google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Karen Steinberg

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Showing posts with label Karen Steinberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Steinberg. Show all posts

Feb 9, 2023

Thursday, February 9, 2023, Paul Steinberg & Karen Steinberg

 

Today's constructors are husband and wife team Paul and Karen Steinberg.  I believe this is Paul's LA Times debut.  This is Karen's second puzzle here, the first being published on Saturday, May 28, 2022.  See Husker Gary's review for a capsule bio.  Paul and Karen are also the parents of prolific constructor David Steinberg has had over 20 puzzles published here and numerous others at that other paper.  In fact the three of them have co-constructed a puzzle for the NYT.  What fun to be a fly on the wall at one of their Sunday morning breakfasts!

Today, riffing on the title of Adrienne Raphel's classic book on crosswords, they invite us to

Think Inside the Fill

We'll start with the reveal where they admonish us to ...

56A. "Remember what you were about to say," and what the answers to the starred clues literally do: HOLD THAT THOUGHT. ... and remind us with four theme phrases holding an IDEA spanning two of the words:

16A. *External troublemaker: OUTSIDE AGITATOROUTSIDE AGITATOR is a term that has been used to discount political unrest as being driven by outsiders, rather than by internal discontent.  Many books have been written on the subject including this one:

See also 18D.

23A. *Prized possession: PRIDE AND JOY.  Here's Stevie Ray Vaughan with his Pride And Joy (Live at Montreux 1982):

33A. *Camera attachment for a panorama: WIDE ANGLE LENS.  Formerly the province of photo-jocks, relatively low-cost add-on lenses are now available for cell phones.  Here's a review.

47A. *Space-saving option for overnight guests: HIDE AWAY BED.  Make sure you read the directions before you get into one:

Here's the grid (with nary a circle):


Here's the rest:

Across:

1. Salinger title girl who says, "I prefer stories about squalor": ESMEFor Esmé—with Love and Squalor is a short story by J. D. Salinger. It recounts a sergeant's meeting with a young girl before being sent into combat in World War II. Originally published in The New Yorker on April 8, 1950,[1] it was anthologized in Salinger's Nine Stories two years later (while the story collection's American title is Nine Stories, it is titled as For Esmé—with Love & Squalor in most countries).
5. Spanish "other": OTRA.  Today's Spanish lesson.

9. Las Vegas WNBA team: ACESThe Las Vegas Aces are an American professional basketball team based in the WNBA  Western Conference.  The Aces won the 2022 WNBA Commissioner’s Cup and WNBA Championship.

13. Dress up like: GO AS.

14. French endearment that means "cabbage": CHOU.  Today's French lesson.  Only in "Le pays de l'amour" would you call your loved one a "cabbage".  "Petit Chou" is their word for Brussels sprout, a tiny cabbage.

15. Pound the pavement?: STOMP.  These folks will pound just about anything.  Here's the overture to  their DVD Stomp Out Loud.
16A. [Theme clue]

19. __ Pueblo, New Mexico: TAOSTaos Pueblo is the only living Native American community designated both a World Heritage Site by UNESCO and a National Historic Landmark.
Multi-level adobe dwelling
20. PowerPoint unit: SLIDE.

21. Brewpub fave: IPA.

22. Bubble bath sigh: AHH.

23A. [Theme clue]

26. More spread out: SPARSER.  The population of Canada is nearly 9 times SPARSER than the US.  Perhaps that's why Canadians live longer than Americans.  Hi CanadianEh!
Comparative population density of
Canada vs United States

28. Dice game: CRAPS.  How to play craps for beginners (12 min.). It's complicated.


29. Tech journalist Swisher: KARAKara Anne Swisher (/ˈkɛərə/ KAIR) is an American journalist. She has covered the business of the internet since 1994. As of 2022, Swisher was a contributing editor at New York, the host of the podcast Sway, and the co-host of the podcast Pivot.
Kara Swisher
30. Vegetable in aloo matar: PEA.  Potatoes and peas (Hindi: आलू  मटर).  Here's a recipe.
Aloo Matar

32. Craft project initials: DIYDo It Yourself and a CSO to TTP, Anon-T, Picard, and Moi.  Hand up if I missed you?

33A. [Theme clue]

38. Acne treatment brand: OXY. There are several treatments available for mild acne.  You may try, or your doctor may recommend, treatment with a nonprescription drug that contains benzoyl peroxide (the generic name for OXY). It's believed that this compound works by destroying the bacteria associated with acne.

