Sunday, January 14, 2024

NPR Sunday Puzzle (Jan 14, 2024): Helping Hurting

NPR Sunday Puzzle (Jan 14, 2024): Helping Hurting
Q: Think of a word for a person who helps you. Copy the last three letters and repeat them at the front, and you'll get a new, longer word that names a person who hurts you. What words are these?
If you rearrange the letters in the longer word, you get something you might do at a marina.

Edit: RENT MOTOR
A: MENTOR, TORMENTOR

147 comments:

  1. As is often the case, I'm having a tough time coming up with a hint. Maybe in time...

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  2. I have an answer, and I'm certain it's right. The original word is a word that I hear frequently mispronounced.

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    1. I haven't noticed the mispronunciation, but there's a certain derivative of that word that displays a kind of false folk etymology. I bet that's related to the mispronunciation you've noticed.

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  3. are we talking of Blaine and Will here?

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  4. Got it quickly. I m reminded of a car.

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  5. In fact, the final word is pronounced the way the original word is misprounced.

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  6. Take the even letters of the word for the hurter. Rearrange. You get something everyone pays attention to if the time is right.

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  7. Easy. I know people who are and do both...

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  8. Delete the repeated letters to get a kind of beings.

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  9. Two I can think of have 4-letter first names.

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  10. I don't feel that I need to explain my art to you, Warren

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  11. Speaking of mispronunciations, did anyone catch the fentanyl (pronounced fentan-awl) senate hearing? I remember when the word nuclear was mispronounced as "nook-yull-er", but this "fentan-awl" thing make my skin crywl.

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  13. I can't think of a good, obscure hint this week. I might be back later if I can come up with something...

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    1. I might be back is a reference to “I’ll be back.” Tormentor sounds vaguely like terminator

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  14. The first part of the longer word spells the last name of a singer. The remaining letters, rearranged, spell the last name of an actor.

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    1. ... or a movie we're all familiar with.

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    2. Thanks, sdb. Jan, I've heard of that movie.

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    3. First of all, my favorite singer of all time so props to Nodd.

      Second, the last letters also anagram to a hit song of the '90s (sung by a different singer though)

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  15. OK, maybe it's too early. The wording is confusing me. If the word was THERAPIST, it would look like ISTISTTHERAP?

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    1. I was working under the assumption it would be ISTTHERAPIST

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    2. Interesting choice of example. Are you a Ted Lasso fan?

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    3. my mind immediately went to arrested development

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  16. You don't have to be an einstein ... but at least our AI masters appear unable to solve this

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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  17. Nineteenth-century clues: Whitman & Tennyson.

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    1. Actually I was thinking of Hraold Bloom.

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    2. Nice! I think Dr. K and I are on the same page; I have a theory about Hugo but will look forward to Thursday's revelation :).

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    3. Just scansion-wise, "mentor, tormentor" kept reminding me of "O Captain! my Captain!" And Tennyson wrote a poem about Odysseus / Ulysses, whose friend was the original Mentor.

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  18. You are not repeating the last 3 letters twice in a row. You are putting one copy at the front of the word. However, for the second puzzle in a row, there is a connection to Pokemon.

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    1. Torment is a Pokemon move that forbids another Pokemon from using the same move twice in a row.

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  19. I was on the right track with another word with a similar meaning, but I just couldn't make the longer word work. Now I have solved it, and my clue is 1834.

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  20. READING RECOMMENDATION

    Last week I ran across a new book by Rachel Maddow, PREQUEL. It came out in November. I finished reading it last night and cannot say enough good things about this very well researched and written book. It is about little known or understood things happening in this country during the 1930's and 1940's that paralleled what was happening in The Weimar Republic, officially known as the German Reich. While the author does not tie it in to what is now happening in our country, it becomes obvious as you progress through the chapters. I learned so much from this amazing book.

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    1. jan, I took a kwiqk peek and will go back later to check it out further. What I saw right away is that it also has more photos than the book. Does she discuss the subject or read from her book?
      Killers of the Flower Moon is an excellent read, but this is even better and more important to our survival as a democracy.

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    2. I'm not sure the book was finished when the podcast came out. Anyway, the audio is from her and several of her sources, as well as historical recordings.

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    3. Thanks, I will have to check it out and listen when I can find the time. Problem is that when you retire you never seem to have time for things you need to do.

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    4. Fans of Prequel/Ultra might also appreciate Timothy Snyder's On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons From The Twentieth Century, a 2017 pamphlet, summarized here last week by the author.

