YOUNG ALUMNI OF THE BAY AREA

2nd ANNUAL TREASURE HUNT 7/15/2000

MASTERS CLUES

 

Note: My comments will all be in bold italics. As for the differences between Regular and Masters clues, in a few cases, the clues were identical. Mostly I just changed a word or a reference in the Masters clue, gave less information, or gave more obscure hints.

1. "Hang On, you’ll find it!"

(to see picture puzzle, click here)

This clue was really fun to write. And little did I know when I was searching on Google.com for images to grab off the 'net to use for the rebus, not to mention reseaching everything else I needed for this hunt on Google, that the founder of Google would attend our treasure hunt. So thank you, Google, the best search engine ever!

Before I go on, did anybody notice the title of this clue - Hang On? If you had, and if you had looked it up in the white pages, you could have gone to Hang On Realty and Insurance Company at 751 Clay Street, directly across the street from the peacock mural, and saved yourselves a lot of time!

The rebus worked out to "PEACOCK MURAL IN ALLEY NEAR PORTSMOUTH SQUARE."

Here's a picture of it (this picture wasn't included with the clue):

 

PEACE - E = PEAC

LOCK - L =

OCK

John) MUIR - I =

(this was tough, I know but I knew you could get it without this word)

MUR
ALPO - PO = AL

(RinTinTin - RTT ) = IN IN IN divided by 3 = (the Regular rebus just had the letters IN)

IN
BALL - B = ALL

(EYES) divided by two = EYE - E =

(the Regular rebus just had one eye - e)

EY

NE =

(I meant you to get the letters "NE" from this, not the direction northeast. This threw a lot of people off, they looked in the northeast corner of Portsmouth Square - unfortunately the mural was directly across the street from the southwest corner, as far away as possible from the northeast corner. I didn't do that intentionally!
NE
JAR - J = AR
HIPPO - HI - P = PO

BART - BA =

(the regular clue had the word BART on the logo - I whited it out for the masters division so you had to recognize the logo)

RT

SOS signal flags -O -S =

(the regular division just had the letter S)

S
(not lips but) MOUTH
= SQUARE

 

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
where is it?
solved puzzle but couldn't find peacock. frustrating
who was the pictured man?
couldn't find it. spent 1 hr
we felt that we deserved this one but could not find

2. "Wheel of Fortune"

Were you paying attention when Alexandra introduced her dog to everybody? If so, you already have a hint about where to go. To get even more information, finish the three streets below.

We’ve given you every occurrence of the standard WOF letters: R, S, T, L, N and E. Who knows, maybe you’ll win a fabulous trip to an exotic island.

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E

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R

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I know, this was _way easy for a Masters clue.

I wanted to work my dog Liberty Belle (Libby) into a clue about the Liberty Bell Slot Machine plaque on the island at the intersection of Bush, Battery and Market. I was hoping to do some anagram using the word "bet" - for gambling - and spent a good two hours taking the words bush, battery and market and trying to come up with a cool anagram, but to no avail. I got "theater bum" and other interesting combinations, but the remaining letters just wouldn't form anything meaningful. Finally in desperation I gave up and made this ridiculously easy puzzle. Perhaps I should have given you fewer letters. I mean, even if I had given you NO letters, how many intersections of three streets are there in the sector? Of course, it wasn't clear that all three streets met in the same place, but I could have made it clear in the clue.

I love word and number puzzles and would like to include a couple in every hunt, but I have to be mindful of the fact that you are on foot and therefore stopping to solve them slows you down, so I feel guilty if I put a tough one in. Next year I think I will, though, because you all seem well up to the task!

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
a little too easy for masters
very easy - should have put a clue on the dog!
acrostic was too easy for masters
easy
too easy

 

3. "Trust your Initial reaction"

You’ll pass through ChinaTown on this Treasure Hunt, but first go here.

