Good Morning, Cruciverbalists, and welcome to Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom. Your host for today will be Marlin Perkins. Oh, sorry. Your host, today, is Malodorous Manatee and the program for today is a recap of a Friday puzzle by Katherine Simonson.
Let's start with the reveal:
56 Across: Annual mass relocation, or a movement that happened four times in this puzzle?: ANIMAL MIGRATION.
At the places where the theme is applied, Katherine takes well-known two-word combinations, each involving an animal of some sort, and reverses the order of the words. I guess that this could be called "MIGRATION". While MIGRATION is a form of relocation it does seem to be a little bit of a stretch. However, because the gimmick is more readily identifiable than in many other puzzles, there is no need to belabor the point.
Here are the four "times":
17 Across: Meeting of monarchs?: BUTTERFLY SOCIAL. A social butterfly is a person who is outgoing, enjoys attending social events, and often moves between different social groups without forming deep connections. They are typically charismatic and thrive on interacting with others. Flip Social Butterfly around and we have a group of Monarch butterflies enjoying each others company. Did anyone first think that kings and/or queens would somehow be involved?
23 Across: Lingerie for a grizzly?: BEAR TEDDY. From this:
To this:
34 Across: Shortage of raptors? HAWK DEFICIT. Deficit hawk is a political slang term for people who place great emphasis on keeping government budgets under control. As the federal deficit alone is in excess of $35 trillion there is, apparently, a shortage of this type of hawk. Flip Deficit Hawk around and we have a dearth of flying carnivores.
51 Across: Protest in support of the loser of a fabled race?: HARE MARCH. The March Hare from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland morphs into:
This is how it all appears in the completed grid:
.... and here are the rest of the clues and answers
Across:
1. Raucous field cry: CAW. A reference to the noise a crow makes and the first of 21 three-letter answers.
4. Workforce: STAFF. Does the STAFF at REI or EMS sell staffs?
9. Wounded by a scorpion: STUNG.
14. Suffix with mod or nod: ULE. ModULE or NodULE
15. Arctic: POLAR.
16. Break down: PARSE. Bill Clinton brought PARSE into the broader lexicon with his famous "It depends on what the meaning of is is" and “Well, I’m just showing the American people what a verb is and what a noun is, would you like me to show them another verb and another noun?"
20. Words of the weary: I'M BEAT.
21. Box: SPAR. Not a carton. Pugilism.
22. Mocking irreverence: SNARK.
28. Sea dog: MARINER. Both GOB and Tar were too short.
30. Kicks on Route 66?: NISSANS. Nice mash-up. The NISSAN Kick is an automobile. I don't think that the song anticipated that. We'll let Ray Benson and company explain . . .
31. Moisturizer brand: OLAY.
33. Central Asia's North __ Sea: ARAL. A place we frequently visit.
39. Half-moon tide: NEAP.
41. Lad of La Mancha: NINO. Spanish for a young lad.
42. Divide with two cuts: TRISECT. One might also create four pieces with two cuts (but the cuts would have to intersect each other).
46. Slices of American cheese: SINGLES.
53. Plot: TRACT. Not the arc of a story. A parcel of land.
54. Pedestrian: BLAH. Meh.
55. Contort in pain: WRITHE.
61. Under the __: RADAR. Idiomatic for intentionally not drawing attention to one's own self. Look, the Norwegian RADAR operator has reported seeing some birds on the screen! He's Scandinavian.
62. Entreaties: PLEAS.
63. Not gross: NET. Not yucky. A financial reference.
64. Acknowledge: THANK.
65. Had a restful night: SLEPT.
66. Burro: ASS. A small one.
Down:
1. Avant-garde movement pioneered by Georges Braque: CUBISM. Per Wikipedia, the CUBISM movement was pioneered in partnership by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque.
Still Life - Georges Braque
2. Spelman graduate: ALUMNA. SpelmanCollege is a private, historically black, women's liberal arts college in Atlanta, Georgia, founded in 1881.
3. Suite amenity: WET BAR. Perhaps. A hotel room that is not a suite could also have a WET BAR and a suite of multiple rooms could be without one.
Literally
4. "Last chance to object": SPEAK NOW. . . or forever hold your peace.
5. Lawsuit basis: TORT. A frequent cause of action in our puzzles.
6. Landon who was governor of Kansas in the 1930s: ALF. ALF Landon was a Kansas governor and a Republican presidential candidate in 1936. He lost to Franklin D. Roosevelt and was the only Republican governor to win reelection in 1934.
7. Like some starts and returns: FALSE. The former might result in a disqualification, the latter might result in a heavy fine and jail time.
8. Skillet: FRY PAN. More often frying pan.
9. Hurling and curling: SPORTS. Hurling is a contact sport played by men and women with a wooden stick and a ball. It is one of Ireland's native Gaelic games. Alternatively, see 25 Down. Curling is somewhat akin to shuffleboard played on ice.
