Game #164: Out of Order!

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mellytu74
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#51 Post by mellytu74 » Wed Jan 04, 2017 9:33 pm

Could #95 be someone other than Ralph Fiennes?

Because, this was nagging me.

44. In an 1842 essay, this American thinker defined the philosophical movement of which he was the leading light as “the Saturnalia or excess of Faith; the presentiment of a faith proper to man in his integrity, excessive only when his imperfect obedience hinders the satisfaction of his wish.” Got that?

I am pretty sure this is RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

Frank wouldn't give us two of the first name (even if one is pronounced differently) in a game like this.

Would he?

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#52 Post by mellytu74 » Wed Jan 04, 2017 9:37 pm

jarnon wrote:86. GEORGE C. SCOTT + HALAS (Lhasa) = 17. SID LUCKMAN
77. DREW CAREY + PEARSON (Persona) = 36. JACK ANDERSON
28. NORMAN MAILER + BATES (Beast) = 64. ALFRED HITCHCOCK
73. LEO BAEKELAND + SZILARD (Lizards) = 6. not Strangelove
6. is EDWARD TELLER

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#53 Post by jarnon » Wed Jan 04, 2017 9:45 pm

Raffle is an anagram of Arthur Laffer, who goes with Milton Friedman.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#54 Post by mellytu74 » Wed Jan 04, 2017 10:06 pm

mellytu74 wrote:Could #95 be someone other than Ralph Fiennes?

Because, this was nagging me.

44. In an 1842 essay, this American thinker defined the philosophical movement of which he was the leading light as “the Saturnalia or excess of Faith; the presentiment of a faith proper to man in his integrity, excessive only when his imperfect obedience hinders the satisfaction of his wish.” Got that?

I am pretty sure this is RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

Frank wouldn't give us two of the first name (even if one is pronounced differently) in a game like this.

Would he?
No he wouldn't.

95. This actor’s performances in two installments of a blockbuster film series earned him two Razzy Awards for Worst Supporting Actor and one MTV Movie Award as Best Villain.

This is HAYDEN CHRISTENSEN

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#55 Post by franktangredi » Wed Jan 04, 2017 10:10 pm

All of the ones where several alternate answers are given include the correct answer.

Of the ones with a single answer with a question mark, six are right and three are wrong.

Three of the "definites" are wrong, including one that's already been matched. (The match is right, but the first name comes from one of the unanswered questions.)

Update: I see that, since this consolidation was posted, Melly found the wrong 'definite' that has already been matched ... but now one of the other wrong 'definites' has been matched.

The third wrong definite is a case of right church, wrong pew.

jarnon wrote:This game is moving so fast, a consolidation will help.


Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then, match two of the names with one of the Associated Words according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Forty of the names will be used twice, each time in a different capacity.

1. *BILL CLINTON

2. “Hail, true body” is the English translation of the last motet written by this composer. (It has been one of my favorite pieces of music since we played it in All-County Orchestra in 1969.)

3. WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY
4. *JACKIE GLEASON

5. In 1984, this track star shared Sportsperson of the Year honors with a female gymnast.
EDWIN MOSES or CARL LEWIS?

6. One of the most prominent 20th century physicists to never win the Nobel Prize, he once told an interviewer, “"My name is not Strangelove. I don't know about Strangelove. I'm not interested in Strangelove.”
WERNER VON BRAUN?

7. DJMQ: He may have been the first – and was certainly the most important – dancer to work with both Twyla Tharp and George Balanchine – in that order.
Another DJMQ appears at #70.

8. JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU
9. **HUGH HEFNER
10. *MARCEL DUCHAMPS
11. J.E.B. STUART
12. GIUSEPPE MAZZINI

13. This leading figure of the Chicago jazz scene was a professional banjoist by the age of sixteen.

14. *MILTON FRIEDMAN

15. The heir of three leading European dynasties, he ruled two empires in the 16th century, but the pressure of constant warfare led him to abdicate and retire to a monastery.

16. LUIGI PIRANDELLO
17. SID LUCKMAN
18. DIANA RIGG
19. *HAROLD KROTO
20. ANNE BOLEYN
21. **AL CAPONE
22. *JAMES BOND

23. An expert in Italian cuisine, this chef won James Beard awards for Best New Restaurant of 1998, Best Chef in New York City in 2002, and Best Restaurateur in 2008.
MARIO BATALI?

24. CLAUDE HOPKINS
25. *LES PAUL
26. *ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ

27. One of the philosophical architects of German Romanticism, he was also he son-in-law of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn.

28. In addition to winning two Pulitzer Prizes, this distinguished American novelist co-founded an alternative news weekly that itself has won three Pulitzers.
NORMAN MAILER?

29. *ROBINSON CANO
30. PRESTON STURGES

31. This Cuban epidemiologist is best remembered for being the first to postulate that a virulent disease was borne by the Aedes aegypti.

32. This peace activist drove an ambulance during the Spanish Civil War and was imprisoned for failing to show up for his draft physical during World War II, but he gained wider fame when he was arrested for his efforts to protest a later war.

33. She had the second-longest combined tenure as First Lady and Second Lady of the United States.
ELEANOR ROOSEVELT or BARBARA BUSH

34. The same year he published The Rules of Sociological Method, he also set up the first department of sociology at any university in Europe.