{The regular clue added the following: "Look out the window for what you seek, and if you can’t see it, go outside and look around.}

 

The Initials in the title were meant to make you focus on the CT in Chinatown, and the TH in Treasure Hunt, which I hoped would lead you to Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill. The inside of the ground floor of Coit Tower is completely covered in murals, of which this was one part. The license plate was on the railing on the outside walkway of the tower.

4. Find them near where two California cities meet. {The regular clue said Northern California cities.}

 

I really like this mural and wanted to work it in somehow but it was one of the last clues I wrote and not very creative. The two California cities were Sacramento and Stockton. The mural was on Stockton between Sacramento and Clay.

This is what I call a "parallel universe clue." One team went to Sacramento and Davis Streets and looked for quite a while. I would have thought, though, that it's pretty obvious this mural would most likely be found in or near Chinatown.

The plastic letters were missing missing from this site. This and clue 7 were the only two sites where the plastic letters were ripped off.

5.

Two nations fought over an ocean

One had an imperial notion

that it must gain control

of a tiny atoll

to keep its advancement in motion

If you know the name of this decisive naval battle that was fought half a century ago in the middle of the Pacific, you’re halfway there.

This was identical to the Regular division clue.

This was a case of a clue that didn't quite come together thematically. And I needed a clue in between the top of Coit Tower and Tower Records because y'all would have been bitching at me if you'd had to walk so far between consecutive clues. I went out late Thursday night looking for an alternative but everything I found had already been used in previous hunts, mine or Jayson's. Initially I was going to do something with the Red Jack Saloon around the corner on Bay Street, referring to the Knave of Hearts - but what does a saloon or a playing card have to do with the Battle of Midway? Besides, it's dangerous to stage clues at bars - last year we lost two teams who solved the Pier 23 clue early in the hunt and decided to hang out there drinking on the back deck all afternoon. They came back to the hunt just in time for the party with two clues solved!}

Anyway the limerick had nothing to do with the clue either - it was 3 in the morning and I thought I might try to write the whole thing in limerick but gave up after one quintuplet or whatever they're called. Although if you're interested, I have written some world class limericks (IMHO) and will be happy to send you samples. Write me at alexandra@thunts.com. You'll be sorry you asked!

Oh, back to the clue. Notice the liberal use of the word "half" - I even capitalized it once - as well as the word "middle." I guess this one was a no brainer. Probably my least favorite clue.

6. "Poetic License"

This poet was born in San Francisco in 1874. Start your search by changing directions in his last name, then heading on the new name in the new direction until you reach a street whose name is a synonym for this same direction, vintage 1861-1865. Next, follow half of Horace Greeley’s advice, young man, until you see a ship sailing in the sky. Just past her, you’ll see a road less traveled by, whose name may remind you of our poet again. Take this road, for that will make all the difference.

{The Regular clue read: "This chilly poet was born in San Francisco in 1874 but is associated more with New England. Start your quest by changing one letter in his last name to its polar opposite. Head in the direction implied by this letter, on the street whose name you’ve just created. You’ll end at a street whose name is yet another synonym for this same direction, vintage 1861-1865. Next, walk toward the ocean, not the bay, until you see a ship sailing in the sky. Just past her, you’ll see a road less traveled by, that may remind you of our poet. Take it, for that will make all the difference."}

I like this one espcially for the punny title: Poetic License.

The poet was Robert Frost, who was indeed born in San Francisco but became most well-known for his poems about New England. If you change the S in his last name to an N you get Front. You were meant to go N (north) on Front Street until it ends at Union Street. The North in the Civil War (1861-1865) was also known as the Union. Horace Greeley was famous for saying "Go West, young man, Go West." On the corner of Battery and Union there is a hanging sign on the corner brick building. It's a painting of a ship (a ship sailing in the sky). A half block further on is Icehouse alley (icehouse - frost - should remind you of him). The last two lines of the clue were meant to remind you of Robert Frost's most famous poem, "The Road Less Travelled:"

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveller,
long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other,
as just as fair
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden back
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I----
I took the one less travelled by,
And that has made all the difference.

