Game #180: Inside Out

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earendel
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#26 Post by earendel » Tue May 22, 2018 2:00 pm

mrkelley23 wrote:12. should be LEVI COFFIN.
Just as I said in my post.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."

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jarnon
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#27 Post by jarnon » Tue May 22, 2018 2:06 pm

earendel wrote:
mrkelley23 wrote:12. should be LEVI COFFIN.
Just as I said in my post.
Frank already said that's right. Sam Houston was a cut-and-paste error. :oops:
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#28 Post by mellytu74 » Tue May 22, 2018 8:23 pm

88. For 68 years, he made his bed in an open dresser drawer in his big brother’s boarding house room.

Don't know how I missed this earlier.

This is KAYO MULLINS, little brother of Moon Mullins in the long-running comic strip.



111. A proponent of the idea that a woman should be able to wear the same outfit for an entire day, this fashion designer first achieved fame for creating an iconic – and I do not use the word ‘iconic’ lightly – hat.

ANOTHER ONE that I have no idea how I missed it.

ROY HALSTON - the iconic hat in question is Jackie Kennedy's pillbox hat.
Last edited by mellytu74 on Tue May 22, 2018 8:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#29 Post by mellytu74 » Tue May 22, 2018 8:29 pm

96. The most prominent journalist from North Dakota, he was the first correspondent to report on the fall of Paris to the Nazis and later became a fixture on CBS television news.

I am completely ashamed that I did not get this instantly .... he was my commencement speaker.

ERIC SEVAREID

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#30 Post by Estonut » Wed May 23, 2018 3:47 am

19. He was the third of only three American League managers to be named Manager of the Year three times.
BUCK SHOWALTER

24. The career of this notorious gold prospector provided the inspiration for Trey Parker’s Cannibal! The Musical.
ALFERD PACKER

26. This designer’s conspicuous absence of underwear at her 1992 OBE ceremony did not prevent her from being made a Dame fourteen years later. (Apparently, the Queen was not unamused.)
VIVIENNE WESTWOOD

28. After 24 years as Deputy Prime Minister, he lost his job in 2003 and was later condemned to death, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison – which made him luckier than his former boss.
TARIQ AZIZ

40. After serving seven terms in the House of Representative, this Massachusetts Democrat retired to form a lobbying firm – and to serve as president of a medical marijuana company.
BILL DELAHUNT

42. He played for an NHL team from 1935 to 1938 and coached the same team from 1955 to 1968, scoring a combined ten Stanley Cup victories in the process.
TOE BLAKE

53. After refusing to confirm John Tyler’s first four Supreme Court appointments, the Senate finally relented and approved this jurist, who served on the Court for the next 27 years.
SAMUEL NELSON

77. She was still a slave when her poem in praise of General George Washington brought her a personal invitation to visit him at his Massachusetts headquarters.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

94. This African American inventor is best known for developing a way to send telegraph messages between train stations and moving trains.
GRANVILLE WOODS

95. This musician and songwriter has had a love-hate relationship with the group that made him famous: he once punched a hole in a wall during a dispute with their manager, but has since reunited with surviving former bandmates and called their past collaboration “part of my youth that is always active in my thoughts.”
MIKE NESMITH

98. This comic book artist said that two of the inspirations for his most famous character were Douglas Fairbanks’s portrayal of Zorro and Leonardo da Vinci’s sketch of a helicopter.
BOB KANE

102. This American tennis player was ranked Number One on eight separate occasions between 1998 and 2005. (She also achieved Number One ranking in doubles.)
LINDSAY DAVENPORT

114. Only one NFL coach has taken more teams to the Super Bowl than this one did.
DON SHULA
A child of five would understand this. Send someone to fetch a child of five.
Groucho Marx

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#31 Post by franktangredi » Wed May 23, 2018 9:09 am

Estonut wrote:
114. Only one NFL coach has taken more teams to the Super Bowl than this one did.
DON SHULA
I made a horrible mistake on this question. The figure is for total Super Bowl appearances as player and/or coach.

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#32 Post by Pastor Fireball » Wed May 23, 2018 10:05 am

28. After 24 years as Deputy Prime Minister, he lost his job in 2003 and was later condemned to death, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison – which made him luckier than his former boss.

The long political tenure and the year 2003 seems to indicate this was somebody associated with Saddam Hussein.

40. After serving seven terms in the House of Representative, this Massachusetts Democrat retired to form a lobbying firm – and to serve as president of a medical marijuana company.

I originally thought this was Barney Frank, but he was in Congress way longer than 14 years. This is actually WILLIAM DELAHUNT.

105. Shortly after his term as governor of Massachusetts, he replaced John Foster Dulles in the Cabinet.

Dulles was Eisenhower's secretary of state. Dean Rusk was never a governor. So it's the guy between Dulles and Rusk.
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#33 Post by jarnon » Wed May 23, 2018 10:39 pm

Updated consolidation…

Identify the 120 people in the clues below. Match them into 60 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Then, match each pair with one of the Associated Words. None of the names will be used twice.

Some of the names may be a little more obscure than usual. I hope this doesn't jam you up too much.

1. In a seminal 1559 work, this theologian wrote that “since the arrangement of all things is in the hand of God, since to him belongs the disposal of life and death, he arranges all things by his sovereign counsel, in such a way that individuals are born, who are doomed from the womb to certain death, and are to glorify him by their destruction….”
SOREN KIRKEGAARD?

2. Her greatest stage triumphs included Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, A Doll’s House, The Constant Wife, The Kingdom of God – the inaugural production of the theatre that bears her name – and The Corn Is Green.
ETHEL BARRYMORE

3. He was the last major astronomer to work without benefit of a telescope – which did not prevent him from compiling data that helped his one-time assistant Johannes Kepler formulate the Laws of Planetary Motion.
TYCHO BRAHE

4. Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina proved to be the key states in his election to the Presidency – which had far-reaching consequences for all three states and the nation as a whole.
RUTHERFORD HAYES

5. The woman who inspired this Renaissance humanist’s finest poetry may have been the wife of an ancestor of the Marquis de Sade.