35. FRANCISCO VÁSQUEZ DE CORONADO

36. Among the biggest stories covered and uncovered by this journalist and columnist were the CIA plot to assassinate Castro, the ITT scandal, the harassment of John Lennon by the Nixon administration, and the Iran-Contra affair.
JACK ANDERSON?

37. *COLIN POWELL
38. *BILLY BIGELOW

39. This German biologist and naturalist coined such terms as ecology, phylogeny, stem cell, and phylum.

40. **JOHNNY MERCER
41. MARY BOLAND

42. This novelist’s 1925 masterpiece is generally considered to have the greatest closing line in the history of American fiction.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD or ERNEST HEMINGWAY

43. LANCE ARMSTRONG

44. In an 1842 essay, this American thinker defined the philosophical movement of which he was the leading light as “the Saturnalia or excess of Faith; the presentiment of a faith proper to man in his integrity, excessive only when his imperfect obedience hinders the satisfaction of his wish.” Got that?

45. **ROGER PENSKE
46. *CLARENCE THOMAS
47. BILL W.
48. GARY COOPER

49. In 1931, this Wallonian writer published the first of 76 novels featuring the same fictional detective.

50. Laws in spectroscopy, circuit theory, and thermochemistry are named for this 19th century Germany physicist, who also coined the term “black box radiation.”
MAX PLANCK?

51. *ANTONIO PROHIAS

52. His total of 38 Number One hits on the Billboard country music chart is exceeded only by George Strait and Conway Twitty.
GARTH BROOKS, GEORGE JONES, MERLE HAGGARD or RONNIE MILSAP?

53. KYLE ROTE JR.

54. A colleague of Freud, he broke away from the Freudian school of psychoanalysis to form his own school of “individual psychology.” (Sigmund was pissed.)

55. The empress never really had that equine affair, but she did have quite a fling with this general, who fathered two of her children and helped her get rid of her husband.

56. GREG ABBOTT
57. RACHEL HUNTER

58. In a 1974 article, this Nobel Prize-winning chemist first propounded the theory that chlorofluorocarbons contribute to ozone depletion.

59. AUBREY VICTOR "DIT" CLAPPER

60. This metaphysical poet saw Eternity the other night and didn’t even Tweet about it.

61. MICHAEL COLLINS
62. *FULTON SHEEN
63. CAT STEVENS
64. ALFRED HITCHCOCK

65. A lot of people think a news broadcast on October 3, 1983, effectively ended this journalist’s career.
JESSICA SAVITCH?

66. *BUGS BUNNY
67. *DRED SCOTT

68. The goal of the institution he founded in 1919 was, in his words, “to bring together all creative effort into one whole, to reunify all the disciplines of practical art – sculpture, painting, handicrafts, and the crafts – as inseparable components of a new architecture.”
WALTER GROPIUS?

69. *ALBERT DESALVO

70. DJMQ: He was the original choreographer of such classic ballets as La Esmerelda, Ondine, and, of course, Giselle.

71. This general served as Commander-in-Chief of the German army at the outset of World War II, but was forced into retirement after the failure of the Nazi assault on Moscow.

72. He was the last British Prime Minister to have previously served as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
WINSTON CHURCHILL?

73. LEO BAEKELAND
74. *FRANK BEARD
75. *CLIFFORD ODETTS
76. *RAYMOND BERRY
77. *DREW CAREY

78. This archaeologist is best known for unearthing a 9000 year-old Bronze Age palace on an island in the Mediterranean.

79. A student of Martin Luther, this theologian published the first translation of the Pentateuch into Danish.

80. The company he founded in 1906 – and which is still going strong today – was one of the first to include nutritional labels on its products and the very first to offer prizes for children inside its boxes.
WILL KEITH KELLOGG?

81. OLEG CASSINI

82. During her tenure as president of NOW, she engaged in more than 80 debates with Phyllis Schafly over the ERA, but earned the enmity of some members over her advocacy of equal custody rights for men in divorce cases.

83. *MARILYN HORNE
84. **TONY ZALE
85. TSAR NICHOLAS II
86. GEORGE C. SCOTT
87. **DANIEL DEFOE
88. ALESSANDRO VOLTA
89. SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
90. FRANK BOAS
91. *JERRY GARCIA

92. Among third basemen, only Brooks Robinson and George Brett appeared in more consecutive All-Star Games than this Omaha-born Hall of Famer.
EDDIE MATHEWS or WADE BOGGS?

93. NATHANEAL GREENE
94. *HOWARD HUGHES
95. *RALPH FIENNES

96. This philosopher’s magnum opus is divided into three parts – the first part dealing with the nature of God and of man; the second part dealing with morality; and the unfinished third part dealing with Christ and the end of the world.

