Puzzles
The Three Utilities Problem

Each of three houses must receive water, gas, and electricity. Is it possible to arrange the connections so that no lines cross?
No, it ain’t. Remove one house and draw connections to the other two:

This divides the plane into three regions, here colored red, yellow, and blue. Placing the third house into any of these regions denies it access to the correspondingly colored utility. So the task is impossible.
Pleasingly, the task can be accomplished on a Möbius strip:

And a torus can accommodate up to four houses and four utilities:

(By Wikimedia user CMG Lee.)
08/31/2025 UPDATE: Reader Guy Bolton King points out that Mathsgear sells a mug embossed with the puzzle. The joke here is that this makes the puzzle solvable — like the torus, the mug is of topological genus 1, “a blob with 1 hole in it,” so it admits the same solution.
And reader Shane Speck writes, “My sneaky solution … has always hinged on the fact that in reality, houses don’t all have separate pipes, and popping on a shared water pipe instantly reduces the problem to the status of incredibly trivial”:
“The problem doesn’t, after all, say you can’t do that… :)”
(Thanks, Guy and Shane.)
Quickie
What’s the final digit in the product of all the odd numbers from 1 to 99?
Small Change
If an angle of one degree is viewed through a lens with 4x magnification, how big will the angle appear to be?
Wayfarer
Francesco Segala (1535-1592) made his name as a sculptor in Padua, but he’s remembered as a father of the picture maze.
Make your way from the traveler’s cup to the exit at bottom center.
Mixed Singles
Mark two points on a line and label them 0 and 1, in that order. Now: In one move you can add or remove two neighboring points marked 0 0 or 1 1. Through a series of such moves, is it possible to arrive at a single pair of points labeled 1 0?
What Am I?
Victorian riddler (and Bishop of Winchester) Samuel Wilberforce offered this conundrum:
I have a large Box, with two lids, two caps, three established Measures, and a great number of articles a Carpenter cannot do without. – Then I have always by me a couple of good Fish, and a number of a smaller tribe, – besides two lofty Trees, fine Flowers, and the fruit of an indigenous Plant; a handsome Stag; two playful animals; and a number of a smaller and less tame Herd: – Also two Halls, or Places of Worship; some Weapons of warfare; and many Weathercocks: – The Steps of an Hotel; The House of Commons on the eve of a Dissolution; Two Students or Scholars, and some Spanish Grandees, to wait upon me.
All pronounce me a wonderful piece of Mechanism, but few have numbered up the strange medley of things which compose my whole.
Lewis Carroll seems to have loved it — he circulated copies to his friends and published this solution in 1866:
The Whole — is Man.
The Parts are as follows.
A large Box — The Chest.
Two lids — The Eye lids.
Two Caps — The Knee Caps.
Three established Measures — The nails, hands and feet.
A great number of articles a Carpenter cannot do without, — Nails.
A couple of good Fish — The Soles of the Feet.
A number of a smaller tribe — The Muscles (Mussels).
Two lofty Trees — The Palms (of the hands).
Fine Flowers — Two lips, (Tulips), and Irises.
The fruit of an indigenous Plant — Hips.
A handsome Stag — The Heart. (Hart).
Two playful Animals — The Calves.
A number of a smaller and less tame Herd — The Hairs. (Hares).
Two Halls, or Places of Worship — The Temples.
Some Weapons of Warfare — The Arms, and Shoulder blades.
Many Weathercocks — The Veins. (Vanes).
The Steps of an Hotel — The Insteps. (Inn-steps).
The House of Commons on the eve of a Dissolution — Eyes and Nose. (Ayes and Noes).
Two Students or Scholars — The Pupils of the Eye.
Some Spanish Grandees — The Tendons. (Ten Dons).
Black and White
After You
A train engine pulling four cars meets a train engine pulling three cars. There’s a short spur next to the main track, but it can hold only one engine or one car at a time. A car cannot be joined to the front of an engine. What’s the most expeditious way for the two trains to pass one another?
This sounds fairly simple, but the solution is surprisingly involved. In presenting the problem in his Cyclopedia of 5000 Puzzles, Tricks, and Conundrums (1914), Sam Loyd wrote that it “shows the primitive way of passing trains before the advent of modern methods, and the puzzle is to tell just how many times it is necessary to back or reverse the directions of the engines to accomplish the feat, each reversal of an engine being counted as a move in the solution.”
Block Diagram
A tromino is a domino of three panels in a row, sized to cover three successive orthogonal squares of a checkerboard.
A monomino covers one square.
Is it possible to cover an 8×8 checkerboard with 21 trominoes and 1 monomino?