6. One of the pallbearers at the funeral of this boxer – ranked by Ring magazine as the greatest puncher of all time – was the man he defeated in his most legendary bout.
JOE LOUIS

7. The early phases of her media career included delivering the news at a local radio station while still in high school, becoming Nashville’s youngest anchor, and hosting Dialing for Dollars.
OPRAH WINFREY

8. DJMQ:
Invited by Balanchine to join the fledgling New York City Ballet in 1949, this Canadian ballerina remained one of its principal dancers for the next 24 years.
Another DJMQ appears at Question #83.)
MELISSA HAYDEN

9. One of this artist’s most famous works was a gold salt cellar currently insured for some $60,000,000.
BENVENUTO CELLINI

10. Since the Grammy awards for male and female Pop Solo Performance were combined into a single category in 2011, this male singer has won it twice.
ED SHEERAN

11. This military commander was on the losing side of the 1836 engagement for which he is now remembered, but the stirring letter he wrote ten days before his death is credited with contributing to that side’s ultimate victory.
SAM HOUSTON? WILLIAM TRAVIS?

12. LEVI COFFIN

13. This retail magnate – who opened his first successful store in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in 1878 – would sometimes make anonymous visits to one of his stores, shoplift items, and then reward employees who caught him at it.
F.W. WOOLWORTH

14. After the sudden death of his wife, this comedian dedicated the next year of his life to completing her unfinished book about a serial killer.
PATTON OSWALT

15. The demonstration that earned him fame – and a lifetime of controversy – took place at Massachusetts General Hospital on October 16, 1846.
WILLIAM MORTON

16. His System of Moral Philosophy made him one of the founding figures of the “Scottish Enlightenment.”
FRANCIS HUTCHESON

17. In 2003, this Canadian-born politician became her state’s first female governor.
JENNIFER GRANHOLM

18. She is a member of the National Women’s Hall of Fame, the Nebraska Hall of Fame, the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame, and the New York Writers Hall of Fame.
WILLA CATHER

19. He was the third of only three American League managers to be named Manager of the Year three times.
TONY LaRUSSA? BUCK SHOWALTER?

20. This titular character was the son of Bungo and grandson of Mungo.
BILBO BAGGINS

21. She was the most married of all English queens, though she was still a slouch in that department compared to her third husband.
CATHERINE PARR

22. The leading heldentenor of his day, this German opera singer sang Wagnerian roles at the Met more than 500 times between 1926 and 1950.

23. Her excavations at Jericho made her one of the leading archaeologists of the mid-20th century.
KATHLEEN KENYON

24. The career of this notorious gold prospector provided the inspiration for Trey Parker’s Cannibal! The Musical.
ALFERD PACKER

25. In 1958, this British explorer commanded the expedition that made the first overland crossing of Antarctica.

26. This designer’s conspicuous absence of underwear at her 1992 OBE ceremony did not prevent her from being made a Dame fourteen years later. (Apparently, the Queen was not unamused.)
VIVIENNE WESTWOOD

27. In an influential 1975 book, this feminist propounded the thesis that rape is "a conscious process of intimidation by which all men keep all women in a state of fear."
GLORIA STEINEM?

28. After 24 years as Deputy Prime Minister, he lost his job in 2003 and was later condemned to death, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison – which made him luckier than his former boss.
TARIQ AZIZ

29. This cinematographer finally won an Oscar on his fourteenth nomination.
ROGER DEAKINS

30. A Catholic university on the West Coast is named for this canonized Jesuit who died at the age of 23 while ministering to victims of a plague in Rome.
ST. ALOYSIUS GONZAGA

31. This French physicist won the Nobel Prize after his hypothesis that all matter has wave properties was experimentally confirmed by two American physicists.
LOUIS DE BROGLIE

32. T.S. Eliot praised this author’s masterwork as “the first, the longest, and the best of modern English detective novels,” while both Dorothy L. Sayers and G.K. Chesterton cited it as the finest detective story ever written.
WILKIE COLLINS

33. This halfback for the Rock Island Independents is credited with scoring the first touchdown in NFL history.

34. Some years before this Union general lost – through his own blunder – one of his legs and most of his men at the Battle of Gettysburg, he had made legal history by becoming the first American acquitted of murder by pleading temporary insanity.

35. This singer has been a Grammy nominee for Best Urban/Alternative Performance and Best Contemporary R&B Album, but her biggest popular success has been as a featured artist on the 2013 Grammy Winner for Song of the Year. (She also appeared in two of the most acclaimed films of 2016.)
JANELLE MONAE

36. This entrepreneur was the third and most recent individual under the age of thirty to be named Person of the Year by Time magazine.
MARK ZUCKERBERG?

37. This stories that won this journalist a Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting also inspired a film for which the actor playing him received an Oscar nomination.
SYDNEY SCHANBERG

38. A prominent architect of Regency England, his notable buildings included Buckingham Palace and the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.

39. She was a minor figure in the Cleveland numbers rackets, but a major figure in a landmark Supreme Court case that resulted in the Fourth Amendment being applied at the state and local level.
DOLLREE MAPP

40. After serving seven terms in the House of Representative, this Massachusetts Democrat retired to form a lobbying firm – and to serve as president of a medical marijuana company.
BILL DELAHUNT

41. He made a name for himself in Hong Kong action films and Cantonse hip-hop – and a different sort of name for himself in scandals involving sexually explicit photos of himself with various women.

42. He played for an NHL team from 1935 to 1938 and coached the same team from 1955 to 1968, scoring a combined ten Stanley Cup victories in the process.
TOE BLAKE

43. The March of Dimes went into debt funding the work of this researcher – and it was worth it.
JONAS SALK

44. As a professor, he helped CCNY earn its reputation as the “proletarian Harvard;” as a thinker, his writings such as Reason and Nature led New York Times to call him "an almost legendary figure in American philosophy, education and the liberal tradition.”
HORACE MANN?

45. This novelist built his reputation with satiric depictions of England after World War I, but is best remembered today for a dystopian novel …
ALDOUS HUXLEY

46. … the title of which is taken from a line spoken by this Shakespearean heroine.
MIRANDA

47. He and his longtime partner were the only team of Broadway lyricists to receive the Kennedy Center Honors.
JOHN KANDER? FRED EBB?