39. Lout: OAF.

40. Indie rock's __ Kiley: RILORilo Kiley was an American indie rock band based in Los Angeles, California (1998 - 2014).  The band consisted of Jenny Lewis, Blake Sennett, Pierre de Reeder, and Dave Rock. Here's their Silver Lining (lyrics):

42. Passport mark: STAMP.  A passport stamp is an inked impression in a passport typically made by rubber stamp upon entering or exiting a territory.

45. Make damp: MOISTEN.

47A. [Theme clue]

51. Frustrating groove: RUT.

52. "One more sleep" time: EVE. This is a new clue for Christmas EVE, based on the song One more sleep by British singer Leona Lewis. This was the shortest version I could find:

53. Gushing reviews: RAVES.  Apparently One more sleep got RAVE reviews in 2013 (see link in previous clue)

54. "__ You Babe": I GOT.  All you need is love!  But it ended when Cher became a mononym.

56A. [Theme reveal]

60. "Hamilton" Tony winner Renée __ Goldsberry: ELISE.  A DIY YouTuber created this pastiche of 3 songs from Hamilton, featuring Renée (and a CSO to our Monday sherpa):
61. Dance move: STEP.

62. Stink: REEK.

63. Cambodian currency: RIEL. The Cambodia RIEL (KHR) has been the official currency since 20 March 1980.   Here is the current exchange rate for US$.  Between 1975 and 1980 (during the Vietnam War era) the country had no monetary system, .  Between 1953 and May 1975 a currency also called the RIEL was issued. Between 1885 and 1953 when Cambodia was a part of French Indochina the piastre was used.  Prior to that time a variety of regional currencies were used.

64. Picks up a Bug, say: TOWS.  Presumably the Bug being a disabled VW.
 
65. Edit menu option: UNDO.  Hands down the most useful editing command.

Down:

1. Self-importance: EGO.

2. Lefty: SOUTHPAW.  IMHO lefties are less "handed" than righties, because we've had to adapt to a right-handed world.  OTOH it's easier for us to ESC from pages we wish we hadn't stumbled into.  Hand up if you're a SOUTHPAW 👍

3. Spy played by Greta Garbo: MATA HARIMata Hari is a 1931 American drama film directed by George Fitzmaurice loosely based on the life of Margaretha Geertruida MacLeod, a Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan executed for espionage during World War I. The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film stars Greta Garbo in the title role. It was Garbo's most commercially successful vehicle. Since Greta prefers to be left alone, here's the real Mata Hari:
Margaretha MacLeod
4. Big petrol seller: ESSO.  The word "petrol" in the clue indicates that they sell in places like England, Ireland, and Canada (another CSO to CanadianEh!!).  They're also a big seller in crossword puzzles.

5. Med. condition that may be treated with Paxil: OCD.  Do you have to be OCD to review crossword puzzles, or is it just me.

