google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Wednesday, July 8, 2026 - Jonathon Hales

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Jul 8, 2026

Wednesday, July 8, 2026 - Jonathon Hales

 Theme:  "Quiet, please!"

 

 25 library cartoons, comic strips, and pictures – Ebook Friendly

Puzzling thoughts:

Greetings from Chairman Moe; or, as I learned last month when Miss Margaret and I toured the Iberian Peninsula for 3+ weeks, the local expression for greetings are: "Bom Dia" (Portuguese) and "Egun On" (Basque)
 
My crossword solving skills took a hiatus, too, as I did not travel with my laptop, and solving on a cellphone is not very practical.  Solving crossword puzzles was not even on my priority/to do list while on holidays.  Too many amazing things to see and explore.  If you've never visited Portugal or the Basque Country in Spain, do. Thanks, CED, for swapping Wednesdays with me this month as I returned back to the U.S. on 1 July and would not have been able to do my "assigned" day

On to the puzzle du jour:  When I googled the constructor's name, Jonathon Hales, I came up empty; other than a few people with that name (and exact spelling) on Facebook.  I found zero relatable "hits" to any so-named crossword puzzle constructor so my guess is that this is both his LAT and personal debut.  If this is so, congratulations!  If not (and he happens to stop by) please provide us with some more details about yourself and about today's puzzle

Jonathon's work is a combination of word play and factual phrases that one could relate to a (52-across. Community facility for researchers and book lovers) LOCAL LIBRARY.  For example:

17. Suggestion for a 52-Across patron who didn't finish a book by closing time?: CHECK IT OUT.  The word play ("check it out") could refer to examining or analyzing something; the library connection (literal meaning) is taking the book to the desk, showing your library card, and taking it home for a period of time
 
 

library checkout cartoon with book and the caption "You want to check out a book?" by Jonny Hawkins 

24. Reminder on a collection that can't leave a 52-Across?: READ ONLY FILE.  The literal and figurative meaning of this is a bit more vague than the other entries, IMO.  But, if you recall the "Reference" section of a library, items such as encyclopedias were "read only in the library"; not to be checked out.  A read only file [as defined by Microsoft Support] is: any computer file that you can open, view, print, or copy, but cannot modify, delete, overwrite, or edit. The operating system blocks any "write" operations to protect the document's content and maintain its original state

 

File System Cartoons and Comics - funny pictures from CartoonStock

 
36. Sign near a door slot of a 52-Across?: RETURN TO THE FOLD. Another connection of literal and figurative as the word "return" is what you literally do with a book you've checked out of the library, and return to the fold is an expression that means to rejoin, return, or be welcomed back into a group, community, or organization after a period of absence. I suppose that a book that's been checked out of the library could be "missed" by the other books.  I chose another meaning of the word "fold" with the cartoon below:
 
 
Origami Fold Cartoons and Comics - funny pictures from CartoonStock 
 
64. Advice for patrons who borrow materials from a 52-Across?: DON'T BE LATE.  The cartoon below is a bit "dark" but it summarizes the theme! 😏
 
 
library checkout cartoon with library and the caption She vowed to put an end to overdue books and unpaid fines. It was the right thing to do ? even used a silencer. by Mike Baldwin 

Perhaps my blogging "skills" took a hiatus, too.  Please add your thoughts to the comment section if you saw anything different than I 

Here is the completed grid.  This "felt" a bit more difficult than a typical Wednesday puzzle but I finished it without help and with very few write-overs ...

 

 

 

Across:

1. Seaweed on tobiko maki: NORI.  Moe-ku:
 
        Question on seaweed
        Sushi wrap: Do you eat it?
        If it's no, NOR I 

5. Trophy winner: CHAMP

Championship Trophies Cartoons and Comics - funny pictures from CartoonStock

10. Quaker grains: OATS.  

Image of Quaker Oats : Old Fashioned Classic Recipes (Hardcover)

14. Sing the praises of: LAUD.  As in the lyrics of this hymn:

 


15. Striped Girl Scout Cookie: SAMOA.  Not sure that I agree that a singular cookie would be called a Samoa 

Amazon.com: SAMOAS® GIRL SCOUT COOKIES : Grocery & Gourmet Food

16. Tortilla sandwich: WRAP.  Moe-ku:

        Movie director's
        Comment after having lunch:
        "I think that's a WRAP!" 