10. Middle of a winning trio: TAC.
Tic Tac Toe
11. Ocean State sch.: URI.
12. Cryptography org.: NSA.
13. Set: GEL. Used as a verb as in how Jello firms up or GELs.
18. Polo of "Good Trouble": TERI.
19. Dress for a formal puja, perhaps: SARI. This solver was not familiar with puja but SARIs are a form of dress frequently worn in crossword puzzles so, with a couple of perps, the answer quickly came to mind. Once, I accidentally offended an Indian woman by using the wrong word for her clothing. So I said "SARI."
23. Small nail: BRAD.
24. Morales of "Mission: Impossible" films: ESAI.
25. Feathered projectile: DART. How does a dart board on the ceiling make you sick? It causes you to throw up.
26. Forensic sample: DNA.
27. French fashion monogram: YSL.
29. Large ruminant in the Rockies: ELK.
32. Japanese dough: YEN. Dough as in slang for money.
34. Locks: HAIR.
35. Cathedral feature: APSE. A place frequented in our puzzles.
36. Amy Tan's "Saving __ From Drowning": FISH. Tan is perhaps best known for The Joy Luck Club.
37. Pasta suffix: INI. Bucatini, Ditalini, Capellini, Tagliolini, etc.
38. Distinction: CONTRAST. As opposed to, say, horizontal hold?
39. Advanced degree?: NTH. Not an academic reference. Extremely/as much as possible.
40. Time capsule time: ERA. A big 'thank you" for not heading down the Swifties road.
43. Board: EMBARK. Do dogs ever leave? Of course not. They EMBARK.
44. Buzz: CALL. As in "I'll give her a buzz". No, not that kind of buzz.
45. Wanders (around): TRAMPS. Like a TRAMP steamer. ROAMS and ROVES were both too short.
47. Sandpaper measure: GRIT.
48. America Ferrera, for one: LATINA. Clued this way, for this answer there were hundreds of millions of clues from which to choose.
49. Repeats: ECHOES.
50. Medical tubes: STENTS. I have a friend who has been feeling really sentimental about a stent she had put in several years ago. It still holds a special place in her heart.
52. "You need to relax": CHILL. CHILL, man. Gee.
55. Cloak: WRAP. As in a riddle WRAPped up in an enigma.
56. Part of LACMA: ART.
57. Casual refusal: NAH. Nah.
58. NAACP co-founder __ B. Wells: IDA. A frequent visitor.
59. "Hoo boy": MAN. Gee. Chill, MAN.
60. Bagel center?: GEE. GEE, man, chill. Oops, sorry. Force of habit. It's actually one of those types of clues (but we're on to this trick). B A G E L
Well, we've wrapped things up up five- three-letter words in a row so there's not much left to say except "Bye Bye For Now." I will add, however, that the relative lack of proper nouns was refreshing, indeed.
On a further note, this recap marks the first time that this marine creature has ventured into the realm of AI generated images. Did you spot them?
Theme: It's the unifier - FAILURE TO LAUNCH. At my age, I think of this as an unsuccessful attempt in rocketry. But the modern usage refers to young adults who struggle to achieve expected milestones of independence and self-sufficiency. This seems to be Google's preference. More generally, it can be any unsuccessful venture. Here, we have an imbedded word or phrase in each theme fill that represents the concept. Ironically, it seems like a success.
17 A. *Call to Rapunzel: LET DOWNYOUR HAIR. Rapunzel is the main character in a German folk tale recorded by the Brothers Grimm in 1812. She is trapped in a tower with a window and no other entrance. Her long, golden hair, when dropped down from the window, becomes a type of ladder. A LET DOWN is a failure to provide some expected assistance.
22 A. *Outmoded forms of payment for some commuters: BUS TOKENS. Physical or digital tickets that allow passengers to ride a bus or other public transport service. A BUST is a failed endeavor of almost any variety.
33 A. * Like a beagle but not a corgi: FLOPPY EARED. A description of an animal's ears that hang down the sides of the head, rather than standing upright. A FLOP is an unexpected failure of some activity. Our oldest granddaughter just returned from 15 months in Japan, where she was dancing at Tokyo Disney. When she returned, I called her "cookie," because she was away fer so long. As you can imagine this joke was a complete FLOP. But I was amused.
49 A. *Western vacation destination: DUDE RANCH. This is a vacation site where city dwellers can experience some aspects of cowboy or old west living. A DUD is an object that doesn't work, like a fire cracker that doesn't crack.
55. Rocket mishap, or what can be found at the start of the answer to each starred clue: FAILURETO LAUNCH. Still, this gets the puzzle off to a good start.
Hi Gang, JazzBumpa here, hoping to continue with success in this puzzle journey.
