google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Larry Snyder

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Showing posts with label Larry Snyder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Snyder. Show all posts

Sep 18, 2024

Wednesday, September 18, 2024 Larry Snyder

 Theme: Trans-atlantic misdirections.   In-the-language phrases are repurposed and given a humorous twist with a distinctly British flare.  Note that two of the theme fill are grid-spanners.

16 A. Arugula researcher at Cambridge?: ROCKET SCIENTIST. Rocket is one of the several names for arugula, an edible annual plant in the family Brassicaceae used as a leaf vegetable for its fresh, tart, bitter, and peppery flavor.   I did not know that, and assume that the ROCKET usage is more common in Britain, where Cambridge is a university dating back to the year 1208, in a city of the same name.   Of course,  a ROCKET SCIENTIST is generally one who works on rocket propelled vehicles.  

25 A. Pristine field for Manchester United?: PERFECT PITCH.   A PITCH is the playing surface for the game of association football. Its dimensions and markings are defined by Law 1 of the Laws of the Game, "The Field of Play". The pitch is typically made of natural turf or artificial turf, although amateur and recreational teams often play on dirt fields. Artificial surfaces are allowed only to be green in color.

Manchester United is a team playing soccer, or as it is known across the pond - football.  The phrase "Perfect Pitch" more commonly refers to the ability to identify or recreate a musical note of a specific frequency without a reference point. I don't have it.

40 A. Sweater for a thrill-seeker's leap off Tower Bridge?: BUNGEE JUMPER.  The Tower Bridge spans the River Thames near the Tower of London.  A BUNGEE JUMPER is a thrill-seeker, regardless of the jumper's location.  But in British parlance, a JUMPER is a warm top that covers the arms - more or less what we would call a sweater.  Bungee jumping is the activity of leaping from a high place while secured by a long nylon-cased rubber band around the ankles.  I am not tempted.  

52 A. Pure sausages at the Rose & Crown pub?: ABSOLUTE BANGERS.  Back in England, BANGERS are sausages.  The term dates from WW II, when, due to meat shortages, sausages were made with watery fillers that wold explode during cooking.  More recently, a BANGER is something that is exceptional, impressive, or of high quality, such as a song with a loud, energetic beat that is good for dancing, or becoming your personal ear worm.   I think this one is a bit of a stretch.


Hi, Gang.  Jazzbumpa reporting for duty.  I've never been across the sea, but I'm not going to let the stop me.  Let's see where today's excursion takes us.

Across:

1. Pillow structure: FORT.  Not the first thing an adult might think of, but the 9-year-old in me approves.  Also requires blankets.


5. Quick reminder: NOTE.  Put it in writing.

9. Mario racing vehicle: KART.   A variety of such vehicles used in a series of kart racing games based on the Mario franchise developed and published by Nintendo. Players compete in go-kart races while using various power-up items. It features characters and courses mostly from the Mario series as well as other gaming franchises such as The Legend of Zelda, Animal Crossing, F-Zero, Excitebike, and Splatoon.


13. Wading bird: IBIS.  Any one of a group of long-legged wading birds in the family Threskiornithidae that inhabit wetlands, forests and plains.[4] "Ibis" derives from the Latin and Ancient Greek word for this group of birds. It also occurs in the scientific name of the western cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) mistakenly identified in 1757 as being the sacred ibis.


14. Board game based on pachisi: SORRY.   Sorry! is a board game that is based on the ancient Indian cross and circle game Pachisi. Players move their three or four pieces around the board, attempting to get all of their pieces "home" before any other player. Originally manufactured by W.H. Storey & Co in England and now by Hasbro, Sorry! is marketed for two to four players, ages 6 and up. The game title comes from the many ways in which a player can negate the progress of another, while issuing an apologetic "Sorry!"