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)

98. RENOIR
99. SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
100. *RICHARD NIXON


MATCHES

21. AL CAPONE + UNSER (Nurse) = 45. ROGER PENSKE
37. COLIN POWELL + MOCHRIE (Homeric) = 77. DREW CAREY
84. TONY ZALE + CURTIS (Citrus) = 69. ALBERT DESALVO
45. ROGER PENSKE + TANEY (Yenta) = 67. DRED SCOTT
38. BILLY BIGELOW + GIBBONS (Sobbing) = 74. FRANK BEARD
87. DANIEL DEFOE + CRAIG (Cigar) = 22. JAMES BOND
66. BUGS BUNNY + MORAN (Roman) = 21. AL CAPONE
95. RALPH FIENNES + KRAMDEN (Denmark) = 4. JACKIE GLEASON
40. JOHNNY MERCER + UNITAS (Austin) = 76. RAYMOND BERRY
29. ROBINSON CANO + CRUSOE (Source) = 87. DANIEL DEFOE
19. HAROLD KROTO + ARLEN (Renal) = 40. JOHNNY MERCER
9. HUGH HEFNER + SLOAN (Salon) = 100. RICHARD NIXON
83. MARILYN HORNE + MORENO (No More!) = 9. HUGH HEFNER
10. MARCEL DUCHAMPS + CERDAN (Dancer) = 84. TONY ZALE
14. MILTON FRIEDMAN + BERLE (Rebel) = 62. FULTON SHEEN
75. CLIFFORD ODETTS + IRVING (Virgin) = 94. HOWARD HUGHES
25. LES PAUL + ASPIN (Spain) = 1. BILL CLINTON
26. ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ + SCALIA (Calais) = 46. CLARENCE THOMAS


PARTIAL MATCHES

BOB? + WEIR (Wire) = 91. JERRY GARCIA
51. ANTONIO PROHIAS + SALIERI (Israeli) = ?


UNMATCHED WORDS

Rap
Ragtime
Car Wash
Grease
Dr. No
Persona
Demons
Phantom
Menace
Beast
Lizards
Deer
Horse
Orca
Great Dane
Lhasa
Paris
Lisbon
Salem
Harlem
Borneo
China
Lakers
Angel
Bruin
Ranger
Diver
Slugger
Oilman
Herald
Subteen
Puritans
Old Men
Darlin’
O. Henry
Lavender
Stew
Red Meats
Red Giant
Comet
Tundra
Vaginal
Clearly
Ode
Romance
Camera
Yoga
Raffle
Not Me!
Hell, Yes!
Last edited by franktangredi on Wed Jan 04, 2017 10:14 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#56 Post by mellytu74 » Wed Jan 04, 2017 10:11 pm

jarnon wrote:Raffle is an anagram of Arthur Laffer, who goes with Milton Friedman.
12. GIUSEPPE MAZZINI + Diver gives us Guiseppe Verdi
93. NATHANEAL GREENE + Stew gives us Nathaneal West

63. CAT STEVENS + Orca = Cat Cora, who goes with fellow Iron Chef 23. MARIO BATALI

44. RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + KRAMDEN (Denmark) = 4. JACKIE GLEASON

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#57 Post by silverscreenselect » Wed Jan 04, 2017 11:03 pm

franktangredi wrote:
47. In 1935, this Akron physician had a fateful meeting with a failed Vermont businessman.
This is a case of right church, wrong row. The physician is not Bill W., but Dr. Bob.

And James Garner played Dr. Bob in a TV movie, so there's the match with James Bond and Ranger.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#58 Post by silverscreenselect » Wed Jan 04, 2017 11:14 pm

franktangredi wrote:

49. In 1931, this Wallonian writer published the first of 76 novels featuring the same fictional detective.


Ragtime
This is Georges Simenon, and since Ragtime anagrams to Maigret, one of the remaining people must be a Jules.

Two other partials.

Jessica Savitch matches with Angel for Jessica Lange.

And DIana Rigg matches with Menace for Patrick Macnee, so there must be a Patrick somewhere.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#59 Post by jarnon » Wed Jan 04, 2017 11:28 pm

silverscreenselect wrote:
franktangredi wrote:
47. In 1935, this Akron physician had a fateful meeting with a failed Vermont businessman.
This is a case of right church, wrong row. The physician is not Bill W., but Dr. Bob.

And James Garner played Dr. Bob in a TV movie, so there's the match with James Bond and Ranger.
Good catch. Dr. Bob also completes the partial with Bob Weir and Jerry Garcia.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#60 Post by silverscreenselect » Thu Jan 05, 2017 8:41 am

Another partial:

Slugger yields Ruggles for Charlie Ruggles, frequent on-screen partner of Mary Boland, so there should be a Charlie in the missing answers.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#61 Post by silverscreenselect » Thu Jan 05, 2017 1:57 pm

A bit of a problem here. Both Verdi and Salieri wrote operas entitled Falstaff about the Shakespearean character, so Falstaff could logically link up with either of them. My guess would be that it's Salieri, since he wrote very few pieces that are in any way memorable, while Verdi has lots and lots of possible links. The only other logical links I could think of for Salieri would either be Mozart or F. Murray Abraham, neither of whom works very well in this puzzle.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#62 Post by franktangredi » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:15 pm

silverscreenselect wrote:A bit of a problem here. Both Verdi and Salieri wrote operas entitled Falstaff about the Shakespearean character, so Falstaff could logically link up with either of them. My guess would be that it's Salieri, since he wrote very few pieces that are in any way memorable, while Verdi has lots and lots of possible links.
I wasn't aware of Salieri's Falstaff.
silverscreenselect wrote:The only other logical links I could think of for Salieri would either be Mozart or F. Murray Abraham, neither of whom works very well in this puzzle.
Are you sure about that?

