google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Monday, February 16, 2026, Betsy Ochester, Andrew Gutelle

Advertisements

Feb 16, 2026

Monday, February 16, 2026, Betsy Ochester, Andrew Gutelle

Happy Presidents' Day!  NaomiZ here to MC a marvelous Monday puzzle by Betsy Ochester and Andrew Gutelle.  This puzzle has five theme entries, symmetrically placed in rows across, with one spanning the grid.  And today's puzzle is not just the luck of the draw, but as the grid spanner makes clear, it was designed for a Monday morning.  

The key to the theme is in the very last Across clue:

65-Across. Ceremony host, or a phonetic hint to 17-, 23-, 37-, 45-, and 58-Across: EMCEE.  EMCEE is a phonetic spelling of the initialism MC, which means Master of Ceremonies.  The hint suggests that the letters M and C will play important roles in the listed entries.

              NZ as MC


17. Communication system with dots and dashes: MORSE CODE.  This entry sets the pattern for the rest.  The two words of the answer begin with M and C.  When solving, I failed to see the pattern until 65-Across enlightened me.  Were you quicker to catch on?

"Samuel Morse, stop fooling with that telegraph thing.
People will never talk to each other with their fingers."


23. "Aladdin" transport: MAGIC CARPET.

37. Early-week newspaper feature: MONDAY CROSSWORD.  Here's our grid spanner!  It tells us that our constructors hoped this puzzle would run on a Monday.  


45. Actor who plays Allan in "Barbie": MICHAEL CERA.  Allan is Ken's red-headed buddy, and so rare a doll that in Greta Gerwig's Barbie, there are multiple Barbies and Kens, but just one Allan, played by Michael Cera.  Admittedly, I didn't remember any of that from the movie, but perps (perpendicular entries) were helpful.

Michael Cera as Allan in Barbie


58. Nickname for Detroit: MOTOR CITY.  I learned Detroit's nickname from X's album More Fun in the New World (1983), specifically from the song "The New World":

"Don't forget the Motor City, this was supposed to be the new world!"

Let's maneuver carefully through the rest of the grid.

Across:


1. Expenses: COSTS.

6. Happy __ clam: AS A.

9. "Judy" Oscar winner Zellweger: RENÉE.  Renée Zellweger won the Academy Award for Best Actress in this 2019 biographical film based on the life of Judy Garland.



14. Software company that makes InDesign and Acrobat: ADOBE.  I use Adobe software to view and edit PDFs, but if you know a good alternative, I am interested!



15. Captain's record: LOG.  My generation's favorite example of a captain's log:  Captain Kirk of the Starship Enterprise recording his observations and noting the stardate.

William Shatner as Captain Kirk in Star Trek, the original TV series



16. Garlicky spread: AIOLI.

17. [Theme clue]

19. "I'm chipped" collar attachment: ID TAG.  A good idea!  Add this tag to your pet's collar to let folks know that the animal has a microchip which will lead to your information.  Our dogs always had their address and phone on their collars as well as the local dog license.


20. Peel or pare, say: PREP.  DH and I have learned to prep ingredients for the meal before we start cooking, so that things are less frantic as we go along.

21. Artist Yoko: ONO.

22. Miss Marple, e.g.: SLEUTH.  A fictional character in Agatha Christie's crime stories, Miss Marple is an amateur consulting detective.

Miss Marple



23. [Theme clue]

25. One little piggy's destination: MARKET.  We'll be playing piggies on our new grandson's toes any day now.  A strange cultural inheritance!



29. Cap: HAT.

30. Look forward to: AWAIT.

31. Bike part that can be raised and lowered: SEAT.

33. Rickman of "Love Actually": ALAN.  Alan Rickman (1946-2016) was an English actor of stage and screen.  You may remember him as Severus Snape, the potions master, in the Harry Potter movies.  Love Actually was a 2003 holiday season romantic comedy.  DH handles the rom-com viewing in our home.  

Alan Rickman in Love Actually. 
His character cheated on Emma Thompson's character.
Some people are still mad at Alan Rickman for that!



37. [Theme clue]

40. Side social media accounts, informally: ALTS.  Some folks set up more than one account on a social media platform.  You could have a very public Instagram account where you try to attract lots of followers, and you might have an ALT(ernate) account for close friends and family.  Or you might market to different audiences through your ALTS.  This is new to me.  I remember that before the world wide web became public, Usenet ALT groups were a way to chat with like-minded folks online.  I still use recipes I gleaned from alt.veg.

