesternl
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PostPosted: Thu May 10, 2012 7:47 pm    Post subject: 800 Reply with quote

If my latin does not fail me (and it is a liong time ago) you can also translate that as: "Pay attention (Nota bene), what follows is not the Japanse language"
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