Sunday, March 01, 2026

NPR Sunday Puzzle (Mar 1, 2026): Famous 20th Century Writer

NPR Sunday Puzzle (Mar 1, 2026): Famous 20th Century Writer
Q: Name a famous 20th century writer. Remove the last two letters of the first name and the last letter of the last name. The result will name a clothing material. What is it?
Contrary to what Will might think, we've seen a version of this before.

Edit: "Version" sounds like "virgin" and "Will" sounds like "wool". This puzzle was very similar to a puzzle from January 2017.
A: VIRGINIA WOOLF --> VIRGIN WOOL

128 comments:

  1. Wow, you're up early today, Blaine!

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  2. Calls to mind several classics.

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  3. Blaine's unlinking of the previous version of this puzzle from the archive helps to confirm that I've got the right answer. It's like the dog that didn't bark.

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  4. Add one letter to the author's full last name, rearrange and you get something we may do with this blog.

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  5. Easy enough. I didn't need a Captain Midnight decoder ring like last week, just a list. Back to sleep for me.

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  6. Rearrange the even letters of the clothing material. You get something authors are good at using.

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    Replies
    1. This comment led me down a long rabbit hole trying to justify "spandex."

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  7. More than 1400 correct entries last week

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  8. Seems like an easy one today. An anagram of one of the writer’s names (first or last) has significance to the clothing material.

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  9. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  10. I solved this one in just a couple of minutes.

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  11. Same puzzle but a different 20th-century writer and get an item of clothing and a famous clothing locale.

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  12. Did anyone else think of a foreign car?

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  13. What am I missing? You don't remove the first letter from the last name?

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    1. Read it again. You remove the last letter from both names, and next to last letter of first name.

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    2. It's the last two letters of the first name and the last letter of the last name. So Mark Twain becomes Ma Twai

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    3. It's such an obvious answer if you did it my way. Back to the drawing board.

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  14. I have the answer. Working on a non-TMI clue.

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    1. Take the removed letters from the name. Rearrange them to get something you might hear mentioned on ESPN.

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  15. Well, it isn't seersucker, sharkskin, or polyester. But wouldn't it be fun if it were?!

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  16. Ahhhh. Okay, I have it. I was overthinking.
    I think I'll post a clue tomorrow or the next day.

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  17. TV Clue: Benny Hill
    pjbDidn'tEvenNeedAListForThisOne!

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  18. This week's NPR Puzzle is clever but not too tough to solve. The Schpuzzle of the Week on Puzzleria! this week (titled “Limerick ’bout a Lexicon”) is not too tough either, but it might be kinda fun. It reads:
    Fill in the three blanks in the limerick below with words of 9 letters, 8 letters, and about 14-or-so letters:
    Peg, a speed-reading abecedarian,
    Begged a lexicon from her _________,
    Began *scanning at “aardvark,”
    Never needing a ________...
    Ergo, now she’s an “______________!”

    * (See: verb, definition 2b)
    (Note: The word in third blank, no matter how you spell it, is one that Peg will not find in the dictionary... nor will you, alas.)

    LegoAlphaBetaG(r)ammatically(WithThanksToBlaineForHisIndulgence)

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  19. Hey has anyone else to submit a Sunday puzzle using the old way? It's making it difficult to get the old way of submit a puzzle idea.

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    Replies
    1. I really need help with the above !!

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    2. If you are looking for a way to get to the old NPR Contact Us form, try opening a post on this blog from a couple of years ago. I was still able to get to the old Contact Us form that wat the last time I tried it.

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    3. CAP: I found the link and i received a response like before.
      https://help.npr.org/contact/s/contact?request=Submit-a-puzzle-answer

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  20. Calling all lapel pin parties.

    Since it will take 3-4 weeks to order these lapel pins at $15 each, if you would like one please drop me an email now with your bricks and mortar address at:

    Word Woman S @ gmail dot calm.

    I will then send you my venmo address for payment.

    Please note '"I"m in" here as well.

    We currently have 6 ordered and need 14 more to make it a go. I'd like to order these pins by Wednesday, March fo(u)rth!

    Thanks!