48. In 1930, this young thug was shot in the head and subsequently turned into a useful martyr by the party of thugs to whom he belonged.

49. The ideas of this child psychologist came into direct conflict with those of Anna Freud, eventually causing the British Psychoanalytical Society to split into three camps.

50. Allegations that this celebrity chef fostered a “culture of sexual harassment” in his New Orleans restaurants led to his stepping down as CEO – and being digitally edited out of an episode of Iron Chef Showdown.
MARIO BATALI? JOHN BESH?

51. A hidden copy of the teachings of the stoic philosopher Epictetus helped this U.S. naval officer survive more than seven years of captivity and torture at the Hanoi Hilton.
JAMES STOCKDALE

52. The offices of the brokerage firm that he and his brother Franklyn founded were destroyed in the San Francisco Earthquake, but the firm itself is still going strong. (You may resume your conversation now.)
E.F. HUTTON

53. After refusing to confirm John Tyler’s first four Supreme Court appointments, the Senate finally relented and approved this jurist, who served on the Court for the next 27 years.
ROGER TANEY? SAMUEL NELSON?

54. This Laker was NBA Rookie of the Year in 1959.
ELGIN BAYLOR

55. This English actress was best known on screen for playing the mother of two vicious criminals and the nanny of someone even worse.
BILLIE WHITELAW

56. Touching two extremes of theatrical style, this American playwright introduced expressionism to Broadway and won a Pulitzer for a realistic depiction of tenement life.
ELMER RICE?

57. As Bishop of Gloucester, he became the first Anglican cleric to denounce the slave trade; he was also an editor of the works of Shakespeare and a staunch defender and friend of Alexander Pope

58. In the early 19th century, Poet Laureate Robert Southey dubbed this Scottish civil engineer the ‘Colossus of Roads’ in honor of the many highways and bridges he designed.
JOHN McADAM? THOMAS TELFORD?

59. This country singer’s debut album asked the musical question “Did I Shave My Legs for This?”
DEANA CARTER

60. This genre painter was best known for his crowded, chaotic scenes of daily life – in fact, his name became a Dutch byword for a disorderly household.
JAN STEEN

61. She was the first woman to make a non-stop westward solo flight across the Atlantic.
AMELIA EARHART? BERYL MARKHAM?

62. Norman Mailer* walked out of a dinner party given for this man after his acquittal, saying. “I think this guy is innocent. I thought we were going to be having dinner with a man who actually tried to kill his wife. This is boring."
CLAUS VON BULOW

*I hate that guy.

63. During his 31-year stint at the New York Times, this music critic used his considerable influence to champion the works of Jean Sibelius.

64. This social activist was once dubbed “the most hated woman in America,” but the activities for which she was so hated were not the motive for her grisly murder.
MADELYN MURRAY O'HAIR

65. She and her partner won Olympic gold with the aid of a French composer who had died 47 years earlier.
JAYNE TORVILL

66. The most controversial episode of his most controversial novel is a dream sequence linked to Pagan goddesses named Allat, Uzza, and Manat.
SALMAN RUSHDIE?

67. This Frankish queen – who may or may not have inspired a major figure in Wagnerian opera – was involved in many power struggles before she was executed at the age of 70 by being pulled apart by four horses.

68. This actress spent six seasons playing a guidance counselor at William McKinley High School.
JAYMA MAYS

69. According to Jewish folklore, she started arguing with her husband from Day One, with each of them intent on taking the top position during sex. It went downhill from there.
LILITH

70. Former medical director of the Puerto Rico Family Planning Association, she oversaw the successful clinical trials of the first oral contraceptive.

71. One of the leading British idealist philosophers, his first major work was his 1877 Critical Account of the Philosophy of Kant.
EDWARD CAIRD

72. This American historian specialized in tracing the impact of technology and urbanization in such works as Technics and Civilization and The City in History.
LEWIS MUMFORD

73. She, Paul McCartney, and Justin Timberlake brought different songs with the same title to Number One on the Billboard pop chart.
PETULA CLARK

74. We may never know the real name of this criminal who was last seen on November 24, 1971.
D.B. COOPER

75. According to Thucydides, this Spartan general captured the city of Byzantium, but was later arrested for collusion with Persia, walled up in a temple, and starved to death.

76. This minister, photographer, and furniture maker helped spur the Colonial Revival style in architecture with his best-selling photographs of the New England landscape.

77. She was still a slave when her poem in praise of General George Washington brought her a personal invitation to visit him at his Massachusetts headquarters.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

78. This driver made racing history with a victory in the 2008 Indy Japan 300.
DANICA PATRICK

79. Between 1915 and 1923, she was appeared in more than thirty films opposite a legendary comedian.
MARGARET DUMONT? EDNA PURVIANCE?

80. She was the first African American woman to serve as campaign manager for a major party presidential candidate.
DONNA BRAZILE

81. Name by Time as one of the 100 Most Influential People of the 20th Century, this advertising pioneer is responsible for such iconic figures as the Marlboro Man, Tony the Tiger, and the lonely Maytag repairman.
LEO BURNETT

82. He and his colleague Mike received the Nobel Prize for "for their discoveries concerning the regulation of cholesterol metabolism.”

83. DJMQ:
His work at the Henry Street Playhouse – which involved innovative use of lighting, slides, and electronic music – led to this choreographer becoming known as “the father of multimedia theatre.”