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  21. Follow-on puzzle: Think of a word for something a person might do. Copy the last three letters and repeat them at the front, and you'll get a new, longer word for something someone might do in response. What words are these?

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  22. Think of a word for two people who help you. Rearrange the letters and you'll get a word for someone who hurts you.

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  23. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  24. Ok, let's try that one more time. A final Sunday hint, a musical one from the world of vocal group harmony, aka doo-wop: The Heartbeats.

    There, that's better.

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  25. Thanks, Dr. K. I think I have it now.

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  26. while the medic doesn't work for this quiz, it is what John Bobbitt shouted in surprise one morning aeons ago

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  27. A friendly reminder…

    If you’re in the path of that very cold air coming down from Canada, be sure to take any cans or bottles of soda or water out of your car. A friend of mine in St. Louis had ten cans of cherry soda in the back of her car and completely forgot about them. It’s about 1° there. They all exploded. You can imagine what her car looks and smells like.

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    1. Looking forward to Wednesday's 30° weather in Kansas City! A regular heat wave, I hope!

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    2. I am still amazed that the KC Chief's stadium was almost filled throughout the Chief's/ Dolphin's game this past Saturday. The game started at -4° and ended up at -8°F. Way too cold for me!!

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  28. Can’t believe there’s an actual rock band album with a title that uses these two words (only). Interesting material. Anyway, the on air contestant’s profession as a finger printer reminded me of an old Sunday puzzle involving “poor toe prints” aka Port Au Prince.

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    1. >album title using these words: And, do a Google image search on just the two words, to see more such stuff!

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  29. Made me think of some "bad players" in the Harry Potter Series.

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  30. Nodd, just for you.

    LA Times
    A bowling alley, a boozy fight and allegations of a new deputy gang in Los Angeles
    Keri Blakinger, Alene Tchekmedyian
    Thu, January 11, 2024 at 11:21 AM PST·12 min read


    https://news.yahoo.com/bowling-alley-boozy-fight-allegations-192101143.html

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  31. I usually solve in the morning, but I had a bit of an odyssey with this one.

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  32. One can use the same letters that appear in the answer (but with different counts of how often the letters occur) to get a kind of mammal, which, by the way, has the same total number of letters as the longer word.

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  33. Overwhelmed by too much NFL on TV, I'm trying to get inspiration to find an answer by watching the Maple Leafs and Raptors.

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  34. I don't think it's fair when people accuse Donald Trump of not having a moral compass. I suggest we just say that it always points South.

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    1. No moral compass needed when you use GPS -- Greedy Pathological Scammery.

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  35. I've had both of these things. I've been both of these things, and I suppose I will be both of these things. More the first than the second, but who knows. Living a full life.

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  36. My ASSISTANT helped me plan the perfect picnic, but the ANT ASSISTANT was working against us the whole time.

    Couldn’t think of a hint so please accept this silly wrong answer instead.

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  37. Along the same lines as the Sunday Puzzle, there is also:
    -- Too bad their hotshot pitcher’s arm is shot.
    -- Mesdames, the ship’s crew is looking for dames here in Paris.
    -- A home team fan will outshout a visiting team’s fan’s shout every time.

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  38. I am now calling the Iowa Republican Caucuses for Dewey!

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  39. I'm reading Prequel, too. I got mine this afternoon. I had to call the Amazon customer service number because the Amazon locker was frozen from our first snowfall in 2 years.

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    1. I think you will find it interesting at first, but taking its time in becoming compelling, but as it builds to a close it will all come together in a way that is similar to the volcanic eruption in Iceland today. Perhaps like an unwelcome alarm going off when you are deep in sleep.

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    2. Wow! Great. I'm reading about George Sylvester Viereck now. That guy was something! An agent for the German government.

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    3. From that comment I can see you will not be able to put the book down until you finish reading it.

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  40. Nodd,
    Did you see my post/link addressed to you above?

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    1. Sorry, I just now saw it. I'll look at the piece and message you back.

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    2. This incident and the gang connection are not surprising at all. As the article notes, LASD gangs have been a longstanding problem, especially under Villanueva. Reminds me of the line Billy Jack spoke in the film of the same name, in response to a statement from a group of illegal hunters of wild horses on Native American land who were accompanied by the local sheriff, after they told Billy, "We've got the law here, Billy." And he said, "When policemen break the law, then there isn't any law - just a fight for survival."