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    Replies
    1. See the previous post for a look at the official Blaine's Puzzle Blog Lapel Pin.

      You don't want to miss this lapel pin!

      Thanks!

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    2. P.S. The main reason I am doing this is to support Bobby, a Blainesville participant, who was turned down for a Will Shortz NPR lapel pin because of the way he solved the puzzle.

      This is my way of protesting that decision. I want Bobby to get a lapel pin.

      "Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not." -Dr. Seuss, author and illustrator (2 Mar 1904-1991)

      Thanks!

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    3. Not to whine, but does it have to be Venmo? I have PayPal, and Zelle, but have not yet set up a Venmo account. I would like to avoid having to track yet another account and password, if possible.

      Thanks for doing this.

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    4. I'm in! I will send you the email.

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    5. Thanks, Lorenzo. 7 down 13 to go.

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    6. JAWS, i can do Zelle. Shoot me an email and I'll send the details

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    7. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    8. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    9. WW, I’m not familiar with the story of Bobby not getting a pin. What method of solving would disqualify someone from getting a pin?

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    10. Check out his comment from Fri Feb 20, 11:54:00 AM PST, on the 2/15 blog.

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    11. Cukrtis, go back and look for this post:
      BobbyFri Feb 20, 11:54:00 AM PST

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    12. Bobby apparently used a site that helped him solve the puzzle, disqualifying him from getting a lapel pin, according to the NPR intern.

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    13. FYI, I'm in as well. Just sent you an email, WW...

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    14. I'm in and I sent you an email. Thank you for the work you are doing!

      Did you get a note from me with my email / venmo?

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  21. Would "moth goos" count as "silk"?

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  22. No one knows where the Galapagos.

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    Replies
    1. Darwin knew. He tortoise well.

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    2. A clever lamarck, Scarlett!

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    3. Thanks Jan! I admit, though, that I had to look up lamarck. My repertoire is evolving.

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    4. Iguana know da truth, so he kelp looking.

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    5. When looking, it helps to be Beagle-eyed.

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    6. Oh, you are speaking of his bone voyage.

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    7. Is, that an Origin(al) pun?
      I’m Species less…

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    8. Yes, it is, unless you consider it the origin of feces and think it extincts.

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  23. "[T]here was that high magic to low puns...."
    --Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49

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  24. I ORDERED THE LAPEL PINS! Since we hemmed and hawed, they gave me an unasked-for discount and we're pretty close to covering the amount. Happy March Fo(u)rth, All. Be bold today. Heck, be a little bossy ;-)

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    Replies
    1. I was called "bossy" recently by someone I care about and decided to wear it proudly today ;-)

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    2. Bear with me folks. Something crashed my Venmo. I'm working on it but it's day 6 of food poisoning here and you'll understand if it takes a while to sort out.Thank heavens for miso soup!

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  25. Hm, my computer thinks it finally found the answer, after giving me
    ISAAK BABEL -> IS A BABE and
    JOYCE CARY -> JOY CAR
    I had thought Joyce Cary was a babe, but wrong again.

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  26. I can't see Isaak Babel's name without mourning what the world lost because some police functionary needed to meet a quota.

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  27. VIRGINIA WOOLF —> VIRGIN WOOL

    Spinoff puzzle: “Same puzzle but a different 20th-century writer and get an item of clothing and a famous clothing locale”
    I’ll wait for Nodd.

    Hint: “Deaths in brackets.”
    In Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, the deaths of three major characters—Mrs. Ramsay, Andrew Ramsay, and Prue Ramsay—are only mentioned in brackets.

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    1. Dr. K, sorry I caused you to wait to post your answer. I initially thought I had an answer in Jack London, but then I realized that by "same puzzle" you meant to include the removal of the three letters, so my answer didn't work. An answer that kinda works is Robert Parish, except that his one book only comes out in a few days, so he technically isn't a famous 20th century writer, though he was famous in the 20th century and will soon be a (co)writer. Bottom line, I don't know the answer to your spinoff.

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    2. Thanks, Nodd. My answer was Ayn Rand --> Aran. See also Snipper's alternate answer below. As a hoop fan and lifelong player, I really do like Robert Parish, though.

