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- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.474
-
-
- Section 1: "Realistic" situation puzzles.
-
- 1.1. In the middle of the ocean is a yacht. Several corpses are floating
- in the water nearby. (SJ)
-
- 1.2. A man is lying dead in a room. There is a large pile of gold and
- jewels on the floor, a chandelier attached to the ceiling, and a large
- open window. (DVS; partial JM wording)
-
- 1.3. A woman came home with a bag of groceries, got the mail, and walked
- into the house. On the way to the kitchen, she went through the living
- room and looked at her husband, who had blown his brains out. She then
- continued to the kitchen, put away the groceries, and made dinner.
- (partial JM wording)
-
- 1.4. A body is discovered in a park in Chicago in the middle of summer.
- It has a fractured skull and many other broken bones, but the cause of
- death was hypothermia. (MI, from _Hill Street Blues_)
-
- 1.5. A man lives on the twelfth floor of an apartment building. Every
- morning he takes the elevator down to the lobby and leaves the building.
- In the evening, he gets into the elevator, and, if there is someone else
- in the elevator -- or if it was raining that day -- he goes back to his
- floor directly. However, if there is nobody else in the elevator and it
- hasn't rained, he goes to the 10th floor and walks up two flights of
- stairs to his room. (MH)
-
- 1.6. A woman has incontrovertible proof in court that her husband was
- murdered by her sister. The judge declares, "This is the strangest case
- I've ever seen. Though it's a cut-and-dried case, this woman cannot be
- punished." (This is different from #1.43.) (MH)
-
- 1.7. A man walks into a bar and asks for a drink. The bartender pulls
- out a gun and points it at him. The man says, "Thank you," and walks out.
- (DVS)
-
- 1.8. A man is returning from Switzerland by train. If he had been in a
- non-smoking car he would have died. (DVS; MC wording)
-
- 1.9. A man goes into a restaurant, orders abalone, eats one bite, and
- kills himself. (TM and JM wording)
-
- 1.10. A man is found hanging in a locked room with a puddle of water
- under his feet. (This is different from #1.11.)
-
- 1.11. A man is dead in a puddle of blood and water on the floor of a
- locked room. (This is different from #1.10.)
-
- 1.12. A man is lying, dead, face down in the desert wearing a backpack.
- (This is different from #1.13, #2.11, and #2.12.)
-
- 1.13. A man is lying face down, dead, in the desert, with a match near
- his outstretched hand. (This is different from #1.12, #2.11, and #2.12.)
- (JH; partial JM wording)
-
- 1.14. A man is driving his car. He turns on the radio, listens for five
- minutes, turns around, goes home, and shoots his wife. (This is different
- from #1.15.)
-
- 1.15. A man driving his car turns on the radio. He then pulls over to
- the side of the road and shoots himself. (This is different from #1.14.)
-
- 1.16. Music stops and a woman dies. (DVS)
-
- 1.17. A man is dead in a room with a small pile of pieces of wood and
- sawdust in one corner. (from "Coroner's Inquest," by Marc Connelly)
-
- 1.18. A flash of light, a man dies. (ST original)
-
- 1.19. A rope breaks. A bell rings. A man dies. (KH)
-
- 1.20. A woman buys a new pair of shoes, goes to work, and dies. (DM)
-
- 1.21. A man is riding a subway. He meets a one-armed man, who pulls out
- a gun and shoots him. (SJ)
-
- 1.22. Two women are talking. One goes into the bathroom, comes out five
- minutes later, and kills the other.
-
- 1.23. A man is sitting in bed. He makes a phone call, saying nothing,
- and then goes to sleep. (SJ)
-
- 1.24. A man kills his wife, then goes inside his house and kills himself.
- (DH original, from "Nightmare in Yellow," by Fredric Brown)
-
- 1.25. Abel walks out of the ocean. Cain asks him who he is, and Abel
- answers. Cain kills Abel. (MWD original)
-
- 1.26. Two men enter a bar. They both order identical drinks. One lives;
- the other dies. (CR; partial JM wording)
-
- 1.27. Joe leaves his house, wearing a mask and carrying an empty sack.