15. Pelvic bones: ILIA.  The ilium (pl.: ilia) is the uppermost and largest region of the coxal bone, and appears in most vertebrates including mammals and birds, but not bony fish. All reptiles have an ilium except snakes, although some snake species have a tiny bone which is considered to be an ilium.

19. "Is it clear?": SEE?   You dig?

20. Be for Halloween: GO AS.   Be dressed in a costume suggestive of some thing or somebody.

21. Deep-fryer compartment: BASKET. For holding the fryables.

22. Shower time?: APRIL.   Typically the month of Spring rains.


24. Grand crime: LARCENY.  The "grand" modifier is applied to theft of personal property having a value above a legally specified amount.

28. Flying: ALOFT.  Up in the air.

29. Hostess snack cake: HOHO.   A chocolate cake rolled with a creamy fillling

30. Yoko who said, "You can be very wild and still be very wise": ONO.  She is a Japanese multimedia artist, singer, songwriter, and peace activist. Her work also encompasses performance art and filmmaking.   She is also the widow of John Lennon.

33. Trapped fluff: LINT.  Lint is a collection of loose, short fibers or threads from clothing, hair, or other materials. It can be found on or around clothing, and can come from materials like cotton, linen, and wool.  It can be caught in a dryer filter.

34. Schematics: PLANS.  Designed representations of the elements of a system using abstract, graphic symbols rather than realistic pictures.

36. Saharan country next to Sudan: CHAD.  Chad, officially the Republic of Chad, is an independent state at the crossroads of North and Central Africa. The landlocked country is bordered by Libya to the north, Sudan to the east, the Central African Republic to the south, Cameroon to the southwest, Nigeria to the southwest, and Niger to the west.

37. Island ring: LEI.  Not an island atoll, but rather a floral loop worn as a decoration.

38. Some Korean compacts: KIAS.  Kia Corporation is a South Korean multinational automobile manufacturer headquartered in Seoul, South Korea. It is South Korea's second largest automobile manufacturer, after its parent company, Hyundai Motor Company.

39. Cran cocktail: COSMO.  A cosmopolitan, or, informally, a cosmo, is a cocktail made with vodka, Cointreau, cranberry juice, and freshly squeezed or sweetened lime juice. The cosmopolitan is a member of the Gimlet family of cocktails. 

43. Prioritizes patients: TRIAGES.  The preliminary assessment of patients or casualties in order to determine the urgency of their need for treatment and the nature of treatment required.

46. Afro-Cuban dance: RUMBA.   This term can be applied to various music and dance styles originating in Cuba, or styles that are similar.

47. __ to the core: ROTTEN.  Said of someone devoid of any redeeming or positive characteristics.

48. Digital indulgence, casually: PEDI.  Short for pedicure, a cosmetic treatment of the feet and toenails.

49. Vintage TV brand: RCA.  A former corporation that was the dominant electronics and communications firm in the United States for over five decades.  It did not survive a series of poor business decision in the face of strong international competition.  

55. Highlighter tone: NEON.   Any of the extremely bright, intense, and vibrant versions of primary and secondary colors, such as red, blue, green, yellow, and purple.  They are so named for the bright colors  of neon lights

56. Doughnut, mathematically: TORUS.  In geometry, a torus is a surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space one full revolution about an axis that is coplanar with the circle. 


57. Frantically: AMOK. In an uncontrolled and disruptive manor.

58. Randomly generated IDs: SSNS.   Social Security Numbers.

59. Soaks (up): SOPS.  Absorbs.

60. Sutures: SEWS.   Applies stitches holding together the edges of a wound or surgical incision.

Down:

1. Some December decor: FIRS.   Evergreen trees, wreaths or branches.

2. __ d'amore: OBOE.   A double reed woodwind musical instrument in the oboe family. Slightly larger than the oboe, it has a less assertive and a more tranquil and serene tone, and is considered the mezzo-soprano of the oboe family,   I played in a symphony orchestra for 16 years, and don't recall ever seeing one.

