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Puzzlemaster I The puzzling origins of Sudoku…on this Moment of Indiana
History. At the height of the Sudoku craze in 2005, New York Times crossword editor and Indiana University alumnus Will Shortz sought to identify the creator of the magic square that had started out as “Number Place”. By process of deduction, Shortz identified Howard Garns, a longtime employee of the Daggett architecture firm in Indianapolis. Garns’ colleagues recalled the architect working on the grids at a spare drafting table. The Connersville native was the son of architect W.H. Garns. The junior Garns was graduated from Indianapolis Technical High School (later known as Arsenal) in 1922, received his B.S. in architectural engineering from the University of Illinois in 1926, and served as a captain in the US Army Corps of Engineers before joining the Daggett firm. Although he lived to see Sudoku gain adherents in Japan, he died in 1989 before the phenomenon took off in the States. Howard Garns is buried in Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis. This Moment of Indiana History is a production of the Indiana Public Broadcasting Stations in association with the Indiana Historical Society. More information is available on-line at “moment of Indiana history.org.” Writer: Yaël Ksander Sources for this program include:
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