84. Though he brought clownery to his profession, he was not at all amused by how he and his career were portrayed in a 1998 film.
"PATCH" ADAMS

85. This pianist, bandleader and arranger was an important transitional figure in jazz, bringing Louis Armstrong to New York in the 1920s and helping Benny Goodman create the sound of swing in the 1930s.
FLETCHER HENDERSON

86. This scholar and clergyman was the leading figure of the Carolingian Renaissance.
ALCUIN

87. Founding partner of a national law firm that bears her name, she is better known for handing down verdicts on two eponymous court shows airing from 2001-2008 and from 2016 to the present.
JUDGE GLENDA HATCHETT

88. For 68 years, he made his bed in an open dresser drawer in his big brother’s boarding house room.
KAYO MULLINS

89. This poet is best known for writing satiric epigrams during the reigns of Domitian and Trajan.

90. He pitched the twentieth perfect game in MLB history and was one of only six pitchers to receive the Cy Young Award in both leagues.
ROY HALLADAY

91. After 26 years at Goldman Sachs, he left the private sector to serve as Alexander Hamilton’s 69th successor.
STEVEN MNUCHIN

92. Although he died in 1994, the voice of this actor can still be heard during the opening of the television series he starred in for nearly thirty years.
MACDONALD CAREY

93. The oldest living child of a U.S. President, she spent four years as a First Lady of a different sort.
LYNDA ROBB?

94. This African American inventor is best known for developing a way to send telegraph messages between train stations and moving trains.
GRANVILLE WOODS

95. This musician and songwriter has had a love-hate relationship with the group that made him famous: he once punched a hole in a wall during a dispute with their manager, but has since reunited with surviving former bandmates and called their past collaboration “part of my youth that is always active in my thoughts.”
MIKE NESMITH

96. The most prominent journalist from North Dakota, he was the first correspondent to report on the fall of Paris to the Nazis and later became a fixture on CBS television news.
ERIC SEVAREID

97. In 2014, this economist became the first woman to fill a highly influential quasi-governmental position.
JANET YELLIN

98. This comic book artist said that two of the inspirations for his most famous character were Douglas Fairbanks’s portrayal of Zorro and Leonardo da Vinci’s sketch of a helicopter.
BOB KANE

99. In his influential essay “Two Concepts of Liberty,” this Latvian-born British philosopher defined negative liberty as absence of coercion and positive liberty as self-mastery and the ability to choose one’s leaders.

100. The first president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, this onetime garment cutter went on to co-found both the CIO and the American Labor party.
SIDNEY HILLMAN

101. This astronaut was the first Jewish American in space, although she is better remembered today for the tragic failure of her second mission.
JUDITH RESNIK

102. This American tennis player was ranked Number One on eight separate occasions between 1998 and 2005. (She also achieved Number One ranking in doubles.)
LINDSAY DAVENPORT

103. This actress is best known for a 1995 film in which she played a Jane Austen heroine – sort of.
ALICIA SILVERSTONE

104. His western and crime novels have been brought to the screen by such directors as John Frankenheimer, Martin Ritt, Richard Fleischer, Barry Sonnenfeld, and Quentin Tarantino.
ELMORE LEONARD

105. Shortly after his term as governor of Massachusetts, he replaced John Foster Dulles in the Cabinet.

106. In the last five years, he has won twelve Grammy Awards in the categories of Best Rap Performance, Best Rap Song, Best Rap Album, and Best Music Video.
KENDRICK LAMAR

107. A 1941 meeting between this Nobel Prize-winning physicist and a Nobel Prize-winning German colleague became the basis for a Tony Award-winning play.
NIELS BOHR

108. This executive oversaw the development of the Ford Mustang, but it was his later work for another automotive company that led to his appearance on several lists of most admired Americans.
LEE IACOCCA

109. Nicknamed “the Brain,” this racketeer is generally considered the man behind a notorious 1919 scandal.
ARNOLD ROTHSTEIN

110. In his heyday, this amateur sleuth rivaled Hercule Poirot and Lord Peter Wimsey in popularity, though many shared Ogden Nash’s opinion that he needed “a kick in the pance.”
PHILO VANCE

111. A proponent of the idea that a woman should be able to wear the same outfit for an entire day, this fashion designer first achieved fame for creating an iconic – and I do not use the word ‘iconic’ lightly – hat.
ROY HALSTON

112. This officer drafted the Valkyrie Plan, but was sent to the Eastern Front – where he eventually committed suicide – before the attempt could be carried out.
FRIEDRICH OLBRICHT

113. Accused of taking part in the plot referenced in the preceding clue, this theologian was hanged at Flossenburg concentration camp just two weeks before its liberation.
DIETRICH BONHOEFFER

114. This NFL coach has the second most total Super Bowl appearances as player and/or coach.
DON SHULA?

115. This author wrote his classic allegory during a twelve-year imprisonment for offences against his country’s established church.
JOHN BUNYAN

116. Influenced by cubism and surrealism, this Italian sculptor is best known for his thin, elongated human figurines that some critics have compared to trees without foliage.

117. He received the Thalberg Award only twelve years after his feature film debut and seven years before winning the first of his two Oscars for Best Director.
STEVEN SPIELBERG

118. The “animalcules” described by this scientist included red blood cells and spermatozoa – which, he assured people, he discovered in the excess residue of marital relations and not through self-stimulation. (Glad we cleared that up.)
ANTOINE VAN LEEUWENHOEK

119. The overture to this French composer’s first operetta continues to be one of the most familiar works of the 19th century – especially the rousing dance that kicks off the finale.
JACQUES OFFENBACH

120. The son of Kikuyu farmers, he led his nation’s struggle for independence and became its most powerful political leader for the next fourteen years.
JOMO KENYATTA?

ASSOCIATED WORDS
Yes
#20
Ten Cents
DNA
JFK
Reagan
Eisenhower
Maguire
Kwan
Judas
Plato
Warren
Lulu
Trixie
Daisy
Daphne
Meg
Alfie
Dennis
Yankees
Eagles
Puppet
Idol
Sheriff
Nun
Barber
Pitcher
Throw
Protest
Bless
Tell
Tap
Cook
Poll
Arrested
Hooked
Dead
Montreal
Houston
Denver
Mississippi
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Afghanistan
Golf
Tennis
Football
Fashion
Baton
Guitar
Lemon
Peach
Pizza
Pie
Gothic
Mad
Friday Night
Sunday Morning
Self-Help
Enterprise
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jarnon
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#34 Post by jarnon » Wed May 23, 2018 10:47 pm

48. In 1930, this young thug was shot in the head and subsequently turned into a useful martyr by the party of thugs to whom he belonged.
HORST WESSEL
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franktangredi
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#35 Post by franktangredi » Wed May 23, 2018 11:04 pm

Of the definite answers, two are wrong. (There is no ambiguity about the answers; they are flat-out wrong.) One is right, but misspelled in a way that will prove significant. One is right, but his name generally in a different form that wll prove significant.