Across:
1. Fish tacos fish, familiarly: MAHI. More formally, mahi-mahi, a tropical fish also known as dolphinfish.
5. Give a ring: PHONE. Call someone on a telephone. They don't necessarily ring any more, though that alert sound setting is usually an option.
10. Portland-to-Boise dir.: ESE. East-south-east.
13. Revered figures: ICONS. Originally depiction of religious figures, now often referring to famous athletes or entertainers.
15. Ingested: EATEN. Consumed.
16. Bolt: RUN. Run away suddenly.
20. Largest African antelope: ELAND. A spiral-horned African antelope that lives in open woodland and grassland.
26. Move stealthily: CREEP. Move slowly and carefully in order to avoid being heard or noticed.
27. Tension: UNEASE. Mental or emotional strain.
28. Home to three of Massachusetts' Five Colleges: AMHERST. Actually, there are five colleges there: Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The greater Boston area has dozens more.
30. Bagel shop: DELI. A store where ready-to-eat food products (such as cooked meats and prepared salads) are sold; short for delicatessen.
31. Free, in a way: UNTIE. Remove a restraining rope or cord.
38. Puffed on an e-cigarette: VAPED. Inhaled and exhaled vapor containing nicotine and flavoring produced by a device designed for this purpose.
39. Honey liquor: MEAD. An alcoholic drink of fermented honey and water.
42. Innocence: NAIVETE. Lack of experience, wisdom, or judgment. Is this innocence? You decide.
46. NPR White House correspondent __ Keith: TAMARA. Tamara Dawnell Keith [b. 1979] is an American journalist. She is the White House correspondent for NPR and co-hosts the NPR Politics Podcast with Scott Detrow. She regularly appears on the PBS NewsHour weekly segment "Politics Monday". Keith is on the board of the White House Correspondents' Association, of which she served as president from 2022 to 2023
48. Big name in kitchen appliances: OSTER. Oster is an American manufacturing company specializing in small kitchen appliances, known for its blenders, toasters, and roaster ovens.
52. Vitriolic rant: TIRADE. A long, angry speech of criticism or accusation.
54. Get fit for competition: TRAIN. Prepare someone or yourself for a job, activity, or sport, by learning skills and/or by mental or physical exercise.
60. Stone or ice follower: AGE. These are notable periods on planet earth. The Stone Age is a prehistoric period characterized by the use of stone tools and weapons. It spans roughly 3.3 million years, from the first evidence of stone tools to the introduction of metalworking, marking the beginning of the Bronze Age. An ice age is any geologic period during which thick ice sheets cover vast areas of land. Such periods of large-scale glaciation may last several million years and drastically reshape surface features of entire continents. A number of major ice ages have occurred throughout Earth history. The last major ice age, also known as the Last Glacial Period, occurred between approximately 115,000 and 11,700 years ago.
61. Eco-friendly vehicles: BIKES. A two-wheeled vehicle powered by peddling.
62. Smooth change in topics: SEGUE. A movement without interruption from one piece of music, part of a story, subject, or situation to another:
63. K'Nex connector: ROD. K'Nex is a building toy with a variety of interlocking shapes.
64. Clairvoyants: SEERS. Persons who claim to have a supernatural ability to perceive events in the future or beyond normal sensory contact.
65. "So many!": LOTS. An unspecified large quantity.
Down:
1. Domain suffix for a private employer: MIL. You expect this to be COM, for a private company, but it's MILitary, the employer of privates. Clever clue.
2. Star pitcher: ACE. A person who excels at a particular sport or other activity.
3. Like cayenne: HOT. Spicy!
4. With painstaking precision: IN DETAIL. With close attention to particulars; thoroughly.
5. Tubular pasta: PENNE. Penne pasta, a popular Italian pasta shape, derives its name from the Italian word "penna," which translates to "pen" or "quill" in English. The name reflects the pasta's shape, a short, cylinder-shaped pasta with diagonally cut ends, reminiscent of a quill or writing pen.
6. Composer Joseph who mentored Mozart and Beethoven: HAYDN. Franz Joseph Haydn [1732 - 1809] was an Austrian composer and a central figure in the development of Classical music. He's often called the "Father of the Symphony" and "Father of the String Quartet" for his contributions to establishing their forms and styles.
7. Great Plains Native: OTO. A Native American people of the Midwestern United States. The Otoe language, Chiwere, is part of the Siouan family and closely related to that of the related Iowa, Missouria, and Ho-Chunk tribes.
Historically, the Otoe tribe lived as a semi-nomadic people on the Central Plains along the bank of the Missouri River in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and Missouri. They lived in elm-bark lodges while they farmed, and used tipis while traveling, like many other Plains tribes. They often left their villages to hunt buffalo.
8. Nine, in Normandy: NEUF. 9
9. Agent that gets good results: ENRICHER. A component or entity that improves or adds to the quality, value, or richness of something. This generally refers to things, not persons.
