Theme: "Lo and Behold" - LO is added to each theme entry.
24A. Film VIP's influence?: DIRECTOR'S CLOUT. Director's cut.
35A. Derision of a parade entry?: FLOAT SHAMING. Fat shaming.
57A. Calligrapher specializing in punctuation?: COLON ARTIST. Con artist.
77A. Hardwood seller's markup?: FLOOR PROFIT. For profit.
92A. Period when Lindsay ruled?: LOHAN DYNASTY. Han Dynasty, together with Zhou, Qin and Tang, all had Xi'an as their capital city.
112A. "Two Women" actress teaming up with a cartoon cat?: LOREN AND STIMPY. Ren and Stimpy.
43D. Prosthetic eagle claw?: FAKE TALON. Fake tan.
52D. Imitation semolina?: FAUX FLOUR. Faux fur. Neat to see both fake and faux in Downs.
Nice follow-up to this "Lo and Behold" we had a few years ago. Notice there's no dupe answers.
Great to see Mike back. We've covered 5 puzzles on our blog, 4 are Sundays.
Across:
1. They cross in sights: HAIRS.
6. "Hmm ... ": LET'S SEE.
13. Aetna competitor: HUMANA. Based in Louisville, Kentucky.
19. Store, as fodder: ENSILE.
21. Giving it one's all, theatrically: EMOTING.
22. In-groups: ELITES.
23. Battery terminal-related: ANODAL. Or ANODIC at times.
26. Passport extension, say: RENEWAL.
28. Lacking face value: NO-PAR.
29. Eroded: ATE INTO. This is how much the richest lost last week.
30. Granola tidbit: OAT.
31. Bookmarked item: PAGE.
33. Official motorcade protection: ESCORT.
41. "Dancing With the Stars" judge Goodman: LEN.
42. "__ one, think ... ": I FOR.
46. Transvaal settlers: BOERS.
47. More in order: NEATER.
49. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" rhyme scheme: AABA.
50. Tax return?: REFUND. Filed. But unprocessed.
53. Orbital point: APOGEE.
54. Performed in the street for tips, in London: BUSKED. Learning moment for me.
56. Give an address: ORATE.
60. Frozen Wasser: EIS. Ice.
61. Unilever men's brand: BRUT.
62. Check writers: PAYERS.
63. Surgical inserts: STENTS.
65. Biological groups: TAXA. Singular is TAXON.
66. Not rented: UNLET.
67. "__ español?": HABLA.
70. Thin batteries: AAAS.
72. Pats or Jags: NFL-ERS.
74. Roof window: DORMER.
75. It parallels the radius: ULNA.
76. Blood test letters: HDL. Good cholesterol.
81. Supply: STOCK.
82. WWII threats: U BOATS.
84. Starts the pool game: BREAKS.
85. Cactus features: SPINES.
86. One may be common: NOUN.
87. Rhythm instrument usually played in pairs: MARACA.
88. Israelite patriarch: ISAAC. And 100. Daughter-in-law of 88-Across: LEAH.
90. Banks on a runway: TYRA.
91. Nocturnal acronym: REM.
97. Clothing giant that's lost an article over the years: THE GAP. And 116. Lincoln Center landmark, familiarly: THE MET.
101. Fair-hiring letters: EOE.
102. Two-handled Greek vase: AMPHORA.
105. Davis of "Dr. Dolittle": OSSIE.
109. Former tykes' clothing chain: KIDS R US.
115. Tot's foot: TOOTSY.
117. Elemental variant: ISOTOPE.
118. Reduced: ON SALE.
Did you see the face mask prices on Amazon? Crazy. Singapore gives each
household a pack of four masks. It prevents profiteering.
119. Gamer's venue: ARCADE.
120. Ski report highlight: NEW SNOW.
121. Softens: EASES.
Down:
1. Learn about: HEAR OF. There have been no new Coronavirus cases in either Xi'an or Guangzhou the past week.
2. Temper: ANNEAL.
3. Knows about: IS ONTO.
4. Disney World attraction: RIDE.
5. Side for a dog: SLAW.
6. Commanded: LED.
7. "Lose Yourself" rapper: EMINEM.
8. Barcelona bull: TORO.
9. Part of a process: STEP.
10. Italian Neorealism film pioneer Vittorio De __: SICA. He directed "Two Women" .
11. Between, to Berlioz: ENTRE.
12. It may be inflated: EGO.
13. Ben-Hur portrayer: HESTON (Charlton)
14. Stomach woe: ULCER.
15. Armed forces units: MILITIAS.
16. Heaps: A TON.
17. Like Switz. in WWII: NEUT. Neutral.
18. Concerning: AS TO.
20. Went by: ELAPSED.
25. Indy competitor: RACER.
27. Cowardly Lion portrayer: LAHR. I wonder why there's never been "The Wizard of Oz" remake.
32. Road trip need: GAS.
34. Wintry pellets: SLEET.
36. Boundary: ABUTTAL.
37. Musical pitch: TONE.
38. Tied up at the harbor: IN PORT.
39. Bright signs: NEONS.
40. Lady of song: GAGA.
44. Bow or curtsy: OBEISANCE. New Year's bow in Korea! I did the same when I was a kid.
45. X-ray doses: RADS.
48. Thrice, in Rx's: TER.
50. Part of RFK, briefly: ROBT. Robert.
51. Gofer guy: ERRAND BOY.
53. Sheltered, at sea: ALEE.
54. Bright, blue-white heavenly body: B STAR. What does B stand for?
55. Multi-purpose vehicle, briefly: UTE.
57. Playground retort: CAN SO.
58. Toondom's Olive: OYL.
59. Key: ISLET.
62. Knitting loops: PURLS.
64. Izod competitor: NAUTICA. There cologne seems to be everywhere.
67. What the Wonderland caterpillar smokes: HOOKAH.
68. Sounds from pounds: ARFS.
69. Dietitian's calc.: BMI. Body Mass Index.
71. Fifth Avenue retailer: SAKS.
73. Pond dweller: EFT.
74. Harsh Athenian lawmaker: DRACO. From him the word "draconian".
76. Pursuit: HUNT.
78. President who appointed Justice Kagan: OBAMA.
79. Educ. basics: R R R.
80. Toll: PEAL.
81. Hand measurement: SPAN.
83. Cursed thing: ANATHEMA.
85. Greet informally: SAY HI TO.
87. Fox of "Transformers": MEGAN.
88. Like Vivaldi's "Spring": IN E.
89. The Missouri R. runs through it: S DAK.
91. Upgrade, as on Yelp: RE-RATE.
93. City of NW Syria: ALEPPO. Always think of Tim Hetherington when I see Aleppo.
94. Perfect Sleepers, e.g.: SERTAS.
95. Rumple: TOUSLE.
96. "Absolutely!": YES YES.