[theme entry]

19. The Dalai __: LAMA.

20. Geena's "Thelma & Louise" co-star: SUSAN.  Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon 

Thelma and Louise' cast: Where are they now?
That's Susan on the left / Geena on the right



21. Native Canadian: CREE. [from Wikipedia] "The Cree are one of the largest Indigenous groups in North America, with a total population exceeding 350,000. Their traditional territories stretch from Alberta to Quebec in Canada, with a few communities in Montana, USA. They are divided into distinct groups like the Plains, Woodland, and Swampy Cree, each adapting unique traditions to their specific regional environments"

23. Not great: BAD.  I typed in MEH before correcting it

[theme entry]

28. Former South African president Nelson: MANDELA.  

Image of Nelson Mandela | Born, Death, Quotes, Biography, Story, & Education, | Britannica

31. Slices and __: DICES.  Ron Popeil's invention of the 1960's: "It slices and dices and makes julienne french fried potatoes ..."


And its commercial was filmed in the Canadian Province that's the answer to (49 across. Home of Canadian curler Marc Kennedy:) ALBERTA. (and a mini-CSO to CanadianEh!)

32. Melber of MS NOW: ARI. [according to Wikipedia] "Ari Naftali Melber is an American attorney and Emmy Award-winning journalist who is the Chief Legal Correspondent for MS NOW and host of The Beat with Ari Melber. Melber won a 2016 Emmy Award for Supreme Court reporting and was nominated for Emmy Awards in 2020 and 2025 in the "Outstanding Live Interview" category"

33. Frequently, in poetry: OFT.

35. March 14 dessert: PIE.  Based on the fact that the mathematical number for "pi" is 3.14 (when rounded to two decimals) and is also a way of expressing March 14 (3/14)

[theme entry]

43. Look at: SEE.  

44. "Gangnam Style" rapper: PSY.  

45. Forever and a day: EON

46. Group of lions: PRIDE.  Moe-ku:

        A group of lions
        Who were homosexual
        Held a PRIDE Parade 
        (of course they did!!) 
 
Lions taking part in a Pride Day parade - Impossible Images - Unique stock images for commercial use. 

[theme reveal]

56. The "A" of IPA: ALE.  As in India Pale ALE

57. __ fountain: SODA.  If the word "fountain" were capitalized, my answer would've been PETE

58. Greek fable writer: AESOP.  My favorite "fables" growing up were featured on the cartoon show "The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle":

 




62. Healthy piece: SLAB.  As opposed to an "unhealthy piece" where I would have inserted the word FLAB

67. Prefix with phone: MEGA.  Anyone else besides me have TELE in this spot?

68. Twinkle: GLEAM.  A different spelling of this word was used as a brand name for toothpaste (that apparently made your teeth "twinkle").  P & G discontinued this brand about 12 years ago as part of a purging of under-performing SKUs

 

Image of Gleem toothpaste - 1983 - YouTube

 

69. Raison d'__: ETRE. Raison d'être is a French phrase that translates to "reason for existence". It refers to the fundamental purpose, justification, or driving motive behind why a person, organization, or concept exists

70. Greek war god: ARES. Did anyone confuse Ares with MARS?  The Roman war god? Not I

71. County in southeast England: ESSEX.

72. Furniture wood: TEAK.  Moe-ku:
 
        Piece of furniture
        Shaped like Polynesian raft
        Is called: Kon-TEAK-i  


Down:
1. MLB playoff round: NLCS.  Short for: National League Championship Series - won last year by the LA Dodgers.  I'm old enough to remember when there was one "champion" of the NL and one of the AL and they contended for the World Series.  Baseball has expanded greatly since then (double the number of teams) and there are more playoff rounds before the World Series begins.  Now, there is a "Wild Card" round; a "Divisional" round; and a "League Championship" round.  Used to be that the World Series was decided in early October - with all the extra "rounds" it can spill into November

2. Diamond Head's island: OAHU.  A reference to the dormant volcano crater located on Hawaii's most populated island

 

Diamond Head: Everything You Need Before Visiting

 

3. Wants to take back: RUES.

4. Security checkpoint request: I.D. CARD.  During our Iberian Peninsula trip we had to show our U.S. Passport several times but never an I.D. "card"

