google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Sunday April 10, 2016, Don Gagliardo & C.C. Burnikel

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Apr 10, 2016

Sunday April 10, 2016, Don Gagliardo & C.C. Burnikel

TITLE: SQUAD

Our Sonny and Cher of Crosswordland strike again on Sunday after a four week hiatus and for awhile Don (theme originator) and C.C. could have sung, I Got You Babe because I was clueless about the gimmick. Halfway through it occurred to me, "Boy there's a lot of S's in these theme answers" and then I, disguised as Captain Obvious, saw S-QUAD as in quad/four S's per theme fill and had to forget about Mod Squad, Police Squad, et al. SSSSweet!

Here is an S-QUAD more amenable to my level!
The Double 16 verticals really stand out in the grid. How long must that have taken?

ACROSS THEME ANSWERS:

22. "Forever" purchase : FIRST CLASS STAMP - While not "Forever" you could have used this FIRST CLASS STAMP to send me a card in the year of my college graduation


46. Government meeting for delicate subjects : CLOSED SESSION - It turns out that the committee did not have to go into CLOSED SESSION to find Charlie innocent after Col. Slade's fabulous speech in Scent Of A Woman. Charlie had his 89. Judge's (Committee's) decree : CASE DISMISSED


55. Simple to use, in adspeak : NO FUSS NO MUSS - Exhibit A


80. Corporate uncertainty : BUSINESS RISK - Selling these units here seems to fit the description




115. It has a November kickoff : CHRISTMAS SEASON - A verboten phrase in most schools


DOWN THEME ANSWERS:

14. "Aha!" : JUST AS I SUSPECTED - Another great someecard 


35. Great Sioux War of 1876 event : CUSTER'S LASSTAND - This turned out to be a Pyrrhic victory for the native people who then became relentlessly pursued by the U.S. Army



THEME REVEAL:

104. Twisty turns ... and the "quad" in each of this puzzle's eight longest answers : ESSES - I count at least QUAD ESSES in this Hana Highway on Maui



Across        

1. Check some figures? : OGLE


5. Mulching material : PEAT

9. Hot spot : RANGE

14. It leaves trails : JET

17. Song often sung in Italian : ARIA - Roy's big voice with a 4-octave range has been described as operatic. I wonder how he'd do on Nessun Dorma or how Pavarotti would do on Pretty Woman?


18. Tiny tank plant : ALGA

19. Brain freeze-causing drinks : ICEES

20. Photo subject for NASA's New Horizons : PLUTO

25. Broad-leaved ornamental : HOSTA - What started as the Omaha HOSTA Society's modest plantings decades ago has turned into the fabulous 100 acre Lauritzen Gardens today.


26. Desert climate feature : DRY HEAT 



27. Blog updates : POSTS

28. Like easier-to-swallow pills : COATED - Not quite "a spoonful of sugar"

29. "__ Miniver" : MRS - Greer Garson won an Academy Award for her title role and gave the longest acceptance speech in academy history. They began a time limit the next year.

30. Strain to lift : HEFT

32. Humana rival : AETNA

33. Chinese gambling mecca : MACAO - Put it on Black at the roulette table when you're there


36. Sloppy, as security : LAX

37. Sauce with a kick : TABASCO - Still made on Avery Island, LA where over half the 200 person workforce also lives

41. "The Simpsons" disco guy : STU

44. "Suits me fine!" : I SURE DO - "Do you enjoy blogging, Gary?"

49. Storage medium : DISK - My old 360 K floppy DS/DD disk pales in storage comparison  to my 3 Terabyte iMac

50. Bulgarian capital : SOFIA

52. Enterprise counselor : TROI

53. Capital with a Viking Ship Museum : OSLO

54. Prohibition era gun : GAT - This mug tried to chisel me and went on the lam and so I offed him with my GAT and a shyster helped me beat the rap

58. Reminders on cards : CUES - Johnny Carson's opening 
monologue CUE card from his last show


59. "Feliz año nuevo" time : ENERO

61. "You __ right!" : ARE SO

62. Champion : TITLIST - My daughter gets me TITLIST Pro V1's that say this on the back


64. Like Gen. Powell : RETD

66. More painful : SORER

69. __ year : LEAP

70. WWII Navy vessel named for the 29th state : USS IOWA - It had an elevator and was fitted with a bathtub when it carried FDR to Mers El Kébir, Algeria in WWII