Of the ones where a single answer is given with a question mark, five are right and four are wrong.

Of the ones with two alernates, all but one include the correct answer. Of the one that doesn't, the two wrong answers given are wrong in tandem.

jarnon wrote:Updated consolidation…

Identify the 120 people in the clues below. Match them into 60 pairs according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Then, match each pair with one of the Associated Words. None of the names will be used twice.

Some of the names may be a little more obscure than usual. I hope this doesn't jam you up too much.

1. In a seminal 1559 work, this theologian wrote that “since the arrangement of all things is in the hand of God, since to him belongs the disposal of life and death, he arranges all things by his sovereign counsel, in such a way that individuals are born, who are doomed from the womb to certain death, and are to glorify him by their destruction….”
SOREN KIRKEGAARD?

2. Her greatest stage triumphs included Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, A Doll’s House, The Constant Wife, The Kingdom of God – the inaugural production of the theatre that bears her name – and The Corn Is Green.
ETHEL BARRYMORE

3. He was the last major astronomer to work without benefit of a telescope – which did not prevent him from compiling data that helped his one-time assistant Johannes Kepler formulate the Laws of Planetary Motion.
TYCHO BRAHE

4. Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina proved to be the key states in his election to the Presidency – which had far-reaching consequences for all three states and the nation as a whole.
RUTHERFORD HAYES

5. The woman who inspired this Renaissance humanist’s finest poetry may have been the wife of an ancestor of the Marquis de Sade.

6. One of the pallbearers at the funeral of this boxer – ranked by Ring magazine as the greatest puncher of all time – was the man he defeated in his most legendary bout.
JOE LOUIS

7. The early phases of her media career included delivering the news at a local radio station while still in high school, becoming Nashville’s youngest anchor, and hosting Dialing for Dollars.
OPRAH WINFREY

8. DJMQ:
Invited by Balanchine to join the fledgling New York City Ballet in 1949, this Canadian ballerina remained one of its principal dancers for the next 24 years.
Another DJMQ appears at Question #83.)
MELISSA HAYDEN

9. One of this artist’s most famous works was a gold salt cellar currently insured for some $60,000,000.
BENVENUTO CELLINI

10. Since the Grammy awards for male and female Pop Solo Performance were combined into a single category in 2011, this male singer has won it twice.
ED SHEERAN

11. This military commander was on the losing side of the 1836 engagement for which he is now remembered, but the stirring letter he wrote ten days before his death is credited with contributing to that side’s ultimate victory.
SAM HOUSTON? WILLIAM TRAVIS?

12. LEVI COFFIN

13. This retail magnate – who opened his first successful store in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in 1878 – would sometimes make anonymous visits to one of his stores, shoplift items, and then reward employees who caught him at it.
F.W. WOOLWORTH

14. After the sudden death of his wife, this comedian dedicated the next year of his life to completing her unfinished book about a serial killer.
PATTON OSWALT

15. The demonstration that earned him fame – and a lifetime of controversy – took place at Massachusetts General Hospital on October 16, 1846.
WILLIAM MORTON

16. His System of Moral Philosophy made him one of the founding figures of the “Scottish Enlightenment.”
FRANCIS HUTCHESON

17. In 2003, this Canadian-born politician became her state’s first female governor.
JENNIFER GRANHOLM

18. She is a member of the National Women’s Hall of Fame, the Nebraska Hall of Fame, the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame, and the New York Writers Hall of Fame.
WILLA CATHER

19. He was the third of only three American League managers to be named Manager of the Year three times.
TONY LaRUSSA? BUCK SHOWALTER?

20. This titular character was the son of Bungo and grandson of Mungo.
BILBO BAGGINS

21. She was the most married of all English queens, though she was still a slouch in that department compared to her third husband.
CATHERINE PARR

22. The leading heldentenor of his day, this German opera singer sang Wagnerian roles at the Met more than 500 times between 1926 and 1950.

23. Her excavations at Jericho made her one of the leading archaeologists of the mid-20th century.
KATHLEEN KENYON

24. The career of this notorious gold prospector provided the inspiration for Trey Parker’s Cannibal! The Musical.
ALFERD PACKER

25. In 1958, this British explorer commanded the expedition that made the first overland crossing of Antarctica.

26. This designer’s conspicuous absence of underwear at her 1992 OBE ceremony did not prevent her from being made a Dame fourteen years later. (Apparently, the Queen was not unamused.)
VIVIENNE WESTWOOD

27. In an influential 1975 book, this feminist propounded the thesis that rape is "a conscious process of intimidation by which all men keep all women in a state of fear."
GLORIA STEINEM?

28. After 24 years as Deputy Prime Minister, he lost his job in 2003 and was later condemned to death, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison – which made him luckier than his former boss.
TARIQ AZIZ

29. This cinematographer finally won an Oscar on his fourteenth nomination.
ROGER DEAKINS

30. A Catholic university on the West Coast is named for this canonized Jesuit who died at the age of 23 while ministering to victims of a plague in Rome.
ST. ALOYSIUS GONZAGA

31. This French physicist won the Nobel Prize after his hypothesis that all matter has wave properties was experimentally confirmed by two American physicists.
LOUIS DE BROGLIE

32. T.S. Eliot praised this author’s masterwork as “the first, the longest, and the best of modern English detective novels,” while both Dorothy L. Sayers and G.K. Chesterton cited it as the finest detective story ever written.
WILKIE COLLINS

33. This halfback for the Rock Island Independents is credited with scoring the first touchdown in NFL history.

34. Some years before this Union general lost – through his own blunder – one of his legs and most of his men at the Battle of Gettysburg, he had made legal history by becoming the first American acquitted of murder by pleading temporary insanity.

35. This singer has been a Grammy nominee for Best Urban/Alternative Performance and Best Contemporary R&B Album, but her biggest popular success has been as a featured artist on the 2013 Grammy Winner for Song of the Year. (She also appeared in two of the most acclaimed films of 2016.)
JANELLE MONAE

36. This entrepreneur was the third and most recent individual under the age of thirty to be named Person of the Year by Time magazine.
MARK ZUCKERBERG?