5. CBS forensic franchise: CSI.  Short for: Crime Scene Investigation

6. See 34-Down: HAT. (34 down. With 6-Down, part of an Abraham Lincoln costume:) TOP.  This dude wore a top hat of sorts:

 




7. Corporation previously called Standard Oil of Indiana: AMOCO.  [per Wikipedia]: The majority of today’s largest energy corporations trace their roots back to the 1911 breakup:

  • ExxonMobil: Descends from the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey (Esso) and the Standard Oil Company of New York (Socony).
  • Chevron: Formed from the Standard Oil Company of California (SoCal), which later acquired Standard Oil of Kentucky.
  • BP (British Petroleum): Acquired the Standard Oil Company of Ohio (Sohio) and the Standard Oil Company of Indiana (Amoco).
  • Marathon Petroleum / Marathon Oil: Descends directly from The Ohio Oil Company, an early Standard Oil production subsidiary.

  • 8. Grieve: MOURN.

    9. Dev of "Lion": PATEL.  A clecho of sorts as the word "lion" appeared for the answer: PRIDE

    10. "Horned" bird: OWL.  We had a Great Horned Owl "family" build a nest in one of our community's Saguaro cacti a few years ago

    Image of Raptor Ambassador Spotlight: Zari the Great Horned Owl - Schlitz Audubon

    11. Language of the Quran: ARABIC.

    12. Snack steamed in a corn husk: TAMALE.

    13. Small shovels: SPADES.  

    18. Patella locale: KNEE.

    22. Grammy winner Gorme: EYDIE.  Married to fellow singer/comedian Steve Lawrence

     


     

    25. Like Kevin McCallister at Christmas: ALONE.  From the movie series "Home Alone"

    26. Inane: DAFT. [according to Cambridge Dictionary] "Daft" is an informal adjective meaning foolish, silly, or obviously absurd. Commonly used in British and Scottish English, the term describes actions, ideas, or behavior that lack good sense and judgment

    27. Feudal estate: FIEF. Moe-ku:
     
            Notable giant
            Became a vassal. His new 
            Phrase? "FIEF-fi-fo-fum"  

    28. Feb. follower: MAR.  Might've preferred this answer to not be an abbreviation 

    29. "Odds __ ... ": ARE.  'N' ENDS didn't fit; nor ON

    30. Tiny issue: NIT.  See my response to 28 down

    35. Kingdom divisions: PHYLA.  [according to Wikipedia] "Phyla" is the plural form of the word phylum. In biology, a phylum is a major taxonomic rank used to classify organisms. It sits below kingdom and above class. Organisms in the same phylum share a fundamental structural framework or a common evolutionary body plan

    37. Food safety org.: USDA.  Short for United States Department of Agriculture

    38. Film spools: REELS

    39. Peter the Great, for one: TSAR.  CZAR also fits, but why tsar?  [according to American Heritage Dictionary]  "Tsar" and "czar" are simply two different English spellings of the same Russian title for a monarch or supreme ruler, with both words etymologically derived from the Roman title "Caesar"

    40. Not 'neath: OER.

    41. Spot with many spots: LOT.  As in a parking lot

    42. Genetic material: DNA. So, is RNA a genetic material?  Would it have worked as an answer here? Yes, RNA is genetic material. While DNA is the primary genetic material for humans and most other cellular life, RNA serves as the sole genetic material for many viruses (such as HIV and Influenza). Additionally, all living cells use RNA to translate genetic information (code) from DNA into functional proteins [according to National Human Genome Research Inst]

    46. Blood bank supply: PLASMA.  Moe-ku:
     
            What's the screen format
            Of Count Dracula's TV?
            Why, PLASMA, of course!  


