Alf's Treasure Hunt 2003

 

            The day started with a reporter arriving from the Newton Tab.  He'd heard that there was some kind of time capsule in the basement of the Metcalf house and a party of hearty souls was quickly dispatched to see if he was right.  In short order, the party returned victorious and the capsule was opened to reveal - a number of products that were introduced back in 1903 (e.g. Sanka coffee, Hershey’s chocolate, Crayola crayons, a license plate and others).  This introduced the theme of this year's hunt, the celebration of a number of 100th anniversaries.

 

            The capsule also contained multiple copies of the Newton Graphic vol.32, dated 1903, which contained information on the births, deaths, and other significant events of the year 1903.  Some of these would figure in the puzzles to come.  On the back page there was the cryptic crossword that kicked off this year's hunt.  A nice touch, the solution to last year's crossword was provided.

 

            The cryptic crossword solution involved a number of words where the definition clued one word and the wordplay clued the other. These words were related because an ALL got turned into a ONE or vice versa.  Only the word clued by the wordplay went in the grid - a significant difference with regard to crossing words.  So both cALLy and cONEy answered 2 down and both gALL and gONE answered 18 across.  From this the solvers were supposed to get the expression "one for all and all for one" and think of the Three Musketeers.  Shaded boxes spelled out 'video', 'candy' and 'book' and, sure enough, all three types of Three Musketeers were found - the chocolate in the kitchen and the movie starring John Wayne!

This divided the group into the red, green, and blue teams.

 

            Meanwhile, a smaller group was solving a hints puzzle.  They'd been given a number of pictures (Mrs. White from the game of Clue, a St. Louis Blues hockey player, the logo of the Cincinnati Reds, a movie poster from “A Clockwork Orange” - all colors), a number of verbal clues involving directions (Hitchcock movie is North by Northwest), and a series of clues providing more colors (Earl who is steeped = grey).  They were also given a set of K'nex.

            The first color represented the hubs in the K'nex.  The orientation was the direction a connecting rod was supposed to go.  The other color was the color of the connecting rod to use in that direction.  The color rod clues were each repeated twice and this clued the solvers into the idea that the same connecting rod needed to go between two particular hubs.

            Connecting things quickly became three-dimensional, but soon settled down into a 2-D image of the side of a cabinet that could be found in the living room.

 

            The red, green and blue teams then got a series of four puzzles which were presented in differing orders for each team.  One such order is repeated here.

 

            The first of these puzzles was an odd man out.  Each of the eight solvers got a different set of puzzles, but it turned out most were repeated from sheet to sheet.  A couple of quick examples: fools, mad, and night are all a kind of cap; handy becomes handicap - the spelling changes so it is the odd man out.  Bryant, Greg, and Stearns all have Bear as part of their names, while Kollek is a Teddy.  Did you know the Teddy Bear was invented in 1903?

            Each odd man out solved resulted in a letter, which when read on the sheets gave a series of names.  It was quickly noticed that Rick was a Monday, Weld was a Tuesday, Addams was a Wednesday and so on.  Another set of names gave months of the year (e.g. June Lockhart).  On all of the sheets only two of the clues were bolded.  These pointed to Tuesday and July, prompting the solvers to go seek out a calendar.

            True to form, the first one found had only one Tuesday in July with a note written on it in the appropriate (team) color.  But someone had taken the time to fill every single date of the calendar with notes for the entire year!  Yikes.

 

            The next puzzle was my favorite of the day.  It was an acrostic where many of the words just didn't seem to fit.  Clue M referred to a chapter title in a W. E. B. DuBois book conveniently found in the foyer.  But "of our spiritual" didn't fit into eleven spaces.  It took quite a while to notice it was really "o FOUR spiritual,” at least in the puzzle creator's fevered brain and he wanted us to put the actual 4 into the acrostic!

            The last line of the acrostic provided a FORMULA of all things.  When solved, this provided the number “1984,” a book whose author was born in 1903, and the place we'd find our next puzzle.

            One note, the designer took Hirschfeld one better and hid his son's, Teddy's, name in the acrostic clues.

 

            The next puzzle consisted of nine license plates.  License plates were first issued in Massachusetts, in 1903.  Each plate had letters and an expiration date, for example, KGV 312    May.  The solvers had to figure out that they had to build a word with the letters KGV in order - Thanksgiving - and then pull out the third, first, and second letter.  The concept was straightforward, but coming up with words like extravehicular and cantankerous was not.