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    3. I agree with you that it is not at all surprising. That is why I posted the link. I wish more ordinary citizens would realize just how corrupt police departments are all over the country. This particular group, in my opinion, is only getting publicity because it involves a racial minority. Most of the outrageous police behavior I have witnessed throughout my entire life has been by white cops. I have so many stories, but most people do not understand. I still try to give each individual cop the benefit of the doubt, but that solves nothing as to the persistent problem. One of the points I want to point out is that it is not simply that there are "a few bad apples" in policing, no, it is systemic.

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  41. Rearrange the letters of the shorter word, and get a two-word phrase for something many, possibly all, of the participants here would like for a current political frontrunner.

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    1. Does rearranging involve repeating a letter? I feel like it does, but I also have experience with that recently! :-)

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    2. No, all the letters are used just once each.

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  42. Hi all. I have yet to solve this one, so sometimes I wait to check here because it might confuse me more. But I am ready to look. Thank you for recommending Prequel; I definitely want to read it now. And that reminded me that I have never shared that in response to DFT's 2016 Presidential election, I founded this organization that I am quite proud of. Our 21st show is coming up on 1/22, to benefit Jose Andres' World Central Kitchen. Thanks for checking us out! www.chicagoactorscta.org.

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    1. Bump last letter of first-shorter- word up one in alphabet to get something sweet and refreshing.
      I will check it out.

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    2. Also last three letters of the first-shorter- word are in my first comment above. And in this one.

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  43. Replies
    1. No worries, jan, he'll be Bach.

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    2. This one hits hard. My dad (RIP) took me to many PDQ Bach Christmas shows in NYC over five or ten years -- always a great time, a joyful combination of beautiful music, painful puns, and lots of inside audience jokes (the house manager, Schikele's entrances, etc.)

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    3. Oh man. I went to his concert at Boston Symphony Hall many decades ago. Schickele entered by coming in up on a balcony, throwing down a rope ladder, and shinnying down the rope. The proper Symphonic Bostonians were Not Amused. But I sure was.

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  44. MENTOR, TORMENTOR

    "Stage a protest" >>> A TORMENTOR is a hanging at each side of a stage directly behind the proscenium that serves to block the wing area and sidelights from the audience.

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  45. mentor, tormentor

    Last Sunday I said, “Two I can think of have 4-letter first names”: Vlad (the Impaler) and Ivan (the Terrible).

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  46. Replies
    1. I forgot my hint:

      "I'm thinking of Victor Hugo." Les Misérables.

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  47. MENTOR, TORMENTOR

    My nonhint hint: “As is often the case, I am having a tough time coming up with a hint. Maybe in time…”
    i.e., I was tormented.

    Musical hint: The Heartbeats
    In 1955, the Heart Beats Quintet (aka the Heartbeats) released “Tormented,” accompanied by Russell Jacquet and His Orchestra.

    About my reply to Dr. Awkward: Harold Bloom, the renowned (and sometimes notorious) Yale literary critic, in 1973 published The Anxiety of Influence, a highly influential study that argued that great poets, e.g., Milton, were engaged in an agon with their most powerful predecessors, in Milton’s case, Shakespeare. In effect, Bloom argued such poets felt tormented by their mentors.

    Hint: “Rearrange the letters of the shorter word, and get a two-word phrase for something many, possibly all, of the participants here would like for a current political frontrunner.”
    MENTOR —> NO TERM

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  48. A "friendly-yet-fiendish" five-puzzle package created by an irregular Puzzlerian! contributor is the featured course on this week's Puzzleria!
    Titled "Math, Music, Meds and More," it features puzzles that combine:
    1. Body Parts & Other Fractions;
    2. Music Genres & Geometry;
    3. Medicine & Geometry;
    4. Controversy & Advocacy; and
    5. Tools,Tints & Potables.
    We upload P! around Midnight PST on the cusp of Thursday and Friday (but probably earlier).
    Also on our menus this week:
    * a Schpuzzle of the Week in which we properly rank the six rank-and-file chess pieces;
    * a Popular-Anthology & World Atlas Hors d’Oeuvre titled "Two habitats for tabby cats,"
    * a Side-By-Side Puzzle Slice titled "Peppy auto-parts professionals?"
    * a Lip-Smack-Snack-Pack Dessert titled "Budget + Judge = Bugles?" and
    * a dozen Riffing Off Shortz And Bergmann Slices titled "Telemachus’ Mentor... or Tormentor?" (including three penned by our friend Nodd and one penned by our friend Plantsmith).
    That adds up to 22 puzzles, or a bit more than three-per-day.
    Drop by for some "enigmatic irregularities!"