98. Refined: HONED.
99. Entourage: POSSE.
102. Utah ski resort: ALTA.
103. "Jerry Maguire" actor Jay: MOHR.
104. Occurring before: Abbr.: PREC. Preceding.
106. Put in a hold: STOW.
107. Watches tykes: SITS.
108. "It's showtime!": I'M ON.
110. Cooked: DONE.
111. Slugger Sammy: SOSA.
113. Hubbub: DIN.
114. Red-berried tree: YEW.
C.C.
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Mar 1, 2020
Feb 29, 2020
Saturday, February, 29, Michael Wiesenberg
Saturday Themeless Puzzle by Michael Wiesenberg
Our professional poker player/author and crossword constructor from Calgary gives us a very doable Saturday themeless puzzle.
Advice on gaming can be found in his book Ready, Bet, Go
Odds are always good that Michael will deal us a fun puzzle and he has done so on this Leap Day:
Across:
1. Baseball warm-up word: SHAG - In 2012, Mariano Rivera tore his ACL while SHAGGING fly balls before a game in Kansas City. What's SHAGGING in baseball, Gary?
5. Brazilian music genre word meaning "trend": BOSSA - In 1963 Eydie Gorme sang Blame It On The Bossa Nova (New Trend) or in Spanish:
10. Secured: ICED and 15. Nailing, in a way: ACING - Steph Curry NAILED this three-point shot to ICE the game
14. Ebb: WANE.
16. Weather __: VANE.
17. Kitchen fixture: OVEN.
18. Mountain slope debris: SCREE - SCREE skiing in Austria - Yikes!
19. Welder's output: ARCS - Not quite the same
20. Home improvement team: REMODELERS.
22. One of two sts. admitted to the Union 11/2/1889: N DAK - The map the year before:
23. Elder of an '80s-'90s country duo: NAOMI JUDD (corrected picture)
24. Metaphorical casino loss: SHIRT - A prescient clue that hints that if I study Daniel's book maybe I won't lose my SHIRT
25. Formed by solidified magma: IGNEOUS - Uh, I'd try to keep my car out of the path of magma before it solidifies into that IGNEOUS rock
26. Is __: imminently will: SOON TO.
27. Turndowns: NOES.
28. Perceived Cold War weapons disparity: MISSILE GAP.
31. Propelled, as a raft: POLED - In Sweden you can sign up for a five-day "Huckleberry Finn" adventure to POLE down the Klarälven River
32. Words preceding an important reminder: PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE: today would be Leap-Day-Baby Dinah Shore's 26th birthday as she was born on this day in 1916.
37. Power eponym: WATT - James
41. Antagonism: RANCOR.
42. Amazon, notably: E-TAILER - I tried to shop local but getting a taillight on Amazon saved me $500
44. Singer for whom Bernie wrote lyrics: ELTON - This movie told the story of ELTON John and his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin
45. Remit, nowadays: PAY ON LINE - My wife/bookkeeper of 53 years insists on checks, stamps and envelopes
47. "Contact" author Sagan: CARL - I loved the first half of this movie and then it fell apart.
48. Comes to terms: MAKES A DEAL - this 1963 pilot is like a time capsule with pre-costume contestants, very small prizes and modestly dressed models
49. "I'll do it": OKAY - The last line in this hilarious Seinfeld scene is spoken by Marlee Matlin
50. Formal "Who's there?" response: IT IS I - A grammatically correct but perhaps slightly pretentious reply
51. Letter-bottom abbr.: ENCLosure
52. Bit of progress: DENT - Beetle Bailey is often shown trying make a DENT in the pile of potatoes
53. Atlantic food fish: SCROD - On a Boston picnic, one might eat SCROD in someone's yahd after pahking the cah
54. Pak of the LPGA: SE RI - One of many fabulous Asian players on the tour
55. Artist's pseudonym formed from the French pronunciation of his initials: ERTE - Romain de Tirtoff a Russian-born French artist and designer known by the pseudonym Erté, from the French pronunciation of his initials (pronounced [ɛʁ.te], AIR TAY)
56. 1953 Ladd classic: SHANE.
57. Casual wear: TEES.
Down:
1. Like court witnesses: SWORN IN - Putting your hand on a Bible is not required these days and the witness can AFFIRM and not SWEAR to tell the truth
2. Try it: HAVE A GO.
3. Buttercup family member: ANEMONE - Buttercup seems like a apt name to me
4. Biological mapping subjects: GENOMES - Here ya go!
5. Parachutist using low-altitude starting points: BASE JUMPER - BASE stands for jumping from Building, Antenna, Span, or Earth (cliff). Here's an Earth jumper shown in stop motion photography
6. Blockage: OCCLUSION - The repair of two coronary OCCLUSIONS
7. Brought into being: SIRED.
8. Dummy Mortimer: SNERD - I never thought Bergen was a very good ventriloquist and perhaps Mortimer would not be accepted today
9. Quite a while: AGES.
10. Rowena's lover: IVANHOE - All you wanna know
11. Bouncer's job: CARDING - Hand up if you had a fake ID!
12. Early Wikipedia competitor: ENCARTA - 1993 - 2009
13. Icon locale: DESKTOP - The one on my MacBook Pro is very cluttered
21. Giovanni's god: DIO - The Italian song DIO, come ti amo means "God How I Love You"
24. Roman sun god: SOL - One of many in the deity array
26. Like a pendulum's movement: SIDE TO SIDE - Galileo used his pulse to time how long it took for the side-to-side swings of a pendulum (chandelier) in a Pisa Cathedral
29. __-mo: SLO.