    47. __ skates: ROLLER.  ICE was too short here, but see the next entry:

    48. Worldwide cold spell: ICE AGE.    

    50. Scottish hillside: BRAE.  I had CRAG first, but after correcting I learned this about the difference between crag and brae"Crag and brae both describe natural geographical elevations, but they differ in their appearance, composition, and regional usage. A crag is a steep, rugged, or projecting rock. A brae is a term from Scottish English and Northern English referring specifically to a sloping hillside, typically leading down to a river" [according to Merriam-Webster]

    51. Shoelace hole: EYELET.  Whilst I still have shoes that involve tying laces, I really enjoy my Skechers "step-in" shoes.  The pair I wear most often even come with eyelets even though those are unnecessary

    53. Mountain hangout: LODGEAprès-ski hangout

    54. Role models: IDOLS.  A direct rejection of the second of the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:4) "It strictly prohibits creating physical, graven images or idols of anything in heaven, earth, or sea to worship them"

    55. Curses: BANES.  My friend the Thesaurussaurus agreesMore 1370 Curse Synonyms. Similar words for Curse.

    59. Fill until full: SATE.  This happened far too often when we were on our Iberian Peninsula trip - but I suppose that gaining just 3 pounds over the course of 23 days isn't too bad.  I swore I wasn't going to eat bread again for quite a while and my first "meal" after getting home was a peanut butter and jelly sandwich 

    60. Other, in Oaxaca: OTRA.  We probably heard this word a time or two when we were in Spain 

    61. Steal a glance: PEEK.  Moe-ku:

            The paparazzi
            Were rated 5 stars.  It was
            Their PEEK performance 

    63. Humanities degs.: B.A.s. Another of many abbreviations used today - Bachelor of Arts

    65. __ kwon do: TAE. Fun Fact:  "Taekwondo" can be translated as tae ("strike with foot"), kwon ("strike with hand"), and do ("the art or way"). Taekwondo (or Tae Kwon Do) Moe-ku:

            New martial arts course
            Features a "touchless" routine
            Known as TAE Kwon Don't  


    66. Extreme sport with bunny hops: BMX. Not sure if this is AI generated or not but if I hadn't googled it I don't know that I could imagine it ...


    As I conclude this blog, I am still wondering if there was another meaning to the collective entries, but I won't lose sleep over it.  Please feel free to comment below if you think otherwise or agree.  Obrigado y Eskarikosko (thank you in Portuguese and Basque)

    See you again next month - Chairman Moe 

    Post script:  I almost forgot to include this classic Library Video; the Library Cop.  Enjoy!

     


     

    35 comments:

    1. Not too bad.
      And the themed phrases were fun.
      However, near the end, the crossing of two foreign language words (from different languages, no less!) was definitely unfair.
      Anyway, FIR, so I’m happy.

      ReplyDelete
    2. Good morning!

      Nice debut, Jonathon, if it is a debut. Nice puzzle, even if it isn't. When I saw "Nelson" in the clue, I was thinking last name. D'oh. When I volunteered as a Tax-Aide at Lonestar College I needed a county library card -- its number was my user id for their computer system. Welcome back, C-Moe. (I've read that Basque is unique -- not related to any other language. And I've gotta ask, what would you call a single Samoa?)

      ReplyDelete
    3. FIW, carelessly missing with PSi x PHiLA.

      What do you call someone who doesn't know an entree from a snack? Patti. (IN RE: TAMALE)

      The Dalai LAMA turned 91 two days ago.

      GLEAM and twinkle aren't synonyms, at least the way I use them.

      More security checkpoints these days honor the image from your local DMVs smart phone app. The Virginia DMV is actively promoting it.

      Like our Chairman, I remember when MLB postseason consisted of just the World Series. And all were day games.

      Thanks to Jonathon for the challenge, and welcome back to our Chairman. I've missed your 'kus.

      ReplyDelete
    4. Is there some software/technology meaning of SLAB? I have poured slabs of concrete foundations, and am on friendly terms with slabs of bacon, but would not characterize either as particularly "healthy."

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. I think it's "healthy" in the sense of "thick."

        Delete
      2. Like d’o, I thought of a slab of cake - a good sized piece. Not healthy in the medical sense.

        Delete
    5. FIW. The crossing of phyla and Psy did me in. Knowing neither I took a WAG at an "i" instead of a "y" and was wrong.
      I got the gist of the theme early on and that helped a lot.
      Overall an enjoyable puzzle.

      ReplyDelete
    6. Wonderful Wednesday. Thanks for the fun Jonathon (congrats on debut?) and CMoe (welcome back).
      I FIRed in good time and saw the LOCAL LIBRARY theme ( although I call it a Public Library).

      No inkblots. Perps filled my unknowns - PSY, NLCS, AMOCO, SAMOA ( we don’t have all those varieties of Girl Guide cookies).