- An hour later he returns. The sack is now full. He goes into a room and
- turns out the lights. (AL)
-
- 1.28. A man takes a two-week cruise to Mexico from the U.S. Shortly
- after he gets back, he takes a three-day cruise which doesn't stop at any
- other ports. He stays in his cabin all the time on both cruises. As a
- result, he makes $250,000. (MI, from "The Wager")
-
- 1.29. Hans and Fritz are German spies during World War II. They try to
- enter America, posing as returning tourists. Hans is immediately
- arrested. (JM)
-
- 1.30. Tim and Greg were talking. Tim said "The terror of flight." Greg
- said "The gloom of the grave." Greg was arrested. (MPW original, from
- "No Refuge Could Save," by Isaac Asimov)
-
- 1.31. A man is found dead in his parked car. Tire tracks lead up to the
- car and away. (SD)
-
- 1.32. A man dies in his own home. (ME original)
-
- 1.33. A woman in Paris in 1895 is waiting for her husband to come home.
- When he arrives, the house has burned to the ground and she's dead. (JM)
-
- 1.34. A man gets onto an elevator. When the elevator stops, he knows his
- wife is dead. (LA; partial KH wording)
-
- 1.35. Three men die. On the pavement are pieces of ice and broken glass.
- (JJ)
-
- 1.36. She lost her job when she invited them to dinner. (DS original)
-
- 1.37. A man is running along a corridor with a piece of paper in his
- hand. The lights flicker and the man drops to his knees and cries out,
- "Oh no!" (MP)
-
- 1.38. A car without a driver moves; a man dies. (EMS)
-
- 1.39. As I drive to work on my motorcycle, there is one corner which I go
- around at a certain speed whether it's rainy or sunny. If it's cloudy but
- not raining, however, I usually go faster. (SW original)
-
- 1.40. A woman throws something out a window and dies. (JM)
-
- 1.41. An avid birdwatcher sees an unexpected bird. Soon he's dead. (RSB
- original)
-
- 1.42. There are a carrot, a pile of pebbles, and a pipe lying together in
- the middle of a field. (PRO; partial JM wording)
-
- 1.43. Two brothers are involved in a murder. Though it's clear that one
- of them actually committed the crime, neither can be punished. (This is
- different from #1.6.) (from "Unreasonable Doubt," by Stanley Ellin)
-
- 1.44. An ordinary American citizen, with no passport, visits over thirty
- foreign countries in one day. He is welcomed in each country, and leaves
- each one of his own accord. (PRO)
-
- 1.45. If he'd turned on the light, he'd have lived. (JM)
-
- 1.46. A man is found dead on the floor in the living room. (ME original)
-
- 1.47. A man is found dead outside a large building with a hole in him.
- (JM, modified from PRO)
-
- 1.48. A man is found dead in an alley lying in a red pool with two sticks
- crossed near his head. (PRO)
-
- 1.49. A man lies dead next to a feather. (PRO)
-
- 1.50. There is blood on the ceiling of my bedroom. (MI original)
-
- 1.51. A man wakes up one night to get some water. He turns off the light
- and goes back to bed. The next morning he looks out the window, screams,
- and kills himself. (CR; KK wording)
-
- 1.52. She grabbed his ring, pulled on it, and dropped it. (JM, from
- _Math for Girls_)
-
- 1.53. A man sitting on a park bench reads a newspaper article headlined
- "Death at Sea" and knows a murder has been committed.
-
- 1.54. A man tries the new cologne his wife gave him for his birthday. He
- goes out to get some food, and is killed. (RW original)
-
- 1.55. A man in uniform stands on the beach of a tropical island. He takes
- out a cigarette, lights it, and begins smoking. He takes out a letter and
- begins reading it. The cigarette burns down between his fingers, but he
- doesn't throw it away. He cries. (RW)
-
- 1.56. A man went into a restaurant, had a large meal, and paid nothing for
- it. (JM original)
-
- 1.57. A married couple goes to a movie. During the movie the husband
- strangles the wife. He is able to get her body home without attracting
- attention. (from _Beyond the Easy Answer_)
-
-
- Section 2: Double meanings, fictional settings, and miscellaneous others.