10. Soft end of a pencil: ERASER. It's soft because it made of rubber; and it's called rubber because it erases pencil marks by rubbing them out.
11. Multiroom accommodations: SUITES. A set of rooms designated for one person's or family's use or for a particular purpose.
12. Mesmerized: ENRAPT. Fascinated, enthralled.
14. Pilots' milestones: SOLOS. The experience of flying an aircraft alone, without an instructor or other pilot in the flight crew. It's a significant milestone in flight training, signifying a student pilot's proficiency and readiness to operate an aircraft independently.
18. Ship follower: WAKE. The track left by a moving body (such as a ship) in a fluid (such as water)
19. Present: HERE. In or at this place or position.
22. Sign of spring: BUD. A compact growth on a plant that develops into a leaf, flower, or shoot.
23. Half of deux: UNE. 1/2 * 2 = 1.
24. Subject of an autobiography: SELF. A person's essential being that distinguishes them from others, especially considered as the object of introspection or reflexive action.
25. Quenched: SATED. Satisfied fully, regarding drink or food. Truly equivalent? You decide.
29. Soccer star Hamm: MIA. Mariel Margaret "Mia" Hamm [b. 1972] is an American former professional soccer player, two-time Olympic gold medalist and two-time FIFA Women's World Cup champion. Hailed as a soccer icon, she played as a forward for the United States national team from 1987 to 2004.
31. Boosted: UPPED. Augmented of amplified.
32. "Science Guy" Bill: NYE. William Sanford Nye [b. 1955] also known as "Bill Nye the Science Guy", is a scientist, comedian, inventor, author, and television personality. He's best known for hosting the Emmy award-winning PBS show Bill Nye the Science Guy, which first aired in 1993 and educated millions about basic science.
34. Layers audio tracks: OVERDUBS. Overdubbing is a technique used in audio recording in which audio tracks that have been pre-recorded are then played back and monitored, while simultaneously recording new, doubled, or augmented tracks onto one or more available tracks of a digital audio workstation or tape recorder.
35. Gentle touch: PAT. Touch quickly and gently with the flat of the hand. With the back of the hand, it's a TAP.
37. College bigwig: DEAN. a senior administrator who oversees a specific academic unit, such as a college or department. They are responsible for academic, programmatic, managerial, and fiscal responsibilities within that unit. Deans typically ensure the adequacy of instruction, monitor academic integrity, and are involved in student recruitment, admission, and academic progress.
40. Path of a fly ball: ARC. A continuous portion of a curved line, as part of the circumference of a circle. Sometimes the result of a launch.
41. "Well, lah-di-__!": DAH. Describes someone who behaves in an affectedly elegant or refined way, often in a way that seems unnatural and intended to impress others. It implies a pretentious or upper-class manner that is considered to be an over-the-top show of sophistication.
42. In the vicinity: NOT FAR. Near by.
43. Italian cheese with a nutty flavor: ASIAGO. A cow's milk cheese, first produced in Asiago in Italy, that can assume different textures according to its aging, from smooth for the fresh Asiago (called Asiago pressato, which means "pressed Asiago") to a crumbly texture for the aged cheese (Asiago d'allevo, which means "breeding farm Asiago").
44. "Did my best": I TRIED. Sometimes one's best u=isn't good enough.
45. Scaloppine meat: VEAL. Veal is the meat from young cattle, typically those under one year old. It's a lighter, more tender meat than beef and is often pale pink in color. Veal production involves raising calves, many of whom are male calves from dairy breeds that are not needed for milk production.
46. Blue-green hue: TEAL. Or aqua. Always need perps.
47. Prima donnas' songs: ARIAS. Accompanied, elaborate melodies sung (as in an opera) by a single voice.
50. Vocalize: UTTER. Speak.
51. Trivial matter: DROSS. The scum or unwanted material that forms on the surface of molten metal, hence something useless or worthless.
53. Great Lake that drains into the Niagara River: ERIE. Lake Erie is the fourth-largest lake by surface area of the five Great Lakes in North America and the eleventh-largest globally. It is the southernmost, shallowest, and smallest by volume of the Great Lakes and also has the shortest average water residence time. At its deepest point, Lake Erie is 210 feet (64 m) deep, making it the only Great Lake whose deepest point is above sea level.
56. __ out a living: EKE. Manage to support oneself or make a living with difficulty.
57. Private aid gp.: NGO. Non-Governmental Organization.
58. Trim: CUT. Make something smaller by cutting away or otherwise removing a portion.
59. "__ making a list ... ": HE'S. Keeping a record, to use for cataloging or decision making, Sung of Mr. Claus.
And here we land after today's successful launch. Hope you enjoyed the ride.
If you're in the Dearborn area on Sunday, come on down to the Michael Guido Theater in the Civic Center on Michigan Ave. The Dearborn Big Band is playing a free concert at 3:00. You can hear a song I wrote.