I got lots of calls and complaints from the Regular players about the license plate, but none from the Masters players - I guess you're a tougher breed. I had placed it around the base of a street sign behind a dumpster and apparently somebody had piled cardboard boxes on it so it was completely hidden. Still, if you played last year you know how much easier it is to find a license plate than three 1" high plastic letters.

7. He’s the creator of Ulysses. What’s between his first and last names? If it’s Greek to you, then you don’t have a clue. Julia Morgan might help if you know your architecture. She was a brick of a woman, who accessorized with jade.

{The Regular clue added: "Hint: it’s on a block defined by a Commodore, a General and two Presidents. To save time, think of busfare." I picked a location on Washington Street, on the block bounded by Washington, Jackson, (two Presidents) Powell (a General - Colin Powell) and Stockton (a Commodore). The reference to busfare was to a $1 bill - Washington is on the $1 bill.}

I noticed on the map that there are two alleys in Chinatown, James and Joice, that are only a block apart at their closest points.

You were meant to think of James Joyce and not Homer (who wrote the Odyssey which was about Odysseus, who was also known as Ulysses). There's a Homer Alley in the sector, I believe, so by saying "it's not Greek" I was warning you off Homer.

This wasn't about James Joyce's middle name at all, it was about what was physically between James and Joice Alleys. The map is your friend! The building I wanted you to find was the Gum Moon Women's Residence. It happens to have been designed by Julia Morgan, but you weren't expected to know that, so I mentioned the words "brick" and "jade" to direct you to a brick building wth jade trim.

Somebody told me later that the Chinatown Y was also designed by Julia Morgan, and that it is brick with a jade roof and is only a block away right next to Joice Alley. I call this a "parallel universe" clue and try as I might, one or two slip in every year.

The plastic letters were missing from this site.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
Julia Morgan also built Chinatown YMCA in the same area

8. Make like Emmett Kelley, and find an Alley that’s not an alley. Face the tomb of Cheops, and at 2:00 you’ll see a Kevin Costner movie. Cross Chris, and if you have half a brain, you’ll find what you seek on a street that’s short by name and short by nature.

{The regular clue said "Quit Clowning around" instead of "Make like Emmett Kelley," otherwise they were the same.}

This was my favorite clue because it just flows perfectly. Clown Alley is an Alley that's not an alley (note use of capitalization again). It's on the first block of Columbus Avenue between Washington and Jackson, a block from the Transamerica Pyramid. If you face the Pyramid (Tomb of Cheops) and call it 12 o'clock, then at approximately 2:00 you'll see a very old advertisement painted directly onto the side of a brick building on Washington Street, visible through a vacant lot. I did not include a photo of it in the clues but this is what it looks like:

Obviously the Kevin Costner movie was "Bull Durham." If you cross Chris(topher Columbus Avenue), across the street at 55 Columbus Avenue is the office of halfbrain.com. Just to the left of it is ILS Alley, perhaps the shortest alley in San Francisco (short by name and short by nature). The license plate was tied to the fence at the end of the alley.

 

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
no idea
old Jason Wecter clue (sic) {maybe it's the same site but not the same clue! This is a small area, we're going to overlap. cf Windsor & Castle (YABA 99) / Windsor & Castle (CNYTH 2000) - afd}

 

9. "Where Are You?"

 

{The Regular teams got a much easier photo with a basketball court in the foreground, and a cartoon about Morris Engelberg & Joe DiMaggio.}

So I've got a thing for Joe DiMaggio - so sue me, Morris. Last year I worked his 56 game hitting streak into the fortune cookie clue (it led to the antique Chinese fortune cookie factory at 56 Ross Alley).

