Theme: SKI Trails (Famous Polish Americans)
20A: "Morning Joe" co-host: MIKA BRZEZINSKI
38A: 1967 Triple Crown winner: CARL YASTRZEMSKI
55A: Longtime Duke coach: MIKE KRZYZEWSKI
SKI is "of", like English suffix "son", Norweigian "sen" and Spanish "ez". Irish put their O' and Mac in the middle, so do Arabs with their "ibn" and Italians with their "di/de". Does anyone know what's the difference between "di" and "de"? What would be my name in Polish? Xi'anski?
I only knew 55A as "Coach K". And Seattle Slew popped into my brain for 38A. I was thinking of the racing Triple Crown. I've actually got quite a few Carl Yastrzemski baseball cards. But I did not know that he is a triple crown winner. Even if I did, I would not know how to write out his surname.
As for Mika Brzezinski, I think I will know how to spell her family name when hell freezes over. There is a reason why Jim Miklaszewski (NBC Pentagon correspondent) is called "Mik".
Did you have a hard time with this puzzle? I didn't. I googled those three names very early on. And now I have got absolutely no satisfaction from filling in all the blanks. Such an empty feeling. Terrible. From now on, I will only seek Google as a last resort.
Did you notice the style difference between Barry Silk and Allan E. Parrish? Both of them are great creators of scrabbly puzzles. But Silk uses lots of Q's, while Parrish is an expert on Z's. I often found letter Q missing in his puzzles.
Across:
1A: Richie's mom, Fonzie-style: MRS. C
14A: Junior of the NFL: SEAU. He is a 12-time Pro-Bowl linebacker for the Patriots.
16A: Like the Arctic: POLAR. My first reaction is frigid.
18A: Israeli weapons: UZIS
24A: Chilean catch: SEA BASS. Why "Chilean"?
25A: Maker of 6D: MOTOROLA And 6D: Slim cell phone brand: RAZR. Does anyone have a iPhone?
32A: Ancient Turkish city: ADANA. Here is the map again. I simply forgot. Identical clue in this constructor's last puzzle. Wikipedia says ADANA is the fifth most populous city of Turkey.
42A: Deep __ bend: KNEE. Gym term?
43A: "Science of Logic" philosopher: HEGEL. See this book cover. Unknown to me.
48A: School of Paris: SORBONNE. Here is a list of famous SORBONNE graduates. I did not see Jackie Kennedy there.
50A: Old name for a 2-wood: BRASSIE. I thought of mashie, which is 5-iron.
54A: Like some NYC theaters: OOB. OOB is Off-Off-Broadway.
65A: High: pref.: ALTI. Like altitude.
67A: French WWI fighter planes: SPADS. The plane is an aronym of its manufacturer Societé Pour Aviation et ses Dérivés. Foreign to me.
Down:
2D: 20 quires: REAM. Nice trivia.
4D: Swiss ticker: CUCKOO. CUCKOO clock?
5D: Mixer: CLUB SODA
7D: Yavapai Coll. state: ARIZ. I've never heard of Yavapai Coll. Curt Schilling's alma mater.
9D: Way from Rome to Brindisi: APPIAN. My first encounter with APPIAN Way. Wikipedia states that it "was the most important ancient Roman road".
10D: Romantic light: MOONBEAM
11D: "I Still See __" ("Paint Your Wagon"song): ELISA. Here is the song. Unknown to me. I've never seen Clint Eastwood in a musical before.
13D: Gilmore of basketball: ARTIS. What a strange name, ARTIS, ART IS (long?). It's begging for a T.
22D: Buddhist discipline: ZEN. SATORI is often clued as "Zen enlightenment".
27D: Shredded: TORE. 51D: Shred: RIP UP
28D: Whip-wielder LaRue: LASH. Is he well-known? I've never met this guy before.
40D: Focuses (on): ZEROES IN
46D: Glacial ridges: ESKERS. New word to me also.
47D: 3/23/01 Newsmaker: MIR. It's de-orbed on this date. I would not have got MIR without the across fills.
50D: Coll. hotshots: BMOCS. BMOC is Big Man on Campus.
52D: Japanese dog: AKITA. This clue made me think of Mkat. She used to comment here often, together with Katherine and Dennis.
53D: Pound and Stone: EZRAS. Knew the poet Pound, not Stone.
58D: Swiss painter: KLEE. I don't know what he tried to express with this "Flower Myth", do you? Is it something DF?
59D: Holm oak: ILEX. I got the answer after I cheated on coach K's name. Both the clue and the answere were new to me. ILEX sounds like an animal, like IBEX. Holy hotwick curvy horns!