37. This stories that won this journalist a Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting also inspired a film for which the actor playing him received an Oscar nomination.
SYDNEY SCHANBERG

38. A prominent architect of Regency England, his notable buildings included Buckingham Palace and the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.

39. She was a minor figure in the Cleveland numbers rackets, but a major figure in a landmark Supreme Court case that resulted in the Fourth Amendment being applied at the state and local level.
DOLLREE MAPP

40. After serving seven terms in the House of Representative, this Massachusetts Democrat retired to form a lobbying firm – and to serve as president of a medical marijuana company.
BILL DELAHUNT

41. He made a name for himself in Hong Kong action films and Cantonse hip-hop – and a different sort of name for himself in scandals involving sexually explicit photos of himself with various women.

42. He played for an NHL team from 1935 to 1938 and coached the same team from 1955 to 1968, scoring a combined ten Stanley Cup victories in the process.
TOE BLAKE

43. The March of Dimes went into debt funding the work of this researcher – and it was worth it.
JONAS SALK

44. As a professor, he helped CCNY earn its reputation as the “proletarian Harvard;” as a thinker, his writings such as Reason and Nature led New York Times to call him "an almost legendary figure in American philosophy, education and the liberal tradition.”
HORACE MANN?

45. This novelist built his reputation with satiric depictions of England after World War I, but is best remembered today for a dystopian novel …
ALDOUS HUXLEY

46. … the title of which is taken from a line spoken by this Shakespearean heroine.
MIRANDA

47. He and his longtime partner were the only team of Broadway lyricists to receive the Kennedy Center Honors.
JOHN KANDER? FRED EBB?

48. In 1930, this young thug was shot in the head and subsequently turned into a useful martyr by the party of thugs to whom he belonged.

49. The ideas of this child psychologist came into direct conflict with those of Anna Freud, eventually causing the British Psychoanalytical Society to split into three camps.

50. Allegations that this celebrity chef fostered a “culture of sexual harassment” in his New Orleans restaurants led to his stepping down as CEO – and being digitally edited out of an episode of Iron Chef Showdown.
MARIO BATALI? JOHN BESH?

51. A hidden copy of the teachings of the stoic philosopher Epictetus helped this U.S. naval officer survive more than seven years of captivity and torture at the Hanoi Hilton.
JAMES STOCKDALE

52. The offices of the brokerage firm that he and his brother Franklyn founded were destroyed in the San Francisco Earthquake, but the firm itself is still going strong. (You may resume your conversation now.)
E.F. HUTTON

53. After refusing to confirm John Tyler’s first four Supreme Court appointments, the Senate finally relented and approved this jurist, who served on the Court for the next 27 years.
ROGER TANEY? SAMUEL NELSON?

54. This Laker was NBA Rookie of the Year in 1959.
ELGIN BAYLOR

55. This English actress was best known on screen for playing the mother of two vicious criminals and the nanny of someone even worse.
BILLIE WHITELAW

56. Touching two extremes of theatrical style, this American playwright introduced expressionism to Broadway and won a Pulitzer for a realistic depiction of tenement life.
ELMER RICE?

57. As Bishop of Gloucester, he became the first Anglican cleric to denounce the slave trade; he was also an editor of the works of Shakespeare and a staunch defender and friend of Alexander Pope

58. In the early 19th century, Poet Laureate Robert Southey dubbed this Scottish civil engineer the ‘Colossus of Roads’ in honor of the many highways and bridges he designed.
JOHN McADAM? THOMAS TELFORD?

59. This country singer’s debut album asked the musical question “Did I Shave My Legs for This?”
DEANA CARTER

60. This genre painter was best known for his crowded, chaotic scenes of daily life – in fact, his name became a Dutch byword for a disorderly household.
JAN STEEN

61. She was the first woman to make a non-stop westward solo flight across the Atlantic.
AMELIA EARHART? BERYL MARKHAM?

62. Norman Mailer* walked out of a dinner party given for this man after his acquittal, saying. “I think this guy is innocent. I thought we were going to be having dinner with a man who actually tried to kill his wife. This is boring."
CLAUS VON BULOW

*I hate that guy.

63. During his 31-year stint at the New York Times, this music critic used his considerable influence to champion the works of Jean Sibelius.

64. This social activist was once dubbed “the most hated woman in America,” but the activities for which she was so hated were not the motive for her grisly murder.
MADELYN MURRAY O'HAIR

65. She and her partner won Olympic gold with the aid of a French composer who had died 47 years earlier.
JAYNE TORVILL

66. The most controversial episode of his most controversial novel is a dream sequence linked to Pagan goddesses named Allat, Uzza, and Manat.
SALMAN RUSHDIE?

67. This Frankish queen – who may or may not have inspired a major figure in Wagnerian opera – was involved in many power struggles before she was executed at the age of 70 by being pulled apart by four horses.

68. This actress spent six seasons playing a guidance counselor at William McKinley High School.
JAYMA MAYS

69. According to Jewish folklore, she started arguing with her husband from Day One, with each of them intent on taking the top position during sex. It went downhill from there.
LILITH

70. Former medical director of the Puerto Rico Family Planning Association, she oversaw the successful clinical trials of the first oral contraceptive.

71. One of the leading British idealist philosophers, his first major work was his 1877 Critical Account of the Philosophy of Kant.
EDWARD CAIRD

72. This American historian specialized in tracing the impact of technology and urbanization in such works as Technics and Civilization and The City in History.
LEWIS MUMFORD

73. She, Paul McCartney, and Justin Timberlake brought different songs with the same title to Number One on the Billboard pop chart.
PETULA CLARK

74. We may never know the real name of this criminal who was last seen on November 24, 1971.
D.B. COOPER

75. According to Thucydides, this Spartan general captured the city of Byzantium, but was later arrested for collusion with Persia, walled up in a temple, and starved to death.

76. This minister, photographer, and furniture maker helped spur the Colonial Revival style in architecture with his best-selling photographs of the New England landscape.

77. She was still a slave when her poem in praise of General George Washington brought her a personal invitation to visit him at his Massachusetts headquarters.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

78. This driver made racing history with a victory in the 2008 Indy Japan 300.
DANICA PATRICK

79. Between 1915 and 1923, she was appeared in more than thirty films opposite a legendary comedian.
MARGARET DUMONT? EDNA PURVIANCE?