3. Brand with a cable car logo: RICEARONI.   a boxed food mix that consists of rice, vermicelli pasta, and seasonings. To prepare, the rice and pasta are browned in butter, then water and seasonings are added and simmered until absorbed. It is a product of Quaker Oats Company, a subsidiary of PepsiCo.  It is also known as the San Francisco Treat.

4. "Shame" sound: TSK

5. Pretzel option: NO SALT.  Would need mustard or cheese dip.

6. Tolkien baddies: ORCS.  A race of humanoid creatures best known for their service as footsoldiers and slaves to the Dark Lords of Middle-earth. Even when not in thralldom to an evil master, Orcs rarely if ever had non-violent interactions with Elves, Men, or Dwarves.

7. Part of TNT: TRI. In chemistry, TNT stands for 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, a man-made, odorless, yellow solid that is used as an explosive:

8. Safety stations in some labs: EYE BATHS.  As described here, a specialized fountain designed to flush the eyes with water to remove foreign material. 

9. Lowbrow art: KITSCH.  Art, objects, or design considered to be in poor taste because of excessive garishness or sentimentality, but sometimes appreciated in an ironic or knowing way.

10. Tough to tell apart: ALIKE.   Similar.

11. Out of bed: RISEN.  Having moved up from a reclined position.

12. Frayed: TATTY.  Worn out, in poor physical condition.

14. Immovable: STOIC.   Calm and unemotional.

17. Wading bird: EGRET.   A heron with mainly white plumage, having long plumes in the breeding season.


18. DEA agent: NARCO.  Slang or derogatory term for a drug enforcement agent.

23. Deflating sound: PFFT.  Air under pressure escaping though a small opening.

24. Animal helped by a mouse in a fable: LIONA kindness is never wasted.   

25. Shadow: PALL.  A dark covering, as of smoke or dust.

26. Author Wiesel: ELIE.  Eliezer "Elie" Wiesel [1928-2016] was a Romanian-born American writer, professor, political activist, Nobel laureate, and Holocaust survivor. He authored 57 books, written mostly in French and English, including Night, a work based on his experiences as a Jewish prisoner in the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps.

27. Temporary stage: PHASE.  A distinct period or stage in a series of events or a process of change or development.

30. "For crying out loud": OH SPARE ME.  When someone is tired of listening to another person or is in a state of disbelief, they may respond with "spare me"

31. Identify: NAME.  Establish or indicate who or what someone or something is.

32. What wavy lines might represent in a comic: ODOR.   Usually an unpleasant one.

34. Pesto need: PINE NUTS.   The white seeds of some pine trees, often used in cooking 

35. Falls behind: LAGS.  Falls behind in movement, progress, or development; not keeping pace with another or others.

36. Word with over or through: COMB.  A strip of plastic, metal, or wood with a row of narrow teeth, used for untangling or arranging the hair.   A comb over is an arrangement of sparse hair attempting to cover a bald spot.  To comb through is to conduct a thorough search.

38. Passover potato pie: KUGEL.   A baked casserole, most commonly made from egg noodles or potato. It is a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish dish, often served on the Sabbath and Jewish holidays.

39. Chutney seed: CUMIN.   The aromatic seeds of a plant of the parsley family, used as a spice, especially ground and used in curry powder.

40. Conductors' tools: BATONS.  A thin stick used by a conductor to direct an orchestra or choir.

41. Darkness personified, in Greek mythology: EREBUS.  Erebus is the personification of darkness and shadows, and is also the name of a place in the underworld on the way to Hades.

42. Notorious apostle: JUDAS.  Th apostle accused of betraying Jesus in the Gospel accounts.

43. Like one honored by a pink, blue, and white flag: TRANS.   An umbrella term for persons whose gender identity, gender expression or behavior does not conform to that typically associated with the sex to which they were assigned at birth.