41. Many moons: EONS.  My Usenet activities occurred EONS ago.

42. Temporary body dye: HENNA.

43. Mini owner: BMW.  BMW owns the MINI brand, including MINI Cooper, MINI Countryman, and MINI Electric.

MINI lineup 2026



44. TikTok content: VIDEOS.  TikTok is another platform where some folks maintain ALTS.

45. [Theme clue]

51. NYC subway between Inwood and Far Rockaway: A TRAIN.  My brother lives in Inwood at the north end of Manhattan.  I've been there, but not to Rockaway, because it's Far.

52. Chem class locale: LAB.

53. Exchange: SWAP.

57. Queen's tenure: REIGN.

58. [Theme clue]

60. Permeate: IMBUE.

61. Be in debt: OWE.

62. Supporter of the arts?: EASEL.  Cute clue!



63. Donkeys: ASSES.

64. "Bel Canto" novelist Patchett: ANN.  Ann Patchett is an American writer whose fourth novel, Bel Canto, received the Orange Prize for Fiction (UK) and PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction (USA).  The novel is based on the Japanese embassy hostage crisis of 1996-97 in Lima, Peru, and focuses on the relationships between terrorists and hostages.

Ann Patchett



65. [Theme clue]

Down:

1. Summer sleepaway site: CAMP.

2. Smell: ODOR.

3. Achy after exercise, say: SORE.

4. Meas. on the wrapper of a stick of butter: TBSP.  An abbreviation in the clue calls for an abbreviation in the answer.



5. "Catch my drift?": SEE?

6. "Run __ now!": ALONG.

7. "Likewise!": SO DO I!

8. Stone or Iron follower: AGE.

9. Berate: RAIL AT.

10. Puffer jacket filler, often: EIDER.  The Common Eider is a large sea-duck of the far north, famous for the insulating quality of its down.  Mother birds pluck their own down feathers to create warm nests for their young.  In Iceland, some folks build small huts for the birds to nest in, and collect the down when the nests are abandoned.

Male and female Common Eiders of Hudson Bay



11. Still snoozing: NOT UP.

12. Exhilarate: ELATE.

13. Twice four: EIGHT.

18. Paint layer: COAT.

22. Sings like Sarah Vaughan: SCATS.  Sarah Vaughan (1924-1990) was an American jazz singer and pianist.  The recipient of two Grammy Awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award, she was known to improvise wordless syllables -- scat singing -- which is typical of vocal jazz.

Sarah Vaughan



23. Self-referential: META.  "Meta" is something that refers to itself or its own category, such as a movie about making movies.  We sometimes see "meta" clues and answers in the crossword puzzle, like "Start to see?" for ESS.  BUT THE BEST META CLUE AND ANSWER I'VE EVER SEEN IN THE LA TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE IS TODAY'S GRID SPANNER, 37-ACROSS!    

24. Utter mess: CHAOS.

25. Three Bears matriarch: MAMA.

26. Mil. truant: AWOL.  A military truant is Away WithOut Leave.

27. __ and rave: RANT.

28. Nanny's offspring: KIDS.  Baby goats.

31. Grimace: SCOWL.

32. Directional suffix: ERN.  Eastern, western, northern, southern.

33. Amazed: AWED.

34. __ Star State: LONE.  Texas!

35. River of Florence: ARNO.

I took this photo of the Arno from Piazzale Michelangelo in Florence, Italy.



36. Confidentiality contracts, for short: NDAS.  Non-Disclosure Agreements are used to protect sensitive or proprietary information from being disclosed by employees, partners, and others.  An NDA protects trade secrets, client lists, and other confidential information.

38. Sanaa's country: YEMEN.  The capital and largest city of Yemen.

The red flag marks Sanaa.



39. Branch of Islam: SHIA.  Not long after the death of Muhammad in the year 632, his followers split into two camps:  Shia Muslims who believed that Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law Ali ibn Abi Talib was the rightful successor, and Sunni Muslims, who appointed Abu Bakr, Muhammad's closest friend and father-in-law, to succeed him.  Shia Muslims account for 10-13 percent of all Muslims.