      I’ll take a double CSO for CREE and ALBERTA (although I didn’t remember Marc Kennedy).

      I smiled when I figured out 41D as a parking LOT spot with many parking spots. Great clue.

      Wishing you all a great day.

      ReplyDelete
    7. The Ys did me in. Carelessly spelled EdDIE, so missed the ONLY in the theme entry, didn’t know PATEL, or SAMOA. Then, carelessly again spelled PHila crossing PSI. TSK,TSK.

      Otherwise, I had few problems with this puzzle. At first I wanted public, but wouldn’t fit so LOCAL went in. Had tele before MEGA, and SLAB left me puzzled.

      Jinx, you’re right, I don’t consider a TAMALE as a snack. That is DAFT.

      I sure liked the film Thelma and Louise.

      Welcome back C-Moe. Great Mokus and I loved that morbid cartoon of the librarian and the silencer.

      ReplyDelete
    8. Musings
      -I solved 52 across last but of course had a good idea where things were headed
      -RETURN TO THE FOLD was my last fill and a bit of a reach
      -I first thought my Canadian curler was an import from ALGERIA at A L _ E R _ A. My _ R A _ went from a CRAG to a BRAE
      -A recent Saturday puzzle had AESOPIAN clued as 2. Using coded language: AESOPIAN.
      -Houses in this town without a basement are usually built on a concrete SLAB
      -The KC Royals made an incredible run to the 2014 World Series as a wild card team but lost to the SF Giants. In 2015 they were AL champs and won the World Series.
      -PATEL is the most common Indian surname in America
      -EYDIE reminds me of all the very uncommon spellings of first names I have encountered in my teaching career.
      -I’m debating on sending those cartoons to my good librarian friend.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé were frequent guests on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show. Steve had a few hit songs, but I can only think of one by Eydie: Blame It On The Bossa Nova.

        Delete
    9. Easy for a Wednesday, FIR in 8:05.
      I hesitate to call the following a pet peeve, as "peeve" is too strong a word, but I am not a fan of having to reference a clue farther down the grid in order to parse an early clue.
      I methodically solve from top to bottom and find it disruptive to deviate.
      And, yes, I am a Virgo with just a slight tendency toward some OCD behaviors.
      (I don't actually believe in Astrology, but then again we Virgos are notoriously skeptical. 😉)

      ReplyDelete
    10. Good Morning:

      I had no trouble with the solve other than needing perps for Phyla and realizing it was Psy not Psi. I agree with HG that Return To The Fold is a bit of a reach. In fact, all the themers aren’t library centric, IMO, but I guess close enough. I find fill-in-the-blank cluing annoying and, in many cases, a convenient shortcut that was utilized 7 times in this puzzle. I also don’t understand cluing Mar as an abbreviation, rather than as a common word. Some editorial decisions puzzle me, no pun intended

      Thanks, Jonathan,and congrats if this is a debut and thanks, Moe, for a great synopsis and commentary, especially the numerous Moe-kus. Glad you enjoyed your travels and happy to have you back!

      Have a great day.

      ReplyDelete
    11. I enjoyed this puzzle very much! And the elaboration! Thanks, Guys! Sparked memories with joys. Especially the MOE-KUs - great tribute! I’ve missed them. (I have a small ritual of writing tribute haiku for individuals on special-special occasions.) And, travel news — I had the great gift of being embraced by Basque culture (in Central CA) thru a friend & her family (her father & uncles were shepherds) — the human warmth, and the food — both yummy! Several aspects sparked memories - of GS cookie selling to my gigantic family, of living for library visits, of toothpastes (remember Bucky Beaver, anyone? Or, “look, Mom, no cavities!”?); of summer “slabs” of vine-ripe roadside watermelon; of neighborhood-grocery-made tortillas…. Sorry to get so nostalgic. I could, but I won’t, go on. Thx again❣️ (O, what’s “CSO” abbr?)

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. It's funny you should mention Bucky Beaver. Advertising themes sometimes outlive the products. "Brusha, Brusha, Brusha, with the new Ipana, brusha, brusha, brsha, it's so good for your teeth!" They promoted themselves as "flouride free". which turned out disastrously, when ADA recommended flouride toothpastes.