44. Garb donned by Oxford dons: ROBES.   A long flowing outer garment.

45. "Them's fightin' words!": IT'S ON.   An exclamation of readiness, eagerness or anticipation for something especially if it is a competition or confrontation. 

48. Crime drama suspect: PERP.   A perpetrator of a crime.  Alternatively, a crossing word in a crossword.

50. Cornfield nuisance: CROW.    Any of various large usually entirely glossy black passerine birds of the family Corvidae and especially genus Corvus.

51. Queries: ASKS.  Inquires.  Those questioning minds want to know.

53. All __ often: TOO.   With distressing frequency.

54. Electric alternative: GAS.  This could refer to natural gas vs electric for a cooking stove or gasoline vs battery power for a vehicle.  You can choose.

On that energetic note, we bring today's adventure to a close.  No extra charge for the birds and solid geometry.

Have a pleasant autumn.  I'll be back in October.

Cool regards!
JzB

Jun 24, 2024

Monday June 24, 2024 Larry Snyder

  

Happy Monday, everyone! Today's offering comes to us from OVERachiever Larry Snyder. Husker Gary introduced us to Larry on his June 3, 2023 LAT debut.

Theme:                          Overdoing It!

I am always impressed when a constructer can double-up on the themers. Let's take a look:

17 Across. Like structurally significant walls: LOAD-BEARING. I knew this one from watching HGTV. It'll cost extra!
  • OVERLOAD.  to load with too great a burden or cargo
  • OVERBEARING.  unpleasantly domineering
30 Across. Many a beach resort condo: TIMESHARE.
  • OVERTIME.  in addition to normal working hours
  • OVERSHARE.  reveal an inappropriate amount of detail about one's personal life
39 Across. Taking every point, in hearts: SHOOTING THE MOON.  Hearts is a card game. explanation
  • OVERSHOOTING.  going past (sometimes unintentionally)
  • OVER THE MOON.  extremely happy; delighted
46 Across. Have a guilt-free conscience, so to speak: SLEEP EASY.
  • OVERSLEEP.  sleep past the time one intended to wake up
  • OVER EASY.  a way to cook eggs so both sides are fried but the yolk remains runny
Then the reveal:

64. Repeatedly, or what can come before the main components of 17-, 30-, 39-, or 46-Across: OVER AND OVER.
When something is said repeatedly it is said OVER AND OVER. Also, two OVERs are paired with the two parts of the themed answers. 

Well done, Larry! I especially liked your grid-spanner, SHOOTING THE MOON.  

Hmmm.... I wonder if C.C. will pay me OVERTIME for having to write two explanations for each answer?  😜

Next, I'll go OVER the remaining clues:

Across:
1. Lettuce wrap lettuce: BIBB.  Fortunately I could only think of one variety of lettuce with a 4-letter name. Here is a P.F. Chang's copy-cat recipe. It calls for ground turkey or chicken but I want to try it with tofu.
BIBB lettuce makes nice cups for the filling.

5. "Tapestry" artist King: CAROLE.  Tapestry is the title track of the second studio album by American singer-songwriter, Carole King (b. Feb. 9, 1942). Here is a version with the lyrics:  

11. Weaken: SAP.  

14. Opera solo: ARIA.     and     
36 Across. Kind of soprano: MEZZO.
MEZZO-soprano ARIAs offer a rich vocal range  for the middle female singing voice (between soprano and contralto). This is Raehann Bryce-Davis singing La Luce Langue at Opera Ballet Vlaanderen in Antwerp, Belgium in 2021. She will knock your socks off!  

15. Soft end of a pencil: ERASER.  cute

16. One more than bi-: TRI-.

19. Cherry shade: RED.  not the protection from the sun provided by a cherry tree

20. Creative motivation, casually: INSPO.  INSPiration

21. Floating ice chunk: BERG.  not a 4-letter nickname for iceberg lettuce (See 1-Across.)  
hanging out on the BERG
22. Actress Merrill: DINA.  (1923 - 2017)  Her father was Wall Street broker E.F. Hutton and her mother was cereal heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post. NPR ran this piece when she passed away.