73. Ocular sign of mischief : GLEAM

76. On the ball : ALERT

79. Puerto Rico, por ejemplo : ISLA

84. Cedar Rapids campus : COE

85. Marsh duck : TEAL

86. Hindu deity : RAMA

87. Salentina Peninsula country : ITALY - The "heel" of Italy's boot


88. Bowl over : STUN

93. Three-syllable foot : ANAPEST - A metrical foot of three syllables in the pattern of "unstressed, unstressed, stressed" e.g. Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house

95. FDR successor : HST - "Uh, Harry, we have this super bomb in New Mexico that no one has told you about."

96. Erode : EAT INTO

97. "Kung Fu" actor Philip : AHN

99. Gets one's feet wet : WADES

100. Bombards with e-junk : SPAMS

102. Yucatán native : MAYA

104. Billion-year span : EON

105. Takes in, say : ALTERS - My alterations are going the other way

107. Weapon in a scabbard : SABER

110. Nutmeg State team : HUSKIES - The U Conn Lady HUSKIES just won their fourth national championship in a row


114. Kingdom : REALM

118. Kunta __ of "Roots" : KINTE - Roots attracted a then-record audience for a miniseries and is credited with changing attitudes toward slavery

119. Ritzy retreat : VILLA

120. "Oy vey!" : AH ME

121. Figure of interest? : RATE


122. Blue : SAD

123. Great __ Mountains : SMOKY

124. Orgs. that donate to runners : PACS - Political runners

125. Do some cleaning : DUST

 
Down
 
1. Clumsy type : OAF

2. Electrical system : GRID - A very nice off-the-GRID house in Washington 


3. New York MTA-owned commuter line : LIRR - Long Island Railroad

4. Patsy : EASY MARK - He went to his grave saying he was a Patsy


5. Treasure map units : PACES

6. "__ Enchanted": 2004 film : ELLA

7. Aunt in P.G. Wodehouse's "Jeeves" stories : AGATHA

8. Prof's aides : TA'S - Get used to them, the prof has to "publish or perish"

9. Ristorante rice dish : RISOTTO

10. Play times? : ACTS

11. Trim : NEAT

12. Peridot and garnet : GEMS

13. Claim subject to debate : ESP- Will this tell you if you have ESP?


15. Relative of -let : ETTE

16. Pond hopper : TOAD

20. Instagram fodder : PHOTOS

21. Wells Fargo product : LOAN

23. Pain usually pluralized : THROE - A Police Chief in the THROES of pain after taking a 50,000 volt Taser jolt as a publicity stunt to get Tasers for his officers


24. UV-blocker rating syst. : SPF

28. Gospel singer Winans : CECE - Also a phonetic representation of one of our constructors today

31. Takes out : EXCISES

32. St. Clare's town : ASSISI - The Poor Clares of Cincinnati extending a blessing on the 800th anniversary of the founding of their order in ASSISI


33. Tiny biting fly : MIDGE 

34. Like most people : ASIAN

36. Sponge made from a vine fruit : LOOFA

38. Regarding : AS TO

39. Highway noise barrier : BERM - Many ball parks offer cheap BERM seating

40. Score after deuce : AD OUT - The server loses if the she loses the next point

42. Vacancy sign : TO LET - I'll be you know the song this picture and fill represents


43. Pizzeria chain, familiarly : UNOS

45. Brit. military award : DSO

47. Loop on the range : LASSO - From our LASSO, Riata, Noose, Bolas department

48. Get-together : SOCIAL

51. What a Sphynx cat lacks : FUR - An acquired taste?


55. "Don't look at me!" : NOT I - Said Judas to Jesus

56. 53-Across locale, to natives : NORGE - 
Jeg kommer fra NORGE (I am from Norway)