30. Saw: SET EYES ON - Doing this with Lady Liberty is a highlight for many entering N.Y. Harbor
32. Like Hollywood films before censorship guidelines were introduced: PRE-CODE - Ten PRE-CODE movies that pushed the envelope
33. LeBron, since Jul. 2018: LA LAKER - Cavalier, Heat, Cavalier, Laker
34. One in a 1K, say: ENTRANT - That 1-Kilometer ENTRANT would have to run/walk about .62 miles
35. Follower: ACOLYTE - Usually young people who help in religious services
36. Certain youngster's nickname: SON - Something I can't call anyone
37. Least civilized: WILDEST.
38. Property recipient, in law: ALIENEE - Here ya go
39. Like a good-sized farm: TEN ACRE - C'mon, TEN ACRES? Around here that's barely a good-sized sweet corn patch
40. Plant support: TRELLIS - In the background you can see my wife's Clematis starting to bloom on its TRELLIS
43. Santa follower: ANA.
45. Cabbage site: PATCH.
46. "Ran" director Kurosawa: AKIRA - His IMDB
48. Wish were here: MISS - My wife would write that to our kitty
Our professional poker player/author and crossword constructor from Calgary gives us a very doable Saturday themeless puzzle.
Advice on gaming can be found in his book Ready, Bet, Go
Odds are always good that Michael will deal us a fun puzzle and he has done so on this Leap Day:
Across:
1. Baseball warm-up word: SHAG - In 2012, Mariano Rivera tore his ACL while SHAGGING fly balls before a game in Kansas City. What's SHAGGING in baseball, Gary?
5. Brazilian music genre word meaning "trend": BOSSA - In 1963 Eydie Gorme sang Blame It On The Bossa Nova (New Trend) or in Spanish:
10. Secured: ICED and 15. Nailing, in a way: ACING - Steph Curry NAILED this three-point shot to ICE the game
14. Ebb: WANE.
16. Weather __: VANE.
17. Kitchen fixture: OVEN.
18. Mountain slope debris: SCREE - SCREE skiing in Austria - Yikes!
19. Welder's output: ARCS - Not quite the same
20. Home improvement team: REMODELERS.
22. One of two sts. admitted to the Union 11/2/1889: N DAK - The map the year before:
23. Elder of an '80s-'90s country duo: NAOMI JUDD (corrected picture)
25. Formed by solidified magma: IGNEOUS - Uh, I'd try to keep my car out of the path of magma before it solidifies into that IGNEOUS rock
26. Is __: imminently will: SOON TO.
27. Turndowns: NOES.
28. Perceived Cold War weapons disparity: MISSILE GAP.
31. Propelled, as a raft: POLED - In Sweden you can sign up for a five-day "Huckleberry Finn" adventure to POLE down the Klarälven River
32. Words preceding an important reminder: PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE: today would be Leap-Day-Baby Dinah Shore's 26th birthday as she was born on this day in 1916.
37. Power eponym: WATT - James
41. Antagonism: RANCOR.
42. Amazon, notably: E-TAILER - I tried to shop local but getting a taillight on Amazon saved me $500
44. Singer for whom Bernie wrote lyrics: ELTON - This movie told the story of ELTON John and his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin
45. Remit, nowadays: PAY ON LINE - My wife/bookkeeper of 53 years insists on checks, stamps and envelopes
47. "Contact" author Sagan: CARL - I loved the first half of this movie and then it fell apart.
48. Comes to terms: MAKES A DEAL - this 1963 pilot is like a time capsule with pre-costume contestants, very small prizes and modestly dressed models
49. "I'll do it": OKAY - The last line in this hilarious Seinfeld scene is spoken by Marlee Matlin
50. Formal "Who's there?" response: IT IS I - A grammatically correct but perhaps slightly pretentious reply
51. Letter-bottom abbr.: ENCLosure
52. Bit of progress: DENT - Beetle Bailey is often shown trying make a DENT in the pile of potatoes
53. Atlantic food fish: SCROD - On a Boston picnic, one might eat SCROD in someone's yahd after pahking the cah
54. Pak of the LPGA: SE RI - One of many fabulous Asian players on the tour
55. Artist's pseudonym formed from the French pronunciation of his initials: ERTE - Romain de Tirtoff a Russian-born French artist and designer known by the pseudonym Erté, from the French pronunciation of his initials (pronounced [ɛʁ.te], AIR TAY)
56. 1953 Ladd classic: SHANE.
57. Casual wear: TEES.
Down:
1. Like court witnesses: SWORN IN - Putting your hand on a Bible is not required these days and the witness can AFFIRM and not SWEAR to tell the truth
2. Try it: HAVE A GO.
3. Buttercup family member: ANEMONE - Buttercup seems like a apt name to me
4. Biological mapping subjects: GENOMES - Here ya go!
5. Parachutist using low-altitude starting points: BASE JUMPER - BASE stands for jumping from Building, Antenna, Span, or Earth (cliff). Here's an Earth jumper shown in stop motion photography
6. Blockage: OCCLUSION - The repair of two coronary OCCLUSIONS
7. Brought into being: SIRED.
8. Dummy Mortimer: SNERD - I never thought Bergen was a very good ventriloquist and perhaps Mortimer would not be accepted today
9. Quite a while: AGES.
10. Rowena's lover: IVANHOE - All you wanna know
11. Bouncer's job: CARDING - Hand up if you had a fake ID!
12. Early Wikipedia competitor: ENCARTA - 1993 - 2009
13. Icon locale: DESKTOP - The one on my MacBook Pro is very cluttered
21. Giovanni's god: DIO - The Italian song DIO, come ti amo means "God How I Love You"
24. Roman sun god: SOL - One of many in the deity array
26. Like a pendulum's movement: SIDE TO SIDE - Galileo used his pulse to time how long it took for the side-to-side swings of a pendulum (chandelier) in a Pisa Cathedral
29. __-mo: SLO.