This is a photograph taken from North Beach Playground. In the background you can see the twin spires of St. Peter & Paul's Cathedral, and the tip of the TransAmerica pyramid. This is the kind of clue where, if you don't recognize it instantly, you can always ask a stranger and probably the first person you ask will be able to help you.

And of course the tie-in with Joe DiMaggio is that this is his childhood playground which the Board of Supervisors wants to rename for him. But his lawyer Morris Engelberg holds the rights to his name, doesn't think anything less than the Bay Bridge or the San Francisco Airport is a big enough honor for Joe DiM, and has filed suit against the City of San Francisco for trying to "profit" from associating his name with a mere playground. Oy veh! I mean- excuuuse me but although he grew up playing ball on this lot, he never played professional baseball in San Francisco. We should name the Bay Bridge for Willie Mays first. Or the Maze - The Mays Maze?}

I _loved this photograph - that really is a basketball caught in mid-air exactly halfway between the P&P spires, and the tip of the Pyramid.

10. What does the poet laureate of San Francisco have in common with Charlie Chaplin? When you figure it out, beat it up the stairs and you’ll howl with glee when you find it in the can.

{The Regular teams got this additional hint: it’s right next door to a Neapolitan volcano, and it may soon become Landmark #228.}

The poet laureate of San Francisco was - I thought - Lawrence Ferlinghetti of City Lights Books. I found out while I was there following teams that in fact he is no longer the poet laureate. Anyway, he is a poet, bookstore owner, and publisher. His store was ground zero for the Beat Generation in the '50's. He is also famous for publishing the first edition of Allen Ginsberg's "Howl." He was prosecuted for obscenity for publishing it. He was aquitted.

The thing he has in common with Charlie Chaplin is "City Lights." The Neapolitan volcano is Vesuvio, the very colorful bar/cafe next door which is also very well known in North Beach. A proposal to make City Lights Bookstore landmark #228 is wending its way through the bureaucracy right now. Not something that would help you solve the clue, but I thought it was an interesting factoid. "Beat it up the stairs and you'll Howl" refers to the Beat generation and also to the fact that the Beat section (including "Howl") is upstairs. I deliberately said it was "in the can" to make you think it was in the bathroom, when in fact the license plate was in a small trash can next to the Beat section.

The guy at the front desk said people had been coming in all day asking about three things: a poet born in San Francisco in 1874 (he didn't know), who is the poet laureate of San Francisco (he knew, but this would have thrown you off because my info was out of date), and James Joyce's middle name. Heh heh.

Now just asking a bookstore clerk about a poet born here in 1874 may not help you. Next time, read him the entire clue because he probably would have figured out the Robert Frost clue from the wording of the last two lines, which were adapted from his most famous poem.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
by luck we got it

 

11. "Let your Digits do the Walking"

Look for Demented Devilboy, and if you like 69, you’ll flip for 70, where you’ll find a digital generation on a street that’s often accompanied by Section 240 of the California Penal Code. Don’t stop, though, until your quest that started with a devil leads you to a halo.

{The Regular clue said "Let Your Fingers do the Walking" - a more direct reference to the phone book. Although I like the word "Digits" better because it ties in with "digital generation" in the clue. Also, instead of the Penal Code, the Regular Division got "a street that is all charged up."}

I really like this clue! This is the one that I think a lot of people got by accident because as they were walking down Battery Street toward the Robert Frost clue, they walked right past Halo and saw the license plate tied around a parking meter.

So here's the explanation. I was leafing through the white pages one day when I came across an odd phrase. As you know, in the upper outside corner of each page in the telephone book, they list the first and last entry on the page to make it easier for you to flip through and find what you need. On page 69 of the white pages the first entry is Demented and the last entry is Devilboy, so the little phrase at the top right of the page reads "Demented Devilboy." I saw this months ago and thought I would have to use it somehow!