6. Alter ego of "Batman" villain Lorelei Circe: THE SIRENPlayed by siren Joan Collins, this character draws from the wellsprings of Greek mythology (Circe), German folklore (Die Hexe Lorelei), and such historical figures as the seductress Mata Hari (see 3D).
The Siren
7. Explorer Amundsen: ROALD. Norwegian Roald Amundsen (16 July 1872 – c. 18 June 1928) led a party of 5 explorers who were the first to successfully reach the South Pole on 14 December 1911. On 12 May 1926, Amundsen and 15 other men in the airship Norge became the first explorers verified to have reached the North Pole.  Amundsen disappeared in June 1928 while flying on a rescue mission for the airship Italia in the Arctic. The search for his remains, which have not been found, was called off in September of that year.
Roald Amundsen 1908
8. Saul Bellow's "The Adventures of __ March": AUGIEThe Adventures of Augie March is a picaresque novel by Saul Bellow, published in 1953 by Viking Press. It features the eponymous Augie March, who grows up during the Great Depression, and it is an example of Bildungsroman, tracing the development of an individual through a series of encounters, occupations and relationships from boyhood to manhood.
9. __ moment's notice: AT A.

10. Crumbly Mexican cheese: COTIJACotija is an aged Mexican cheese made from cow's milk and named after the town of Cotija, Michoacán. White in color and firm in texture, its flavor is salty and milky.
Cotija cheese
11. Hybrid music genre: EMO POP.  I threw a dart at this list of EMO POP bands and in keeping with our secondary theme of seductresses the band Sleeping with Sirens popped out at me.  Here's their If I'm James Dean, You're Audrey Hepburn (lyrics):

12. Wets with a hose: SPRAYS.

15. Lettering guide: STENCIL.

17. Web access cos.: ISPSInternet Service Providers. Actual access to the World Wide Web is the first, and perhaps most important of, many types of services provided by ISPS.

18. Wyo. neighbor: IDAWyo. is short for Wyoming.  My grandson (the long distance axe thrower in my last review) goes to Wyoming Catholic College, and like all the students there, he is majoring in the Great Books.  The college also teaches a lot of outdoor skills, among them wilderness survival training and advanced first aid.  He has already had an introductory course as a backwoods EMT and may pursue that as a career.

IDA is short for IDAHO, sometimes clued with IDA Tarbell, the woman who took on Standard Oil (see 4D ESSO).  She was often accused of being a 16A.

22. Query: ASK.

24. Get even with: REPAY.

25. Laundry room appliances: DRYERS.

27. Semicircular antenna housing: RADOME. A radome (a portmanteau of radar and dome) is a structural, weatherproof enclosure that protects a radar antenna. The radome is constructed of material transparent to radio waves. Radomes protect the antenna from weather and conceal antenna electronic equipment from view.
Radomes
31. Before now: AGO.

32. Author who wrote on Friday?: DEFOEDaniel Defoe (c. 1660 – 24 April 1731) was an English writer, merchant, journalist, pamphleteer, social critic, and spy.  He is most famous for his novel Robinson Crusoe, published in 1719.  He has been seen as one of the earliest proponents of the English novel, and helped to popularise the form in Britain with others such as Aphra Behn and Samuel Richardson. Defoe wrote many political tracts, was often in trouble with the authorities (an outside agitator no doubt), and spent a period in prison. Intellectuals and political leaders paid attention to his fresh ideas and sometimes consulted him.  Oh yes, Friday?  He is the manservant of the novel's protagonist, Robinson Crusoe.
Daniel Defoe 1660
34. One-sided, in legal proceedings: EX PARTEex parte (ex par-tay, but popularly, ex party) adj. Latin meaning "for one party," referring to motions, hearings or orders granted on the request of and for the benefit of one party only.

35. Meaty Moroccan dish: LAMB STEWHere's a recipe.
Lamb Stew
36. Much of the atmosphere: NITROGEN.  Nitrogen, or N, using its scientific abbreviation, is a colorless, odorless element. Nitrogen is in the soil under our feet, in the water we drink, and in the air we breathe. In fact, nitrogen is the most abundant element in Earth’s atmosphere: approximately 78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen! Nitrogen is important to all living things and plays a key role in plant growth: too little nitrogen and plants cannot thrive, leading to low crop yields; but too much nitrogen can be toxic to plants.
 