-
- 2.1. A man shoots himself, and dies. (HL) (This is different from #2.2.)
-
- 2.2. A man walks into a room, shoots, and kills himself. (HL) (This is
- different from #2.1.)
-
- 2.3. Adults are holding children, waiting their turn. The children are
- handed (one at a time, usually) to a man, who holds them while a woman
- shoots them. If the child is crying, the man tries to stop the crying
- before the child is shot. (ML)
-
- 2.4. Hiking in the mountains, you walk past a large field and camp a few
- miles farther on, at a stream. It snows in the night, and the next day
- you find a cabin in the field with two dead bodies inside. (KL; KD and
- partial JM wording)
-
- 2.5. A man marries twenty women in his village but isn't charged with
- polygamy.
-
- 2.6. A man is alone on an island with no food and no water, yet he does
- not fear for his life. (MN)
-
- 2.7. Joe wants to go home, but he can't go home because the man in the
- mask is waiting for him. (AL wording)
-
- 2.8. A man is doing his job when his suit tears. Fifteen minutes later,
- he's dead. (RM)
-
- 2.9. A dead man lies near a pile of bricks and a beetle on top of a book.
- (MN)
-
- 2.10. At the bottom of the sea there lies a ship worth millons of dollars
- that will never be recovered. (TF original)
-
- 2.11. A man is found dead in the arctic with a pack on his back. (This
- is different from #1.12, #1.13, and #2.12.) (PRO)
-
- 2.12. There is a dead man lying in the desert next to a rock. (This is
- different from #1.12, #1.13, and #2.11.) (GH)
-
- 2.13. As a man jumps out of a window, he hears the telephone ring and
- regrets having jumped. (from "Some Days are Like That," by Bruce J.
- Balfour; partial JM wording)
-
- 2.14. Two people are playing cards. One looks around and realizes he's
- going to die. (JM original)
-
- 2.15. A man lies dead in a room with fifty-three bicycles in front of
- him.
-
- 2.16. A horse jumps over a tower and lands on a man, who disappears. (ES
- original)
-
- 2.17. A train pulls into a station, but none of the waiting passengers
- move. (MN)
-
- 2.18. A man pushes a car up to a hotel and tells the owner he's bankrupt.
- (DVS; partial AL and JM wording)
-
- 2.19. Three large people try to crowd under one small umbrella, but
- nobody gets wet. (CC)
-
- 2.20. A black man dressed all in black, wearing a black mask, stands at a
- crossroads in a totally black-painted town. All of the streetlights in
- town are broken. There is no moon. A black-painted car without
- headlights drives straight toward him, but turns in time and doesn't hit
- him. (AL and RM wording)
-
- 2.21. Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice all live in the same house. Bob
- and Carol go out to a movie, and when they return, Alice is lying dead on
- the floor in a puddle of water and glass. It is obvious that Ted killed
- her but Ted is not prosecuted or severely punished.
-
- 2.22. A man rides into town on Friday. He stays one night and leaves on
- Friday. (KK)
-
- 2.23. Bruce wins the race, but he gets no trophy. (EMS)
-
- 2.24. A woman opens an envelope and dyes. (AL)
-
- 2.25. A man was brought before a tribal chief, who asked him a question.
- If he had known the answer, he probably would have died. He didn't, and
- lived. (MWD original)
-
- 2.26. Two men are found dead outside of an igloo. (SK original)
-
-
- Attributions key:
-
- When I know who first told me the current version of a puzzle, I've put
- initials in parentheses after the puzzle statement; this is the key to
- those acknowledgments. The word "original" following an attribution means
- that, to the best of my knowledge, the cited person invented that puzzle.
- If a given puzzle isn't marked "original" but is attributed, that just
- means that's the first person I heard it from. I would appreciate it if
- attributions for originals were not removed; however, this list is hereby
- entered into the public domain, so do with it what you wish.
