Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below.
Articles
Is July’s code giving you an (atom)-splitting headache? Here it is again: How It Works This code uses symbols from the Periodic Table of Elements. Each element has an atomic number that describes the number of protons found in its nucleus. Match the atomic number to the first letter of the element’s atomic symbol (the …
Did you have fun playing charades with your family? Click on the image below to download additional suggestions. You can always add your favorite episodes to the mix!
The studio recording light flashes red. Shona K. looks to her right and sees Connie Kendall, er . . . Katie Leigh. Across the room Jess Harnell (aka Wooton Bassett) studies his script from behind a black baseball cap. Shona blinks. Can this actually be real? “At first I am starstruck,” Shona admits. “I’m kind …
Did you solve this kickin’ code? Here it is again: SN JMNV GHL ZMC GHR ONVDQ. It might help to look up Philippians 3:10. In that verse, the apostle Paul sets out his goal (which is very different from a soccer goal). How It Works To crack this code, think like a soccer player. Just …
1. You’re talking with friends near your school’s main entrance. A woman arrives with twins in a stroller. She asks how to find Mr. Johnson’s classroom. You . . . a) say, “Why? Is it lost?” and double over laughing. b) give her directions and offer to push the stroller for her. c) say, “Sorry, …
The word worship has more than one meaning. Devoted fans boldly worship a sports star or a movie hero. Kids at school may hungrily worship popularity or good grades. The children of Israel were commanded to only worship the One True God. The fact is, God designed worship as a core part of every human …
Did you have a tough time cracking January’s stopwatch code? Here it is again: How It Works First, multiply the minutes by 60 and add the remaining seconds to convert stopwatch times to total seconds: 179, 2, 151, 5 and 41. This code uses additive primes—prime numbers whose digits add up to another prime number. …
The October code is no joke. Here it is again: How It Works Each clown’s hair color is worth a specific number of points: red = 0; orange = 1; yellow = 2; green = 3; blue = 4; purple = 5. Each clown’s nose color is also worth points: red = 0; orange = …
Everybody knows the story of Samson. He single-handedly fought a lion and defeated thousands of soldiers. Samson was so amazing that it’s easy to forget that God’s strongest hero was once a child. Reagan M. plays “Little Samson” in the brand-new Bible musical at Sight & Sound Theatres in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The $5 million …