30. Saw: SET EYES ON - Doing this with Lady Liberty is a highlight for many entering N.Y. Harbor
32. Like Hollywood films before censorship guidelines were introduced: PRE-CODE - Ten PRE-CODE movies that pushed the envelope
33. LeBron, since Jul. 2018: LA LAKER - Cavalier, Heat, Cavalier, Laker
34. One in a 1K, say: ENTRANT - That 1-Kilometer ENTRANT would have to run/walk about .62 miles
35. Follower: ACOLYTE - Usually young people who help in religious services
36. Certain youngster's nickname: SON - Something I can't call anyone
37. Least civilized: WILDEST.
38. Property recipient, in law: ALIENEE - Here ya go
39. Like a good-sized farm: TEN ACRE - C'mon, TEN ACRES? Around here that's barely a good-sized sweet corn patch
40. Plant support: TRELLIS - In the background you can see my wife's Clematis starting to bloom on its TRELLIS
43. Santa follower: ANA.
45. Cabbage site: PATCH.
46. "Ran" director Kurosawa: AKIRA - His IMDB
48. Wish were here: MISS - My wife would write that to our kitty
Feel free to ante up an opinion.
Feb 28, 2020
Friday, February 28, 2020 Mark MacLachlan
"BR EXIT"
18. Power of a Hummer?: UTE FORCE. Brute force
23. Enormous card revealed at end of magician's routine?: ACE FOR IMPACT. Brace for impact
38. Tattoo depicting the last woolly mammoth?: INK OF EXTINCTION. Brink of extinction
47. Avian mascot on a refueling vessel?: OILER CHICKEN. Broiler chicken
57. Hotel employee who only works one day a month?: IDES MAID. Brides maid
68. Subject of a 2016 U.K. referendum, and a hint to five puzzle answers: BREXIT. Parse it as BR Exit.
I liked this puzzle. Drop the Br from the commonly known phrases and redefine the remnants.
Initially couldn't figure out any of the theme answers due to good cluing and a few crossing unknowns. Then got IDES MAID but didn't think too much about it. A few moments later, got BREXIT and then knew the game. Add Br back in and fill in the rest of the common phrase. Nice !
This is Mark's fifth puzzle. One each year starting in 2016. I looked back at each.
"C Battery" Sunday March 26, 2016
"Three Little Letters" Wednesday April 5, 2017
"Iron In" Friday September 28, 2018
"Code Crackers" Sunday July 14, 2019
Mark is a chemistry professor at the University of British Columbia. Using my code cracking skills (not very refined), I see a pattern:
I don't recall the Friday puzzle and had no comments that day, but of the other three it appears I only aced one. It would have been one for four if not for perp saves on SPIFF, ON THE DL, ETOILE and SEN-SEN.
Hope you had fun solving it !
Across:
1. Big divides: CHASMs. Ideological divides: Schisms.
7. Vat sediment: LEES. Dregs. Speaking of remnants...
11. Swindler: CON.
14. Aid, as a fallen teammate: HELP UP. And, 23D: Give a hand: ASSIST.
15. Munch Museum city: OSLO. Dedicated to the life and works of the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. The new museum opens in the fall of this year.
16. Crazy Eights relative: UNO.
17. Connected: ONLINE.
20. Greek group: FRAT.
22. Discreetly, in slang: ON THE DL. Down Low.
27. Form fig.: SSN.
28. Fictional anchor Nessman: LES.
29. Goes apace: HIEs.
33. "Your point being?": SOO. An informal, and perhaps confrontational or condescending "What is your point ?" Elongate so. Why drag it out ?
34. __ 51: AREA.
36. The slightest bit: A TASTE.
41. Avoids: SKIRTs. Sidesteps.
42. Muslim leader: IMAM.
43. Carol contraction: TIS. No, Tinbeni, the lyrics to "Deck The Halls" do not have the verse, "Tis the season to drink Stoli" but it does have a nice ring to it.
44. Immobilize with a charge: TASE.
45. "Moby-Dick" setting: SEA. Hardly a favorite here.
46. Bullring bravo: OLE.
Ole wore both of his winter jackets when he painted his house last July. The directions on the can said "put on two coats".
Sven says to Ole "I found dis pen, is it yours?"
Ole replies, "Don't know, give it here"
He then tries it and says, "Yes it is"
Sven asks "How do you know?"
Ole replies, "Dat's my handwriting!"
53. Three on a match, they say: BAD OMEN. Bad luck is what I knew.
56. Ikea purchase: SOFA. Some of their brands include Kivik, Ektorp, Klippan, Friheten and Balkarp. These are the kinds of words I would need if I were creating a crossword.
59. Acted greenly?: REUSED.
63. It usually needs breaking: TIE. Last year's Scripps National Spelling Bee ended in an 8-way tie. The final eight went 20 straight rounds of spelling without any errors. The Bee simply ran out of predetermined words to sufficiently challenge these children. Each co-champion took home the $50K first place prize. The Bee is taking steps to reduce the number of entrants to the final, and searching for new lists of words that are even harder to spell.
What word in the dictionary is always spelled incorrectly ?
64. 1968 self-named folk album: ARLO. Arlo Guthrie, known for singing songs of protest and about social injustice. - Wikipedia.
65. Stands in a studio: EASELs. Bob Ross used them on his program...
66. Wrap up: END. "That's a cut !"
67. Changes to green, say: DYEs. Sounds Eco.
Down:
1. Comic Margaret: CHO. Not my cuppa.
2. Egg producer: HEN.
3. The lot: ALL. Lock, stock and barrel. Everything.
4. Calvin's spaceman alter ego, in comics: SPIFF. Spaceman Spiff at Fandom.
5. Literature Nobelist Alice: MUNRO. "Munro’s stories reveal her as a consummate artist who is without question among the most accomplished masters of the short story." - Nobelprize.orjg
6. Weapon for Goliath: SPEAR. Asparagus, broccoli or pickle ?
7. Teammate of Babe: LOU. Ruth and Gehrig, respectively. Numbers 3 and 4 on their jerseys and on your Yankees lineup card.