-
- LA == Laura Almasy RSB == Ranjit S. Bhatnagar
- CC == Chris Cole MC == Matt Crawford
- MWD == Matthew William Daly KD == Ken Duisenberg
- SD == Sylvia Dutcher ME == Marguerite Eisenstein
- TF == Thomas Freeman JH == Joaquin Hartman
- MH == Marcy Hartman KH == Karl Heuer
- GH == Geoff Hopcraft DH == David Huddleston
- MI == Mark Isaak SJ == Steve Jacquot
- JJ == J|rgen Jensen KK == Karen Karp
- SK == Shelby Kilmer KL == Ken Largman
- AL == Andy Latto HL == Howard Lazoff
- ML == Merlyn LeRoy RM == "Reaper Man" (real name unknown)
- TM == Ted McCabe JM == Jim Moskowitz
- DM == Damian Mulvena MN == Jan Mark Noworolski
- PRO == Peter R. Olpe (from his list)
- MP == Martin Pitwood CR == Charles Renert
- EMS == Ellen M. Sentovich (from her list)
- ES == Eric Stephan DS == Diana Stiefbold
- ST == Simon Travaglia DVS == David Van Stone
- RW == Randy Whitaker MPW == Matthew P Wiener
- SW == Steve Wilson (not sure of name)
-
- Special thanks to Jim Moskowitz, Karl Heuer, and Mark Brader, for a lot of
- discussion of small but important details and wording.
-
-
- Notes and comments:
-
- My outtakes list (items removed from this list for various reasons,
- most of which came down to the fact that I didn't like them) is now
- available from the r.p FAQ server.
-
- There are many possible wordings for most of the puzzles in this list.
- Most of them have what I consider the best wording of the variants I've
- heard; if you think there's a better way of putting one or more of them,
- or if you don't like my categorization of any of them, or if you have any
- other comments or suggestions, please drop me a note. If you know others
- not on this list, please send them to me.
- Of course, in telling a group of players one of these situations, you
- can add or remove details, either to make getting the answer harder or
- easier, or simply to throw in red herrings. I've made a few specific
- suggestions along these lines in the answer list, available in a separate
- file. Also in the answer list are variant problem statements and variant
- answers.
-
- --Jed Hartman
- zorn@apple.com (as of 9/92)
-
-
-
- Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu rec.puzzles:18148 news.answers:3079
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles,news.answers
- Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!usc!wupost!gumby!destroyer!uunet!questrel!chris
- From: uunet!questrel!chris (Chris Cole)
- Subject: rec.puzzles FAQ, part 13 of 15
- Message-ID: <puzzles-faq-13_717034101@questrel.com>
- Followup-To: rec.puzzles
- Summary: This posting contains a list of
- Frequently Asked Questions (and their answers).
- It should be read by anyone who wishes to
- post to the rec.puzzles newsgroup.
- Sender: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Reply-To: uunet!questrel!faql-comment
- Organization: Questrel, Inc.
- References: <puzzles-faq-1_717034101@questrel.com>
- Date: Mon, 21 Sep 1992 00:09:46 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Sat, 3 Apr 1993 00:08:21 GMT
- Lines: 1115
-
- Archive-name: puzzles-faq/part13
- Last-modified: 1992/09/20
- Version: 3
-
- ==> logic/situation.puzzles.s <==
- Answers to Jed's List of Situation Puzzles
-
- This is the list of answers to the puzzles in my situation puzzles
- list. See that list for more details. This document also contains
- variant setups and answers for some of the puzzles.
-
- Section 1: "Realistic" situation puzzles.
-
- 1.1. A bunch of people are on an ocean voyage in a yacht. One afternoon,
- they all decide to go swimming, so they put on swimsuits and dive off the
- side into the water. Unfortunately, they forget to set up a ladder on the
- side of the boat, so there's no way for them to climb back in, and they
- drown.
- 1.1a. Variant answer: The same situation, except that they set out a
- ladder which is just barely long enough. When they all dive into the
- water, the boat, without their weight, rises in the water until the ladder
- is just barely out of reach. (also from Steve Jacquot)
-
- 1.2. The room is the ballroom of an ocean liner which sank some time ago.
- The man ran out of air while diving in the wreck.