            Once all the words were solved, the month stickers (the "May") prompted them to put the letters into a certain order and to go find a cauliflower in the cellar for the next puzzle.

 

            The final puzzle in the first set was a machine built with twelve vacuum tube sockets.  Vacuum tubes also were invented in 1903.  The sockets were labeled with the musical scale (A, C#, G) for the last group, although earlier groups may not have had this clue, and a note told the solvers the second letter was important.  A "circuit" was drawn on the machine and a switch and light bulb promised illumination if the puzzle was solved correctly.  But that was a red herring.

The solvers figured out the circuit drawn on the machine would spell something out with the second letters.  They didn't do as well listening to the notes the tubes made when tapped to decide where they should go in the circuit.  With three different sizes, only the four tubes of each particular size needed to be compared, but the solver's ears weren't turned very well.  Instead of BLUE TUTU BY TV, they got something about tubas in the tub.

            The anagrammers in the group wound up taking the second letters and solving the puzzle without the correct arrangement.  Sigh.

 

            The Merge puzzle was devious word play at its finest.  Two columns of titles/songs/proverbs/whatnot were each labeled with the letters a through z.  The solvers in our group sat and stared at the choices for quite a while without the slightest idea of what to do.  Finally one person noticed "Ticket to Ride" might go with "On the Road".  Quickly all 26 pairs of ring-rung, steel-stole, win-one were found.

            The solvers noticed that homonyms had been used but didn't know what to do with them.  They finally resorted to the clues to see that only five pairs had BOTH sides replaced with homonyms.  Those ten letters formed an anagram that spelled PITTSBURGH, RIGHT FIELD, and BIRTH PLACE for the three groups.

            Conveniently, a baseball encyclopedia provided the birthplace of the person who played right field for the 1903 Pittsburgh Pirates (The NL representative in the first World Series, in 1903).  The birthplace was Liberty, PA, which led to a video containing three Liberty movies, including "Cinderella Liberty" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.”

 

            A World Series logic puzzle was next and mostly solved by the baseball aficionados in the group while dinners were fetched and prepared.  The five fans in the puzzle were each born in a year their team won the pennant and various data about the fans led to the solution that a particular fan followed the St. Louis Cardinals.

            But a cardinal in the room for totally different reasons almost led the solvers to the wrong clue.  Fortunately, they were intercepted before harm could be done and then figured out they needed to find some St. Louis cards.  Two decks of cards with the arch on their back were quickly discovered.

 

            The two decks split the party into the yellow and purple groups.  One deck was missing the king and queen of hearts, leading to a wedding picture of David and Shari; the other was missing five spades, leading to one of the toilets ("flush").  Again, the puzzles were in a different order for the two groups and one of the orders is presented here.

            The first puzzle was a set of 52 license plate images with the state names removed.  The solvers quickly discovered an Isla del Encanto (Puerto Rico) and "BRIBE ME$" (District of Columbia).  They correctly figured that all fifty states would be represented as well.

            Also provided with the plate images was an acrostic-type page with the markings NY3, KY6, MA2.  Once the solvers had discovered the New York plate, the second letter of that plate was used to spell out a message in the acrostic.  The group had to work back and forth to make sure their guesses about which plate was which were correct.

            The puzzle creator was mean however - the first line of the acrostic started with "Hiltl Vegi."  The solvers looked at L-T-L-V and were sure something had to be wrong.  (Hiltl Vegi is the oldest vegetarian restaurant in Europe, established in 1903).  The acrostic told them to look up the symbol of the nation spelled with the missing letters.  Only U and K were unused on the 52 plates, and looking up English Bulldog in the dictionary got them the next clue.

 

            A page of cryptic music titles appeared next.  "Buffalo once roamed, while deer and antelope played, in state where Stephen Foster lived; nowadays, horses rule the roost" was supposed to get the solvers two overlapping song titles.  Those titles, "My Old Kentucky Home " and "Home on the Range" contained a common, overlapping word, in this case, home.  A number at the end of the clue pointed to a particular letter, in this case the "O,” that was used to spell out a solution.