80. She was the first African American woman to serve as campaign manager for a major party presidential candidate.
DONNA BRAZILE

81. Name by Time as one of the 100 Most Influential People of the 20th Century, this advertising pioneer is responsible for such iconic figures as the Marlboro Man, Tony the Tiger, and the lonely Maytag repairman.
LEO BURNETT

82. He and his colleague Mike received the Nobel Prize for "for their discoveries concerning the regulation of cholesterol metabolism.”

83. DJMQ:
His work at the Henry Street Playhouse – which involved innovative use of lighting, slides, and electronic music – led to this choreographer becoming known as “the father of multimedia theatre.”

84. Though he brought clownery to his profession, he was not at all amused by how he and his career were portrayed in a 1998 film.
"PATCH" ADAMS

85. This pianist, bandleader and arranger was an important transitional figure in jazz, bringing Louis Armstrong to New York in the 1920s and helping Benny Goodman create the sound of swing in the 1930s.
FLETCHER HENDERSON

86. This scholar and clergyman was the leading figure of the Carolingian Renaissance.
ALCUIN

87. Founding partner of a national law firm that bears her name, she is better known for handing down verdicts on two eponymous court shows airing from 2001-2008 and from 2016 to the present.
JUDGE GLENDA HATCHETT

88. For 68 years, he made his bed in an open dresser drawer in his big brother’s boarding house room.
KAYO MULLINS

89. This poet is best known for writing satiric epigrams during the reigns of Domitian and Trajan.

90. He pitched the twentieth perfect game in MLB history and was one of only six pitchers to receive the Cy Young Award in both leagues.
ROY HALLADAY

91. After 26 years at Goldman Sachs, he left the private sector to serve as Alexander Hamilton’s 69th successor.
STEVEN MNUCHIN

92. Although he died in 1994, the voice of this actor can still be heard during the opening of the television series he starred in for nearly thirty years.
MACDONALD CAREY

93. The oldest living child of a U.S. President, she spent four years as a First Lady of a different sort.
LYNDA ROBB?

94. This African American inventor is best known for developing a way to send telegraph messages between train stations and moving trains.
GRANVILLE WOODS

95. This musician and songwriter has had a love-hate relationship with the group that made him famous: he once punched a hole in a wall during a dispute with their manager, but has since reunited with surviving former bandmates and called their past collaboration “part of my youth that is always active in my thoughts.”
MIKE NESMITH

96. The most prominent journalist from North Dakota, he was the first correspondent to report on the fall of Paris to the Nazis and later became a fixture on CBS television news.
ERIC SEVAREID

97. In 2014, this economist became the first woman to fill a highly influential quasi-governmental position.
JANET YELLIN

98. This comic book artist said that two of the inspirations for his most famous character were Douglas Fairbanks’s portrayal of Zorro and Leonardo da Vinci’s sketch of a helicopter.
BOB KANE

99. In his influential essay “Two Concepts of Liberty,” this Latvian-born British philosopher defined negative liberty as absence of coercion and positive liberty as self-mastery and the ability to choose one’s leaders.

100. The first president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, this onetime garment cutter went on to co-found both the CIO and the American Labor party.
SIDNEY HILLMAN

101. This astronaut was the first Jewish American in space, although she is better remembered today for the tragic failure of her second mission.
JUDITH RESNIK

102. This American tennis player was ranked Number One on eight separate occasions between 1998 and 2005. (She also achieved Number One ranking in doubles.)
LINDSAY DAVENPORT

103. This actress is best known for a 1995 film in which she played a Jane Austen heroine – sort of.
ALICIA SILVERSTONE

104. His western and crime novels have been brought to the screen by such directors as John Frankenheimer, Martin Ritt, Richard Fleischer, Barry Sonnenfeld, and Quentin Tarantino.
ELMORE LEONARD

105. Shortly after his term as governor of Massachusetts, he replaced John Foster Dulles in the Cabinet.

106. In the last five years, he has won twelve Grammy Awards in the categories of Best Rap Performance, Best Rap Song, Best Rap Album, and Best Music Video.
KENDRICK LAMAR

107. A 1941 meeting between this Nobel Prize-winning physicist and a Nobel Prize-winning German colleague became the basis for a Tony Award-winning play.
NIELS BOHR

108. This executive oversaw the development of the Ford Mustang, but it was his later work for another automotive company that led to his appearance on several lists of most admired Americans.
LEE IACOCCA

109. Nicknamed “the Brain,” this racketeer is generally considered the man behind a notorious 1919 scandal.
ARNOLD ROTHSTEIN

110. In his heyday, this amateur sleuth rivaled Hercule Poirot and Lord Peter Wimsey in popularity, though many shared Ogden Nash’s opinion that he needed “a kick in the pance.”
PHILO VANCE

111. A proponent of the idea that a woman should be able to wear the same outfit for an entire day, this fashion designer first achieved fame for creating an iconic – and I do not use the word ‘iconic’ lightly – hat.
ROY HALSTON

112. This officer drafted the Valkyrie Plan, but was sent to the Eastern Front – where he eventually committed suicide – before the attempt could be carried out.
FRIEDRICH OLBRICHT

113. Accused of taking part in the plot referenced in the preceding clue, this theologian was hanged at Flossenburg concentration camp just two weeks before its liberation.
DIETRICH BONHOEFFER

114. This NFL coach has the second most total Super Bowl appearances as player and/or coach.
DON SHULA?

115. This author wrote his classic allegory during a twelve-year imprisonment for offences against his country’s established church.
JOHN BUNYAN

116. Influenced by cubism and surrealism, this Italian sculptor is best known for his thin, elongated human figurines that some critics have compared to trees without foliage.

117. He received the Thalberg Award only twelve years after his feature film debut and seven years before winning the first of his two Oscars for Best Director.
STEVEN SPIELBERG

118. The “animalcules” described by this scientist included red blood cells and spermatozoa – which, he assured people, he discovered in the excess residue of marital relations and not through self-stimulation. (Glad we cleared that up.)
ANTOINE VAN LEEUWENHOEK

119. The overture to this French composer’s first operetta continues to be one of the most familiar works of the 19th century – especially the rousing dance that kicks off the finale.
JACQUES OFFENBACH

120. The son of Kikuyu farmers, he led his nation’s struggle for independence and became its most powerful political leader for the next fourteen years.
JOMO KENYATTA?