43. The "B" of LBJ: BAINES.  Finally, a President for Presidents' Day!  Lyndon Baines Johnson (1908- 1973) was the 36th president of the United States, serving from 1963 to 1969.  He accomplished a lot for civil rights, education, Social Security, and the space program, but lost popular support for escalating involvement in the unpopular war in Vietnam.

LBJ



44. Airbnb competitor: VRBO.  Vrbo is an online marketplace for vacation rentals.  It was originally an initialism for Vacation Rentals By Owner, but is now just Vrbo.  DH and I have never used Airbnb (though our adult offspring do), but we have rented spacious cabins for the whole family through vrbo.com (and through HomeAway, which was absorbed by Vrbo in 2019).

This three-level cabin with turret was *inside* the boundaries of Glacier National Park!



45. Tennis star Sharapova: MARIA.  Maria Sharapova is a Russian former professional tennis player who won five major titles and the Career Grand Slam in singles.  

Maria Sharapova



46. Action __: post-meeting list: ITEMS.

47. Baby beds: CRIBS.

48. Peace Palace site, with "The": HAGUE.  The Peace Palace is an international law administrative building in The Hague, Netherlands.  It houses the International Court of Justice (the main judicial body of the United Nations), the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague Academy of International Law, and the Peace Palace Library.

Peace Palace



49. Bozo: CLOWN.  Bozo the Clown was a character created for children's entertainment, popular in the second half of the 20th century. He was introduced in the United States in 1946, and to television in 1949, later appearing in franchised television programs of which he was the host.  Bozo was played by numerous performers.  The Bozo Show aired nationally from 1960 to 2001.

Kids today are afraid of clowns.  Not old cruciverbalists!  We grew up with Bozo.



50. Devoured: EATEN.

53. Con: SCAM.

54. The Badger St.: WISC.  In the 1820s, Wisconsin lead miners lived in their mines, very much like badgers, burrowing into hillsides to keep warm in the winter.

A badger in a burrow.



55. Suit to __: fit perfectly: A TEE.

56. Gomer of TV's Mayberry: PYLE.  More old TV.  Gomer Pyle was a fictional character, played by Jim Nabors, who originally appeared on The Andy Griffith Show.  A naive auto mechanic turned US Marine Corps private, he became a recurring character, and then was spun off to his own show, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. in 1964, which ran until 1969.  The character was from the fictional town of Mayberry, North Carolina.

Jim Nabors as Gomer Pyle



58. Extinct New Zealand bird: MOA.  Moa are an extinct group of flightless birds formerly endemic to New Zealand.  There were likely a couple million of them circa 1300 CE when Polynesians settled New Zealand.  Some species were 12 feet tall!  Extinction occurred within 100 years of human settlement, thanks to overhunting.

Moa and human nemesis



59. Food writer Drummond: REE.  Ree Drummond is a food blogger whose site, The Pioneer Woman, documents her life in rural Oklahoma.  Her blog led to a television show of the same name on The Food Network.  I tried out some of her cookie recipes several years ago.  If she could do it on the ranch, surely I could do it in my urban kitchen!

Ree Drummond



Here's the grid:




Solvers, were you ELATEd by this MONDAY CROSSWORD?  Did it suit you to A TEE?

Or did you find some ITEMS you'd like to RANT about?

We AWAIT your comments below!

-- NaomiZ

46 comments:

Subgenius said...

Very easy, unless you
were unfamiliar with Mr. Cera, but even then I’m sure that little difficulty was found.
FIR, so I’m happy.

Lemonade 714 said...

Happy President’s Day. I appreciate the mention of LBJ with whom I share a birthday every August. The no puzzle was well done but did contain more modern references that require perps for me. I agree the MONDAY CROSSWORD is a special fill.
Thanks NaomiZ for you interesting writeup

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

Zipped right along, until I reached the CE_A/V_BO cross. WAGged an R. Whew. Perhaps Miss Marple was the inspiration for Morgan Guillory of High Potential, but they sure don't dress similarly. ALAN Rickman was also memorable as the evil Hans Gruber in Die Hard -- spoiler alert -- he does. Thanx for the entertainment, Betsy and Andrew. It did not result in Much Cussing. Enjoyed your expo, NaomiZ. (Are you in that group photo, or were you behind the camera?)

unclefred said...