23. Use oars: ROW.

25. "No harm done": IT'S OKAY.

27. Chew the fat: GAB.     and     71 Across. Chews the fat: YAKS.  

33. Beginning on: AS OF.

35. Sorento automaker: KIA.  Here are the details on the 2025 model from Car and Driver magazine. When did KIAs get so large?

43. 41-Down variety: PEKOE.     and     41 Down. Brewed beverage: TEA.

44. Floral garland: LEI.

45. How only two Super Bowls have ended, for short: IN OT.  an Easter egg??
This just happened last February when the Chiefs beat the 49ers IN OverTime in Super Bowl LVIII. The other time was seven years ago when the Patriots beat the Falcons in Super Bowl LI.

50. Moody music genre: EMO.

51. Cajole: WHEEDLE.  

53. Droop: SAG.  Blame it on gravity!
Old 97's (You know I love them!)
No Baby I from their seventh studio album, Blame it on Gravity
"You got them tears
They fall like pearls
Blame it on gravity, yeah
Blame it on being a girl"
55. Gripped: HELD.

56. __ A Sketch: ETCH.  
"screen time" in the 1960s

59. Maps app output: ROUTE.

63. In need of chicken soup, maybe: ILL.

66. "Fee, __, foe, fum": FIE.  I smell the blood of an Englishman. Be he alive, or be he dead, I'll grind his bones to make my bread.
(Hand up for preferring the dead option when this happens.)

67. Make fizzy: AERATE.  On my recent cycling trip in the Pyrenees I tried txakoli wine (not a type-0! how to pronounce). It is not in itself fizzy but they pour it from on high so it AERATEs by the time it gets to your glass. (See the 9 sec. video below.) You are supposed to drink it quickly, before the bubbles leave. more info  
He makes this look easy! 
68. Dread: FEAR.

69. Supporting: FOR.  as in "I am FOR this ballot measure"

70. Bishop's neighbor on a chess board: KNIGHT.  
Down:
1. Indonesian island that has more than 20,000 temples: BALI.  That is about 1 temple for every 225 people. Balinese Hinduism

2. Wrinkle remover: IRON.  

3. Leaning: BIAS.  "Atilt" took today off.

4. Negative media coverage, for short: BAD PR.  Public Relations is shortened.

5. Fair grade: CEE.  

6. Part of UAE: ARAB.  United Arab Emirates

7. Hard to find: RARE.

8. Egyptian god of death and rebirth: OSIRIS.  ESP for me but it turns out he was one of the most important gods of ancient Egypt.  more info.

9. 50 meters, for an Olympic pool: LENGTH.  I liked this fresh angle! I also like a 50-meter pool. The pool where I swim these days is only 25 yards. I feel like I am constantly turning around.

10. Unit of energy: ERG.  The erg is a unit of energy equal to 10−7 joules.

11. Home plate umpire's parameter: STRIKE ZONE.  Great fill! I saw that "batter's box" fit but that did not seem quite right so I waited for a couple of perps.

12. Large stadium: ARENA.

13. March 14, to math fans: PI DAY.  3/14 is the day we celebrate 3.14  

18. Kick (out): BOOT.  
Nancy Sinatra released These Boots Are Made for Walkin' in 1966.

22. Sequence before fa-sol-la: DO RE MI.  

24. Crowdsourced site, briefly: WIKI.  Today's meta moment:  Wikipedia's entry about Wikipedia  

26. Alike: SAME.

27. Sound of shock: GASP.

28. Tennis legend Arthur: ASHE.

29. Merchant with novels, memoirs, etc.: BOOK SELLER.  I recently read Days at the Morisaki Bookshop. There is a picture of a cat on the cover so I kept waiting for a cat to appear in the story. Spoiler alert:  no cat.