    LegoLambdaMathMusicMeds&More

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  49. I wrote, “Take the even letters of the word for the hurter. Rearrange. You get something everyone pays attention to if the time is right.” That’s MOON.

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  50. mentor -> tormentor
    I wrote:
    Think of a word for two people who help you. Rearrange the letters and you'll get a word for someone who hurts you. mentors, monster

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  51. MENTOR, TORMENTOR

    > Musical clue: Chubby Checker.

    "Torment" shares a root with "torture" and "torque", from the Greek for "twist".

    > Free Spirit

    That's the name of Julie Clark's T-34 MENTOR.

    >> If the word was THERAPIST, it would look like ISTISTTHERAP?
    > Interesting choice of example. Are you a Ted Lasso fan?

    "I can't be your MENTORwithout occasionally being your TORMENTOR."

    > 93219

    That's the ZIP code for Earlimart, CA, the namesake of an indie rock band whose fifth studio album, in 2007, was MENTOR TORMENTOR, as Snipper noted.

    > ... or a movie we're all familiar with.

    Tron was one of the answers two weeks ago.

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  52. Mentor, tormentor. I said: The first part of the longer word spells the last name of a singer. The remaining letters, rearranged, spell the last name of an actor. (Mel Torme, Rip Torn)

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  53. I tried to make 'tutor' work. Somehow I thought 'torturer' would result, but it didn't. When I finally solved it I posted my clue "1834". That's the chapter and verse (Matthew 18:34) where the wicked servant was delivered to the tormentors (jailers) until he paid his debt.

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    1. And I never did figure out Blaine's clue.

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    2. I didn't either. (I usually don't.) I thought it might have something to do with "otter," but I couldn't get the rest to work.

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    3. Something about securing an Evinrude for the day.

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    4. Must be. I also tried "moor," which looked promising, but alas... Blaine?

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    5. Blaine posted 'rent motor'. Congratulations to Word Woman!!!

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    6. Yes, I also went down the Tutor torturer track, and then the correct answer jumped out at me.

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  54. MENTOR, TORMENTOR

    I wanted to clue Plan 9 from Outer Space, but couldn't find a way to do it subtly, yet gracefully.

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  55. MENTOR/TORMENTOR

    Drop the repeated letters to get a kind of beings --- MEN

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  56. MENTOR → TORMENTOR

    Unavoidable late post...

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  57. MENTOR, TORMENTOR
    I posted that I was reminded of a car. In an episode of Seinfeld, Jerry notes that he does not like the term "mentee" and prefers the term protege. That, of course, reminds me of the Mazda Protege.

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  58. My reference was to the rock band Earlimart which released an album in 2007 entitled Mentor Tormentor (and for which my reference to interesting “material” was a near anagram for the band’s name).

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  59. And Jan, I didn’t realize there was a town in California with that name, and I might have driven through it on a recent trip that included visits to SF, SB and LA.

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  60. Rats, I didn't win anything on the 2023 NYT' Super Mega Crossword , but it was fun trying! Over 10K entries so I don't feel too bad!!

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  61. I posted: Think of a word for something a person might do. Copy the last three letters and repeat them at the front, and you'll get a new, longer word for something someone might do in response. What words are these?

    SHOUT, OUTSHOUT

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  62. The "Bad Players" in the Harry Potter series were "DeMentors"

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  63. I wrote: "Overwhelmed by too much NFL on TV, I'm trying to get inspiration to find an answer by watching the Maple Leafs and Raptors." The Maple Leafs NHL team and Raptors NBA team are from Toronto, abbreviated on scoreboards as TOR. They're men's teams.

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  64. I wrote "One can use the same letters that appear in the answer (but with different counts of how often the letters occur) to get a kind of mammal, which, by the way, has the same total number of letters as the longer word."
    Using the same letters as in MENTOR / TORMENTOR (but with different counts), one can spell MONOTREME.

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  65. My hint was: "there's a certain derivative of that word that displays a kind of false folk etymology."
    The derivative I had in mind is 'mentee', which is a kind of false formation, since in 'mentor' the 'or' isn't the suffix of agency! It's not somebody who ments.

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  66. This week's challenge comes from Joseph Young, who conducts the blog "Puzzleria!" Think of a familiar saying in seven words. The initial letters of the first three words in order spell a type of container. And the initials of the last four words in order spell something edible that might be found in this container. What's the saying?

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  67. People are normally reliable in certain environments.

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  68. Teachers understand better organization leads education onward.

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  69. For mentor and tormentor : I said
    are we talking of Blaine and Will here?
    Makes sense?

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  70. The first cut is sometimes the deepest

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