The Nitrogen Cycle
37. Did some digging: SLEUTHED.  Our favorite sleuth is Vera Stanhope, played by actress Brenda Blethyn, OBE, who is the Detective Chief Inspector of the Northumberland Constabulary in Northern England.  She's about as frumpy and unglamorous as they come, but with her leadership, gritty no-nonsense MO, detective skills, and the determination to keep digging, her team always gets the perp. The eagerly awaited Season 12 of Vera started last week.  Here's a trailer from Season 10:


41. Toronto's prov.: ONT.  CanadianEh! just scored a hat trick!

42. Feminine pair: SHE HER.  Clever clue.  As it turned out this was filled by a pair of pronouns, not by several possible collective nouns that I suspect some of the males on the Corner might have thought of first.

43. Copenhagen's __ Gardens: TIVOLITivoli Gardens, also known simply as Tivoli, is an amusement park and pleasure garden in Copenhagen, Denmark. The park opened on 15 August 1843 and is the third-oldest operating amusement park in the world:

Tivoli Gardens
44. Antarctic penguin: ADELIE.  The Adélie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae) is a species of penguin common along the entire coast of the Antarctic continent, which is the only place where it is found. It is the most widespread penguin species, and, along with the emperor penguin, is the most southerly distributed of all penguins.

Adélie penguin
46. Prefix with -pathic: IDIOIdiopathic connotes a disease arising spontaneously or from an obscure or unknown cause

48. "Hush, ya big baby!": WAH.

49. Nautical "Halt!": AVAST.

50. BTS hit "__ Come": YET TO.  "Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)" is a song by South Korean boy band BTS, released on June 10, 2022, through Big Hit Music and Universal Music Group, as the lead single from their first anthology album Proof. It is the band's first original Korean-language single since 2020's "Life Goes On". An alternative hip hop track, the song's lyrics are a reflection on the past nine years of the band's career while also looking forward to what the future holds.  All the clips of YTC were in Korean, with no translations.  Pass.

55. Ashram adviser: GURU.

57. Broadband letters: DSLDigital subscriber line (DSL; originally digital subscriber loop) is a family of technologies that are used to transmit digital data over telephone lines, which were originally created for voice communication.  Data transmission via DSL is provided by an Internet Service Provider (see 17D) in this case usually a telephone company.

58. Some PCs: HPS.  This review was created on one.
59. Ref's ruling: TKO.  You folks have suffered enough.  I'm calling this match.

Cheers,
Bill

As always, thanks to Teri for proof reading and for her constructive criticism.  
 
waseeley

May 28, 2022

Saturday, May 28, 2022, Karen Steinberg

 Saturday Themeless by Karen Steinberg


Karen and David
Steinberg
Hi Gary,

I'm the mom of crossword constructor and editor David Steinberg; I'm also a writer and psychologist, even though in high school math was my favorite subject and an occupational interest test told me I should become a computer programmer (!).  As a teenager I solved crosswords in magazines and logic puzzles in books but stopped when I got to college.  I didn't start up again until more than 35 years later, when David began constructing.

Though I use a Mac, I was familiar with Crossword Compiler from helping David with the Pre-Shortzian Puzzle Project, and in 2017 I decided to build a puzzle myself by placing theme entries into Crossword Compiler and having it suggest the grid design.  That puzzle ended up in the Orange County Register crossword, which David was editing; a second one I built using the same grid-design strategy was published as part of David's "Women's March" month of puzzles at Universal.  I realized, though, that if I really wanted to try constructing, I'd have to learn how to build my own grids, and I wanted to do that on the Mac, so David showed me how to work with CrossFire.

Back to the puzzle.  This one came about because I'd never been a real fan of themelesses—to me, they just weren't as interesting and seemed like anyone could construct one by sticking in a bunch of trendy phrases or words with Z's or X's.  I also thought they'd be really easy to construct, so after collecting a few interesting words, I decided to give it a try.