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Estonut
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#36 Post by Estonut » Thu May 24, 2018 12:17 am

franktangredi wrote:Of the definite answers, two are wrong. (There is no ambiguity about the answers; they are flat-out wrong.) One is right, but misspelled in a way that will prove significant.
This one might be mine:

77. She was still a slave when her poem in praise of General George Washington brought her a personal invitation to visit him at his Massachusetts headquarters.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

I thought she might have used a non-standard (or archaic) spelling, so I looked her up.
The author of the Wikipedia article wrote:Phillis Wheatley, also spelled Phyllis and Wheatly (c. 1753 – December 5, 1784) was the first published African-American female poet.
If this is the one to which Frank was referring, it also implies that spelling of first names is critical to the Tangredi.
A child of five would understand this. Send someone to fetch a child of five.
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#37 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 7:40 am

Unfortunately, he might also be referring to #1, because I believe his last name is almost always spelled KIERKEGAARD.

But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#38 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 7:52 am

And while going down a rabbit hole trying to confirm answers, I discovered the correct spelling of the most hated woman in America: MADALYN MURRAY O'HAIR.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#39 Post by franktangredi » Thu May 24, 2018 7:55 am

mrkelley23 wrote:Unfortunately, he might also be referring to #1, because I believe his last name is almost always spelled KIERKEGAARD.

But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
One of my comments on the last consolidation did refer to #1 ... but it wasn't that particular comment. The spelling comment was indeed reference to Wheatley.

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#40 Post by silverscreenselect » Thu May 24, 2018 7:58 am

mrkelley23 wrote: But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
I agree; I doubt there's anyone else even remotely well known with the first name DOLLREE and MADALYN is also an unusual spelling of that name. This would suggest anagramming or partial words, perhaps the "REE" and the "LYN" matching with parts of other people's names. But Frank did something like this a couple of puzzles ago, and I don't think he would repeat something that soon.
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#41 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 8:00 am

Another spelling: 97 should be JANET YELLEN.

95 might be the "different form" Frank is referring to because, while I occasionally heard Nesmith referred to as Mike, it was nearly always Michael.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#42 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 8:05 am

44. appears to be MORRIS COHEN, not Mann.
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#43 Post by franktangredi » Thu May 24, 2018 8:13 am

Clarification needed here. I said, "One is right, but misspelled in a way that will prove significant." Other names may have misspellings, but I only cited misspellings that will affect the outcome of the game.

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#44 Post by franktangredi » Thu May 24, 2018 8:15 am

mrkelley23 wrote:Another spelling: 97 should be JANET YELLEN.
Oops. Didn't catch that or I would have included it in that comment. Glad you did!
Last edited by franktangredi on Thu May 24, 2018 8:17 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#45 Post by franktangredi » Thu May 24, 2018 8:17 am

silverscreenselect wrote:
mrkelley23 wrote: But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
I agree; I doubt there's anyone else even remotely well known with the first name DOLLREE and MADALYN is also an unusual spelling of that name. This would suggest anagramming or partial words, perhaps the "REE" and the "LYN" matching with parts of other people's names. But Frank did something like this a couple of puzzles ago, and I don't think he would repeat something that soon.
You're referring to the game Puzzle Jam? It always feels good when people remember past games!

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#46 Post by mellytu74 » Thu May 24, 2018 8:32 am

franktangredi wrote:
mrkelley23 wrote:Unfortunately, he might also be referring to #1, because I believe his last name is almost always spelled KIERKEGAARD.

But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
One of my comments on the last consolidation did refer to #1 ... but it wasn't that particular comment. The spelling comment was indeed reference to Wheatley.
VERY simple spelling change for #1

JOHN CALVIN

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#47 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 8:38 am

mellytu74 wrote:
franktangredi wrote:
mrkelley23 wrote:Unfortunately, he might also be referring to #1, because I believe his last name is almost always spelled KIERKEGAARD.

But my hunch is that spellings of both first and last names are going to be important.
One of my comments on the last consolidation did refer to #1 ... but it wasn't that particular comment. The spelling comment was indeed reference to Wheatley.
VERY simple spelling change for #1

JOHN CALVIN
Now that's funny right there!
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#48 Post by earendel » Thu May 24, 2018 8:41 am

mrkelley23 wrote:
mellytu74 wrote:
franktangredi wrote:
One of my comments on the last consolidation did refer to #1 ... but it wasn't that particular comment. The spelling comment was indeed reference to Wheatley.
VERY simple spelling change for #1

JOHN CALVIN
Now that's funny right there!
<Sheesh®> I misread the date as 1959, not 1559. :oops:
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#49 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu May 24, 2018 8:57 am

franktangredi wrote:
Estonut wrote:
114. Only one NFL coach has taken more teams to the Super Bowl than this one did.
DON SHULA
I made a horrible mistake on this question. The figure is for total Super Bowl appearances as player and/or coach.
That leaves a lot of possibilities. My leading candidate would be Dan Reeves, but you'd have to consider Mike Ditka, Tom Flores, Ron Rivera, and probably several more I'm not thinking of. Did Landry play in the league?

One clarifying question, Frank -- are you referring to head coaches only in this question?
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Re: Game #180: Inside Out

#50 Post by franktangredi » Thu May 24, 2018 9:20 am

mrkelley23 wrote:
franktangredi wrote:
Estonut wrote:
114. Only one NFL coach has taken more teams to the Super Bowl than this one did.
DON SHULA
I made a horrible mistake on this question. The figure is for total Super Bowl appearances as player and/or coach.
That leaves a lot of possibilities. My leading candidate would be Dan Reeves, but you'd have to consider Mike Ditka, Tom Flores, Ron Rivera, and probably several more I'm not thinking of. Did Landry play in the league?

One clarifying question, Frank -- are you referring to head coaches only in this question?
Yes, I am, and you have the right answer.

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