Theme: "PrEEEE-fix" - or - "Four E-'s [sic] a jolly good fellow ..."
Puzzling thoughts:
First, thanks to NaomiZ for filling in for me while I was taking some time off of the puzzle boards to recover from my eye surgeries. I appreciate the well-wishes from you readers, though I am still working towards better vision. Maybe I will have good news to share on my next blog ...
Second, with most eye surgery layoffs comes the need to refocus on the task at hand; that being, to clearly see what the constructor is trying to illustrate in her puzzle. Cataract surgery or not, I re-viewed the puzzle after completing it in less than 10 minutes. It seems that Ms. Simonson (owner of two published LAT puzzles) was merely trying to convey a witty (or is it, "wit-E-") connection between her clues and a common phrase/item that begins with the letter "E". As follows:
16-across. Headquarters for a simulated space launch?: E-MISSION CONTROL. An emission control system on a car, for example, might be a catalytic converter which converts noxious gases into a less harmful substance. (Note: How come they haven't been able to develop something similar for the flatuant society?)
I digress ... the clue, however, refers to a "mission control center" - the facility that monitors and guides space flights, e.g. The humor/wit is associated with how I've hyphenated the answer. Items that begin with the prefix "E -" usually refer to something "electronic" or done "on-line" (e-commerce/e-mail/e-ticket). If there ever existed a place where space-traffic control applicants could go to train in a simulator, it might be here ... @ e-mission control
29-across. Recognition for top cyber snoops?: E-SPY AWARDS. I would hope that all who have solved crossword puzzles are familiar with the ESPY awards which honor professional and amateur athletes. The word ESPY is very commonly used by crossword puzzle constructors. By hyphenating the "e" from the "spy" in this example, an on-line (cyber) recognition for top sleuths might be called the e-spy awards
47-across. Group of online church leaders?: E-RECTOR SET. Hands up for how many of you Crossword Corner readers played with one of these when you were a kid? A rector is defined in various ways, as the hyperlink shows. Not sure if the American Anglican church is ready to hand over their priestly duties to an e-rector set just yet. If they did, would they now be called: e-piscopalians?
62-across. Co-branding by web-based sellers?: E-MERGING MARKETS. You seeee [sic] where this is going by now? 😉
I guess if I had to choose one of the four entries today that gave me a slight grin it would be the E-SPY AWARDS. The others were kinda "meh" IMO, although E-RECTOR SET might be the best of the other three
As for the rest of the fill, it was actually quite tight. No weird words, nor too many TLW's or abbrs. Also, the inclusion of the words: TOE TAP, CORKER, and GREEN MEN added to its enjoyment. All in all, I score it, ⭐⭐ - 3/4⭐, though I think a few solvers today might use the "juice/squeeze" analogy in their comments. It certainly was not very hard for a Friday puzzle, but that seems to be the norm these days
Here is the filled in grid with the "E-s" highlighted, then off to the rest ...
The Grid
Across:
1. Legato symbol on a score: SLUR. The arced line connecting the scale notes below
5. High flyer: JET. Glad to see an actual word here instead of SST, for example
8. Medicinal or savory plants: HERBS. Hand up for trying ALOES, first?
13. Prong: TINE. As on a fork
14. "That was a long time __": AGO. When C-Moe last blogged, maybe?
15. Fermented Japanese condiment: TAMARI. Not familiar with this condiment
[themer]
19. Spunk: MOXIE. I love this word!
20. Like many shower stalls: TILED.
This type of tile seems to be the current trend for shower stalls
21. NYC hrs.: EST. Eastern Standard Time (only during late fall and winter hours, however)
22. Grocery department: DELI. When I stop by there, they make me feel like a hero
24. Working diligently: AT IT. What I found myself doing with today's blog! A bit rusty I admit
34. Mil. branch: USN. I waited for the perps to fill this
35. Dust speck: MOTE. Seems synonymous - let's check with the thesaurus-saurus:
Close enough
36. Jasper Johns genre: POP ART.
The artist and one of his images (pop art)
37. Cal State city: CHICO. Here is a link to the Cal State dot edu website. CHICO is in the north/central part of the state, between Sacramento (the capital) and Redding. My partner Margaret was on the library staff of Cal State Channel Islands, once upon a time
39. Droop: SAG. Gravity takes over on we older persons. My extra bit of paunch is what I refer to as "Dunlop" disease ... my belly done lopped over my belt
41. Consideration when halving or doubling a recipe: RATIO. I liked this clue! 3:1 = 6:2
42. Rehabilitate: REFORM. There is no reforming C-Moe, I'm afraid
44. Wearying trip: TREK. @ Picard - would you define the journey of the Star TREK Enterprise to be wearying?
46. Brew in a mug: TEA. and its "clecho" @ 64-down. Brew in a mug: ALE.
53. Science site: LAB. Or for some owners, "lap site"
56. Martian, perhaps: ALIEN. and its "clecho" @ 40-down. Martians, perhaps: GREEN MEN.
58. Clear: ERASE.
[themer]
65. Silky fabric: SATEEN.
66. Hair-raising product: GEL. This look would scare me; you??
How much GEL was used to create this whatever it is you'd call it?
