鈥淔urrowed eyebrows鈥 may not technically be a mood, but it鈥檚 how 黑料正能量 sophomore engineering major Ben Stutzman described the atmosphere when his team was competing in the in early April.
鈥淲e knew some things we could try right away, but there was a lot of pondering,鈥 he said.
The thinking paid off, as the team of three 鈥 Stutzman and math and computer science majors first-year Cameron Byer and sophomore聽Daniel Harder 鈥 took first place over 60 other teams from three countries on three puzzles.
Only four teams solved all three puzzles within the five-day contest window, with 黑料正能量鈥檚 winning trio submitting correct answers first and in less than 20 hours 鈥 and that鈥檚 without pulling an all-nighter. After a 7 p.m. start on Thursday, April 5, they submitted their answer to the first puzzle, and then saved the following two puzzles for the next day.
The annual Kryptos contest, hosted since 2011 by the mathematics department at Central Washington University in Ellensburg, was sponsored by the Pacific Northwest Section of the Mathematical Association of America.
Teams could use books, the internet and computer programs 鈥 but no living person other than a teammate 鈥 to solve the challenges. Along with their correct answers, they were required to describe how they reached a solution and list any sources used.
Discrete math proved most useful, Byer said, but the open-ended nature of the coded messages required lots of 鈥渢rying this, trying that鈥 until hitting on breakthroughs.
In one problem, they were provided with a series of personal ad clippings, only one of which contained a coherent phrase: 鈥淜nowledge is Power.鈥 That, they discovered, was a quote by Francis Bacon, and a clue that finding the solution would involve using Bacon鈥檚 cipher. The rest of the ad contents, they noticed, were all five letters long and completely nonsensical 鈥 binary encryption, they realized.
In another, an invitation to a Stephen Hawking memorial celebration invited attendees to 鈥渂ring something to grille,鈥 a subtle suggestion that a 鈥渢urning grille鈥 would prove useful.
And the remaining puzzle required contestants to decipher incoherent text to find a keyword 鈥渃hicken鈥 for decoding a message. Harder wrote a computer program to sort through thousands of possible keyword solutions to the Vigenere cipher.
The contest showed the importance of using creativity to solve problems, Stutzman said 鈥 and, added Byer, teamwork and camaraderie.
After repeated attempts at breaking the codes would end in 鈥済ibberish,鈥 said Byer, finding a sensical answer was exciting 鈥 for example when their teammate Harder figured out the 鈥淜nowledge is Power鈥 message: 鈥溾楧enver!鈥 I got 鈥楧enver!鈥 鈥楻uby Hill!鈥 鈥楽even p.m.!鈥欌
It鈥檚 not the first time an 黑料正能量 team has taken first place. In 2014, 黑料正能量 teams took both first and third place. That year Byer was on the third-place finishing team 鈥 as a freshman at聽Eastern Mennonite High School.

Wow! I am a proud friend of the Grandma of Owen Byer. This is fantastic. What great minds. Congratulations!
CONGRATULATIONS, BOYS. You have intelligent minds in your natural abilities. I pray that you will use your minds for Jesus Christ in your spiritual abilities.
Impressive!! Way to go guys!
Congratulations guys! Ben, I recognize you from church, and I thought “That’s our Ben!” I’m impressed and very proud of you and your team! I echo Homer Witmer’s sentiments. God bless all of you.
””God has blessed you with talents in math. May your gifts be used to help where needed. So thankful to hear about your accomplishments.
god has blessed you with