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  28. VIRGINIA WOOLF --> VIRGIN WOOL

    > Blaine's unlinking of the previous version of this puzzle from the archive helps to confirm that I've got the right answer.

    From January 15, 2017.

    > It's like the dog that didn't bark.

    Clueing both WOLF and WOOF.

    > I'll say 774.

    USS VIRGINIA, SSN-774, is the lead ship of her class, which succeeded the SEAWOLF class of atomic subs (callback to January 18).

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  29. "I predict high numbers this week." From Discogs.com: "For just a few months in 1964 (approximately July to October), "The Who" changed their name to the "High Numbers", releasing one single under that billing before reverting to the more inventive and appropriate "The Who." The name change resulted from their association with Pete Meaden, a mod who briefly managed them in mid-1964" ... No mention of Virginiaphobia.
    Luke 12:32 -- "Fear not, little flock..."

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  30. I wrote, “Rearrange the even letters of the clothing material. You get something authors are good at using.” That’s LINGO.

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    1. As I noted above, that sent me down a rabbit hole trying to justify SPANDEX. The previous version of this puzzle started with a clothing material in two words, making it far easier. I didn't get this one until Monday, although I did look for a writer named Woody Li.

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  31. You’ll find Noah’s Ark in the Bible, millennia ago. It was full of animals.
    You’ll find Jeff Zarkin on Puzzleria!.. within the hour! Jeff is full of puzzles!
    Just as Noah was a master watercraft-crafter, our friend Jeff is a master puzzle-crafter. His “Jeff Zarkin Puzzle Riffs” feature has been circumnavigating the "Puzzlerian Waters" since 2019.
    Jeff's latest “gemcraft” (titled “SuperZee’s Imposing Zarkinian Posers!) contains a "conundrumian cargo" of eight puzzles that we guarantee shall "float your boat."
    Also on our menus this week are:
    ~ a Schpuzzle of the Week titled “Frozen Homophonic Fishin’,”
    ~ a BoFeVineLine Hors d’Oeuvre titled “What cattle do (& a cat’ll do),”
    ~ a Not-So-Nice Puzzle Slice titled “Scandalized, banned and manhandled!”
    ~ a Pigmentary Dessert titled “Drawn and Quartered?” and
    ~ ten riffs of this week's NPR Sunday Puzzle, titled “Who’s Afraid of Virgin Wool?” (including six by Nodd and one by one by Plantsmith... both riffmeisters-extraordinaire!)
    Hop aboard, why doncha!

    LegoLambDaWeaseLlamAntelopElanDonkeYaKangaroOceloTigeRhinoceroSheePiGiraffElephanToucaNarwhaLeecHyenAngelfisHorneTurtlEmU???????

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    1. (My "U-animal" ends with a "mid-alphabetical letter...")

      LegoContinuing(...WhichIsPrecededByA"LatinHeart")

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  32. My clue was: "I think I'll post a clue tomorrow or the next day." Because VW had a collection of short stories called "Monday or Tuesday". (And, obviously, I posted my clue on Sunday!)

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  33. Virginia Woolf >> Virgin Wool

    The, “Big Bad Wolf,” is a staple of fairy tales and folk literature, from the classics The Three Little Pigs, and Little Red Riding Hood, to Sergei Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf. But none is more appropriate to this week’s puzzle than, Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”.

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  34. I likewise was hinting at Albee's play by writing "My old friend," the last half of the first line of S&G's "The Sound of Silence," which later states that "the words of the prophets are written on the subway walls."- That was, in fact, where Albee got the title for his play, from a graffito on a NYC subway car. (I thought the first half of that first line would have been TMI. The second half was probably TLI.)

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  35. VIRGINIA WOOLF, VIRGIN WOOL

    I wrote I solved this one in just a couple of minutes as a reference to the The Hours.

    The Hours was the original working title for Virginia Woolf’s landmark 1925 novel, Mrs. Dalloway

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  36. Replies
    1. Do you think WW will send out those blog pins in a Norman Mailer?

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    2. Update on the lapel pins -- I have not absconded with your pin money folks but am on the way to Urgent Care. Fingers crossed.