57. Cardinal cap letters : ST. L.

60. Flea market deal : RESALE

63. Reporter's source : LEAK - Mark Felt


65. Bio info : DOB - Get to ready to recite your Date Of Birth 20 times a day if you're in a hospital

67. Borden spokescow : ELSIE

68. Tour de France downtime : REST DAY - What was Lance taking on those days? 

70. __ directed : USE AS

71. Lousy sausages? : WURSTS

72. "Ditto" : AS AM I

74. Altar up above : ARA

75. 87-Across fashion center : MILAN

77. Stir : ROUSE and 
94. Got up : AWOKE


78. Places for cots : TENTS

79. Sign of a recent bite : ITCH

81. Hacker's cry : I'M IN

82. Harper's Weekly caricaturist : NAST - He created modern image of Santa and the GOP's elephant

83. Bawling, for crying out loud: Abbr. : SYN - Synonyms. Four crying out loud = QUADS, er, babies not S's

88. Don Quixote, for one : SPANIARD

90. "Gosh!" : DEAR ME

91. Brand with a paw print in its logo : IAMS

92. "The rumor is ... " : SOME SAY

98. "Very funny!" : HA HA HA

101. Hit with hail, say : PELT

103. Museum pieces : ART

105. Torah holders : ARKS

106. Luke's twin : LEIA - I wonder what they got Darth for Father's Day?

107. Thin strip of wood : SHIM - Used to plumb and level doors here


108. Woody's son : ARLO - Arlo said his famous Alice's Restaurant lasted 18 min and 38 sec just like the gap in Richard Nixon's Watergate tape

109. Take for a ride : BILK

111. "Semper Fi" org. : USMC - I hope Dennis will comment today

112. Biblical name meaning "hairy" : ESAU

113. They're often pickled : SOTS - So many euphemisms 

115. Walgreens rival : CVS - So far they can't get the ground in our town to build next to the Walgreens here as is often their wont 

116. Hiking guide : MAP

117. Ping-Pong need : NET


My SteadfaStneSS led to many SuceSSeand I finished without requiring multiple SeSSionS. 

Let'S See what otherhave to Say:


34 comments:

  1. Greetings!

    Thanks for pleasant diversion, CC, DG and Husker!

    Reasonably easy. Theme cool. USS IOWA mostly perped. Otherwise no problems.

    Have a great Sunday, all!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Morning, all!

    Fun puzzle. I had no idea what the theme was until I got to the reveal, but then I had a wonderful AHA moment as I got the S-QUAD title.

    Pretty easy overall. My main hangups were with the little things. Like having SO DO I and AS DO I before finally getting AS AM I. Or putting in OH HA HA before HA HA HA. I also went with ARIZONA before USS IOWA. The perps eventually took care of all of those, but it's always hard when you have an answer you just know is right and it turns out to be wrong.

    I have to get up early tomorrow morning to get my son out the door for his 5 day "Environmental Camp" (or "E-Camp") 5th grade school trip. This will be the first day he's been away from home without us aside from an occasional sleep-over at a friend's. He doesn't seem nervous about it, but my wife and I are a bit of a wreck just thinking about it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good morning!

    One pass across. One pass down. Student passed. Thank you, triumphant trio, Don (Hard-g), C.C. and Husker.

    Anybody recently buy a roll of "Forever" stamps and now rues the day? Hand up. Price drop from a government entity? Unheard of. Absurd!

    It had to be CHRISTMAS SEASON because Open Enrollment wasn't quite long enough.

    Avery Island is not surrounded by water.

    Never watched Kung Fu, but AHN bubbled up from somewhere in the depths.

    Had LATH before SHIM. Shims are not only thin, the thickness has to taper if they're to do their job.

    Looking at your interest rate chart, Husker, I can easily pick out the year we bought our house in Houston. Sold it in '07.

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  4. I think I see a beaming Hondo in the background of that Huskies photo.

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  5. Actually Tom, my two brothers and I all received degrees attending in Storrs and were there when the basketball fortunes changed when Toby Kimball brought them to the tournament. The success of GENO AURIEMMA is incredible. This year's senior class won the championship all four years.

    The puzzle was fun, with the parsing of the title a challenge. Each of the theme answers were great. Enjoyed the CLUING of AGATHA and ASIAN.

    Thanks hard g, C.C. and Gary

    BTW the golf ball has the E, TITLEIST.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Gary, this is one of your best blogs. I knew it was you before I looked at the author.
    Don and CC, I thoroughly enjoyed this puzzle.
    This week's Friday, Saturday and Sunday puzzles were all faster than usual for me. I was on the Dynamic Duo's wave length from the start. There was nothing obscure here.
    My only hang up was DESK before DISK. I left it and came back to change it when I saw ASIAN and SURE.
    CHRISTMAS SEASON in many of our stores begins before Halloween. I couldn't care less and so ignore the hype until Nov.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Actually Jason, Google what smh means on text speak.