- 1.2a. Variant which puts this in section 2: same statement, ending with
- "a large window through which rays are coming." Answer: the rays are
- manta rays (this version tends to make people assume vampires are
- involved, unless they notice the awkwardness of the phrase involving
- rays).
-
- 1.3. The husband killed himself a while ago; it's his ashes in an urn on
- the mantelpiece that the wife looks at. It's debatable whether this
- belongs in section 2 for double meanings.
-
- 1.4. A poor peasant from somewhere in Europe wants desperately to get to
- the U.S. Not having money for airfare, he stows away in the landing gear
- compartment of a jet. He dies of hypothermia in mid-flight, and falls out
- when the landing gear compartment opens as the plane makes its final
- approach.
- 1.4a. Variant: A man is lying drowned in a dead forest. Answer: He's
- scuba diving when a firefighting plane lands nearby and fills its tanks
- with water, sucking him in with the water. He runs out of air while the
- plane is in flight; the plane then dumps its load of water, with him in
- it, onto a burning forest. (from Jim Moskowitz)
-
- 1.5. The man is a midget. He can't reach the upper elevator buttons, but
- he can ask people to push them for him. He can also push them with his
- umbrella. I've usually heard this stated with more details: "Every
- morning he wakes up, gets dressed, eats, goes to the elevator..." Ron
- Carter suggests a nice red herring: the man lives on the 13th floor of the
- building.
-
- 1.6. The sisters are Siamese twins.
- 1.6a. Variant: A man and his brother are in a bar drinking. They begin to
- argue (as always) and the brother won't get out of the man's face, shouting
- and cursing. The man, finally fed up, pulls out a pistol and blows his
- brother's brains out. He sits down to die. Answer: They are Siamese twins.
- In the original story, the argument started when one complained about the
- other's bad hygiene and bad breath. The shooter bled to death (from his
- brother's wounds) by the time the police arrived. (from Randy Whitaker,
- based on a 1987 _Weekly World News_ story)
-
- 1.7. The man has hiccups; the bartender scares them away by pulling a
- gun.
-
- 1.8. The man used to be blind; he's now returning from an eye operation
- which restored his sight. He's spent all his money on the operation, so
- when the train (which has no internal lighting) goes through a tunnel he
- at first thinks he's gone blind again and almost decides to kill himself.
- Fortunately, the light of the cigarettes people are smoking convinces him
- that he can still see.
- 1.8a. Variant: A man dies on a train he does not ordinarily catch.
- Answer: The man (a successful artist) has had an accident in which he
- injured his eyes. His head is bandaged and he has been warned not to
- remove the bandages under any circumstances lest the condition be
- irreversibly aggravated. He catches the train home from the hospital and
- cannot resist peeking. Seeing nothing at all (the same train-in-tunnel
- situation as above obtains, but without the glowing cigarettes this time),
- he assumes he is blinded and kills himself in grief. I like this version
- a lot, except that it makes much less sense that he'd be traveling alone.
- (from Bernd Wechner)
-
- 1.9. The man was in a ship that was wrecked on a desert island. When
- there was no food left, another passenger brought what he said was abalone
- but was really part of the man's wife (who had died in the wreck). The
- man suspects something fishy, so when they finally return to civilization,
- he orders abalone, realizes that what he ate before was his wife, and
- kills himself.
- 1.9a. Variant: same problem statement but with albatross instead of
- abalone. Answer: In this version, the man was in a lifeboat, with his
- wife, who died. He hallucinated an albatross landing in the boat which he
- caught and killed and ate; he thought that his wife had been washed
- overboard. When he actually eats albatross, he discovers that he had
- actually eaten his wife.
- 1.9b. Variant answer to 1.9a, with a slightly different problem
- statement: the man already knew that he had been eating human flesh. He
- asks the waiter in the restaurant what kind of soup is available, and the
- waiter responds, "Albatross soup." Thinking that "albatross soup" means
- "human soup," and sickened by the thought of such a society (place in a
- foreign country if necessary), he kills himself. (from Mike Neergaard)
-
- 1.10. He stood on a block of ice to hang himself. The fact that there's
- no furniture in the room can be added to the statement, but if it's
- mentioned in conjunction with the puddle of water the answer tends to be
- guessed more easily.