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#63 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:22 pm

franktangredi wrote:
silverscreenselect wrote:A bit of a problem here. Both Verdi and Salieri wrote operas entitled Falstaff about the Shakespearean character, so Falstaff could logically link up with either of them. My guess would be that it's Salieri, since he wrote very few pieces that are in any way memorable, while Verdi has lots and lots of possible links.
I wasn't aware of Salieri's Falstaff.
silverscreenselect wrote:The only other logical links I could think of for Salieri would either be Mozart or F. Murray Abraham, neither of whom works very well in this puzzle.
Are you sure about that?
We're not looking for F Murray. We're just looking for F.

As in F Scott.

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#64 Post by silverscreenselect » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:31 pm

franktangredi wrote:
silverscreenselect wrote:A bit of a problem here. Both Verdi and Salieri wrote operas entitled Falstaff about the Shakespearean character, so Falstaff could logically link up with either of them. My guess would be that it's Salieri, since he wrote very few pieces that are in any way memorable, while Verdi has lots and lots of possible links.
I wasn't aware of Salieri's Falstaff.
silverscreenselect wrote:The only other logical links I could think of for Salieri would either be Mozart or F. Murray Abraham, neither of whom works very well in this puzzle.
Are you sure about that?
Frank:

I thought a New York theater aficionado like you would surely have seen this:

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/21/arts ... thing.html

Of course F. Murray Abraham doesn't work here wince there's no word on the list that anagrams to Abraham.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#65 Post by silverscreenselect » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:38 pm

franktangredi wrote:2. “Hail, true body” is the English translation of the last motet written by this composer. (It has been one of my favorite pieces of music since we played it in All-County Orchestra in 1969.)
D-Oh. I was looking for associated words that anagrammed to Abraham or Mozart and then I realized I was doing it the wrong way.

This is Mozart, and there's the link to Salieri.
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#66 Post by franktangredi » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:49 pm

silverscreenselect wrote:
franktangredi wrote:2. “Hail, true body” is the English translation of the last motet written by this composer. (It has been one of my favorite pieces of music since we played it in All-County Orchestra in 1969.)
D-Oh. I was looking for associated words that anagrammed to Abraham or Mozart and then I realized I was doing it the wrong way.

This is Mozart, and there's the link to Salieri.
For everyone's enjoyment:


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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#67 Post by jarnon » Thu Jan 05, 2017 10:06 pm

Four more partials:
FRANZ? + HALDER (Herald) = 71. Nazi general
41. MARY BOLAND + SHELLEY (Hell, Yes!) = ?
ERNST? + CHAIN (China) = 99. SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
LIONEL? + HAMPTON (Phantom) = 13. Chicago jazz musician
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#68 Post by jarnon » Thu Jan 05, 2017 10:40 pm

UPDATED CONSOLIDATION


Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then, match two of the names with one of the Associated Words according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Forty of the names will be used twice, each time in a different capacity.

1. *BILL CLINTON
2. *WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
3. WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY
4. *JACKIE GLEASON

5. In 1984, this track star shared Sportsperson of the Year honors with a female gymnast.
EDWIN MOSES or CARL LEWIS?

6. *EDWARD TELLER

7. DJMQ: He may have been the first – and was certainly the most important – dancer to work with both Twyla Tharp and George Balanchine – in that order.
Another DJMQ appears at #70.

8. JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU
9. **HUGH HEFNER
10. *MARCEL DUCHAMPS
11. J.E.B. STUART
12. *GIUSEPPE MAZZINI

13. This leading figure of the Chicago jazz scene was a professional banjoist by the age of sixteen.

14. **MILTON FRIEDMAN

15. The heir of three leading European dynasties, he ruled two empires in the 16th century, but the pressure of constant warfare led him to abdicate and retire to a monastery.

16. LUIGI PIRANDELLO
17. *SID LUCKMAN
18. *DIANA RIGG
19. *HAROLD KROTO
20. ANNE BOLEYN
21. **AL CAPONE
22. **JAMES BOND
23. *MARIO BATALI
24. CLAUDE HOPKINS
25. *LES PAUL
26. *ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ

27. One of the philosophical architects of German Romanticism, he was also he son-in-law of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn.

28. *NORMAN MAILER
29. *ROBINSON CANO
30. PRESTON STURGES

31. This Cuban epidemiologist is best remembered for being the first to postulate that a virulent disease was borne by the Aedes aegypti.

32. This peace activist drove an ambulance during the Spanish Civil War and was imprisoned for failing to show up for his draft physical during World War II, but he gained wider fame when he was arrested for his efforts to protest a later war.

33. She had the second-longest combined tenure as First Lady and Second Lady of the United States.
ELEANOR ROOSEVELT or BARBARA BUSH

34. The same year he published The Rules of Sociological Method, he also set up the first department of sociology at any university in Europe.

35. FRANCISCO VÁSQUEZ DE CORONADO
36. *JACK ANDERSON
37. *COLIN POWELL
38. *BILLY BIGELOW

39. This German biologist and naturalist coined such terms as ecology, phylogeny, stem cell, and phylum.

40. **JOHNNY MERCER
41. **MARY BOLAND

42. This novelist’s 1925 masterpiece is generally considered to have the greatest closing line in the history of American fiction.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD or ERNEST HEMINGWAY?