8. Legally prevents: ESTOPs.
9. Justice Kagan: ELENA.
10. Cymbal sound?: SOFT C.
11. "Friday I'm in Love" band, with "The": CURE. A British band that scored a top 10 pop hit with that song. No idea. Perps.
12. Saved, in a way: ON CD.
13. Holiday song: NOEL.
19. "Ah, I see what you meant": OH, THAT.
21. Household cleaning brand: TILEX.
24. Dolphins Hall of Famer Larry: CSONKA. Talk about brute force. The big bruising fullback was the featured running back in the ball-control ground-game offense of Don Shula's undefeated 1972 Miami Dolphins. Jim Kiick and fleet-footed Mercury Morris shared the halfback duties.
25. Japanese mushrooms: ENOKIs.
26. More substantial: MEATIER.
30. "Will this work for you?": IS IT OK ?
31. French star: ETOILE. étoile definition is - a star or a pattern in the shape of a star. Merriam-Webster.
32. Longtime breath freshener: SEN-SEN. Me too, Carrie, me too.
34. Back to a mate: AFT. As in the stern (back) of a ship and a crewman (mate).
35. Dorm, briefly: RES. Residential quarters.
36. Gasteyer of "SNL" (1996-2002): ANA. What do Ana Gasteyer, Jane Curtain, Brad Hall, Gary Kroeger, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Seth Meyers all have in common ? They are all former members of SNL that attended Northwestern University.
37. Network for film buffs: TCM. Turner Classic Movies.
39. Chocolatey Post cereal: OREOOS.
40. Apple models: IMACs.
45. Declining due to age: SENILE.
48. "Grr!": I'M MAD.
49. Comic Denis: LEARY.
50. Biblical mount: HOREB.
51. "The bad news is ... ": I FEAR. Spellcheck can only do so much. The user still needs to have a clue. This one probably didn't make it out of the first round in the school's spelling bee.
52. It might have a champion: CAUSE.
53. Sound __: BITE.
54. Score after deuce: AD IN.
55. Monopoly card: DEED.
58. Mexican pair: DOS. uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, diez.
60. __ roles: SEX. Gender roles.
61. Inventor Whitney: ELI. The History of Interchangeable Parts in the Industrial Revolution
62. Summer hrs.: DST.
Here's the grid:
Here is more detailed information.
18. Power of a Hummer?: UTE FORCE. Brute force
23. Enormous card revealed at end of magician's routine?: ACE FOR IMPACT. Brace for impact
38. Tattoo depicting the last woolly mammoth?: INK OF EXTINCTION. Brink of extinction
47. Avian mascot on a refueling vessel?: OILER CHICKEN. Broiler chicken
57. Hotel employee who only works one day a month?: IDES MAID. Brides maid
68. Subject of a 2016 U.K. referendum, and a hint to five puzzle answers: BREXIT. Parse it as BR Exit.
I liked this puzzle. Drop the Br from the commonly known phrases and redefine the remnants.
Initially couldn't figure out any of the theme answers due to good cluing and a few crossing unknowns. Then got IDES MAID but didn't think too much about it. A few moments later, got BREXIT and then knew the game. Add Br back in and fill in the rest of the common phrase. Nice !
This is Mark's fifth puzzle. One each year starting in 2016. I looked back at each.
"C Battery" Sunday March 26, 2016
"Three Little Letters" Wednesday April 5, 2017
"Iron In" Friday September 28, 2018
"Code Crackers" Sunday July 14, 2019
Mark is a chemistry professor at the University of British Columbia. Using my code cracking skills (not very refined), I see a pattern:
- Add C (the chemical element symbol for Carbon).
- Add Fe (the chemical element symbol for Iron).
- Drop Br (the chemical element symbol for Bromine).
I don't recall the Friday puzzle and had no comments that day, but of the other three it appears I only aced one. It would have been one for four if not for perp saves on SPIFF, ON THE DL, ETOILE and SEN-SEN.
Hope you had fun solving it !
Across:
1. Big divides: CHASMs. Ideological divides: Schisms.
7. Vat sediment: LEES. Dregs. Speaking of remnants...
11. Swindler: CON.
14. Aid, as a fallen teammate: HELP UP. And, 23D: Give a hand: ASSIST.
15. Munch Museum city: OSLO. Dedicated to the life and works of the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. The new museum opens in the fall of this year.
16. Crazy Eights relative: UNO.
17. Connected: ONLINE.
20. Greek group: FRAT.
22. Discreetly, in slang: ON THE DL. Down Low.
27. Form fig.: SSN.
28. Fictional anchor Nessman: LES.
29. Goes apace: HIEs.
33. "Your point being?": SOO. An informal, and perhaps confrontational or condescending "What is your point ?" Elongate so. Why drag it out ?
34. __ 51: AREA.
36. The slightest bit: A TASTE.
41. Avoids: SKIRTs. Sidesteps.
42. Muslim leader: IMAM.
43. Carol contraction: TIS. No, Tinbeni, the lyrics to "Deck The Halls" do not have the verse, "Tis the season to drink Stoli" but it does have a nice ring to it.
44. Immobilize with a charge: TASE.
45. "Moby-Dick" setting: SEA. Hardly a favorite here.
46. Bullring bravo: OLE.
Ole wore both of his winter jackets when he painted his house last July. The directions on the can said "put on two coats".
Sven says to Ole "I found dis pen, is it yours?"
Ole replies, "Don't know, give it here"
He then tries it and says, "Yes it is"
Sven asks "How do you know?"
Ole replies, "Dat's my handwriting!"
53. Three on a match, they say: BAD OMEN. Bad luck is what I knew.
56. Ikea purchase: SOFA. Some of their brands include Kivik, Ektorp, Klippan, Friheten and Balkarp. These are the kinds of words I would need if I were creating a crossword.