67. Stretches often named for music genres: ERAS. Any Disco ERA fans here?
68. Some Central Europeans: SLAVS.
69. Dollar: ONE. Store, Tree, or General did not fit
70. Automation prefix: ROBO.
Down:
1. Derive (from): STEM. Or in 2020's speak, an acronym for Science Technology Engineering and Math
2. Prom conveyance: LIMO. Or in my case, a 1964 Dodge Dart GT, equipped with a 225 cu in slant 6, and Chrysler's TorqueFlite push button transmission - I think the young lady that rode with me was named Debbie ... great car for driving: not so much for a prom date ... bucket seats ...
3. Linux predecessor: UNIX. I will defer to the resident computer geeks to better explain this clue and answer ...
4. Dwell: RESIDE.
5. __ alai: JAI. Here is an erstwhile popular crossword pair of entries - I think "Alai" appears more often then "Jai"
8. Artisan's output: HANDIWORK. According to @CrosswordTracker, this entry word has shown up just once - also in 2025 - so kudos to Ms. Simonson for finding this
9. First aid pro: EMT.
10. Not well-done: RARE. The hyphenated "well-done" led me to think it referred to a temperature of steak. Here is how I prefer my steak prepared:
"Pittsburgh" style; Rare +
11. Frat boys: BRO'S. [note: I added the apostrophe so you could see that it's an abbreviation] Fraternity members are called "brothers". Moe-ku #2:
The sorority
XTP's* fraternity
Partner: BRO's for Rho's
*X = Chi; T= Tau; P = Rho
12. Fine-grained soil: SILT. and its clecho (count 'em, three clechos today!) 18-down. Fine-grained soil: CLAY.
15. Keep time with one's foot: TOE TAP. Here is a golden oldie that includes tapping all five TOES
17. Behold: SEE.
[cut and pasted next to 12-down]
23. Many an August baby: LEO. The others are Virgos - hands up for any LEOs here? Not I
25. Taberna dish: TAPA. Taberna: Spanish; Tavern: English ... tapas are small plate dishes (appetizers) that are offered by many tabernas
26. Ill-gotten gains: LUCRE. Crossword-y?? Not a word I use in everyday speak
27. Guide: USHER. I like this clue, as the clue word and entry word mean both whether it's used as a noun or a verb. "The guide ushered me to my seat, or the usher guided me to my seat"
28. Kitchen block insert: KNIFE. We have one of these kitchen blocks, but they contain a mis-matched set of knives a pair of food scissors and a meat fork
Picture this unbranded, for mine
30. Bog accumulations: PEATS. Not sure that I like seeing the word "PEAT" pluralized; maybe a forced entry or something edited in? Moe-ku #3
Well-known model Kate
Married tennis pro Sampras.
She became Pete's Moss
31. Threadbare: RATTY. This picture describes it perfectly!
Star of a new movie called "Ratty Toile"
32. Hangs on the line: DRIES.
33. Weasel with a black-tipped tail: STOAT.
35. Household expenses: MORTGAGES. Another word that shouldn't be pluralized, IMO, given the context of the clue. Unless, of course, you have two (or more) mortgages to pay. One is enough for me/us, thank you!
38. __-Cola: COCA. Is this really Friday? Did anyone else think that the clues/answers were not "Friday-tough"
45. List shortener: ETC. Et al had one too many letters
48. Picnic spoiler: RAIN. ANTS fit until it didn't
49. Excellent joke: CORKER. This brought back memories of the 15 odd years I lived in New England. The word corker has its roots in the UK and means:a person or thing that is especially good, attractive, hilarious or funny. The folks I knew in NE wouldn't pronounce this as it appears (Cork' - er), they would say: (Caw'-kuh)
Today's constructor Katherine Simonson makes her LAT debut with 4 across theme clues identified only by trailing question marks. The clues are all references to countries, but they don't make a whole lot of sense and the two word fills don't make any sense either -- but on closer inspection the second word can be combined with a word embedded at the end of the first fill to make an in the language phrase. Here are the themers ...
17. Warmup bands from Casablanca?: MOROCCAN OPENERS. This one did make a bit of sense -- here's Ilsa and Sam warming up in Rick's Cafe in the movie Casablanca ...
As Time Goes By
23. Liquid from Munich?: TEUTONIC WATER.
45. Faucet hardware from Stockholm?: SWEDISH WASHER.
53. Ice cream treats from Manila?: PHILIPPINE CONES.
I couldn't see any particular connection between the in the language part of these phrases.