Once you've figured that out, you're on page 69 and you "flip" to page 70. On page 70 is a company called Digital Generation. They have two offices, both in the sector. One is on California and the other on Battery, so I mentioned a "charged up" street to get you to Battery. When I went to place the license plate outside their office at 875 Battery, I realized there was no sign for the business. Then I saw Halo Marketing across the street, and couldn't resist the tie-in (Devil - Halo - get it?). So I placed it there.

Actually, if you had noticed that Halo was capitalized you could have looked them up in the business section of the phone book. Another back door clue. This clue was way too easy to solve even if you didn't get the "Demented Devilboy" reference. I'm curious to know how many of you got it the "right" way - write to me at alexandra@thunts.com.

You should always bring a copy of the phone book with you on the hunt. Did I forget to mention that?

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
very clever
Demented Devilboy kind of obscure

12. Are you looking for love in all the wrong places? Do you keep missing connections? Try the personals. (Think of Cerberus, he will tell you where to look.)

{To point them to the Bay Guardian, the Regular teams got this reference to the BeeGees instead of to Cerberus: "think of a high-pitched fraternal trio who were "stayin’ alive" in 1977 - that will give you an idea where to look"}

This was clearly meant to point you to a personals ad somewhere - but where? The reference to Cerberus was meant to make you think of the mythological three-headed dog who guards the gates of hell = GUARDIAN.

Next, in the Bay Guardian's personals section, the smallest section is called "Missed Connections." The Bay Guardian offers a free four week ad, with a 25 letter headline and 25 words in the body, so I took them up on it. The ad I placed read:

"YABA DABA DOO - WILMA SEEKS FRED. Our eyes locked at the Savoy Tivoli. We didn't speak. Let's meet there again on Saturday July 15th and I promise to treasure you forever."

Here's a picture of it:

 

I thought once you figured out to look in the Guardian, this one would pretty much be a lock. The only drawback was that I didn't realize that the Savoy doesn't actually open until 5:00 pm or I probably wouldn't have placed the clue there.

The Bay Guardian also gave me a voicemail box - I should check it to see if Fred Flinstone has called me.

I thought this clue would be a slam dunk, and just put it in because it was a cute gimmick. It turns out that this was the toughest clue in both divisions (20 of 29 Regular teams solved it, and only 2 of 5 Masters teams), but paradoxically it was also the favorite clue of both divisions, receiving a 9.13 rating from the Regular players, and a 9.42 rating from the Masters players.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
clever
nice touch
very hard - think outside the box. Cerberus ? = ? Guardian, not obvious
  1. Climb the post-apocalyptic-seeming quadrilateral concrete cataract.

    The Regular Clue was completely different. Check it out here.

I notice in other treasure hunts in which I play that after a while, you can discern patterns in the way the clue-writers work. In my case, I have a weakness for alleys, murals, Coit Tower, Joe DiMaggio, and putting something at either the start or the finish. I've done all of the above both years in YABA. Keep that in mind for next year!

This was my "finish" clue. The Vaillancourt fountain is just too intriguing (if that's the word for it) to pass up.

There was nothing in this clue to really help you - you either recognized that this referred to the Vaillancourt Fountain in Justin Hermann Plaza, or you didn't. 3 of the 5 Masters teams solved this one.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
should have incorporated name of fountain
too hard
too hard

14. An emperor’s castle sits high on a hill, and in a building beneath it, reached by descending through a dark passage, Bogie waits for Bacall. Nearby, you’ll find this private poodle pissoir.

The only difference between the Regular clue and the Masters clue was that the Regular clue referred to a Roman emperor, and the words Dark Passage were capitalized. In either case, some local knowledge was required.