59. Acted greenly?: REUSED.
63. It usually needs breaking: TIE. Last year's Scripps National Spelling Bee ended in an 8-way tie. The final eight went 20 straight rounds of spelling without any errors. The Bee simply ran out of predetermined words to sufficiently challenge these children. Each co-champion took home the $50K first place prize. The Bee is taking steps to reduce the number of entrants to the final, and searching for new lists of words that are even harder to spell.
What word in the dictionary is always spelled incorrectly ?
64. 1968 self-named folk album: ARLO. Arlo Guthrie, known for singing songs of protest and about social injustice. - Wikipedia.
65. Stands in a studio: EASELs. Bob Ross used them on his program...
66. Wrap up: END. "That's a cut !"
67. Changes to green, say: DYEs. Sounds Eco.
Down:
1. Comic Margaret: CHO. Not my cuppa.
2. Egg producer: HEN.
3. The lot: ALL. Lock, stock and barrel. Everything.
4. Calvin's spaceman alter ego, in comics: SPIFF. Spaceman Spiff at Fandom.
5. Literature Nobelist Alice: MUNRO. "Munro’s stories reveal her as a consummate artist who is without question among the most accomplished masters of the short story." - Nobelprize.orjg
6. Weapon for Goliath: SPEAR. Asparagus, broccoli or pickle ?
7. Teammate of Babe: LOU. Ruth and Gehrig, respectively. Numbers 3 and 4 on their jerseys and on your Yankees lineup card.
8. Legally prevents: ESTOPs.
9. Justice Kagan: ELENA.
10. Cymbal sound?: SOFT C.
11. "Friday I'm in Love" band, with "The": CURE. A British band that scored a top 10 pop hit with that song. No idea. Perps.
12. Saved, in a way: ON CD.
13. Holiday song: NOEL.
19. "Ah, I see what you meant": OH, THAT.
21. Household cleaning brand: TILEX.
24. Dolphins Hall of Famer Larry: CSONKA. Talk about brute force. The big bruising fullback was the featured running back in the ball-control ground-game offense of Don Shula's undefeated 1972 Miami Dolphins. Jim Kiick and fleet-footed Mercury Morris shared the halfback duties.
25. Japanese mushrooms: ENOKIs.
26. More substantial: MEATIER.
30. "Will this work for you?": IS IT OK ?
31. French star: ETOILE. étoile definition is - a star or a pattern in the shape of a star. Merriam-Webster.
32. Longtime breath freshener: SEN-SEN. Me too, Carrie, me too.
34. Back to a mate: AFT. As in the stern (back) of a ship and a crewman (mate).
35. Dorm, briefly: RES. Residential quarters.
36. Gasteyer of "SNL" (1996-2002): ANA. What do Ana Gasteyer, Jane Curtain, Brad Hall, Gary Kroeger, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Seth Meyers all have in common ? They are all former members of SNL that attended Northwestern University.
37. Network for film buffs: TCM. Turner Classic Movies.
39. Chocolatey Post cereal: OREOOS.
40. Apple models: IMACs.
45. Declining due to age: SENILE.
48. "Grr!": I'M MAD.
49. Comic Denis: LEARY.
50. Biblical mount: HOREB.
51. "The bad news is ... ": I FEAR. Spellcheck can only do so much. The user still needs to have a clue. This one probably didn't make it out of the first round in the school's spelling bee.
52. It might have a champion: CAUSE.
53. Sound __: BITE.
54. Score after deuce: AD IN.
55. Monopoly card: DEED.
58. Mexican pair: DOS. uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, diez.
60. __ roles: SEX. Gender roles.
61. Inventor Whitney: ELI. The History of Interchangeable Parts in the Industrial Revolution
62. Summer hrs.: DST.
Here's the grid:
Note from C.C.:
Just another reminder for the Cru Dinner again, which will be held on Friday, March 20, 2020 (6:00pm to 8:00pm) and officially kick off the 43rd ACPT. The space is limited, so please contact with Mike Alpern as
soon as possible. Mike's email address is: alpernm@aol.com
Feb 27, 2020
Thursday, February 27th 2020 Debra Hamel
Theme: Compass Pinots - I mean pitons - no, wait, piston? Anagrams of the primary compass points modify a well-known directional phrase; and hinted at by the circled N, E, S, W at the center of the puzzle.
17A. Authentic piece of a holy relic?: TRUE THORN. True North. The magnetic inclination (the difference between True North and Magnetic North) changes over time and also depends on where you are on the globe, but if you were standing at the North Pole and pulled out a compass, it would point you towards Ellesmere Island in northern Canada, more than 300 miles away.
58A. Biblical pronouns read by James Earl Jones?: DEEP THOUS. Deep South.
11D. Place reserved for one reconciling a dispute?: MIDDLE SEAT. Middle East. Funnily, the middle seat occupant on the airplane sometimes is the cause of a dispute over the armrest.
28D. Unwelcome leftovers?: THE OLD STEW. The Old West. Depends how old. Some stews get better left for a couple of days to let the flavors develop. Obviously, there's a tipping point :)
Right then, let's dig into this one. The anagrams don't seem forced in the four theme entries which is great, Debra did have a clever observation that there are anagrams to be had; and the circled letters highlighted in the grid do give you a nudge towards finding the compass points. A great way to solve an anagram is to write the letters in a circle; perhaps that was a subtle hint too, I'm not sure if this was Debra's intention. Maybe I'm reading too much into that, but I liked it.
Now, let's get to a couple of niggles - I'm thinking that if you're going to use "THE old west" you should also have "THE deep south" and "THE Middle East". These don't really stand on their own, unlike "True North" which doesn't need the definite article. I like consistency and to me this falls a little short. Also, if you're going to use "?" in the clue as the device to hint at the theme entries, you absolutely shouldn't have a clue like 20A. Your mileage may vary, naturally.
Moving right along ...
Across:
1. Ottoman bigwigs: AGAS
5. Wildly: AMOK. Amok is a funny word, you only ever see it paired with "run". I suppose "walking amok" doesn't have the same ring to it.