Dang! I hoped to be the first to post a comment today. The the e-newspaper didn't get to my mailbox until 6:15. It's usually there sometime between 5 and 6. Then my printer wouldn't print the CW. Lots of fiddling for quite a while. Finally got it to print...last Saturday's Jumble, which it refused to print on Saturday. Finally turned off printer, restarted computer, and tried again.

Finally got it printed, only to find a ton of names (20) some crossing. Only DNK 6, but still, that was enough to make this NOT the easy-peasey Monday CW I was hoping for. Eventually FIR in 15.

Finally rushed to the blog only to find I was far from first. And in my rush forgot to look for the theme. Oy.

Clever CW, thanx BO&AG. PLEASE try your best to construct w/o so many names.

Thanx to NaomiZ for the terrific write-up.

Well, my sprinkler system was running while I did the CW and the blog. Now, of course, it's raining.

BobB said...

I thought a little stiffer than the usual Monday puzzle. I like that!

Jack said...

Thanks for the shout-out to X! Still one of my favorite bands, and that's such a great song. "It was better, better before we voted for what's his name..."

Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but ages->EONS, and anti->SCAM. DNK REE, ALTS, ANN, and only sorta knew IMBUE.

I remember those Usenet days. I mostly hung out at the newsgroup comp.datacom.isdn. (Newsgroups were organizational overlays of the larger Usenet. "ALT" and "comp" were two of seven prefixes used in newsgroups.) I used a software program called "Agent" to navigate newsgroups.

As a cis male, I've never seen the movie Barbie. I know CERA only from CROSSWORDs.

I was gonna object to the subway clue with two NYC nabes, but then I remembered that Take the A TRAIN was the song that made Duke Ellington famous.

If you find yourself in CHAOS, you can always call for Max, Agent 99 and The Chief and help will arrive in a Sunbeam Alpine.

Thanks to Betsy (I won't refer to you as B.O.) and Andrew for the MONDAY CROSSWORD fun. My favorite was "supporter of the arts" for EASEL. And thanks to NaomiZ for another fun and interesting tour.

Irish Miss said...

Good Morning:

This was an easy, smooth solve with an obvious theme, leading to an obvious but, to me, surprising reveal. As timely as Monday Crossword is, compared to the other, solid themers, I found it to have more than a tinge of green paint. The rest of the fill and cluing, however, negate any strong criticism.

Thanks, Betsy and Andrew, for starting the week off so enjoyably and thanks, Naomi, for the terrific review and commentary.

Have a great day.

KS said...

FIR. For a Monday I found this to be just a tad on the crunchy side. But plenty of perps to help out.
I loved the long center fill as "Monday Crossword". So clever, as was the theme.
Overall an enjoyable puzzle.

Anonymous said...

Took 4:05 today to wish you all a Merry Christmas, oh wrong holiday, Mea Culpa.

I knew the Actress of the Day (Renee), but I didn't know the "food writer" (Ree), the novelist (Ann), and the subway (atrain). Wouldn't a "food writer" be a crossword favorite "icer"?

I hope it's not against the Corner rules to wish you all a Happy Presidents' Day.

Husker Gary said...

Musings
-An easy puzzle where I got the gimmick quickly.
-That weekend I had to choose between Barbie and Oppenheimer. Guess what I chose.
-Yeah, D-O, I remember ALAN as Hans Gruber in a movie where he said, “Yippep Ki Yo” to Bruce Willis
-Duke Ellington’s orchestra signature tune was Take The A Train
-I TEED up my first ball yesterday on a, sunny 65F day. My game is getting to be a better grade of below average.

Inanehiker said...

Wow - super fast Monday puzzle even for a Monday - rarely is there a 4 for the first number on the timer! But the straightforward theme made it easier with all the M C answers.

Gimmes for me - Ann Patchett is one of my favorite authors - if you're ever in Nashville stop by her indie bookstore - Parnassus Books
ALAN Rickman was such a versatile actor (RIP) - a favorite role for me was Colonel Brandon in "Sense and Sensibility"
Jinx - you should watch "Barbie" some time - my DH and many other men I know enjoyed it as well

Thanks Naomi for the fun blog
gotta head out - driving DH to St Louis to catch a plane to Mozambique!

CanadianEh! said...

Here in Ontario and some of the other Canadian provinces, it is Family Day. Manitoba has Louis Riel Day, PEI has Islander Day, Nova Scotia has Heritage Day.

CanadianEh! said...