        There's tons of old commercial jingles that were clever enough to stay in your mind, but apparently not clever enough to sell their product. That's still true today. I sometimes see ads on TV and think, "Hmmm, clever ad. I wonder what it was for?"

        Delete
      2. Uncle Fred, you are exactly right: "Hmmm, clever ad. I wonder what it was for?" When I was at GTE, we had a great TV commercial series highlighting how we were an advanced technology company that also provided telephone service. Focus groups universally liked the ads, but when asked who the company was a solid majority said AT&T. By comparison, those old "ring around the collar" commercials were universally hated, but those ads sold a lot of Wisk. Probably the template for the Limu the Emu commercials of today.

        Delete
    12. 18 names, DNK 5. Struggled to FIR in 16, with the last cell to fill being the "L" where "...FOLD" and "LOT" cross. A mental alpha run finally came up with the "L" for "FOLD" but it took C.Eh! @ 9:12 for the "LOT" V-8 can.

      I had the exact same thoughts as TK @ 8:28: "SLAB" brought to mind bacon and concrete. and it took a bit to think of an alternate meaning for "SLAB". A slab of bacon is hardly healthy.

      PHYLA was an easy one for me. Best teacher I ever had was my HS Biology teacher, Mr. Mortenson. Very demanding. He had a balsa wood sledge hammer and would roam the classroom and ask questions of individual students. If you didn't know you got bopped on the head with the sledgehammer. Or he would twist your ear. Sometimes he would bring his concertina to class and play and sing. Somewhere I still have the folder made in his class. I went to Greendale High School, just outside Milwaukee. He taught classification thus: King Peter Cooks Onions For Greendale Students: Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species. See what a great teacher he was? I still remember, from a biology class in 1960!

      Overall a fun CW, several good clues, nice theme which I got early. Thanx JH.

      I would enjoy watching the local team, the Miami Marlins, baseball games, but I would need to subscribe to "Marlins.com" for a monthly fee. I'm already paying Comcast $253/mo for WIFI internet access and T.V. That's enough. So have not seen a single Marlins game this year.

      C.Moe, you mentioned Skechers. I too love their shoes. Mine have eyelets with elastic stretched between them. Very comfortable. AND they opened a store just a few blocks from my house in FLL.

      Terrific write-up C.Moe, welcome back. You mentioned the Veg-O-Matic: I bet I still have one squirreled away somewhere. I watched your "Fractured Fairy Tales" video: it still brings a smile, all these years later. MCMLXI. Why do we still use Roman numerals?

      Oh, almost forget to mention: I enjoyed your MoeKus.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. Thanks, unclefred - as to why we still use Roman numerals? Because we can! ;^) But I am glad that Roman numerals have for all intents and purposes been eliminated from use in crossword puzzles

        Delete
    13. Hola! Fun times abound in this puzzle. I LAUD the CHAMP who composed it. I can relate to the LIBRARY theme as I was once in training to be a LIBRARIAN, but I preferred teaching. I'll take a CSO at TAMALE and no, it's not just a snack.
      My niece, EYDIE, was named after the singer; her parents attended a concert in Las Vegas and loved EYDIE Gorme.
      I still remember my friend, SUSAN, who was killed in a car accident many, many years ago.
      i have visited some parts of Canada, but not ALBERTA.
      My sister just had a KNEE procedure without the surgery; it's a new way and much less invasive. I'll have to call her and see how it all went.
      Have a great day, everyone! Moe, I'm so glad you enjoyed Spain. I loved it so much that I returned three times.

      ReplyDelete
    14. 39D. Also KAISER, and the deli roll🤣

      ReplyDelete
    15. Additional puzzling thoughts:

      1) What is up with "this" that showed up a few times in my blog? Puzzles& Brainteasers. I don't recall seeing that before and I certainly didn't add it to my comments

      2) Why is my name not "blue" today when I comment? It only did this when I comment from my cellphone, not my laptop

      3) What else did I miss from my absence?

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. Lots. We’re not in Kansas anymore.

        Delete
      2. Monkey @ 12:58 => Hmm. Sounds like there WERE some changes. Hope that all of our Cornerites are OK

        Delete
      3. Chairman Moe, know any retired HTML programmers? Just kidding. It's a no-win situation.