9. Peaks: ACMES
14. At hand: NIGH
15. Animated explorer: DORA
16. Patterned fabric: TOILE
19. Comedian Izzard: EDDIE. One of my favorite stand-up comics, I've linked to him before. How Britain built its Empire (TV-MA for language).
20. Sound investments?: STEREOS. See intro comment.
21. Like some deliveries: SAME-DAY
23. Indy guide: PACE CAR. Nice clue - "Lonely Planet" would be my first guess, despite having way too many letters. Since 2002, Chevrolet has had the exclusive rights to provide the pace car at the Indianapolis 500, they've all been Corvettes or Camaros, unsuprisingly. I wouldn't want to pace a field of IndyCars in a Chevy Spark.
25. She walked into Rick's gin joint: ILSA. "Play it, Sam".
26. Disastrous: FATAL Yep. Pretty much covers it.
29. Comedian Garofalo: JANEANE. Thank you, crosses.
31. Folk legend Phil: OCHS
32. __ Jose: SAN. Do you know the way?
33. Connects with: TIES TO
36. Arles article: UNE. It seems a shame to consign Arles to a crossword clue. I lived there for a few weeks, and who doesn't appreciate a nice Roman adqueduct?
37. __ West Records: Nashville label: NEW. Thank you, crosses.
38. Rosy-fingered goddess who rises in the east: EOS, Thank you, crosswords.
39. AirPod spot: EAR. Pops up again.
40. Get back in business: RE-OPEN
42. Product prefix that evokes winter: SNO-
43. Die down: WANE
44. Herbie, in Disney films: LOVE BUG
46. Outset: GET-GO
47. They don't last: FADS
49. Part of Curaçao: CEDILLA. The diacritical mark under the "C". The spendidly-named map-maker Heironymus Cock named it "Quraçao" on his 1562 map of the region, but that variant didn't catch on, so Curaçao it is.
51. Rather: INSTEAD
53. Apparel brand with a spinnaker logo: NAUTICA
57. Mesh: FIT IN
60. Red-pencil: EMEND. I had the first "E" already in place, so I wasn't tempted by AMEND.
61. December 24 and 31: EVES
62. "At Last" singer James: ETTA. A lovely song.
63. Georgia team, in sports headlines: DAWGS. Bulldogs, to give them their formal name.
64. Take a chance: DARE
65. Hoarse laugh: RASP
Down:
1. Tiny colonists: ANTS
2. Structural engineering piece: GIRT. Thank you, crosses. Want to know your studs and joists from your girts? Here you go ..
3. Chills and fever: AGUE
4. Tibetan leaders: SHERPAS. Not the Dalai Lamas then. I'm not sure I'd call a sherpa a leader, but I guess they are in the mountain guiding sense.
5. Specially formed: AD HOC
6. Saskatchewan city with a 34-foot animal statue named Mac at its tourist info center: MOOSE JAW. Here's Mac, with his "cute" Lego model which looks to be about eight feet tall!
7. NHL great Bobby: ORR
8. Dodge City native: KANSAN
9. "Up and __!": AT 'EM! Funny, I talked about this last week - we had "Up and About" then.
10. Cough medicine ingredient: CODEINE
12. Inventor Howe: ELIAS. He invented and patented the lockstitch sewing machine, and was involved in a protracted lawsuit for five years with Isaac Singer, who was producing and selling machines which violated Howe's patents. Howe won, and made a lot of money over the years with royalties from Singer. He was granted a patent in 1851 for an "automatic, continuous clothing closure", the zipper as we know it today. He didn't exploit the invention, possibly because he was making money from the sewing machine royalties.
13. "Peace out": SEE YA!
18. Marsh duck: TEAL. They can't walk straight, but they can fly in a corkscrew motion at speeds in excess of 50 mph. That's some achievement! The English expression "drunk as a duck" refers to the teal's characteristic waddle on land.
22. Schoolyard retort: ARE TOO!
24. U.S. neighbor to the north: CAN.
26. One of two in Hank Aaron's uniform number: FOUR. There's a mint-condition "Hammerin' Hank" 1954 rookie card on eBay at the moment going for $37,500 if you're interested!
27. Proactiv+ target: ACNE
30. First words in an alphabet book: A IS ... for ...
32. Largest of New York's Finger Lakes: SENECA. I don't know any of the Finger Lakes off the top of my head, but I had enough letters from the crosses to fill this in without a thought.
34. Tart taste: TANG
35. Mega Stuf cookie: OREO
37. Great Basin st.: NEV. National Park in eastern Nevada close to the Utah border.
38. One may be civil: ENGINEER. I used to go to football matches back in England with a friend who was a civil engineer. His language was anything but civil when his team was losing (which was often!)
41. Message board item: POSTING
42. South, in Avignon: SUD
43. Local news segment: WEATHER
45. Settled in for the night, with "down": BEDDED
46. Surfeit: GLUT
47. Fluted on the march: FIFED. I fell for the "PIPED" trap at first, but didn't take long to correct it.
48. Jungian inner self: ANIMA. I think I knew this, but the crosses filled it in for me.
50. Momentary error: LAPSE
52. Fades to black: ENDS
54. Bit: IOTA
55. Stops shooting: CUTS. I like that movie and TV directors still have megaphones; I saw a lot in use when I worked on the lot at Warner Bros.
56. "Stat!": ASAP!
59. Gabor of "Green Acres": EVA. Her sister, Magda, was briefly married to George Sanders, who had been previously married to the third sister, Zsa Zsa. Keepin' it in the family!
I think that about covers it for today. Here's the grid, with the circled "compass rose" in the center.
Steve
17A. Authentic piece of a holy relic?: TRUE THORN. True North. The magnetic inclination (the difference between True North and Magnetic North) changes over time and also depends on where you are on the globe, but if you were standing at the North Pole and pulled out a compass, it would point you towards Ellesmere Island in northern Canada, more than 300 miles away.
58A. Biblical pronouns read by James Earl Jones?: DEEP THOUS. Deep South.
11D. Place reserved for one reconciling a dispute?: MIDDLE SEAT. Middle East. Funnily, the middle seat occupant on the airplane sometimes is the cause of a dispute over the armrest.