I don't remember what the original seed entry for the puzzle was, though it may have been BYE FELICIA, which is in my earliest screen captures of the grid (the way I keep track ot things!) but which, because of fill issues, didn't make it to the end.  Because I'm really a theme person, I immediately began envisioning the puzzle as depicting a sort of party-like environment on reality TV in which someone might do a quick VIBE CHECK, ask a potential partner  "ARE YOU GAME?", see if he or she had some CLAIM TO FAME, note all the TATTOOED body parts, eat some LAVA CAKE (accidentally BUTT DIALING a friend when seated), move on to a new person ("SEE YA LATER"), and hope for an eventual DREAM DATE.

Patti had a few really good changes she wanted me to try to make—in particular, improving the short fill in the corners and sides of the grid and getting rid of FAKIE.  I made the changes (including replacing FAKIE with CUTIE), and the puzzle was accepted.  I don't remember any particular area being tough to fill—I go into a sort of Zen-like state when I'm filling and will just sit there for hours, from first thing in the morning till last thing at night, looking at all the good options for each word and then seeing what effect each has on the rest of the fill.  I can easily sit there doing that for two days straight—I've always been the sort of person who works in an extremely focused way over a relatively short period of time rather than steadily plodding away at something off and on for months.

Karen, Paul and son David had the first
 "Family Puzzle" in the NYT on 5/22/22
Anyway, I came away from my "themeless experiment" with a newfound respect for the genre and its constructors.  Themelesses aren't any easier to construct—in fact, in some ways, they're harder, because you have to be more willing to let some really good entries that you'd planned to include fall by the wayside.  So, lesson learned! 😳 

Across:

1. "How we all doing?," e.g.: VIBE CHECK - A standard audience greeting for a comedian

10. Waiter at a stand: CAB - Uber will come to you

13. "Wanna?": ARE YOU GAME.

15. Thurman of "Hysterical Blindness": UMA - A 20-yr-old movie


16. Forte: CLAIM TO FAME.

18. Pin in the back: TEN It's easy to miss

19. Wii forerunner: NES - Nintendo Entertainment System

20. Attacking surfers, maybe: TROLLING - Delete and move on


22. Exasperated cry: AARGH 

25. Drew on?: TATTOOED - Fun clue

26. One of the "Black-ish" parents: DRE - On the right below. The role is played by Anthony Anderson who I best remember as a detective on Law And Order


27. Digital permission: E-CONSENT - Okay

29. Domingo, e.g.: DIA - DIA is "day" and Domingo is "Sunday" in Spanish 

30. Performs like Saweetie: RAPS - Google if you must. Her RAP lyrics and costumes are unprintable here.

31. Management level: TIER.

35. Curiosities: MARVELS - Yes, they could be

37. "Black Panther" setting: WAKANDA - WAKANDA is an imaginary East African country for this super hero movie. Some of the filming like this scene was done in a rock quarry in Stonebridge, Georgia. 


40. Queen of Arendelle: ELSA.


41. Louboutin item: SHOE - Hey, the shipping is free! C.C. told me that 
a) she was familiar with this brand
b) They are famous for the bottom of the shoe being red
c) she would never spend that much on a shoe.


42. Cacophony: DIN.

43. Dessert that can be microwaved in a mug: LAVA CAKE 


47. __ factor: ICK.

48. Something that can't miss: A SURE BET Fugue For Tinhorns

50. Natl. Merit Scholarship hurdles: PSATS and 59. Coll. test: GRE - We get tested a lot here with GRE, SAT, PSAT, ACT, LSAT and MCAT

52. Go out briefly: TAKE A NAP - Oh, "out" as in asleep! 

53. LG rival: RCA - RCA TV's are now made by the Curtis International in Canada

54. Poke bowl option: AHI - Poke means to cut or slice in Hawaiian. Here is some AHI tuna on top of a poke bowl


55. Making a booty call?: BUTT DIALING - Fun clue


60. Sofa bed site: DEN.

61. "Peace": SEE YA LATER - The first Today host in the 50's, David Garroway, singed off at the end of the show by saying "Peace" with this gesture.