31. Least amt.: MIN.  MINimum

32. Two under par, in golf: EAGLE.  

34. Tricked: FOOLED.

37. Speed (by): ZOOM.  

38. "You may be __ something there": ONTO.

40. Cued (up): TEED.

42. Angry cat sound: HISS.

47. An hour before midnight: ELEVEN.  11:00 p.m. is one hour before 12:00 a.m. Whose great idea was that?!

48. "Great" czar: PETER I.  (1672-1725)  more info
Hand up for quickly filling in P-E-T-E-R what???

49. Three feet: YARD.

51. Faint scent: WHIFF.

52. Prefix meaning "sun": HELIO-.  Helios was the Greek sun god. He drove a chariot across the sky from east to west every day.  
relief sculpture excavated at Troy
54. Silly: GOOFY.

57. Rocky projection: CRAG.  This is a 5:35 min. video about a couple looking to find a new location in Greece for sport climbing. They establish ROUTEs on a gorgeous and challenging CRAG.  

58. "Thirty days __ September ... ": HATH.  I useth the knuckle trick.  

60. Eye layer: UVEA.  

61. Flooring wood: TEAK.     and     64 Down. Flooring wood: OAK.

62. Messes up: ERRS.

65. Com alternative: NET.  Top Level Domains (TLDs) See #4 below. (Click to enlarge.) 

Here's the grid:

That's it for today. sumdaze, OVER and out!

Jun 3, 2023

Saturday, June 3, 2023, Emma Lawson and Larry Snyder

Themeless Saturday by Emma Lawson and Larry Snyder

As you will tell from the paucity of my comments, I was able to sail through big parts of this puzzle. However, when the wordplay heated up I had some delightful struggles. This is Larry's first published puzzle and Emma's first Saturday themeless but fourth overall for the LA Times. 

Emma is a reasearch librarian at Langara University in Vancouver, British Columbia. Larry is a professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering and director of the Institute for Data, Intelligent Systems and Computation at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA. This is another transcontinental collaboration.

  



     

Across:

1. Age of the information superhighway: DIGITAL ERA - The switch from a slide rule to a calculator marked the beginning for me

  

11. 1980s pop duo: WHAM.


15. Hardest part of making guacamole: AVOCADO PIT.


16. Spooned, maybe: HELD.


17. Tropical mocktail: NADA COLADA.


18. Some Minecraft blocks: ORES - I had no idea but ORES made sense with that game title 😐


19. Sounds from a bull pen: SNORTS - Our friend Nick has heard many of those as he is a professional bullfighter/rodeo clown.


20. Fulfills a take-out order?: ERASES 😀 - No restaurants or mobsters here.

22. Actress Winslet: KATE - Her portrait done for the famous scene from Titanic was actually drawn by the director James Cameron


23. Mathewson who was one of the first five inductees into the Baseball Hall of Fame: CHRISTY.


25. Blackthorn berries: SLOES.

27. __ Troopa: Nintendo turtlelike creature: KOOPA.


30. Some viewer-supported broadcasts: PBS SHOWS.

34. "Best sleep on it before deciding": BE SURE - $154,940 for this Cadillac Escalade


35. Big talkers: ORATORS.

36. Richard Williams, to Venus and Serena: DADAGER - Oh, now I get it, it's a portmanteau!


37. "I can __": RELATE.

