Week 863: It's post time Tiny Woods x Pleasant Prince = Tiger's Cub Scout Dublin x Odysseus = Bloomsday Alcindor x Bravo Whiskey = Abdul-TheBar One of our oldest and most ridiculously popular contests: Below is a list of 100 of the almost 400 horses eligible for this year's Triple Crown races. This week: "Breed" any two of them and name the "foal," as in the examples above. Your personal stable of entries cannot exceed 25. As in real life, the names cannot be longer than 18 characters, including spaces and symbols. Winner gets the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. Second place gets a pretty little build-your-own Stonehenge kit that produces a monument way smaller than Spinal Tap size. If you have a large hand, you could set it up in your palm. Donated by Russell Beland as a sacrifice to the Gods of The Style Invitational. Other runners-up win their choice of a coveted Style Invitational Loser T-shirt or yearned-for Loser Mug. Honorable Mentions get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational Loser Magnets. First Offenders get a smelly tree-shaped air "freshener" (Fir Stink for their First Ink). One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail to losers@washpost.com or by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, April 12. Put "Week 863" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with your entry. Contests are judged on the basis of humor and originality. All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be edited for taste or content. Results to be published Derby Day, May 1. No purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries will be disqualified. The revised title for next week's results is by Tom Witte; this week's honorable-mentions subhead is by Kevin Dopart. The list of horses is taken from the full one at BloodHorse.com. A Little Warm Ace of Aces Alcindor Ashore Aspire Awesome Act Backtalk Beethoven Biloxi Black Snowflake Blind Luck Boisterous Bravo Whiskey Bulls and Bears Call Shot Canthavehim Catch Twenty Two Chief Counsel Clear Alternative Close to the Edge Colonel Mustard Conveyance Crisp D' Funnybone Deep Darkness Delong Road Discreetly Mine Down With Dixie Drive Home Dryfly Dublin Enclosure Endorsement Excessive Passion Extraextraordinary Fenway Faithful First Dude Get a Grip Guys Reward Hear Ye Hear Ye Homeboykris Ice Box In the Paint Interactif Johore Kollege Launch N Relaunch Leaving New York Lethal Combination Liquidity Event Lookin at Lucky Make History Make Music for Me Marble Arch Marching Tune Moojab Mr. Saturdaynight Nacho Friend Nextdoorneighbor No Shenanigans Noah's Dream Odysseus One Nation Overcommunication Party at My Place Pleasant Prince Preamble Privilaged Prizefighting Psychic Income Radiohead Raging Wit Rule Saw Perfection Scuba Diver She Be Wild Shrimp Dancer Silenced So Elite Spangled Star Spicer Stay Put Super Saver Switch The Director The Program Thousand Excuses Tiny Woods Toboggan Slide Trackman Twirling Candy Utopian Walking the Beach Who's Up Winaholic Winslow Homer Worldly Worth a Buck Wow Wow Wow Ziggy's Stardust Report from Week 859, in which we asked you to tell us jokes in any of four given forms: "If they can ___, why can't they ___?"; "You can ___, but you can't ___"; "It's not the ___, it's the ___"; or "If you ___, they will ___." The winner of the Inker If they can train puppies to use the newspaper, why can't they train yuppies to use the newspaper? (Beverley Sharp, Washington) 2. the winner of the Loser key chain custom-made in Thailand: You can rest in a courtroom, but you can't court in a restroom. -- L. Craig (John Glenn, Tyler, Tex.) 3. You can love your fellow man in Virginia, but you can't send out invitations. (Larry Yungk, Arlington) 4.If they can create a thin, pocket-size, touch-screen-enabled e-mailer/Internet browser/game machine/organizer/cellphone, why can't they create a cancel button in an elevator? (Ari Unikoski, Tel Aviv) But they couldn't: Honorable mentions IF THEY CAN put a man on the moon, WHY CAN'T THEY put a man on the moon? (Bruce Alter, on vacation in Port St. Lucie, Fla.) If they can make a microwave oven, why can't they make a microwave chiller? (I want a cold one NOW!) (Jeff Contompasis, Ashburn) If they can reenact Civil War battles, why can't they reenact witch dunkings? Oh, and the witches should wear flimsy T-shirts. (Peter Metrinko, Gainesville) If they can create plastics that won't break down in a landfill for centuries, why can't they use them to make a garden hose that lasts more than two summers? (Russell Beland, Fairfax) If they can have Winter Olympics curling, why can't they have Summer Olympics shuffleboard? (Jeff Contompasis) If they can tell me I didn't need to dial 1 for a call to a different area code, why can't they just ignore the freaking 1 and put through the freaking call? (Elden Carnahan, Laurel) If they can put a man on the moon, why can't they put a man on "The View"? (Barry Koch, Catlett, Va.) If they can make a phone that lets you look up movie times and buy tickets, why can't they automatically silence the phone during the movie? (Joe Neff, Warrington, Pa.) If they can call the theory of evolution a fallacy by finding a single unexplained fact, why can't they do the same for religion? (Kevin Dopart, Washington) YOU CAN turn words like "calendar" and "friend" into verbs, BUT YOU CAN'T illiterate me into doing it. (Russell Beland) You can put your best foot forward, but you can't get anywhere unless you also put your worst foot forward. (Mae Scanlan, Washington) You can win the Nobel Peace Prize without doing anything, but you can't win the Publishers Clearing House Sweepstakes without entering. (Drew Bennett, West Plains, Mo.) You can live by the Bible, but you can't die by the Bible, unless it's maybe it's one of those big Gutenberg Bibles with the metal clasps. (Chuck Smith, Woodbridge) You can pet your mate, but you can't mate your pet. (Tom Witte, Montgomery Village) You can call it a tea party, but you can't drink anything but Kool-Aid. (Larry Yungk) You can avoid contradictions, but you can't avoid contradictions. (Jay Shuck, Minneapolis) You can take my committee chair, videotape me smoking a crack pipe, give me a field sobriety test after a traffic stop and censure me for awarding a city contract to my girlfriend, but you can't take my dignity. -- M.B., Washington (Stephen Dudzik, Olney) IT'S NOT the subtle feeling of rejection, IT'S the mace. (Barry Koch) It's not the heat, it's the high water content in the atmosphere that elevates the vapor pressure to the extent that evaporative cooling is ineffective. Also, you should take your hand out of the toaster oven. (Tim Livengood, Columbia, whose only previous ink was another geeky entry in 2003) It's not the view of Russia from Alaska, it's the . . . well, everything else. (Rick Haynes, Potomac) IF YOU leave me now, and take away the biggest part of me, THEY WILL probably ask you what you're going to do with my butt. (Randy Lee, Burke) If you walk out of a bathroom with Nutella all over your fingers, they will not get the joke. Even when you lick it off. Trust me on this. (Kevin Dopart) If you text your entry while trying to drive, th (Kevin Dopart) And Last: It's not the number of entries you submit to the Empress, it's the submission to the Empress in your entries. (Drew Bennett, West Plains, Mo., who includes an embarrassingly bad suck-up poem to the Empress with his entries every freaking week) Next Week: Ten, anyone? or The X Games