On Tuesday, WikWak said..."I have seldom known as giving and selfless a person. RIP, Bradley."
What follows was written prior to Abejo's passing. It is not meant to add anything to aid in coming to grips with the sadness. At best, a brief diversion.
Salutations, cruciverbalists. Another Thor's Day has dawned. Today, in lieu of the roar of thunder courtesy of the son of Odin, our constructor, MaryEllen Uthlaut, has provided the sonic effects.
THEME: Did You Hear Something Go Pop Pop Pop?
There are many, many ways that we use the word POP in our
language. Pop (contemporary) Culture, Pop (surprise) Quiz, Pop
(ask) The Question, Pop (go) Into The Store, Pop (open) The Cork, It
Just Popped (came) Into My Head, Five Bucks A Pop (each), I Just Heard
My Knee Pop (noise), etc. MaryEllen has chosen to integrate four
other ways that POPS is used into this entertaining puzzle.
17. Pops: BOSTON ORCHESTRA. The Boston POPs
Orchestra was founded in 1885. It's stated mission was, and remains,
to perform light classical music as well as the popular music of the
day. Arthur Fiedler led the Boston Pops for fifty years.
33. Pops: ICE CREAM BARS. ICE CREAM BARS, aka
an Ice Cream POPS, are frozen desserts on a stick often with coatings of
chocolate to prevent melting and dripping of the ice cream.
42. Pops: DAD'S NICKNAME. Let's see, there's POP,
Father, Pa, Pater, Papa, Daddy, Poppa, Pappy and, of course, "So's yer Old
Man!"
63. Pops: CARBONATED SODAS. The term POP is used to
mean soda in various parts of the country. According to one source,
historically the correct term is actually 'phosphate' which was defined by
soda jerks as being a flavored syrup mixed with carbonated water.
Sodas were what we call, today, 'floats'. POP is actually a shortening
of 'phosphate' (as they say in some crossword puzzles: letters one, three
and five).
Across:
1. Old storyteller: BARD. William Shakespeare is often referred to as the BARD of Avon.
5. __ value: FACE. To take something at "FACE
Value" means to accept something as presented without delving more
deeply into an analysis of the matter or item.
9. Worthless stuff: DROSS. DROSS is something
that is base, trivial or worthless. The scum that forms on the
surface of molten metal is also called DROSS.
15. Muslim community leader: IMAM. An IMAM leads
Muslim worshipers in prayer.
16. Time of one's life: YOUTH. A bit of
misdirection here. To Have The Time Of One's Life, when used
idiomatically, means to have a wonderfully enjoyable
experience. Here we need to answer with a time, or phase, of one's
life.
20. Female bighorn: EWE. From 1974 until 2016, the Los Angeles/St.
Louis Rams football team cheerleading squad was known as The Embraceable
EWEs. For some reason or another, that bit of
misjudgment makes me think of Tom Lehrer's comment about Dr. Samuel
Gall, inventor of the Gallbladder. Of the late Dr. Gall Mr. Lehrer
once said, "His educational career began, interestingly enough, in
agricultural school where he majored in Animal Husbandry....until they
caught him at it one day."
21. Ensign __ Crusher, Wil Wheaton's "Star Trek: TNG"
role: WESLEY. Picard, please correct me if I am
wrong, but I believe that Wil Wheaton began playing the role of WESLEY
Crusher in 1987 when Wheaton was just fourteen or fifteen years old.
22. Tasteless gruel: SLOP.
Feeding Slop to the Pigs
23. Trio from Don Giovanni?: ENS. Here we go
again. It is one of those clues meant to be taken extremely
literally. There are three ENS in Don Giovanni.
24. Flow slowly: SEEP. Below are
two High Resolution Photographs showing possible water SEEPage on
Mars. Some slopes on Mars darken during the Martian summer but
return to a lighter color by the following spring.
26. Manage, with "out": EKE. A Top Twenty entry
in the Crosswordese dictionary.
27. Parachute attachment: HARNESS. It is a very
good idea to keep one's parachute HARNESSED to oneself.
31. Like "it," grammatically: NEUTER. As an
adjective, it means that a word is neither feminine nor
masculine. As a transitive verb, NEUTER is substantially more
disturbing. No living creature would like it.