43. LANCE ARMSTRONG
44. *RALPH WALDO EMERSON
45. **ROGER PENSKE
46. *CLARENCE THOMAS
47. **DR. BOB
48. GARY COOPER
49. *GEORGES SIMENON

50. Laws in spectroscopy, circuit theory, and thermochemistry are named for this 19th century Germany physicist, who also coined the term “black box radiation.”
MAX PLANCK?

51. *ANTONIO PROHIAS

52. His total of 38 Number One hits on the Billboard country music chart is exceeded only by George Strait and Conway Twitty.
GARTH BROOKS, GEORGE JONES, MERLE HAGGARD or RONNIE MILSAP?

53. KYLE ROTE JR.

54. A colleague of Freud, he broke away from the Freudian school of psychoanalysis to form his own school of “individual psychology.” (Sigmund was pissed.)

55. The empress never really had that equine affair, but she did have quite a fling with this general, who fathered two of her children and helped her get rid of her husband.

56. GREG ABBOTT
57. RACHEL HUNTER

58. In a 1974 article, this Nobel Prize-winning chemist first propounded the theory that chlorofluorocarbons contribute to ozone depletion.

59. AUBREY VICTOR "DIT" CLAPPER

60. This metaphysical poet saw Eternity the other night and didn’t even Tweet about it.

61. MICHAEL COLLINS
62. *FULTON SHEEN
63. *CAT STEVENS
64. *ALFRED HITCHCOCK
65. *JESSICA SAVITCH
66. *BUGS BUNNY
67. *DRED SCOTT

68. The goal of the institution he founded in 1919 was, in his words, “to bring together all creative effort into one whole, to reunify all the disciplines of practical art – sculpture, painting, handicrafts, and the crafts – as inseparable components of a new architecture.”
WALTER GROPIUS?

69. *ALBERT DESALVO

70. DJMQ: He was the original choreographer of such classic ballets as La Esmerelda, Ondine, and, of course, Giselle.

71. This general served as Commander-in-Chief of the German army at the outset of World War II, but was forced into retirement after the failure of the Nazi assault on Moscow.

72. He was the last British Prime Minister to have previously served as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
WINSTON CHURCHILL?

73. *LEO BAEKELAND
74. *FRANK BEARD
75. *CLIFFORD ODETTS
76. *RAYMOND BERRY
77. **DREW CAREY

78. This archaeologist is best known for unearthing a 9000 year-old Bronze Age palace on an island in the Mediterranean.

79. A student of Martin Luther, this theologian published the first translation of the Pentateuch into Danish.

80. The company he founded in 1906 – and which is still going strong today – was one of the first to include nutritional labels on its products and the very first to offer prizes for children inside its boxes.
WILL KEITH KELLOGG?

81. OLEG CASSINI

82. During her tenure as president of NOW, she engaged in more than 80 debates with Phyllis Schafly over the ERA, but earned the enmity of some members over her advocacy of equal custody rights for men in divorce cases.

83. *MARILYN HORNE
84. **TONY ZALE
85. TSAR NICHOLAS II
86. *GEORGE C. SCOTT
87. **DANIEL DEFOE
88. ALESSANDRO VOLTA
89. *SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
90. FRANK BOAS
91. *JERRY GARCIA

92. Among third basemen, only Brooks Robinson and George Brett appeared in more consecutive All-Star Games than this Omaha-born Hall of Famer.
EDDIE MATHEWS or WADE BOGGS?

93. *NATHANEAL GREENE
94. *HOWARD HUGHES
95. HAYDEN CHRISTENSEN

96. This philosopher’s magnum opus is divided into three parts – the first part dealing with the nature of God and of man; the second part dealing with morality; and the unfinished third part dealing with Christ and the end of the world.

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)

98. PIERRE AUGUSTE RENOIR
99. *SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
100. *RICHARD NIXON


MATCHES

21. AL CAPONE + UNSER (Nurse) = 45. ROGER PENSKE
37. COLIN POWELL + MOCHRIE (Homeric) = 77. DREW CAREY
84. TONY ZALE + CURTIS (Citrus) = 69. ALBERT DESALVO
45. ROGER PENSKE + TANEY (Yenta) = 67. DRED SCOTT
38. BILLY BIGELOW + GIBBONS (Sobbing) = 74. FRANK BEARD
87. DANIEL DEFOE + CRAIG (Cigar) = 22. JAMES BOND
66. BUGS BUNNY + MORAN (Roman) = 21. AL CAPONE
44. RALPH WALDO EMERSON + KRAMDEN (Denmark) = 4. JACKIE GLEASON
40. JOHNNY MERCER + UNITAS (Austin) = 76. RAYMOND BERRY
29. ROBINSON CANO + CRUSOE (Source) = 87. DANIEL DEFOE
19. HAROLD KROTO + ARLEN (Renal) = 40. JOHNNY MERCER
9. HUGH HEFNER + SLOAN (Salon) = 100. RICHARD NIXON
83. MARILYN HORNE + MORENO (No More!) = 9. HUGH HEFNER
10. MARCEL DUCHAMPS + CERDAN (Dancer) = 84. TONY ZALE
14. MILTON FRIEDMAN + BERLE (Rebel) = 62. FULTON SHEEN
75. CLIFFORD ODETTS + IRVING (Virgin) = 94. HOWARD HUGHES
25. LES PAUL + ASPIN (Spain) = 1. BILL CLINTON
26. ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ + SCALIA (Calais) = 46. CLARENCE THOMAS
86. GEORGE C. SCOTT + HALAS (Lhasa) = 17. SID LUCKMAN
77. DREW CAREY + PEARSON (Persona) = 36. JACK ANDERSON
28. NORMAN MAILER + BATES (Beast) = 64. ALFRED HITCHCOCK
73. LEO BAEKELAND + SZILARD (Lizards) = 6. EDWARD TELLER
63. CAT STEVENS + CORA (Orca) = 23. MARIO BATALI
47. DR. BOB + WEIR (Wire) = 91. JERRY GARCIA
22. JAMES BOND + GARNER (Ranger) = 47. DR. BOB
12. GIUSEPPE MAZZINI + VERDI (Diver) = 89. SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
51. ANTONIO PROHIAS + SALIERI (Israeli) = 2. WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART


PARTIAL MATCHES

ARTHUR? + LAFFER (Raffle) = 14. MILTON FRIEDMAN
93. NATHANEAL GREENE + WEST (Stew) = ?
JULES? + MAIGRET (Ragtime) = 49. GEORGES SIMENON
65. JESSICA SAVITCH + LANGE (Angel) = ?
PATRICK? + MACNEE (Menace) = 18. DIANA RIGG
CHARLIE? + RUGGLES (Slugger) = 41. MARY BOLAND
FRANZ? + HALDER (Herald) = 71. Nazi general
41. MARY BOLAND + SHELLEY (Hell, Yes!) = ?
ERNST? + CHAIN (China) = 99. SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
LIONEL? + HAMPTON (Phantom) = 13. Chicago jazz musician


UNMATCHED WORDS

Rap
Car Wash
Grease
Dr. No
Demons
Deer
Horse
Great Dane
Paris
Lisbon
Salem
Harlem
Borneo
Lakers
Bruin
Oilman
Subteen
Puritans
Old Men
Darlin’
O. Henry
Lavender
Red Meats
Red Giant
Comet
Tundra
Vaginal
Clearly
Ode
Romance
Camera
Yoga
Not Me!
Слава Україні!

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mellytu74
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#69 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Jan 05, 2017 10:42 pm

A couple of stabs at unanswered questions:

7. DJMQ: He may have been the first – and was certainly the most important – dancer to work with both Twyla Tharp and George Balanchine – in that order.

Mikhail Baryshnikov?

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)

GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON?

If it is, I suspect that's our Mary Shelley match.

96. This philosopher’s magnum opus is divided into three parts – the first part dealing with the nature of God and of man; the second part dealing with morality; and the unfinished third part dealing with Christ and the end of the world.

Summa Theologica? If it is, that's THOMAS AQUINAS

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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#70 Post by franktangredi » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:00 pm

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)
Oops, this is the first time I noticed an important word got dropped from this clue. It should be

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself famous, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)

The missing word is a reference to a famous quotation. If you identify this person, it will help you fill in a partial and identify which one of the 'definites' is still wrong.
And once you figure out the correct answer to (b), it will fill in another partial.

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mellytu74
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#71 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:04 pm

82. During her tenure as president of NOW, she engaged in more than 80 debates with Phyllis Schafly over the ERA, but earned the enmity of some members over her advocacy of equal custody rights for men in divorce cases.

ELEANOR SMEAL?

58. In a 1974 article, this Nobel Prize-winning chemist first propounded the theory that chlorofluorocarbons contribute to ozone depletion.

Frank Sherwood Rowland

15. The heir of three leading European dynasties, he ruled two empires in the 16th century, but the pressure of constant warfare led him to abdicate and retire to a monastery.

CHARLES V -- completes the Ruggles/Boland match

60. This metaphysical poet saw Eternity the other night and didn’t even Tweet about it.

HENRY VAUGHN?
Last edited by mellytu74 on Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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franktangredi
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#72 Post by franktangredi » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:07 pm

As noted, one of the definites is wrong. It's already matched with someone, but once you get the answer to the corrected #97, you'll be able to slot that person into the same spot.

Two of the answers with a question mark are correct, two are incorrect.

All of the ones with multiple answers include the correct answer.

All but one of the partials is correct.

There's one pair in particular that I am shocked nobody has spotted. You should certainly have been looking for it!
jarnon wrote:UPDATED CONSOLIDATION


Identify the 100 people in the clues below. Then, match two of the names with one of the Associated Words according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Forty of the names will be used twice, each time in a different capacity.

1. *BILL CLINTON
2. *WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
3. WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY
4. *JACKIE GLEASON

5. In 1984, this track star shared Sportsperson of the Year honors with a female gymnast.
EDWIN MOSES or CARL LEWIS?

6. *EDWARD TELLER

7. DJMQ: He may have been the first – and was certainly the most important – dancer to work with both Twyla Tharp and George Balanchine – in that order.
Another DJMQ appears at #70.

8. JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU
9. **HUGH HEFNER
10. *MARCEL DUCHAMPS
11. J.E.B. STUART
12. *GIUSEPPE MAZZINI

13. This leading figure of the Chicago jazz scene was a professional banjoist by the age of sixteen.

14. **MILTON FRIEDMAN

15. The heir of three leading European dynasties, he ruled two empires in the 16th century, but the pressure of constant warfare led him to abdicate and retire to a monastery.

16. LUIGI PIRANDELLO
17. *SID LUCKMAN
18. *DIANA RIGG
19. *HAROLD KROTO
20. ANNE BOLEYN
21. **AL CAPONE
22. **JAMES BOND
23. *MARIO BATALI
24. CLAUDE HOPKINS
25. *LES PAUL
26. *ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ

27. One of the philosophical architects of German Romanticism, he was also he son-in-law of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn.

28. *NORMAN MAILER
29. *ROBINSON CANO
30. PRESTON STURGES

31. This Cuban epidemiologist is best remembered for being the first to postulate that a virulent disease was borne by the Aedes aegypti.

32. This peace activist drove an ambulance during the Spanish Civil War and was imprisoned for failing to show up for his draft physical during World War II, but he gained wider fame when he was arrested for his efforts to protest a later war.

33. She had the second-longest combined tenure as First Lady and Second Lady of the United States.
ELEANOR ROOSEVELT or BARBARA BUSH

34. The same year he published The Rules of Sociological Method, he also set up the first department of sociology at any university in Europe.

35. FRANCISCO VÁSQUEZ DE CORONADO
36. *JACK ANDERSON
37. *COLIN POWELL
38. *BILLY BIGELOW

39. This German biologist and naturalist coined such terms as ecology, phylogeny, stem cell, and phylum.

40. **JOHNNY MERCER
41. **MARY BOLAND

42. This novelist’s 1925 masterpiece is generally considered to have the greatest closing line in the history of American fiction.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD or ERNEST HEMINGWAY?

43. LANCE ARMSTRONG
44. *RALPH WALDO EMERSON
45. **ROGER PENSKE
46. *CLARENCE THOMAS
47. **DR. BOB
48. GARY COOPER
49. *GEORGES SIMENON

50. Laws in spectroscopy, circuit theory, and thermochemistry are named for this 19th century Germany physicist, who also coined the term “black box radiation.”
MAX PLANCK?

51. *ANTONIO PROHIAS

52. His total of 38 Number One hits on the Billboard country music chart is exceeded only by George Strait and Conway Twitty.
GARTH BROOKS, GEORGE JONES, MERLE HAGGARD or RONNIE MILSAP?

53. KYLE ROTE JR.

54. A colleague of Freud, he broke away from the Freudian school of psychoanalysis to form his own school of “individual psychology.” (Sigmund was pissed.)

55. The empress never really had that equine affair, but she did have quite a fling with this general, who fathered two of her children and helped her get rid of her husband.

56. GREG ABBOTT
57. RACHEL HUNTER

58. In a 1974 article, this Nobel Prize-winning chemist first propounded the theory that chlorofluorocarbons contribute to ozone depletion.

59. AUBREY VICTOR "DIT" CLAPPER

60. This metaphysical poet saw Eternity the other night and didn’t even Tweet about it.

61. MICHAEL COLLINS
62. *FULTON SHEEN
63. *CAT STEVENS
64. *ALFRED HITCHCOCK
65. *JESSICA SAVITCH
66. *BUGS BUNNY
67. *DRED SCOTT

68. The goal of the institution he founded in 1919 was, in his words, “to bring together all creative effort into one whole, to reunify all the disciplines of practical art – sculpture, painting, handicrafts, and the crafts – as inseparable components of a new architecture.”
WALTER GROPIUS?

69. *ALBERT DESALVO

70. DJMQ: He was the original choreographer of such classic ballets as La Esmerelda, Ondine, and, of course, Giselle.

71. This general served as Commander-in-Chief of the German army at the outset of World War II, but was forced into retirement after the failure of the Nazi assault on Moscow.

72. He was the last British Prime Minister to have previously served as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
WINSTON CHURCHILL?

73. *LEO BAEKELAND
74. *FRANK BEARD
75. *CLIFFORD ODETTS
76. *RAYMOND BERRY
77. **DREW CAREY

78. This archaeologist is best known for unearthing a 9000 year-old Bronze Age palace on an island in the Mediterranean.

79. A student of Martin Luther, this theologian published the first translation of the Pentateuch into Danish.

80. The company he founded in 1906 – and which is still going strong today – was one of the first to include nutritional labels on its products and the very first to offer prizes for children inside its boxes.
WILL KEITH KELLOGG?

81. OLEG CASSINI

82. During her tenure as president of NOW, she engaged in more than 80 debates with Phyllis Schafly over the ERA, but earned the enmity of some members over her advocacy of equal custody rights for men in divorce cases.

83. *MARILYN HORNE
84. **TONY ZALE
85. TSAR NICHOLAS II
86. *GEORGE C. SCOTT
87. **DANIEL DEFOE
88. ALESSANDRO VOLTA
89. *SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
90. FRANK BOAS
91. *JERRY GARCIA

92. Among third basemen, only Brooks Robinson and George Brett appeared in more consecutive All-Star Games than this Omaha-born Hall of Famer.
EDDIE MATHEWS or WADE BOGGS?