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  8. Hello Puzzlers -

    Trouble free solve today. Hand up for thinking of Hondo when Huskies showed up - they're certainly big news around here.

    The development of Tabasco Sauce has an interesting history. It's detailed in the book Salt by Mark Kurlansky. Apparently Avery Island was a salt mine before becoming a pepper farm, or something like that.

    Thanks to the DGCC team and Husker!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Good Morning!
    Husker, Don and C.C. - What a fantastic team!. I didn't get the theme until the reveal. I love those aha moments.
    1 across was a great clue in a great puzzle.
    Thank you!

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  10. Good Morning:

    Another gem from the Dynamic Duo! Fun and clever theme and lots of doable fill. Huskies definitely brought Hondo to mind, as did CeCe, to our CC and Lucina with dry heat! Tabasco makes a super-tasting Bloody Mary mix, but it's hard to find, at least in my area.

    Thanks to Don G, CC, and Gary for a delightful solve and wonderful guided tour; great write-up, HG!

    We have nice, blue and sunny skies but there is a nip in the air and some slight winds. Doesn't feel like Spring, yet.

    Have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  11. I am from Connecticut (Nutmeg State) and it just hit me why the University of Connecticut's mascot are "Huskies".
    UCONN (Yukon) huskies.

    Don't even ask about the nutmeg thing?

    ReplyDelete
  12. And how old are you, Bob, and how long have you lived in CT?

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  13. This was fun. Started out smoothly in the NW with a great clue for Ogle. Got the theme after then second one fell, so that helped out. Had a few self imposed snags, like where I read the clue for Sots as "They're often picked" so I filled in Nits. Tried to squeeze Missouri into the battleship slot and named the Alter constellation of Ada. Got past all those and got it all in a reasonable Sunday time. Thanks for the offering Don and C.C., and for pinch hitting Gary.

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  14. Thanks Don and CC for a fun Sunday puzzle.

    Gary, I loved the cute pet movies. I may try to get my cat to play ping pong.

    I forgot that Sunday’s puzzle had a title so SQUAD didn’t bother me. I went piece meal with the answers I was sure of [some of which I had to change later] so I got to the reveal early in my solve.

    I had to red letter the last 1/5 to get a finish.

    32 D. ASSISI. A famous Poor Clare, Mother Angelica, passed away this Easter. She founded the EWTN Catholic broadcast network and had a very popular call-in show,. So I knew that answer. Franciscan nun therefore ASSISI. MOTHER_ANGELICA

    119A Kunte KINTE. The boiler died in our apartment bldg and we never saw Roots. We stayed out all night then ran home and hopped into bed.
    I heard African Americans on the train discussing it. Seemed like they hadn’t know slavery was that bad.

    84A. COE. I looked up Coe College in Cedar Rapids because I had never heard of it. Even with the answer given I had no idea what C.O.E. stood for. It is a small liberal arts private college.Their athletic teams are the “Kohawks.”
    Coe_College

    Thanks Bob Niles, for explaining why U Conn Huskies.

    We got 5-10 inches of snow Friday night and Sunday in Cleveland. What a crazy spring!

    Live Well and Prosper,

    ReplyDelete
  15. The history and source of the name for Coe College.

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  16. Good morning all. Thank you Don, CC, and Husker Gary.

    Struggled around the environs of DISMISSED and AS AM I. My hacker's cry was FORE for the longest time. When I finally ditched it, I promptly entered AWAY after EAT for erode. Couldn't build around that either. Eventually realized NAST and then INTO, so finally got AS AM I and DISMISSED, but that left me with RA-A. Should have thought about all of the letters, because I jumped on W and thus an incorrect I wIN.

    My reporter's source was a LEAd, not a LEAK. Didn't have the R in ARA either, so RISK was not apparent. Also had mILK instead of BILK.

    So a few misses. That's ok.

    Loved the two GSD pups playing !

    ReplyDelete
  17. ANAPEST to the rescue after the recent DACTYL.
    One can AWAKEN without "getting up." We had this recently, too.