Wow! Mozambique! We need deets.

CanadianEh! said...

Marvellous Monday Crossword (yes, that is a special fill). Thanks for the fun, Betsy and Andrew, and NaomiZ.

I FIRed in good time, and saw the MC theme with the second themer.
One inkblot to change Ages to EONS (hi Jinx). I was going to RANT and rave (or RAIL AT) about the dupe of Ages and AGE, but my words were EATEN.

Canadian butter is usually sold in pound blocks (don’t ask me why not in kilograms!) and not sticks. Depending on the brand, they may or may not have measurement markings on the wrapper, and measurements (and recipes) will be 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 1 cup lines. I use the grid on my boxes of Crisco shortening to measure butter.

Canadian actor (and current CW favourite) Simu Liu was one of the Ken dolls in “Barbie”.

I learned about ANN Patchett here years ago. YR recommended Bel Canto, and I put it on my reading list- good read!

Hand up for EASEL clue being the favourite of the day. Runner-up was the clue for MARKET.

Wishing all the Americans here a happy President’s Day.

Monkey said...

I too really like Ann Patchett, and Bel Canto in particular.

NaomiZ said...

I was behind the camera, d-o! Thanks for asking. 📷

Monkey said...

Nice, smooth and the theme was easy to detect in this MONDAY CROSSWORD. Just a few unknowns like CERA, ALAN and ALTS, but all easily filled. MOA and REE filled with my not even noticing.
.

One of the advantages of living so long is that BAINES and PYLE filled with no trouble.

Thank you NaomiZ for a stellar recap and the pic of beautiful Florence.

NaomiZ said...

😊👍

Charlie Echo said...

FIR, but had to really work for it. Started quickly, but slowed way down, and really slowed down in the SW corner. Didn't know the Barbie guy, the subway, or the tennis player. Fortunately, the WAGS and perps came through, and NaomiZ topped things off with a nice recap, so I wound up enjoying this morning, despite my lack of anti-social media and A&E knowledge.

Yellowrocks said...

Very enjoyable puzzle. The MC gimmick was evident from the beginning. Nice reveal. It was a fast solve with one bad cell. In hindsight I vaguely remember seeing VRBO and CERA. I wrote an N instead of an R.
I have been amazed that toddlers of today are afraid of clowns. My sibs and my sons were not afraid.
Canadian Eh! I am surprised that you remembered my recommending Bel Canto. That was long ago. I will have to read it again.
When one of my boys was young he asked me to "higher" his tricycle seat. If we lowered his brother's seat, why couldn't we higher his. Logical.
When my physical therapist wanted to move to a new facility in driving distance from his home he was blocked by a PDA. The company he worked for had many sites all around here.
TYL8R,I hope.

Yellowrocks said...

Drat! Blocked by an NDA. It was not a marriage.

RustyBrain said...

Not bad, but I prefer King's X.

RustyBrain said...

I thought including MONDAY CROSSWORD today was a nice touch. Very META.

Gomer Pyle and Star Trek ran concurrently in the mid '60s, but they were light years apart!

Very skillful review, Naomi. They should invent a camera that takes a photo and a selfie at the same time, then superimposes them so you can be in the picture!

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

“High Potential” one of my favorite series, currently on hiatus

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

Nice ‘n’ EZ top o’ the week challenge. Lots of MC answers but you can only have one EmCee. Knew all the names but REE . We had a local “BOZO the Clown” kid show on our TV channel. Clearly one of the local news guys. It was live and the audience kids often misbehaved and wouldn’t cooperate. It was worth watching to see just how they would act up.

Almost put debts for COSTS but didn’t perp-work

Would a little piggy be sophisticated and omnivorous enough to eat roast beef ? Prof. Google says In many places (such as Australia and parts of the US/UK), feeding meat or meat-contaminated food scraps to pigs is illegal to prevent disease transmission

🎼”You must take the "A"-Train
To go to sugar hill way up in Harlem
If you miss the "A"-Train
You'll find you missed the quickest way to Harlem
Hurry - get on now it's coming
Listen - to these rails a-humming - all board
Get on the "A"-Train
Soon You will be on sugar hill in Harlem
”🎶

ALTS? META/self-referential?

MOTORCITY to Motown … The Windsors REIGN but do not rule. Renée got an Oscar for playing the great Judy Garland who never got one

Happy Prez day.