93. *NATHANEAL GREENE
94. *HOWARD HUGHES
95. HAYDEN CHRISTENSEN

96. This philosopher’s magnum opus is divided into three parts – the first part dealing with the nature of God and of man; the second part dealing with morality; and the unfinished third part dealing with Christ and the end of the world.

97. We know that, in 1812, this poet woke up to find himself, but history is silent on whom he woke up next to. (It could have been ANYBODY.)

98. PIERRE AUGUSTE RENOIR
99. *SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
100. *RICHARD NIXON


MATCHES

21. AL CAPONE + UNSER (Nurse) = 45. ROGER PENSKE
37. COLIN POWELL + MOCHRIE (Homeric) = 77. DREW CAREY
84. TONY ZALE + CURTIS (Citrus) = 69. ALBERT DESALVO
45. ROGER PENSKE + TANEY (Yenta) = 67. DRED SCOTT
38. BILLY BIGELOW + GIBBONS (Sobbing) = 74. FRANK BEARD
87. DANIEL DEFOE + CRAIG (Cigar) = 22. JAMES BOND
66. BUGS BUNNY + MORAN (Roman) = 21. AL CAPONE
44. RALPH WALDO EMERSON + KRAMDEN (Denmark) = 4. JACKIE GLEASON
40. JOHNNY MERCER + UNITAS (Austin) = 76. RAYMOND BERRY
29. ROBINSON CANO + CRUSOE (Source) = 87. DANIEL DEFOE
19. HAROLD KROTO + ARLEN (Renal) = 40. JOHNNY MERCER
9. HUGH HEFNER + SLOAN (Salon) = 100. RICHARD NIXON
83. MARILYN HORNE + MORENO (No More!) = 9. HUGH HEFNER
10. MARCEL DUCHAMPS + CERDAN (Dancer) = 84. TONY ZALE
14. MILTON FRIEDMAN + BERLE (Rebel) = 62. FULTON SHEEN
75. CLIFFORD ODETTS + IRVING (Virgin) = 94. HOWARD HUGHES
25. LES PAUL + ASPIN (Spain) = 1. BILL CLINTON
26. ANTONÍN NOVOTNÝ + SCALIA (Calais) = 46. CLARENCE THOMAS
86. GEORGE C. SCOTT + HALAS (Lhasa) = 17. SID LUCKMAN
77. DREW CAREY + PEARSON (Persona) = 36. JACK ANDERSON
28. NORMAN MAILER + BATES (Beast) = 64. ALFRED HITCHCOCK
73. LEO BAEKELAND + SZILARD (Lizards) = 6. EDWARD TELLER
63. CAT STEVENS + CORA (Orca) = 23. MARIO BATALI
47. DR. BOB + WEIR (Wire) = 91. JERRY GARCIA
22. JAMES BOND + GARNER (Ranger) = 47. DR. BOB
12. GIUSEPPE MAZZINI + VERDI (Diver) = 89. SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
51. ANTONIO PROHIAS + SALIERI (Israeli) = 2. WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART


PARTIAL MATCHES

ARTHUR? + LAFFER (Raffle) = 14. MILTON FRIEDMAN
93. NATHANEAL GREENE + WEST (Stew) = ?
JULES? + MAIGRET (Ragtime) = 49. GEORGES SIMENON
65. JESSICA SAVITCH + LANGE (Angel) = ?
PATRICK? + MACNEE (Menace) = 18. DIANA RIGG
CHARLIE? + RUGGLES (Slugger) = 41. MARY BOLAND
FRANZ? + HALDER (Herald) = 71. Nazi general
41. MARY BOLAND + SHELLEY (Hell, Yes!) = ?
ERNST? + CHAIN (China) = 99. SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING
LIONEL? + HAMPTON (Phantom) = 13. Chicago jazz musician


UNMATCHED WORDS

Rap
Car Wash
Grease
Dr. No
Demons
Deer
Horse
Great Dane
Paris
Lisbon
Salem
Harlem
Borneo
Lakers
Bruin
Oilman
Subteen
Puritans
Old Men
Darlin’
O. Henry
Lavender
Red Meats
Red Giant
Comet
Tundra
Vaginal
Clearly
Ode
Romance
Camera
Yoga
Not Me!

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mellytu74
Posts: 9694
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 7:02 pm
Location: Philadelphia, PA

Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#73 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:15 pm

Am I missing something?

there is no anagram for Tucker on the list?

Preston Tucker would go with Howard Hughes.

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mellytu74
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Location: Philadelphia, PA

Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#74 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:24 pm

86. Joel Grey was to this actor as Edith Evans was to Albert Finney and David Johansen was to Bill Murray.

It isn't George C Scott. It' S PATRICK STEWART

SO

86. PATRICK STEWART + MACNEE (Menace) = 18. DIANA RIGG

97. GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON + HALAS (Lhasa) = 17. SID LUCKMAN

41. MARY BOLAND + SHELLEY (Hell, Yes!) = 97. GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON

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franktangredi
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Re: Game #164: Out of Order!

#75 Post by franktangredi » Thu Jan 05, 2017 11:25 pm

mellytu74 wrote:Am I missing something?

there is no anagram for Tucker on the list?

Preston Tucker would go with Howard Hughes.
You already have Howard Hughes matched, don't you?

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