-
- 1.11. He stabbed himself with an icicle.
-
- 1.12. He jumped out of an airplane, but his parachute failed to open.
- Minor variant wording (from Joe Kincaid): he's on a mountain trail instead
- of in a desert. Minor variant wording (from Mike Reymond): he's got a
- ring in his hand (it came off of the ripcord).
- 1.12a. Silly variant: same problem statement, with the addition that one
- of the man's shoelaces is untied. Answer: He pulled his shoelace instead
- of the ripcord.
- 1.12b. Variant answer: The man was let loose in the desert with a pack
- full of poisoned food. He knows it's poisoned, and doesn't eat it -- he
- dies of hunger. (from Mike Neergaard)
-
- 1.13. He was with several others in a hot air balloon crossing the
- desert. The balloon was punctured and they began to lose altitude. They
- tossed all their non-essentials overboard, then their clothing and food,
- but were still going to crash in the middle of the desert. Finally, they
- drew matches to see who would jump over the side and save the others; this
- man lost. Minor variant wording: add that the man is nude.
-
- 1.14. The radio program is one of the call-up-somebody-and-ask-them-a-
- question contest shows; the announcer gives the phone number of the man's
- bedroom phone as the number he's calling, and a male voice answers. It's
- been suggested that such shows don't usually give the phone number being
- called; so instead the wife's name could be given as who's being called,
- and there could be appropriate background sounds when the other man
- answers the phone.
-
- 1.15. He worked as a DJ at a radio station. He decided to kill his wife,
- and so he put on a long record and quickly drove home and killed her,
- figuring he had a perfect alibi: he'd been at work. On the way back he
- turns on his show, only to discover that the record is skipping.
- 1.15a. Variant: The music stops and the man dies. Answer: The same,
- except it's a tape breaking instead of a record skipping. (from Michael
- Killianey) (See also #1.16, #1.19e, and #1.34a.)
-
- 1.16. The woman is a tightrope walker in a circus. Her act consists of
- walking the rope blindfolded, accompanied by music, without a net. The
- musician (organist, or calliopist, or pianist, or whatever) is supposed to
- stop playing when she reaches the end of the rope, telling her that it's
- safe to step off onto the platform. For unknown reasons (but with
- murderous intent), he stops the music early, and she steps off the rope to
- her death.
- 1.16a. Variant answer: The woman is a character in an opera, who "dies"
- at the end of her song.
- 1.16b. Variant answer: The "woman" is the dancing figure atop a music
- box, who "dies" when the box runs down. (Both of the above variants would
- probably require placing this puzzle in section 2 of the list.)
- 1.16c. Variant: Charlie died when the music stopped. Answer: Charlie was
- an insect sitting on a chair; the music playing was for the game Musical
- Chairs. (from Bob Philhower)
- (See also #1.15a, #1.19e, and #1.34a.)
-
- 1.17. The man is a blind midget, the shortest one in the circus. Another
- midget, jealous because he's not as short, has been sawing small pieces
- off of the first one's cane every night, so that every day he thinks he's
- taller. Since his only income is from being a circus midget, he decides
- to kill himself when he gets too tall.
- 1.17a. Slightly variant answer: Instead of sawing pieces off of the
- midget's cane, someone has sawed the legs off of his bed. He wakes up,
- stands up, and thinks he's grown during the night.
- 1.17b. Variant: A pile of sawdust, no net, a man dies. Answer: A midget
- is jealous of the clown who walks on stilts. He saws partway through the
- stilts; the clown walks along and falls and dies when they break. (from
- Peter R. Olpe)
- 1.17c. Rough sketch of variant: There were a mirror and a bottle on the
- table, and sawdust on the floor. He came in and dropped dead. Answer: He
- was a midget, but he wasn't aware of it, because the table used to be too
- high for him to see his reflection in the mirror, until someone shortened
- its legs. He was horrified by the discovery, and the shock killed him.