62. Spots: ADS.

63. Romantic ideal: DREAM DATE - Before he was famous, Steve Martin was picked as a DREAM DATE on The Dating Game



Down:

1. Short sucker?: VAC - Oh, VAC is short for vacuum! 

2. Not over Zoom, say: Abbr.: IRL - In Real Life. 

3. Arthur who appeared on "All in the Family": BEA - Before she was famous, BEA was a marine during WWII


4. Considering: EYING.

5. Attractive words?: COME HERE - Depending on inflection these words can be attractive or demanding

6. Humble abodes: HUTS - Alan Turing worked on deciphering Enigma in HUT 8 at Bletchley Park during WWII


7. Nwodim of "SNL": EGO 


8. Loose garments: CAFTANS - Morrocan 
9. Disappearing discount stores: K-MARTS

10. Pie type?: CUTIE.

11. Modify: AMEND 

12. [Just like that!]: BANG - I do the puzzle, blog it and BANG, I'm done!

14. Fake feelings: EMOTE - A range...


17. University with a law school at Greensboro: ELON - North Carolina's favorite University cwd fill

21. Host of, casually: LOTTA - Emcee seemed right for a while


22. Online request: ADD ME - I've asked several constructors to ADD ME as a FaceBook friend and they all have

23. Basic font: ARIAL - ARIAL

24. Parents: REARS - Verb

25. Tanks, e.g.: TOPS - Most golf courses do not allow tank TOPS to be worn


28. Berkeley, to sports fans: CAL - The ending of the 1982 Cal Berkley/Stanford game was perhaps the most unusual finish in the history of college football.


32. Birthplace of novelist Rohinton Mistry: INDIA - A Canadian man born in India


33. Order: EDICT.

34. Orders: RANKS - Theme parks in RANK Order


36. "Antiques Roadshow" determination: VALUE.

37. Unfriendly way to answer the phone: WHAT - I was doing the puzzle on the swing next to my DW. I said out loud said, "Unfriendly way to answer the phone" and she said, "WHAT?" I repeated the clue and she said, "What" again. I laughed out loud when I realized we had a "Who's on first?" routine going. 

38. "No problemo!": A-OK.

39. "Just relax": KEEP CALM.


41. Regal rod: SCEPTER - QEII with hers and her orb 69 years ago 


44. Part of UAE: ARAB.

45. "__ of the Louvre": Emma Lazarus poem: VENUS Here ya go

46. Let up: ABATED.

48. Followed a doctor's order?: AAHED 


49. Frontier trader's goods: SKINS Museum Of The Fur Trade in Chadron, NE

51. Leaves for lunch: SALAD - Oh, these leaves


52. "Did it!": TADA.

53. Anti-piracy org.: RIAA.
56. Go dark?: DYE.

57. "Make __ double": IT A - Some days after 8 hours with 7th graders...

58. Barclays Center player: NET - Home of the Brooklyn NETS



BONUS: Karen added this for great insight!!

As for clues that were changed, I've highlighted them in your list below and added the original clue in brackets:

Across:
 
1. "How we all doing?," e.g.: VIBE CHECK [Room read, say]

10. Waiter at a stand: CAB. [Waving might or might not make it stop]

13. "Wanna?": ARE YOU GAME.

15. Thurman of "Hysterical Blindness": UMA
 
16. Forte: CLAIM TO FAME -  [Reason for noteworthiness]

18. Pin in the back: TEN - [Percenter preceder]

19. Wii forerunner: NES - [Classic console inits.]

20. Attacking surfers, maybe: TROLLING [Deliberately provocative online activity]

22. Exasperated cry: AARGH [Anguished cry]

25. Drew on?: TATTOOED. [Like the bodies of many "Bachelor" contestants]

26. One of the "Black-ish" parents: DRE. [Dr. whose last "name" is one more letter than his first]

27. Digital permission: ECONSENT.

29. Domingo, e.g.: DIA.

30. Performs like Saweetie: RAPS. [26-Across's songs]

31. Management level: TIER. [College selectivity descriptor]

35. Curiosities: MARVELS. [2022 superhero film based on comics (with "The")]

37. "Black Panther" setting: WAKANDA. [Black Panther's fictional home]