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    3. I suggest you go to a hospital, and avoid urgent care like the plague. I base this on my personal experience recently.

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    4. The pins can wait, WW. Get well soon!

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    5. We all agree, Word Woman. I am praying for you, and for your medical professionals.
      LegoSerious

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    6. Praying for you, WW. I actually started when you mentioned day 6 of food poisoning. Get well soon!

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    7. Thanks everyone. I'm home, I'm tired, getting what I need to get well. Urgent Care was excellent.

      Hopefully, more pin news over the wknd. Stay tuned.

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    8. Great news, indeed! Speedy recovery, WW!

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    9. May your recovery continue to go well, WW!

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    10. Thanks, everyone, for your good wishes for my health.

      I have placed and paid for our order of 50 lapel pins. It takes 3 weeks for production and 3 days for shipping so the lapel pins should be here about April Fool's Day.

      I'll then address and send them out to you in padded envelopes.

      Thanks for your patience!

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    11. NOTE BIG RE: LAPEL PIN MONEY: Please no longer use my Venmo to send lapel pin money. If you used it and it crashed on you, please either use Zelle or email me and I will provide you my physical address.

      I use Venmo for teaching chess, math and science, and its crashing for so many days is a headache I did not expect.

      AGAIN, DO NOT use my Venmo going forward. If you already paid by Venmo and got confirmation you are good. Use Zelle or I will send you a bricks and mortar address.

      It's always something.

      Thanks!

      Delete
  37. Hmmmm - looks like I went down a different path with Ayn Rand = Aran. Acceptable alternative answer?

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    1. It seems that Aran jumpers are a style of wool sweater from the Aran islands of Ireland, rather than a clothing material per se. But, worthy of a mention from the Puzzlemaster.

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    2. See my spinoff puzzle above.

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    3. Yes, jan, but it might be well to remember not to sunbathe on blacktop or you might end up with a tartan.

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    4. I grew up in NYC and sunbathing on rooftops was routinely referred to as "tar beach."

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    5. Ha! I considered roofs instead of blacktop.

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  38. My clue: "Queen of the harpies!"

    This is a quote from an early classic Simpsons episode featuring a squabbling couple clearly modeled on Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor's characters in the film "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

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  39. VIRGINIA WOOLF, VIRGIN WOOL
    Benny Hill once spoofed the movie "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?", playing both Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. The opening credits were too big for the whole screen(sort of a takeoff on CinemaScope), so it actually said "Who's Afraid of Virgin Wool", which of course starred Rich Burt and Eliza Tayl.
    Sample dialogue:
    "So, you and your wife have been married for 14 years."
    "You know, it's funny. I don't remember breaking two mirrors."
    (Sorry, one of my favorite jokes in the sketch there. Not verbatim, but you get the idea.)
    pjbIsSoGladThisWeek'sChallengeWasActuallyThatEasy!

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  40. VIRGINIA WOOLF, VIRGIN WOOL

    I had posted the clue, "Take the removed letters from the name. Rearrange them to get something you might hear mentioned on ESPN."

    The removed letters are IAF. Rearrange those into FIA, the governing body of Formula One auto racing, which is often broadcast on ESPN (and the 2026 season begins in Australia this weekend).

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  41. This week's challenge comes from Donn Dimichele, of Redlands, CA. Name a famous musical duo. Remove four consecutive letters of the duo's name and phonetically you'll name a famous nonmusical duo. Who are they?

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    Replies
    1. I'm such a fan, I keep their picture in my wallet.

      Delete
  42. Huh, I almost immediately found a musical duo that forms another musical duo when I remove four consecutive letters.
    Haven't got the intended puzzle answer though.

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  43. Oh. Okay. I misread the puzzle. Or I forgot what it asked almost instantly, one or the other.
    I think this will be pretty easy for Blainesvillains.

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For NPR puzzle posts, don't post the answer or any hints that could lead to the answer before the deadline (usually Thursday at 3pm ET). If you know the answer, submit it to NPR, but don't give it away here.

You may provide indirect hints to the answer to show you know it, but make sure they don't assist with solving. You can openly discuss your hints and the answer after the deadline. Thank you.