Magic Wand

 
 

Memorized Deck Magic



     Article 17



 
Prediction a la Kruskal
with the Aronson Stack

BY DENNIS LOOMIS & SIMON ARONSON

WRITTEN BY DENNIS LOOMIS


            On page 45 of the recently released English version of Mnemonica by Juan Tamariz, there’s a trick called: “Prediction a La Kruskal.” It was devised by Antonio Jose Arenillas for the Mnemonica stack. I wondered if it could be done with the Aronson Stack. After considerable investigation, I’m pleased to reveal that it can. I worked this out shortly after getting my copy of Mnemonica. When, I shared it with Simon Aronson, he created a brilliant addition which makes for an even stronger effect.

            The Kruskal count or process was named for Rutgers mathematician Martin D. Kruskal. It was designed to be done with a shuffled deck, but was not successful 100% of the time. By using the Aronson Stack with the appropriate prediction card, we can guarantee the success of our trick.

 First, the magician predicts a card. This can be a written prediction on a piece of paper, a card from another deck in your pocket, or any other prediction procedure you like.

Next, a spectator is asked to cut the deck. The cut is restricted to the top half. The cut off packet of cards is turned face up on the table, revealing the card the spectator cut to. A counting process is used to move through the deck to a final card, which turns out to match the prediction.

In the original Kruskal Count the Aces count as one and the face cards are valued at five.

Let’s work through an example. With the deck in Aronson Stack order, let’s say that the card cut to is the Ten of Spades. The spectator deals ten cards face up onto the Ten of Spades, arriving at the Queen of Diamonds. Since a face card was reached, the spectator deals five more cards and arrives at the Queen of Hearts. This process is repeated, arriving at the Four of Diamonds next, then the Ten of Clubs, the Four of Clubs, and the Six of Diamonds. Since there are only three cards remaining, the count can go no further, and the Six of Diamonds becomes the “selected” card.

With a new procedure for the count, and with a new starting point, we can perform a strong prediction routine. In Mnemonica, Arenillas and Tamariz have changed the procedure for the face cards. Instead of valuing them as five, they are spelled. If a Queen appears, the spectator spells Q-U-E-E-N as five cards are dealt. For the Jack and King, only four cards are thumbed over since those cards spell with four letters. In fact, my effect with the Aronson Stack will work with either process, but the original Kruskal procedure often leads to a disadvantageous situation which I will explain later. So, I use the spelling procedure with the face cards.

You need only do two things, and the trick is virtually self working. First, you must cut the Five of Diamonds to the face before starting, and your prediction must be the Queen of Hearts. For the past few days, I’ve been carrying a Queen of Hearts from another deck in one pocket so that I can do this trick. I simply pull the card out, with its back to the audience, and place it somewhere in view. It’s lucky that the Queen of Hearts is the card that works with the Aronson Stack; it’s a card often named by laymen.

The spectator can cut to any of the top 24 cards. In discussing this with Simon Aronson, he suggested the following patter to explain why their choice is limited to the top half of the deck:  “This is a counting trick.  We’ll count down a random number, using whatever number you cut to.  So cut off less than half the deck so that we have some cards left in which to do the counting.”

Just follow the procedure outlined above, spelling the court cards and counting the values of the others, and your path will always lead to the Queen of Hearts.

Here’s a chart showing the path taken for a cut to any of the top 24 cards:

 

1

7C

10C

4C

6D

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

2

4H

JC

4S

2S

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

3

KH

JH

10H

QS

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

4

4D

10C

4C

6D

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

5

10D

9H

2C

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

6

JC

4S

2S

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

7

JH

10H

QS

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

8

10C

4C

6D

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

9

JD

3C

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

10

4S

2S

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

11

10H

QS

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

12

6H

4C

6D

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

13

3C

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

 

14

2S

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

 

15

9H

2C

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

16

KS

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

 

 

17

6S

QC

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

18

4C

6D

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

19

8H

KC

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

 

 

 

20

9C

2H

AS

3H

AC

10S

QD

QH

 

 

 

 

 

21

QS

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

 

22

6D

5C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

23

QC

5C

6C

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

 

24

2C

JS

9S

KD

AD

7S

QH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

COMMENTS

1. The trick will work if the Queen of Hearts is cut to the bottom, but then the counting and spelling procedure will proceed to the very last card. It looks better to have one card left on the table.

2. If you use the original Kruskal count procedure of valuing the face cards as “5,” the trick will work. However, in some paths, you will arrive at the King of Spades, the Queen of Spades, the Jack of Spades, the Ace of Spades, and the Ten of Spades. This is because of one of the poker deals built into the Aronson Stack. This suggests a stack.  So, I prefer to avoid it by using the procedure of spelling the face cards worked out by Arenillas and Tamariz.

3. The initial cut can go quite a bit deeper. With one exception, all of the cards up to the Six of Clubs will work. That’s the top 33 cards of the deck once you’ve cut the Five of Diamonds to the face. However, it will not work with the 9 of Diamonds. I recommend using Simon Aronson’s patter given above, and if they cut a little deep, have them turn the packet face up. If you see a card in the range of 28 to 51 or 1 to 8 (stack numbers,) you are fine. If, however, you see card 52 (Nine of Diamonds) you react by saying: “I think that’s a little deep, will you cut a few less cards?” Then you replace the packet and have the spectator cut again. This should seldom happen as Simon’s patter virtually ensures that the cut will fall into the totally safe area of the top 24 cards.