36. Note from the office: MEMO. Can secretaries
really write MEMO's with both their left and right hands at the same
time? Or is that stereotyping?
37. Buddy: PAL.
38. Mild Dutch cheese: EDAM.
Why is EDAM such a unique cheese?
Because it's made backwards.
47. Hardened: STEELY.
47. Hardened: STEELY.
Steely Dan
51. Poetic contraction: 'TIS. It is a contraction for it is.
52. Christmas pudding fruit: PLUM.
Did you hear the PLUM joke?
It was pitiful.
55. Take in the groceries?: EAT.
56. Seal-hunting swimmer: ORCA. ORCAs can often
be found in crossword puzzles. Sometimes, the clues are similar to
those used for OREOs, with black and white as the key words.
Today, this marine mammal is honoring that marine mammal with
black and white images (also apropos of Oreos and crossword puzzles).
58. Protective charm: AMULET.
60. 46-Down work: ODE. An ODE is a lyric poem in
the form of an address to a particular subject. Another Top-Twenty
entry on the list of Crosswordese vocabulary.
66. Mound: KNOLL. A KNOLL is a small
hill. JFK was not shot from the Grassy Knoll in Dallas, TX but
some conspiracy theorists believe differently.
The Grassy Knoll - Dealey Plaza
67. Great start?: MEGA. The constructor threw in the question mark to let us know that she was being a bit sneaky with this clue. MEGA can be used as both an adjective and as an adverb.
68. Ceremonial grandeur: POMP. Under some
circumstances, POMP means a splendid display.
69. Changed course, nautically: YAWED. YAWED is
the past tense of YAW which means to twist about a vertical axis.
Occasionally, in an airplane or on a boat, I am
emphatically reminded of the difference between Pitch, Roll and Yaw.
70. Worshipped image: IDOL. Originally, an IDOL
was the physical representation of a god. Some of the Israelites
created a false idol, the Golden Calf, to worship in a moment of doubt
when Moses ascended Mt. Sinai. In today's POP Culture, IDOL means
a greatly admired or loved person. Plus ca change plus c'est le
meme chose.
71. Long shot, in hoops lingo: TREY. Slang for a
three-point shot. The distance varies a bit (pro, college, men,
women) but it is generally more than twenty feet. TREY used this
way likely has its origins in card player lingo for the card one higher
than the deuce and that is, of course, the three.
Down:
1. Sheep herder in a 1995 Best Picture nominee: BABE. "That'll do, pig, that'll do."
2. Swear: AVOW. I usually cannot remember the
difference between AVOW and AVER, especially as clued in puzzles.
However, the first two letters are the same, the balance is going to be
either an O and a W or an E and an R, and the perps take care of that.
3. Come to the surface: RISE. Or, to go above the surface.
4. EPA-banned
insecticide: DDT. Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane
was developed in the 1940's and was used to combat insect-borne human
diseases. Its use was banned in 1972.
5. Skillful handling: FINESSE.
6. 8th-century B.C. Hebrew prophet: AMOS.
Amos was one of the so called twelve minor prophets. So,
just how famous was AMOS ?
7. Western burger franchise __ Jr.: CARL'S.
CARL'S Jr is a fast food restaurant chain founded by Carl
Karcher. Several of their burgers have the word Western in their
titles regardless of on which continent the particular restaurant is
located. For example, the Junior Western Burger or, if you are
hungrier, The Triple Spicy Western Bacon Cheese Burger.
8. Bob Hope, often, for the Oscars
ceremony: EMCEE. EMCEE is the spelled-out
version of M.C. or Master of Ceremonies.
9. Turn red, say: DYE. A seemingly half-hearted attempt at misdirection. Clearly, neither Embarrass nor Ripen was going to fit in the allotted squares.
10. Supreme singer?: ROSS. Diana Ross was the
lead singer of the vocal group The Supremes. The group had a
record-setting twelve number one hit singles.
11. Current source: OUTLET. First, we needed to disabuse ourselves of the notion that the
reference was, for example, to a current source of income. As
for the required answer, I tend to think of the source of an electric
current as being at the point at which it is generated. See 39
Down, below.
12. One of four on a par-4: STROKE. In golf, a STROKE is any swing forward of a golf club by a
golfer who is trying to strike the golf ball. Just because the
hole is rated a "par-4" does not mean that a single STROKE will turn out to be one of
four. It could be one of fewer, or one of many more,
STROKEs.