- (vaguely remembered by Ivan A Derzhanski, who adds that this would be best
- used as raw material for some elaboration. I agree; it's pretty
- implausible as is)
-
- 1.18. The man is a lion-tamer, posing for a photo with his lions. The
- lions react badly to the flash of the camera, and the man can't see
- properly, so he gets mauled.
- 1.18a. Variant: He couldn't find a chair, so he died. Answer: He was a
- lion-tamer. This one is kind of silly, but I like it, and it sounds
- possible to me (though I'm told a whip is more important than a chair to a
- lion-tamer). (from "Reaper Man," with Karl Heuer wording)
-
- 1.19. A blind man enjoys walking near a cliff, and uses the sound of a
- buoy to gauge his distance from the edge. One day the buoy's anchor rope
- breaks, allowing the buoy to drift away from the shore, and the man walks
- over the edge of the cliff.
- 1.19a. Variant: A bell rings. A man dies. A bell rings. Answer: A
- blind swimmer sets an alarm clock to tell him when and what direction to
- go to shore. The first bell is a buoy, which he mistakenly swims to,
- getting tired and drowning. Then the alarm clock goes off. In other
- variations, the first bell is a ship's bell, and/or the second bell is a
- hand-bell rung by a friend on shore at a pre-arranged time.
- 1.19b. Variant answer to 1.19a: The man falls off a belltower, pulling
- the bell-cord (perhaps he was climbing a steeple while hanging onto the
- rope), and dies. The second bell is one rung at his funeral. Could also
- be a variant on 1.19 (as suggested by Mike Neergaard): the bell-cord
- breaks when he falls (and there's no second bell involved).
- 1.19c. Variant answer to 1.19a: The man is a boxer. The first bell
- signals the start of a round; the second is either the end of the round or
- a funeral bell after he dies during the match. Could also be a variant on
- 1.19 (as suggested by Mike Neergaard): a boxing match in which the top
- rope breaks, tumbling a boxer to the floor (and he dies of a concussion).
- 1.19d. Variant: The wind stopped blowing and the man died. Answer: The
- sole survivor of a shipwreck reached a desert isle. Unfortunately, he was
- blind. Luckily, there was a freshwater spring on the island, and he
- rigged the ship's bell (which had drifted to the island also) at the
- spring's location. The bell rang in the wind, directing him to water.
- When he was becalmed for a week, he could not find water again, and so he
- died of thirst. (from Peter R. Olpe)
- 1.19e. Variant: The music stopped and the man died. Answer: Same as
- 1.19a, but the blind swimmer kept a portable transistor radio on the beach
- instead of a bell. When the batteries gave out, he got lost and drowned.
- (from Joe Kincaid) (See also #1.15a, #1.16, and #1.34a.)
-
- 1.20. The woman is the assistant to a (circus or sideshow) knife thrower.
- The new shoes have higher heels than she normally wears, so that the
- thrower misjudges his aim and one of his knives kills her during the show.
-
- 1.21. Several men were shipwrecked together. They agreed to survive by
- eating each other a piece at a time. Each of them in turn gave up an arm,
- but before they got to the last man, they were rescued. They all demanded
- that the last man live up to his end of the deal. Instead, he killed a
- bum and sent the bum's arm to the others in a box to "prove" that he had
- fulfilled the bargain. Later, one of them sees him on the subway, holding
- onto an overhead ring with the arm he supposedly cut off; the other
- realizes that the last man cheated, and kills him.
- 1.21a. Variant wording: A man sends a package to someone in Europe and
- gets a note back saying "Thank you. I received it." Answer: This is just
- a simpler version; the shipwreck situation is the same, and the man
- actually did send his own arm.
- 1.21b. Variant wording: Two men throw a box off of a cliff. Answer:
- Exactly the same situation as in 1.21a (one slight variation has a hand in
- the box instead of a whole arm), with the two men being two of the fellow
- passengers who had already lost their arms.
- 1.21c. Variant wording: A man in a Sherlock Holmes-style cape walks
- into a room, places a box on the table and leaves. Answer: In this one
- he's wearing the cape either to disguise the fact that he hasn't really
- cut off his arm/hand as required, or else simply in order to hide his
- now-missing limb. (from Joe Kincaid)
-