Here's the grid ...
Here's the rest ...Across:
1. Rudimentary elements: ABCS.
5. Service station job: LUBE.
9. Automaker owned by Stellantis: FIAT.
13. "Hot To Go!" singer Chappell: ROAN. My granddaughter would define this fill as a particular color of a horse, but in this case it refers to Kayleigh Rose Amstutz (born February 19, 1998), known professionally as Chappell Roan, an American singer and songwriter. Here's the clue song ... A recent article reveals that MS. Amstutz is having some trouble adjusting to her meteoric rise to fame.
14. Grand film format: IMAX. The IMAX theater at the Maryland Science Center is on our short list of places to visit to see the film Deep Sky ...
15. Collector of synonyms: ROGET. The only synonym that thesaurus.plus suggests for this fill is Peter Mark Roget, a British physician, natural theologian, lexicographer, and founding secretary of The Portico Library.
Peter Mark Roget 18 January 1779 – 12 September 1869
17. [Theme clue]
20. Olympic gymnast Strug who was part of the gold-winning American team in 1996: KERRI. Kerri Allyson Strug (born November 19, 1977) is a retired American gymnast from Tucson, Arizona. She was a member of the Magnificent Seven, the victorious all-around women's gymnastics team that represented the United States at the 1996 Summer Olympics. Strug performed the vault that clinched the gold for the U.S. team despite having injured her ankle.
Kerri Strug
21. Play to __: A TIE. Most games will have a sudden death playoff, one exception being chess which can result in a draw. Hand up for any others?
22. Intel org.: NSA. CIA fit, but didn't perp. We pass by the NSA every time we go to Washington, but it's best not to talk about that. 😑
23. [Theme clue]
26. Wag: CARD. One who is quick with BON MOTS.
27. Acid type produced during exercise: LACTIC. Lactic acid is fuel for your cells during intense exercise. It’s created when your body breaks down glucose and other carbohydrates. It’s a common myth that muscle soreness you feel after exercise is caused by lactic acid trapped in your cells. Studies have found that’s not true. The temporary rise in lactic acid caused by intense physical activity isn’t dangerous and usually won’t cause any symptoms.
30. Loose overcoat: ULSTER. New to me. The Ulster coat was a Victorian working daytime overcoat, with a cape and sleeves. It has long since gone out of fashion, but is often mentioned in Victorian literature, e.g. in Dickens and in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The name derives from a popular synonym for Northern Ireland, where the style originated.
Ulster coats
34. Tailless simian: APE.
35. Amazon Prime vehicle: VAN.
36. Not virtually, briefly: IRL. The only Cornerite we've met IRL is inanehiker (Nina). She, Teri, and I spent a wonderful day together exploring the National Museum of Art and getting lost in D.C. (pretty easy to do. 😀)
37. Kitchen gadget brand: OXO.
38. Broadway legend Ethel: MERMAN. Ethel Merman (January 16, 1908 – February 15, 1984) was an American actress and singer. Known for her distinctive, powerful voice, and her leading roles in musical theater, she has been called "the undisputed First Lady of the musical comedy stage."[ She performed on Broadway in Anything Goes, Annie Get Your Gun, Gypsy, and Hello, Dolly! Here she is singing There's No Business Like Show Business ...40. Diner coffee: JOE.
41. Failed, as a fuse: BLEW. These guys were so frustrated when they failed to get what they wanted that they threatened to BLOW a fifty amp fuse! ... 42. Timeworn saying: OLD SAW. They also make beautiful music. Here's a CSO to Misty.
44. Standing on the street: CRED. "Standing" as in CREDIBILITY.
45. [Theme clue]
49. Afr. neighbor: EUR. AFRICA is abbreviated and so EUROPE is abbreviated.
50. Bilateral: DUAL.
51. Fillable flatbreads: PITAS.
53. [Theme clue]
57. Understood implicitly: TACIT.
58. Irish New Age singer: ENYA. Last week she gave us an instrumental, so this week we'll hear her sing May It Be ...
59. Elite Eight org.: NCAA.
60. Fleet: NAVY. FAST fit but didn't perp.
61. Fawning parents: DEER. A herd of fawning parents lives in our back yard and forced us to put an eight foot fence around our vegetable garden. 😞
62. Dispatched: SENT.
Down:
1. Branch: ARM.
2. Work that's bound to sell?: BOOK. Clever clue.
3. Keeper: CARETAKER.
4. Nocturnal noisemakers: SNORERS. I'd recommend a CPAP machine, but they're addictive.
5. Allowed: LICIT.
6. Actress Thurman: UMA.
7. Potassium-rich snacks: BANANAS.
8. Different in an alluring way: EXOTIC. IMHO all of reality is EXOTIC!
19. Imagine: PICTURE. Here is large oil painting at the Hillwood Museum that helps us imagine what life was like in Tsarist Russia ...