38. Tiny object that goes around the world?: MINI YOYO - This is Duncan's smallest YOYO and "around the world" is a standard yoyo trick (not shown here)


39. Boob: TWERP - Professor Harold Hill's take on River City's new pocket billiards table:

It takes judgement, brains and maturity to scoreIn a balkline game, I say that any BOOBCan take and shove a ball in a pocketAnd I call that sloth the first big step on the roadTo the depths of deg-ra-day

40. Group that meets regularly to practice spelling?:  COVEN 
😀 An "out there" clue made sense when the spelling is about casting spells by a COVEN of witches 

41. Date: PLUS ONE. - Joann is my PLUS ONE when we go to graduation parties

43. Teléfono answer: HOLA.

47. Neptune's largest moon: TRITON - TRITON with Uranus in the background 


48. Up: ARISEN.

50. Cooler at sea: BRIG - 😀 Cooler is slang for jail and a BRIG is a jail abroad a ship 

51. "Facts!": AMEN TO THAT.


54. "That must hurt": OUCH.

55. Rant and rave in public: MAKE A SCENE.

56. Ruby Queen, e.g.: BEET - People seem to either love or hate BEETS. I'm in the former camp.


57. "Little help, please!": I NEED A HAND.


Down:

1. Maker of Købenstyle casseroles: DANSK - Danish cookware 


2. Pomeranian voiced by Emma Stone in Disney's "Suite Life" franchise: IVANA.


3. Focus of actors working as waiters?: GODOT - 😀 The actors in the clue are a profession but the waiters in the clue are, uh, just actors in a play where waiting is in the title. Last week, Tom Pepper and C.C. had 
15. Welcome message to a waiter: NEXT PLEASE 


4. "You matter to me": I CARE.

5. Delicacy: TACT.


6. Fusses: ADOS.

7. "U slay me!": LOL.

8. Clean water agcy.: EPA.

9. Backseat drivers, e.g.: RIDERS 😀

10. Video Olympics platform: ATARI.


11. "Maybe, maybe not": WHO'S TO SAY - How 'bout another way to ask it by a 22-yr-old Johnny Mathis on a 1957 Ed Sullivan Show?


12. "As requested": HERE YOU GO.

13. Some steinfuls: ALES.

14. Physical pros: MDS - During my yearly required physical with my MD, he and I mostly talk about space and golf for 20 minutes.

21. Welcomed: ASKED IN.


23. Farm moms: COWS - Ewes and sows get the day off

24. Guys: HES.

25. Decathlon event: SHOTPUT.


26. Legends: LORE - King Arthur and Robin Hood are two legends of England

28. Quarry: PREY.

29. Flight-related prefix: AERO.

30. Tawny __: PORT Port Defined All ports are made from a blend of grapes grown throughout Portugal's Douro valley. There are two kinds of port: tawny and ruby. Tawny is aged in wooden casks and released ready to drink, while ruby ages more in bottle than in wood and generally requires many years of cellaring. You're welcome!


31. "The __ Crew": Milwaukee nickname: BREW - Very familiar to baseball peeps


32. Attractive figure?: SALE PRICE - SALE_R_C_ led me to SALES RACK for too long of a price

33. "The Boys" superhero who fires destructive beams: STARLIGHT - Neither the comic book nor broadcast has crossed my path. All you want (or don't want) to know


34. Nemesis: BANE.


36. Low bar?: DIVE - This DIVE is The Bottom Road Bar and is just across the Platte River from my golf course. It has great burgers and unbelievably low prices. Grandson and I ate all that for $13.00 total after 18 holes.

               

38. Sun chaser?: MON 😀 Oh, it's a calendar deal!

40. Hustler: CONMAN - Fast Eddie Felson leaps to my mind when I see that word. His drinking was one thing that put a 
43. Snag: HITCH in his plans.


42. "Me too": SO AM I.

44. "Cocaine Bear" actor __ Jackson Jr.: OSHEA.


45. Singer Rimes: LEANN.


46. Paid to play: ANTED.


47. "Facts!": TRUE.

48. Not much: A TAD.

49. Parks of Alabama: ROSA 


50. Small float: BOB - 😀 Also called a bobber. It was not my last fill but it was my last, "Oh, now I get it! Fishing gear."

52. Squeak (out): EKE.

53. Once called: NEE - More brides seem to be keeping their birth names.