Ah

From John Scott’s The Puzzle King, 1899:

“A locomotive with a truck is travelling over a straight level line at the rate of 60 miles an hour. A man standing at the extreme rear of the truck casts a small stone into the air in a perpendicular direction. The stone travels upward at an average rate of 30 feet per second for 3 seconds; the height of the man’s hand from ground when the stone leaves is 15 feet. At what distance behind the train will the stone strike the ground in its descent?”

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Hidato

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hidato-Puzzle.svg

This logic puzzle game was invented by Israeli mathematician Gyora Benedek. The task is simple: Write a number in each blank square so that, in the finished diagram, a continuous chain of consecutive numbers connects the lowest number, 1, to the highest, 40. The numbers can connect horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. For example, the number 8 must go in the square above 7 because 7, 8, and 9 must occupy adjacent squares. Can you complete the rest of the diagram?

Intermission

You’ve dealt about half the cards for a bridge game when you’re momentarily called away. When you return, no one can remember where you left off dealing. Without counting cards, how can you finish the deal accurately, so that each player receives the cards she’d have got if you hadn’t been interrupted?

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The Clockwise Ant

A problem by Argentinian puzzlist Jaime Poniachik, from the February 1992 issue of Games magazine:

An ant crawls onto a clock face at the 6 mark just as the minute hand is passing 12. She begins crawling counterclockwise around the face’s circumference at a uniform speed. When the minute hand passes her, she reverses course and crawls clockwise without changing her speed. Forty-five minutes after her first encounter with the minute hand, it passes her a second time and she departs. How much time did she spend on the clock face?

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Desperate Measures

sivák chess puzzle

A joke chess problem by Bohuslav Sivák, from the Bratislavan newspaper Pravda, Dec. 29, 1972. White can mate in two moves by resorting to a drastic stratagem. What is it?

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Fanciful Creatures

In What Is the Name of This Book? (1986), Raymond Smullyan describes two curious denizens of the Forest of Forgetfulness. The Lion lies on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, and the Unicorn lies on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. Each tells the truth on the days it doesn’t lie.

One day Alice encounters the two of them resting under a tree. They tell her:

Lion: Yesterday was one of my lying days.

Unicorn: Yesterday was one of my lying days too.

“From these two statements, Alice (who was a very bright girl) was able to deduce the day of the week. What day was it?”

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The Number Checks Puzzle

https://archive.org/details/amusementsinmath0000dude/page/16/mode/2up

From Henry Dudeney’s Amusements in Mathematics, 1917. Without removing these checks from their ring, divide them into three groups so that the first group multiplied by the second makes the third. For example, one valid try might be 28, 907, 15463, except that 28 × 907 doesn’t equal 15463.

“Of course, you may have as many of the checks as you like in any group. The puzzle calls for some ingenuity, unless you have the luck to hit on the answer by chance.”

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