 

I used this one just as an excuse to make you climb up Telegraph Hill. Plus the eastern flank of Telegraph Hill is very atmospheric. The emperor's castle is Julius Castle, a restaurant at the end of Montgomery Street. If you walk back down Montgomery Street away from Julius' Castle, southbound, you'll see this cutout of Humphrey Bogart in the window at 1360 Montgomery, just about at eye level because the southbound side of the street is elevated. This is where the movie Dark Passage was set - I believe this was Bacall's characters apartment where Bogart, on the lam from San Quentin, either waits to have a face change operation, or is recovering from one. The Dark Passage was a reference both to the movie and to the stairway down from the southbound side of Montgomery to the Northbound side. Just north of the Bogie window is the poodle mural. I think that poodle lives in the apartment on the corner because he/she was yapping away from the window at Libby as I was placing the license plate.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
old Wecter clue (sic) {guilty as charged - I didn't know about the Dark Passage apartment until the CNYTH about three years ago - afd}
easy for experienced hunters

15. Find a shady character at the Babble of Tower.

{The Regular clue was: "You’ll find a Slim, Shady character at the Babble of Tower if you Listen carefully at the proper Station."}

Some teams told me they didn't connect this clue with the M&Ms in your packet. Not my fault - I wrote the clue number on the candy! Next year, look at everything in your packet before you head out. I usually include some edibles as part of a clue. Last year it was chocolate truffles from XOX Truffles in North Beach, and fortune cookies with a clue in the fortune. This year we went a little downscale.

At the time I wrote this clue two weeks ago the rapper Eminem had the number one album in the country and had sold 1.2 million records in one week. His debut album was entitled "Slim Shady." I think his latest album is "My Name is Marshall Mathers." The Babble of Tower referred to the Rap section at Tower Records, (Rap = Babble) and was a word play on the biblical Tower of Babel. There is a Listening Station in the the Rap section at Tower Records on Bay and Columbus, directly behind Eminem's CD's; the license plate was tied to it.

I shadowed team 31 - the eventual winning team in the Regular division - into Tower Records while they looked for the license plate. They did just the right thing, they focused on the words "slim" and "shady" and went up to the clerk at the desk to ask if those words had any significance. But - unbelievably - when he immediately said "Eminem, he's a rapper" the person who asked didn't seem to hear it, and immediately followed up with another question "...or anything with the word 'slim' in it" and the clerk volunteered that there were lots of albums that had the word 'slim' in them - a lot of blues albums, for instance. It was very hard not to yell out, "No, he just told you EMINEM!!! Rap Section!!!"

They got to the plate just as another team got there, they both saw that the first letters were still there, and team 31 backed off and let the other team have the letters. So they win the Sportmanship award as well as first place.

For those of you who complained about the clue not being age-appropriate, the people who played in the hunt this year ranged in age from twelve to (I'm guessing) over 50. The point of the hunt is not to write clues that tap into everyone's existing knowledge-base. It's to write fun clues that you can solve if you're resourceful, even if they're about something you've never heard of before. That way you'll learn something too.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
never heard of Eminem, but we guessed Tower
too hard

16. Two presidents meet at the gateway to the Orient - will it soon be three? Pass Alec, Billy, Daniel and Steven’s place, and try to avoid being caught in the headhunter’s net. Cross the gold country’s most famous mill, and when you see a pheasant under glass, duck into the alley behind it. Shhh! Don’t create too much of a rumpus when you find what you’re looking for.

The Regular clue was identical

The two Presidents were Bush and Grant. It may soon be three if George W. Bush is elected in November. There are other intersections of two Presidents' names - Bush and Taylor for instance, but the "gateway to the Orient" should have tipped you off to the Chinatown Gates. A half block south is the Baldwin Hotel (Alec, Billy, Daniel, Steven...) and across the street from that is headhunter.net. The most famous mill in the gold country was Sutter's Mill, where gold was first discovered - it's a California Historical Landmark - so you cross Sutter. Right from the start you should have been able to see the GLASS PHEASANT, a huge sign running down the side of a building on Grant between Sutter and Campton Alley. The word "PHEASANT" was literally under the word "GLASS." It's right on the corner of Campton Alley, and there's a sign for a restaurant called Rumpus in the alley.

MASTERS PLAYER COMMENTS
fun