C.C.
20A: "Morning Joe" co-host: MIKA BRZEZINSKI
38A: 1967 Triple Crown winner: CARL YASTRZEMSKI
55A: Longtime Duke coach: MIKE KRZYZEWSKI
SKI is "of", like English suffix "son", Norweigian "sen" and Spanish "ez". Irish put their O' and Mac in the middle, so do Arabs with their "ibn" and Italians with their "di/de". Does anyone know what's the difference between "di" and "de"? What would be my name in Polish? Xi'anski?
I only knew 55A as "Coach K". And Seattle Slew popped into my brain for 38A. I was thinking of the racing Triple Crown. I've actually got quite a few Carl Yastrzemski baseball cards. But I did not know that he is a triple crown winner. Even if I did, I would not know how to write out his surname.
As for Mika Brzezinski, I think I will know how to spell her family name when hell freezes over. There is a reason why Jim Miklaszewski (NBC Pentagon correspondent) is called "Mik".
Did you have a hard time with this puzzle? I didn't. I googled those three names very early on. And now I have got absolutely no satisfaction from filling in all the blanks. Such an empty feeling. Terrible. From now on, I will only seek Google as a last resort.
Did you notice the style difference between Barry Silk and Allan E. Parrish? Both of them are great creators of scrabbly puzzles. But Silk uses lots of Q's, while Parrish is an expert on Z's. I often found letter Q missing in his puzzles.
Across:
1A: Richie's mom, Fonzie-style: MRS. C
14A: Junior of the NFL: SEAU. He is a 12-time Pro-Bowl linebacker for the Patriots.
16A: Like the Arctic: POLAR. My first reaction is frigid.
18A: Israeli weapons: UZIS
24A: Chilean catch: SEA BASS. Why "Chilean"?
25A: Maker of 6D: MOTOROLA And 6D: Slim cell phone brand: RAZR. Does anyone have a iPhone?
32A: Ancient Turkish city: ADANA. Here is the map again. I simply forgot. Identical clue in this constructor's last puzzle. Wikipedia says ADANA is the fifth most populous city of Turkey.
42A: Deep __ bend: KNEE. Gym term?
43A: "Science of Logic" philosopher: HEGEL. See this book cover. Unknown to me.
48A: School of Paris: SORBONNE. Here is a list of famous SORBONNE graduates. I did not see Jackie Kennedy there.
50A: Old name for a 2-wood: BRASSIE. I thought of mashie, which is 5-iron.
54A: Like some NYC theaters: OOB. OOB is Off-Off-Broadway.
65A: High: pref.: ALTI. Like altitude.
67A: French WWI fighter planes: SPADS. The plane is an aronym of its manufacturer Societé Pour Aviation et ses Dérivés. Foreign to me.
Down:
2D: 20 quires: REAM. Nice trivia.
4D: Swiss ticker: CUCKOO. CUCKOO clock?
5D: Mixer: CLUB SODA
7D: Yavapai Coll. state: ARIZ. I've never heard of Yavapai Coll. Curt Schilling's alma mater.
9D: Way from Rome to Brindisi: APPIAN. My first encounter with APPIAN Way. Wikipedia states that it "was the most important ancient Roman road".
10D: Romantic light: MOONBEAM
11D: "I Still See __" ("Paint Your Wagon"song): ELISA. Here is the song. Unknown to me. I've never seen Clint Eastwood in a musical before.
13D: Gilmore of basketball: ARTIS. What a strange name, ARTIS, ART IS (long?). It's begging for a T.
22D: Buddhist discipline: ZEN. SATORI is often clued as "Zen enlightenment".
27D: Shredded: TORE. 51D: Shred: RIP UP
28D: Whip-wielder LaRue: LASH. Is he well-known? I've never met this guy before.
40D: Focuses (on): ZEROES IN
46D: Glacial ridges: ESKERS. New word to me also.
47D: 3/23/01 Newsmaker: MIR. It's de-orbed on this date. I would not have got MIR without the across fills.
50D: Coll. hotshots: BMOCS. BMOC is Big Man on Campus.
52D: Japanese dog: AKITA. This clue made me think of Mkat. She used to comment here often, together with Katherine and Dennis.
53D: Pound and Stone: EZRAS. Knew the poet Pound, not Stone.
58D: Swiss painter: KLEE. I don't know what he tried to express with this "Flower Myth", do you? Is it something DF?
59D: Holm oak: ILEX. I got the answer after I cheated on coach K's name. Both the clue and the answere were new to me. ILEX sounds like an animal, like IBEX. Holy hotwick curvy horns!
C.C.