[net.nlang] There never was a solution to LOONDERK.

ntt@dciem.UUCP (Mark Brader) (02/20/84)

Ken Perlow (ihuxq!ken)'s LOONDERK, as suggested by Dave Sherman (utcsrgv!dave),
was never supposed to have a solution.  (In case you missed James A. Woods
(ames-lm!jaw)'s item, it was derived from the NAME Janet Kolodner and appeared
in the SIGART newsletter in October 1983.)

The original article appeared in the New York Times Magazine on August 21,
1983 (aren't indexes wonderful) and all you Hofstadter fans out there (whose
public libraries save the Times) will find it worth reading.  It begins thus:

	"Exploring the Labyrinth of the Mind", by James Gleick

	You're looking at a newspaper comic page and your eye falls
	on today's jumble.  It's an anagram puzzle.  You have to
	turn a few scrambled letters into a word.  LOONDERK.  A tough
	one.  KRONDOLE.  KNOODLER.  Patterns form and reform in your
	mind.  **Actually, in this case there isn't even a word there**,
	but at least the patterns look like words.  Implausible
	combinations like EOKDNLRO and NRDOEOKL never leap to mind.

Mark Brader