4. If you like to ‘Jazz’ with the Aronson stack, this trick makes an excellent addition to your arsenal. Since the Queen of Hearts is frequently named, just go into this trick when it is. You will have to cut the Five of Diamonds to the face, of course. 

5. If you are proficient at ‘Jazzin’ with the Aronson stack, you can eliminate any restrictions on the cut at all. If the cut falls in the safe area of the top 24 cards, you continue with this trick. You can even do so if they should cut into the eight card block immediately below the Nine of Diamonds. (Just remember that these are stack numbers one to eight.) But, if the cut falls on the Nine of Diamonds, or below the Six of clubs, you simply do not do this trick. Just revert to your normal ‘Jazzin’ procedures.

6. The reason that the Kruskal count works well with the Queen of Hearts as the target is that there are two cards which lead directly to the Queen (The Seven of Spades, and the Queen of Diamonds.) And, the paths which lead to those two cards are mutually exclusive. If you look on the chart at the path from the top card of the deck (the Seven of Clubs,) and the path from the second card from the top, you’ll see that they’re completely different. No cards appear in both of those paths.  Any card which begins a path which crosses either of those two paths will lead inexorably to the Queen of Hearts. Fortunately, with the Aronson stack, the next twenty two cards all do this.

7. In Mnemonica, Arenillas and Tamariz give their method for repeating the effect. This can easily be done with this version. After you complete the effect, replace the Queen of Hearts on the bottom of the deck. You can then repeat the entire routine, with the Five of Diamonds as your prediction. In fact, you can use any of the following cards which are near the bottom of the deck: Ace of Hearts, Eight of Spades, Three of Diamonds, Seven of Hearts, and Five of Diamonds. Just return the Queen of Hearts to the bottom of the deck, and slip the card of your choice from the above list to the fifty-first position, and you are set.

THE ARONSON ADDITION

            I told Simon Aronson about my discovery of how to do “Prediction a la Kruskal” with the Aronson stack. A couple of days later, he had worked out this brilliant variation. In Simon’s version, the Kruskal procedure will lead to a card previously selected by another spectator!

            Begin with the deck in Aronson Stack order. Spread the stacked deck for a selection and removal. The selection must come from the lower half of the deck. Actually, it must fall from the 28th card to the 50th card. This is not difficult. Simply begin spreading cards from left to right with your left thumb as you begin to ask the spectator to take a card. Move quickly, and by the time he can respond, you have passed the first 28 cards or so. Then, slow down and let them choose a card as it goes by. Don’t let them pick either the bottom card or the one adjacent to it.

            Have the spectator show the card to the other spectators, and as he does so, get a break between the 7H and the QH. Simon works with the 5D as a short card, so it’s easy in his case to catch a break one card up from his short card. He suggests that you may also want to pencil dot the Seven or Queen to facilitate this. You could put “punch” work into one of those cards as well.

            After the spectator has shown the card around, split the deck at the break to have the selection returned. Obtain a new break two cards down. This is very easy to sight count.

            Now double undercut to your break.  The 5D will become the face card of the deck, and the selection will be two cards above it. Now proceed with the Kruskal procedure outlined above, and your final card will be the selection! As Simon said: “This opens up the possibilities greatly.”

            When the effect concludes, you need only replace the selection in its proper position and your Aronson Stack is intact.

COMMENTS ON SIMON’S ADDITION

1. Here's an alternative procedure I worked out for the selection process: Begin by cutting the Five of Diamonds to the face. Have someone just touch any card they like as you thumb cards slowly into the right hand. (They must touch one of the top 23 cards.) Break the deck below the card they touch and tip up the cards in the right hand to show them their selection on the face. You do NOT square up those cards. As you replace the spread cards in your right hand onto the cards in your left, Hofzinser cull the chosen card. The way you’re holding the cards makes this quite easy. As you close the fan, slip the culled chosen card between the 7H and QH. (The next-to-the-bottom-card and the one above it.)  Now false shuffle and/or cut and you are ready to proceed with the Kruskal Count.

2. You can create a similar effect using a procedure from Mnemonica. Begin by forcing the Queen of Hearts from a different deck. Have the card tabled but not revealed until the end of the effect.

You could use a gaffed forcing deck, like a one-way deck, Svengali Deck, etc. Or, you can use a sleight of hand force. If your force is deceptive, you create about the same effect as with Simon’s addition.

Brief plug for my business: Loomis Magic carries a big line of magic DVD’s. And, we have great prices. So, please feel free to visit us at www.loomismagic.com when you’re contemplating a purchase. I think you’ll find our prices as good as any and better than most. We have a simple flat fee shipping charge, which means that you’ll save a LOT on bigger orders.

About the time this article appears, Loomis Magic will have copies of it’s newest product: Sterling Dare’s Money Menagerie on DVD. This will be on two disks, and is a great way to learn to make Origami Animals for new paper folders and origami enthusiasts alike. Sterling’s book has been available for several months, but we are very excited about this DVD version. Visit the Loomis Magic Web Site for more information.

For those of you that have heard the buzz about the Loomis/Riser Micro Chop Cups for the past 2 years, be warned that Jim Riser will be producing the last of these during December of 2004. After that, no more will be made and when the inventory is gone they will not be produced again.



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UPDATED OCTOBER 17, 2004

Copyright 2004 by Dennis Loomis