Ben Hogan's Famous One-iron Shot
13. Metal-cutting machine: SHAPER.
18. Proprietor: OWNER. Apu is the PROPRIETOR of
the Springfield KWIK-E MART.
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon
19. Nocturnal scavenger: HYENA. In
addition to being scavengers, HYENAs are skilled hunters.
Sometimes called "Lauging Hyenas", they make loud barking noises that
sound like cackling laughter.
27. "That's the guy!": HIM.
28. First-rate player: ACE. The best baseball pitcher on any given team is called that team's ACE. In the 1960's, Sandy Koufax was the ACE of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitching staff.
29. Sleep cycle: REM. Rapid Eye Movement.
REM sleep typically accounts for 20 - 25 percent of an adult's sleep
cycle. Most dreams occur during REM sleep.
Ted
30. Drains of power: SAPS.
32. Early online forum: USENET. There are
several folks here who can explain USENET far better than I can.
Basically, USENET, established in 1980, is a bulletin board system and
was the precursor to internet forums.
The Ascent of Man
35. Spot on a screen: BLIP. Radar is used to
determine the location of an object by measuring the time it takes for a
radio wave to reach and return from the object. The determined
points are shown on a screen and are called BLIPs.
39. Hydroelectric power source: DAM.
Hoover (nee Boulder) Dam
41. Came upon: MET. We have MET Mr. Met numerous times in crossword puzzles.
43. Mountain in the Tour de France route: ALP.
44. Subject of the biopic "I'm Not
There": DYLAN. Robert Allen Zimmerman was born
in Duluth, Minnesota in 1941. In 1962, he legally changed his name
to Bob DYLAN. His net worth is estimated at $200 Million and, in
2016, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature. His mother
would be so proud.
45. Guided by a statement of faith: CREEDAL. I
looked it up and, surprisingly, it actually is a word. CREEDAL, as
the clue implies, is an adjective used when referring to a statement of
a religious belief or "creed".
46. "The Poetry of earth is never dead" poet: KEATS.
47. Short and solid: STOCKY.
48. Albania's capital: TIRANA. TRIANA is the largest
Albanian city both in terms of population and area. Often, constructors mess with
us and the "capital" they refer to is the local currency. In this
case that would be the LEK which appears frequently in puzzles.
49. Mortgage provision: ESCROW. Under the terms
of some mortgages, money for property taxes and insurance is paid
monthly into an ESCROW account by the borrower where the funds are held
in order to pay the bills when they become due.
53. Taste sensation: UMAMI. There are five
recognized basic tastes. In addition to UMAMI they are salty,
bitter, sweet and sour. Of these, UMAMI is, perhaps, the most
difficult to define. Words often used to try to do so are meaty,
broth-like and savory.
54. Subtle, as a shade: MUTED. MUTED can also refer to sound, as on the computer, tablet or cell phone that you are now using.
57. Willing partner: ABLE. Another bit of misdirection. In this case the reference is to "Ready, Willing and ABLE."
59. Toy company with theme parks: LEGO.
60. Reminder to take out the trash?: ODOR. I
first tried to make MOTHER, and then EX-WIFE, work.
61. British title: DAME.
Dame Edna
62. Best Game, e.g.: ESPY. In this case,
ESPY is the name of a sports award given by ABC Television and
named for the sports channel ESPN. Both ESPN and ABC are owned by
The Walt Disney Company. As with so many current-day acronyms,
first they decide on what they want the acronym to be and then they
"force feed" the words for which the acronym stands. In this case
that's Excellence In Sports Performance Yearly Award or ESPY.
64. Passé: OLD. I'll let this one pass.
65. Get off the fence: OPT. To OPT means to make a choice. We could OPT not to solve crossword puzzles but that would be sub-optimal.
That wraps up the puzzle today. As I gain more experience with
"blogging" on the Corner, my admiration for all of those who create these
puzzle "explorations" grows. It is a challenge, I have discovered,
to strike a balance between expository writing, entertainment, and humor. I lean
toward the humorous but I know that the primary purpose here is to try to
explain the clues and answers. On another note, after "shooting" in
black and white this week, next time I'll put the color film back in the
camera.
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