Anonymous said...

My goal is to someday finish a puzzle without looking at the Down clues, and I inched a little closer today, completing 80% working North to South.
A fun, well-constructed puzzle that flowed easier than any in recent memory.

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

The PT likely signed a “restrictive covenant” to prevent him from leaving the practice and then competing within a certain radius. Usually time limited. Common business procedure. It’s not an NDA.

Misty said...

Delightful Monday puzzle, many thanks, Betsy and Andrew. And your comments and photographs were just wonderful, many thanks for those too, NaomiZ.

Well, I found it interesting to see MORSE CODE and ID TAG next to each other near the top of a MONDAY CROSSWORD puzzle. But I guess they have nothing to do with a MOTOR CITY or a MAGIC CARPET. We do get some city references with that A TRAIN and a BMW and a LAB. But a CLOWN is better off in a theater and introduced to the audience by an EMCEE. Still, a totally delightful puzzle that did not make me SCOWL for even a second. So, thank you again, Betsy, Andrew, and Naomi.

Have a great week coming up, everybody, and let's pray that our weather won't be too bad.

Yellowrocks said...

Yes, pigs can eat roast beef. Although they can and will eat any kind of table meat. But as Ray-O said, it is not recommended for health reasons. In novels murder victims are fed to the pigs to get rid of the evidence. I read that it is true that pigs will even eat human flesh. "Due to a pig's ability to eat most organic matter, including bones, they have been infamously used by criminals to dispose of human remains, with only hard materials like teeth or large bone fragments sometimes left behind." I looked it up because I frequently read about this in crime novels.
I stepped off a curb yesterday and fell on my hip. Other than a big bruise I am okay. One hearing aid popped off and was damaged. I am on my way to get it repaired. I believe my warranty will cover it, otherwise big $$$. So I have just learned another movement I must be wary of. “We are too soon old and too late smart.”

Yellowrocks said...

The PT called it an NDA, nondisclosure agreement. My fingers don't type what my brain says. Again, "We are too soon old . . . . ."

NaomiZ said...

YR, you closed with one of my late father's favorite quips! I am sorry for your fall and glad the damage was not worse. Take care!

Lucina said...

Hola! What a breeze of a puzzle. I had fifteen minutes to spare before I left for my volunteer work and almost finished before leaving. Nice one! Thank you, Betsy and Andrew. MONDAY CROSSWORD was a big surprise. And it's good to remember ALAN Rickman; he was outstanding in "Sense and Sensibility".
I have read other books by ANN Patchett but not Bell Canto.
Happy Presidents' Day! And take time to celebrate, everyone.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

"-Duke Ellington’s orchestra signature tune was Take The A Train"
Dang, I wish I had thought of that. I might have even added a link to that famous tune!

Who Likes Crossed Names? said...

Yellowrocks put VNBO/CENA which makes just as much sense. Who likes crossed names? Otherwise an enjoyable MONDAY CROSSWORD puzzle. Clever to have that in the middle.

Jayce said...

I enjoyed this puzzle and reading all your comments.

RustyBrain said...

I sometimes try to solve a puzzle using only the downs because vertical answers are harder to see. Either way, it certainly ramps up the challenge.

RustyBrain said...

Re: pigs. Does that really work? Just asking for a "friend." LOL

Malodorous Manatee said...

Thanks, NaomiZ, for the great MCing. I was on the Bozo The B Clown show for a friend's birthday in circa 1957. Now I've got to figure out how to lose this "put another candle on the birthday cake, the birthday cake .....I'm another year old today" ear worm that I am presently experiencing.

Prof M said...

Am I the only one who entered “angel” before EASEL?

Prof M said...

Non-competition Agreement, “Non Comp,” NCA.

NaomiZ said...

You both have me beat. I need the crosses! When I fill an answer Across, I check the connecting Downs, and vice versa.

NaomiZ said...

🤣

Monkey said...

That’s what I do Naomi.

CanadianEh! said...

I’m not sure why your recommendation of Bel Canto stuck in my memory! Somebody here recommended Louise Penny and I have now read all her Gamache novels, including the newest, The Black Wolf. I owe you both my thanks.
Sorry to hear that you fell - I’m glad it wasn’t worse.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

There's an old country saying "I haven't had so much fun since the hogs ate my brother." I thought it was said facetious, but maybe not.