A Boyar Wedding Feast Konstantin Egorovich Makovskii St. Petersburg, Russia 1883
24. Actor/director Ken: OLIN. Ken Olin is perhaps best known for starring as Michael Steadman in Thirtysomething, which focuses on a group of baby boomers in their thirties who live in Philadelphia, and how they handle the lifestyle that dominated American culture during the 1980s given their involvement in the early 1970s counterculture as young adults. Here is Olin in a scene from the pilot, with his wife Hope, played by actress Mel Harris ...
25. Summer systs.: ACS. Air Conditioners, not Hurricanes.
26. Peninsular land formation: CAPE. E.g. Cape Cod, Mass.
Cape Cod
28. Thanksgiving staple: YAM.
29. Cry at the end of a cooking competition: HANDS UP. Here's a cooking competition between fictional Chef Sir Lenny Henry, CBE and real Chef Gordon Ramsey, OBE. Guess who wins ... I bet Henry had way too many Scotch Bonnets 🌶🌶🌶in his dish.
31. Capacity to endure: TOLERANCE. Assuming ENDURANCE as a one word synonym I asked the dinosaur if he thought this fill was a synonym -- nope ....
33. Work out on an erg: ROW. ERG is short for ERGOMETER, an indoor rowing machine that measures work units called ERGS. This is not a new concept -- Chabrias, an Athenian admiral of the 4th century BC, introduced the first rowing machines as supplemental military training devices. To train inexperienced oarsmen, Chabrias built wooden rowing frames onshore where beginners could learn technique and timing before they went onboard ship.
Rowing Machines
35. Sound quality?: VALIDITY. As in the soundness of an argument, i.e. its validity. Another clever clue.
36. State where sliced bread was invented: IOWA. Otto Frederick Rohwedder of Davenport, Iowa, United States, invented the first single loaf bread-slicing machine making it convenient to package uniformly and eliminating the need for the consumer to cut it with a knife. It was first sold in 1928, advertised as "the greatest forward step in the baking industry since bread was wrapped". By 1933, around 80% of bread sold in the US was pre-sliced, leading to the popular idiom "the greatest thing since sliced bread".
Sliced Bread
39. Quaintly stylish: MOD. Not quite CHIC?
40. Place for stubble: JAW LINE.
41. Natives of northwest France: BRETONS. The Bretons are an ethnic group native to Brittany in north-western France. They trace their heritage to groups of Brittonic speakers who emigrated from southwestern Great Britain, particularly Cornwall and Devon, mostly during the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain. They migrated in waves from the 3rd to 9th century (most heavily from 450 to 600) into Armorica, which was subsequently named Brittany after them. Here's a Breton song called Imram an Enez
43. Sculpted: SHAPED.
44. Stylish: CHIC.
45. Huit minus un: SEPT. Today's French lesson: "8 - 1 = 7".
46. Capital of China's Hubei Province: WUHAN. With a population of over eleven million, Wuhan is the most populous city in Hubei and the ninth-most-populous city in China. It is also one of the nine national central cities. Since early 2020, it is probably best known as the epi-center of the COVID-19 pandemic. As this article from the New England Journal of Medicine tells, the actual origins of SARS-CoV-2 are somewhat controversial.
47. CNN national correspondent Hill: ERICA. Erica Ruth Hill-Yount is an American journalist who works for CNN. She serves as a primary substitute anchor and as a correspondent. She co-anchored Weekend Today for NBC from 2012 to 2016, following prior work at CBS.
Erica Hill
48. Asparagus unit: SPEAR.
52. Son of John and Yoko: SEAN. Sean Taro Ono Lennon (born 9 October 1975) is a British-American musician, songwriter, and producer. He is the son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and half-brother to Julian Lennon. He has played in several bands over the years, including The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger formed by he and his partner, model Charlotte Kemp Muhl -- whom he found out only a year after he'd started dating her that she was also a musician! He is also a composer and has released two solo albums: Into the Sun (1998) and Friendly Fire (2006). Here's the song Midnight Sun that he cowrote with Kemp Muhl from the album The GOASTT ...
54. Actress Tyler : LIV. Here she is as Arwen rescuing Frodo from the Nazgul in The Fellowship of the Ring in Peter Jackson's adaptation of the Lord of the Rings ...
55. Emmy-winning TV scientist Bill: NYE. Bill Nye is a former mechanical engineer who plays a scientist on TV. And like Matt Smith and Bill Nighy he likes bow ties.
Bill Nye
Matt Smith and Bill Nighy From a scene in Dr. Who -- Vincent and the Doctor -- click it, you'll love it!
56. Didn't play: SAT.
Cheers,
Bill
And as always, thanks to Teri for proof reading and for her constructive criticism.