    ReplyDelete
  18. I liked this puzzle very much. Excellent cluing and fill, and a tricky clever theme. I have put this one in my top ten list. And Gary, your excellent write-up, into which you obviously invested a lot of time and effort, added to the enjoyment. Quality stuff! [Humming "King of the Road" to myself.]

    ReplyDelete
  19. Fun Sunday Squad today. Thanks Don, C.C. and Husker Gary.

    I didn't get the theme until the reveal clue as I was busy looking for words that would go with SQUAD. Clever.
    Thanks Husker G for explaining the Bawling, for crying out loud=SYN clue. I was looking for text speak. Perhaps a / or : instead of , might have helped.

    Smiled at 1A and 10D clues.
    Noted a lot of "I" phrases - I sure do, Not I, Just as I suspected.

    Not sure whether I like the 71D Lousy sausages? clue. Maybe Lousiest sausages?
    I was trying to fit Erases before EXCISES. Hand up for Lath before SHIM.

    Sometimes not being aware of some American things can slow the solve. This Canadian did not know "Forever" stamps, UNOS pizza (although I think we have had this before), LIRR and Nutmeg State (we did have a list of State nicknames previously but apparently nutmeg is unofficial).

    But I did know NORGE (MIL was Norwegian). Wanted OBE before DSO. By now, I know to use SABER not sabre!

    I knew St. Francis of Assisi but not St. Clare.

    Have a great day. Still cool here. Now I will be humming Roger Miller all day.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Another lovely puzzle from our dynamic duo of CC & DG! It was a fairly quick solve (for a Sunday)and amusing as well. Once I saw ESSES and scanned the grid, the theme became apparent. Nicely done! DIW, though, at AD OUT which I had no idea about and HITLIST didn't seem bad. Drat!

    Thanks, Gary, for subbing once again!

    I hope all are enjoying a beautiful Sunday! It's raining today, off and on, so no DRYHEAT at present. It's coming, though.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I had "throb" instead of "throe," but eventually got it. I don't think of "throes" as being pain, however. One can be in the throes of ecstasy, throes of anguish, etc. Did that throw (throe?) anyone else?

    ReplyDelete
  22. Good afternoon all on this rainy Sunday...we LOVE it!

    Perfect day to enjoy a most clever puzzle. Thanks CC and Don...and, of course, Gary who always does a great job explaining all the answers that I had to fill with multiple perps:hosts, anapest, coe,lirr, and so on. Didn't take as long as I expected. Sometimes I think I am living under a rock; had not remembered Salentina Peninsula, or did I ever hear it? Our trip to Italy did not take us that far south.

    I will be heading to the land of "dry heat" on Wed to care for my oldest sister who is in the advanced stages of alzheimers.I am very sad thinking about how frightening things are for her,not being able to remember all the things she once did so easily. Lucina, if I have time, I will give you a call.

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  23. Hi Y'all! I agree the puzzle was FIRST CLASS Solve all the way, Don & C.C.! Gary, wow, lots of work! Loved the ping pong playing cat.

    Forgot to read the title so didn't get the theme until the last. When I saw S Quad, I got the meaning right away. Clever, very meaty fill.

    Didn't know ANAPEST or Salentina Peninsula in ITALY. Perped.

    I had filled ___LIST. When TIT perped in, I thought it was a LIST Dennis had compiled to OGLE.

    Our Marines can be happier today with USMC.

    BERM: think of this more as a water barrier rather than noise barrier. My menfolk bulldozed many miles of berms in farm field terraces to direct water.

    Hit with hail was PELT, not "dent". Car owners would argue this with an insurance co.

    Hand up for recently buying "FOREVER STAMPS" and will rue that day forever -- or 100 stamp usages, whichever comes first.

    ReplyDelete
  24. I figured out UCONN Huskies years ago. Not because I'm smart, but because I only heard it on TV and translated it to Yukon Huskies. Then I vaguely wondered why a Canadian Territory team was playing in the U.S. Duh!

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  25. Hi folks,

    Was out the door in the early AM & never looked at thecorner till I came home, but I wondered what the heck was going in with all the Huskie comments. After a look see, saw the clue & fill. All I can say is if you are a basketball fan & you never saw them play this year, you missed out on near perfection. Coach Geno & his quality assistants had them playing as a TEAM. They were a pleasure to watch. And they are nice, pleasant kids.