            In one room, the solution, "Prince dreams of wet drops in dark color" was a final overlapping song title, "Deep Purple/Purple Rain", so the word in common was purple.  The purple team had something like "What color would Donovan paint a U-boat?"  This answer was "Mellow Yellow/Yellow Submarine".  So the purple team's location was the yellow room, and vice versa.  Both envelopes were in plain site in the proper rooms.

 

            The final puzzle of the second set was a lot of fun.  The solvers were given an map and told they needed to look up the locations of places in the map.  But it wouldn't be that easy.

            The map holder, with map was sent into a 2nd floor closet.  With him, another person wielding a flashlight helped him in his search.  These people could hear another team member in the bedroom outside their door, who told them what places to look up.  That person could see, but not hear, a person at the top of the stairs, who in turn could see, but not hear a person at the foot of the stairs, who in turn could see, but not hear, the rest of the team in the team's home base.

            The home group told one of their members what place to look up and a chain of charades got that information to the second floor bedroom, where the place was verbally relayed to the searchers in the closet.  Once the atlas had been used, a baby monitor allowed the people in the team base to hear what had been found.

            The place names came off a set of streamers hanging from the ceiling.  There were about 50 streamers, but only 10 place names to charade.  Each streamer contained something cryptic like "Marble to Rabbit Ears Pass."  When both hamlets were found and plotted on the map, the orientation of the path from Marble to Rabbit Ears Pass was noted and that streamer was aligned in that orientation on the ceiling.

            Words were spelled out.  In one group LONDON’S CALL pointed to “Call of the Wild,” Jack London’s famous book, written in 1903.  In the other room LANCE and EDDY appeared.  Unfortunately, no one in the group knew the slightest thing about the Tour de France, started in 1903, and didn't recognize the only two 5-time winners to get the next clue, even with the hints.  Fortunately, the puzzle designer was available to guide them.

 

            The second merge was a coloring challenge (Crayola Crayons came out in 1903).  The solvers were given a number of words and names related to 1903 and written in crayon colors (Ford was black, World Series was white), and a series of questions.  The questions were all answerable in some way that connected to those colors.  Question 1 - Commissioner of baseball 1951-1965 was Ford Frick, hence Ford, or black.  A drawing with areas marked with numbers needed to be crayoned in.  The area marked with the number 1 became black.

            Two pictures resulted.  The first had a chess KING, an arrow pointing to a KNEE, and a KANGAROO.  The second group had a RACCOON, a RADIO and a RAINBOW.  The solvers noticed the leading K and R. Eventually someone thought of chemical elements. K is potassium, but there is no R. However (after the composer said they were on the right track), it was pointed out that there is a Kr - Krypton. Maybe there was a Kryptonite lock on one of the bicycles in the basement. Sure enough, and it was being used to lock a puzzle.

Unfortunately, Krypton was discovered in 1898; drats!

The combination--1903--was guessed quickly and the puzzle was read: " In the living room the teddy bears have a question for you."

 

Several teddy bears and other stuffed animals were sitting on the living room couch...  Someone quickly thought that the bears represented letters and that the non-bears were spaces.  But that would make the word lengths 1 1 4 2 3 3, which was impossible.  Eventually, however, the composer confirmed that this was a proper interpretation.  Hmm.  Eventually, in a flash of inspiration one of the solvers realized that the pattern of the last four words could be "…what do you see?"  There's a book called "Brown Bear, Brown Bear, what do you see?" but that's too many letters.  Wait!  The first two bears are both brown, and they're the only brown ones on the couch—they represent themselves.

Someone quickly went to retrieve the book and got the answer: "I see a red bird looking at me."  We saw a red bird in a tree nearby.  It was holding a note telling us to look in a box at the foot of the tree.

            The final prize was ice cream cones – invented in 1903 and made popular at the St. Louis World’s Fair the following year.

 

 

One additional note:  this year’s hunt was dedicated to the memory of Al Hirschfeld, 1903-2003, noted for concealing the name of his daughter, Nina, in his caricatures.  In his honor, some of the puzzles had Ninas hidden.  In actuality, this paragraph is an example.  Hirschfeld tributes also were contained in the welcome letter as well as many of the puzzles: the cryptic, the acrostic, the license plate images, and the music puzzle included some 1903-centered clues.  For example, the first overlapping song title -- at least for the purple team -- was "Ain't She Sweet Adeline"; Sweet Adeline was published in 1903.