40. Queen of Arendelle: ELSA. [Kenyan lioness]

41. Louboutin item: SHOE. [One might be worn with its rearranged letters]

42. Cacophony: DIN. [Brouhaha]

43. Dessert that can be microwaved in a mug: LAVACAKE. [Dessert that's molten in the middle]

47. __ factor: ICK. [":o=!!!"]

48. Something that can't miss: ASUREBET. [It might be too good to be true]

50. Natl. Merit Scholarship hurdles: PSATS.

52. Go out briefly: TAKEANAP. [Conk out in the afternoon]

53. LG rival: RCA. [Classic brand with a dog and phonograph logo]

54. Poke bowl option: AHI. [In Hawaii, tuna that refers to two species]

55. Making a booty call?: BUTTDIALING.

60. Sofa bed site: DEN. [Sofabed site]

61. "Peace": SEEYALATER. ["I'm out!']

62. Spots: ADS. [Many pop-ups]

63. Romantic ideal: DREAMDATE. [Perfect romantic encounter]

Down:
1. Short sucker?: VAC.

2. Not over Zoom, say: Abbr.: IRL. [How a texter might want to meet a Tinder match]

3. Arthur who appeared on "All in the Family": BEA. ["All in the Family" guest star Arthur]

4. Considering: EYING.

5. Attractive words?: COMEHERE. [Possible meaning of a wave]

6. Humble abodes: HUTS.

7. Nwodim of "SNL": EGO. [A humble person has a small one]

8. Loose garments: CAFTANS. [Middle Eastern robes]

9. Disappearing discount stores: KMARTS. [Big box stores that have declined from 2,486 to less than 20]

10. Pie type?: CUTIE.

11. Modify: AMEND. [Change by formal procedure]

12. [Just like that!]: BANG. [Big one?]

14. Fake feelings: EMOTE. [Many soap stars do it]

17. University with a law school at Greensboro: ELON. [Floki "Frunkpuppy" owner Musk]

21. Host of, casually: LOTTA. ["Whole ___ Love" (1969 Led Zeppelin hit)]

22. Online request: ADDME. [LinkedIn request]

23. Basic font: ARIAL. [Disney princess's favorite font]

24. Parents: REARS.

25. Tanks, e.g.: TOPS. [Tanks and tubes]

28. Berkeley, to sports fans: CAL. [Stanford nemesis, for short]

32. Birthplace of novelist Rohinton Mistry: INDIA. [Largest democracy in the world]

33. Order: EDICT. [Directive]

34. Orders: RANKS.

36. "Antiques Roadshow" determination: VALUE. [A comic book's might increase with age]

37. Unfriendly way to answer the phone: WHAT. [Information-gatherer's question]

38. "No problemo!": AOK.

39. "Just relax": KEEPCALM. [Emergency advice]

41. Regal rod: SCEPTER. [Queen's rod]

44. Part of UAE: ARAB. [Spring preceder]

45. "__ of the Louvre": Emma Lazarus poem: VENUS. [Out-of-this-world first name in tennis]

46. Let up: ABATED. [Decreased in intensity]

48. Followed a doctor's order?: AAHED. [Reacted to fireworks, maybe]

49. Frontier trader's goods: SKINS. [Cheesy potato parts]

51. Leaves for lunch: SALAD. [Caesar, for one]

52. "Did it!": TADA.

53. Anti-piracy org.: RIAA. [Music piracy org. whose initials anagrams to an opera highlight]

56. Go dark?: DYE. [Turn purple, perhaps]

57. "Make __ double": ITA. [Make ___ rule]

58. Barclays Center player: NET. [Ball blocker]

59. Coll. test: GRE. [Test that's some work another way]