    Next year will be back to reality, but it still will be fun.

    Nighty night! I am pooped.

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  26. Sorry, but one more Huskie matter, Lemon, no question about Toby Kimball's influence on UConn BB, but the player that really began their rise to prominence was Art Quimby.

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  27. Busy day with a trip to Los Angeles, but I got it! I got it! I got a Don and C.C. Sunday puzzle! Thank you, thank you, thank you both--and you too, Husker Gary. What a great experience!

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  28. Fun puzzle. Thanks, Dynamic Duo. You never fail to amuse. And GREAT write up, HG! One of your best, and that's saying a lot!

    Tabasco abounds down here in the swamp near Avery Island. I even put it in scrambled eggs. Sorry it is not available elsewhere. It adds an interesting pepper flavor as well as the famous heat. I'm not wild about the heat, but I like the flavor.


    ReplyDelete
  29. I believe that is a misunderstanding of what Irish Miss meant. Tabasco makes a Bloody Mary mix, (very good) and that can be hard to find. A bottle of the sauce can be found in most every grocery. TABASCO® brand Bloody Mary Mix LINK. MORE.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Good evening, folks. Thank you, C.C. and Don Hard G, for a fine puzzle. Thank you Husker Gary, for a fine review.

    I started late on this puzzle today, because of reading a book, "The Nightingale." Got into it and finished in about two hours. Not bad for me.

    I felt great because I got the NW corner easily. But, that is where it stopped. I wound up bouncing around the entire puzzle and filling in words that were obvious. I did get then theme early because of that fact, which helped me on the theme answers.

    Slowly filled in the puzzle. My only inkblot was 58A, where I entered confidently RSVP. That soon proved to be an error. CUES won that battle.

    Not sure of the comments on FOREVER Stamps. What is happening with that? I buy them all the time.

    Got NAST easily. Crossword staple.

    HA HA HA. Very funny.

    Took me a long time to figure out EXCISES, since I did not know SOFIA. However, deep thinking won out.

    Not sure of a MIDGE. Perps proved it.

    My wife surprised me last night. I was at a Commandery Inspection all day at Cary, IL, and afterward we had planned a dinner with my wife, daughter, and her boyfriend, for my birthday at the Shrine Temple. Well, I showed up and there were 13 of my friends there, including my wife and daughter. What a nice surprise. We had a great time!

    I will be speed reading my book tomorrow to finish it by our club meeting tomorrow night. The book is great so far.

    See you tomorrow.

    Abejo

    ( )

    ReplyDelete
  31. I was in Texas all last week visiting my sis and some of our kids. Good to get back into the crossword groove again, with a fun puzzle from CC and Don G. and an entertaining write-up from HG!
    I really enjoyed reading "The Nightingale" too @abejo - I didn't know anything about the spys who led downed Allied troops in Vichy France to freedom through the Pyrenees. I also just read a book by Philip Deal called "Love in an Iron Bowl" a memoir about a young man who goes to teach in a Chinese university the year after Tiananmen Square. It was very interesting - I was thinking the whole time I read it -"I wonder what CC's take on his perspective would be?"

    ReplyDelete
  32. Very late today, having been out of town for a few days. The long S-QUAD fills were easily guessed but I would have never figured the theme out. The puzzle was fairly easy with only two unknowns- HOSTA & ANAPEST, that I can only thank the perps for. As far as UNOS, I only know it from a previous puzzle and out of curiosity looked up the pizza chain ratings. It's not in the top 20 in terms of locations. Tough for someone outside of the Northeast to know.

    But I got lucky tonight and finished with no errors.

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  33. Are you kidding me?!?

    Tonight, the bottle let me down.

    RIP Merle

    ReplyDelete
  34. Well here it is, Thursday and I finally finished. NORGE??? It went so smoothly and ESSES clued me in. And then I went back north. GEM and ALGA saved me
    Loved HG and the posts. Toby Kimball!! Belmont Hill nestcepas? NE has UNOS now.
    I was afraid of Muss but had to have it.
    PS. Champions use TITLeIST golf balls

    ReplyDelete

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