        In your absence, the browser companies further implemented cross site (third party) protection against tracking cookies and browser fingerprinting that is used by advertising services to target users.

        Long story short - that broke Blogger for us. We used to use full page commenting, but the comments font defaulted to a very light Arial that was hard to read. I could not change the font via HTML changes despite tens of hours of effort due to Blogger's Strict Content Policy overriding any changes I made to our blog's template.

        We tried Pop Up commenting, but that didn't work. We now use Embedded commenting. Authenticating (your Blogger profile) in Embedded comments has always been a bit more troublesome than Full Page, but at least now we get a font we can easily read.

        When you get the prompt about Cookies, you'll need to allow them to easily comment using your Google profile. If your browser allows the cookies, you just have to remember to select your Google Account before writing your comment.

        Read the comments on June 26th, June 28th and yesterday to better understand the overall issue. You'll see that others (NaomiZ et al) also got that Puzzle and Brainteasers link.

        Delete
      4. Thanks, TTP - I will go back and read the 26 and 28 June blogs

        Delete
    16. Unlike my normal solving, I actually guessed today's would relate to a library. CHECK, READ, RETURN, and DON'T BE LATE. I often wonder what percentage of library books are NEVER returned.

      ALBERTA and ALONE were basically perps. I noticed the Canadian ice sport and Alberta had the right number of letters. I remember the movie but not the character's name or actor.

      BMX-perps- I thought 'bunny hops' were only at Easter Egg hunts. Bunny slopes are for beginning skiers.

      AMOCO- Chevron's biggest buy was Texaco. You can't 'trust your car to the man who wears the star' at stations (unless you live in OR or NJ)..

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. I was too young to remember The Bunny Hop from The Ray Anthony Show, but my mother and sisters must have sung it a lot because I still remember it.

        Delete
    17. Thank you, Jonathon, and congrats on your debut.

      Welcome back, Chairman Moe. Sounds like you had a great time. I've been paying attention to the heat wave across parts of Europe. National news coverage featured the heat wave in France in many of the shots. It was baking for them. Was the Iberian Penisula as hot as Arizona?

      I thought the singer's name was Leslie. I conflated Leslie Gore with Gorme. EYDIE perped in. Whatever. You Don't Own Me, and I'll Cry If I Want To...

      Today's Universal also had the clue, "Scottish hillside"

      TSAR vs CZAR - It is pretty much crossword convention across the major venues that the Russian rulers are TSARs, while business moguls and barons of industry are czars.

      "Spot with many spots" was my D'oh! moment of the puzzle. I needed Chairman Moe's simple explanation to get it. D'oh!

      "Healthy piece" = SLAB perped in, but I have no NIT with the clue. Healthy is not being used here in a dietary sense. I agree that today's healthy is in the sense of a thick slice. Like cake or a big slab of watermelon.

      Slab coffee tables with live edges made from downed hardwoods are currently fashionable in home decor. Some are huge. Expect to spend between a few hundred to over a few thousand dollars, depending on wood species, the thickness of the slab and the overall length and width.

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      1. TTP @ 1:00 => Yes, we experienced some pretty intense heat (for that time of the year) when we were in Portugal. Plus, they have a whole lot more humidity than we do in AZ so it felt worse

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      2. It has been unseasonably hot and humid in the Midwest and Northeast. That and the heavy rains. Made it miserable to be outside. Still happening. More rain coming tomorrow and temps in the 90's again next week here in Chicagoland. Pittsburgh also got walloped with storms and flooding.

        Gotta run to the store and will probably get DW's car warshed even though there's a 50% chance of rain tomorrow.

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    18. The deal with my posting as ANONYMOUS was that I didn’t see the littler triangle on the pulldown menu next to “comment as” so it defaulted to anaymous.

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    19. FWIW, I just now added a video to my blog - not sure why I didn't think of it when I originally wrote it. It's the scene from an old Seinfeld show that featured the Library Cop

      https://youtu.be/D9tP9fI2zbE?si=6s8EPZMdo390er6U

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      1. Excellent!

        Phillip Baker Hall as Bookman the library cop. One of my favorite Seinfeld episodes. With the classic line, "You and your good time buddies." Too funny.

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    For custom-made birthday, anniversary or special occasion puzzles from C.C., please email crosswordc@gmail.com

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