Read
Scripts & |
Moment
of Indiana History: Scripts Hoosier
Puzzlemaster I Nice work if you can get it…another Hoosier Puzzlemaster, on this Moment of Indiana History. Public radio listeners are most likely familiar with the name Will Shortz.
The Puzzlemaster from NPR’s Weekend Edition on Sunday mornings has
been on the air since that program started in 1987. The estimated sixty-four
million Americans who work crosswords have probably also encountered the
native Hoosier’s name at some point or another. Shortz has been
editor of the broadly syndicated New York Times crossword puzzle since
1993. Only the fourth person to have donned that illustrious mantle, Shortz
has been a cruciverbalist since childhood. Born in Crawfordsville, Indiana
in 1952, and raised on an Arabian horse farm, Shortz sold his first crossword
puzzle to a national Sunday school publication at the age of 14. Within
two years, he was contributing regularly to Dell puzzle magazines. After
having completed all of the requirements for a major in economics at Indiana
University, Shortz discovered the Individualized Major program. He worked
with professors to create a specialized curriculum that resulted in his
1974 B.A. in Enigmatology—still the only such degree awarded at
any institution in the world. Although he subsequently completed a law
degree at the University of Virginia, he stopped short of taking the bar
exam, choosing instead to accept an editorship at Games magazine, where
he spent 15 years before joining the Times. In 2005, Shortz solved a different sort of puzzle, whose answer lay in
the Hoosier State. As the Sudoku fad took hold, Shortz sought out the
origin of the magic square with the Japanese name. Its prototype existed
in a brainteaser known as “Number Place”, which had appeared
twenty-five years earlier in a Dell publication (incidentally the same
publishers to whom Shortz made submissions in his youth). Comparing the
list of contributors with the issues containing “Number Place”,
Shortz deduced that the puzzle’s author was Howard Garns, an Indianapolis
architect. 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:
|
|
|
|