28D. Unwelcome leftovers?: THE OLD STEW. The Old West. Depends how old. Some stews get better left for a couple of days to let the flavors develop. Obviously, there's a tipping point :)
Right then, let's dig into this one. The anagrams don't seem forced in the four theme entries which is great, Debra did have a clever observation that there are anagrams to be had; and the circled letters highlighted in the grid do give you a nudge towards finding the compass points. A great way to solve an anagram is to write the letters in a circle; perhaps that was a subtle hint too, I'm not sure if this was Debra's intention. Maybe I'm reading too much into that, but I liked it.
Now, let's get to a couple of niggles - I'm thinking that if you're going to use "THE old west" you should also have "THE deep south" and "THE Middle East". These don't really stand on their own, unlike "True North" which doesn't need the definite article. I like consistency and to me this falls a little short. Also, if you're going to use "?" in the clue as the device to hint at the theme entries, you absolutely shouldn't have a clue like 20A. Your mileage may vary, naturally.
Moving right along ...
Across:
1. Ottoman bigwigs: AGAS
5. Wildly: AMOK. Amok is a funny word, you only ever see it paired with "run". I suppose "walking amok" doesn't have the same ring to it.
9. Peaks: ACMES
14. At hand: NIGH
15. Animated explorer: DORA
16. Patterned fabric: TOILE
19. Comedian Izzard: EDDIE. One of my favorite stand-up comics, I've linked to him before. How Britain built its Empire (TV-MA for language).
20. Sound investments?: STEREOS. See intro comment.
21. Like some deliveries: SAME-DAY
23. Indy guide: PACE CAR. Nice clue - "Lonely Planet" would be my first guess, despite having way too many letters. Since 2002, Chevrolet has had the exclusive rights to provide the pace car at the Indianapolis 500, they've all been Corvettes or Camaros, unsuprisingly. I wouldn't want to pace a field of IndyCars in a Chevy Spark.
25. She walked into Rick's gin joint: ILSA. "Play it, Sam".
26. Disastrous: FATAL Yep. Pretty much covers it.
29. Comedian Garofalo: JANEANE. Thank you, crosses.
31. Folk legend Phil: OCHS
32. __ Jose: SAN. Do you know the way?
33. Connects with: TIES TO
36. Arles article: UNE. It seems a shame to consign Arles to a crossword clue. I lived there for a few weeks, and who doesn't appreciate a nice Roman adqueduct?
37. __ West Records: Nashville label: NEW. Thank you, crosses.
38. Rosy-fingered goddess who rises in the east: EOS, Thank you, crosswords.
39. AirPod spot: EAR. Pops up again.
40. Get back in business: RE-OPEN
42. Product prefix that evokes winter: SNO-
43. Die down: WANE
44. Herbie, in Disney films: LOVE BUG
46. Outset: GET-GO
47. They don't last: FADS
49. Part of Curaçao: CEDILLA. The diacritical mark under the "C". The spendidly-named map-maker Heironymus Cock named it "Quraçao" on his 1562 map of the region, but that variant didn't catch on, so Curaçao it is.
51. Rather: INSTEAD
53. Apparel brand with a spinnaker logo: NAUTICA
57. Mesh: FIT IN
60. Red-pencil: EMEND. I had the first "E" already in place, so I wasn't tempted by AMEND.
61. December 24 and 31: EVES
62. "At Last" singer James: ETTA. A lovely song.
63. Georgia team, in sports headlines: DAWGS. Bulldogs, to give them their formal name.
64. Take a chance: DARE
65. Hoarse laugh: RASP
Down:
1. Tiny colonists: ANTS
2. Structural engineering piece: GIRT. Thank you, crosses. Want to know your studs and joists from your girts? Here you go ..
3. Chills and fever: AGUE
4. Tibetan leaders: SHERPAS. Not the Dalai Lamas then. I'm not sure I'd call a sherpa a leader, but I guess they are in the mountain guiding sense.
5. Specially formed: AD HOC
6. Saskatchewan city with a 34-foot animal statue named Mac at its tourist info center: MOOSE JAW. Here's Mac, with his "cute" Lego model which looks to be about eight feet tall!
7. NHL great Bobby: ORR
8. Dodge City native: KANSAN
9. "Up and __!": AT 'EM! Funny, I talked about this last week - we had "Up and About" then.
10. Cough medicine ingredient: CODEINE
12. Inventor Howe: ELIAS. He invented and patented the lockstitch sewing machine, and was involved in a protracted lawsuit for five years with Isaac Singer, who was producing and selling machines which violated Howe's patents. Howe won, and made a lot of money over the years with royalties from Singer. He was granted a patent in 1851 for an "automatic, continuous clothing closure", the zipper as we know it today. He didn't exploit the invention, possibly because he was making money from the sewing machine royalties.
13. "Peace out": SEE YA!
18. Marsh duck: TEAL. They can't walk straight, but they can fly in a corkscrew motion at speeds in excess of 50 mph. That's some achievement! The English expression "drunk as a duck" refers to the teal's characteristic waddle on land.
22. Schoolyard retort: ARE TOO!
24. U.S. neighbor to the north: CAN.
26. One of two in Hank Aaron's uniform number: FOUR. There's a mint-condition "Hammerin' Hank" 1954 rookie card on eBay at the moment going for $37,500 if you're interested!
27. Proactiv+ target: ACNE
30. First words in an alphabet book: A IS ... for ...
32. Largest of New York's Finger Lakes: SENECA. I don't know any of the Finger Lakes off the top of my head, but I had enough letters from the crosses to fill this in without a thought.
34. Tart taste: TANG
35. Mega Stuf cookie: OREO
37. Great Basin st.: NEV. National Park in eastern Nevada close to the Utah border.
38. One may be civil: ENGINEER. I used to go to football matches back in England with a friend who was a civil engineer. His language was anything but civil when his team was losing (which was often!)
41. Message board item: POSTING
42. South, in Avignon: SUD
43. Local news segment: WEATHER
45. Settled in for the night, with "down": BEDDED
46. Surfeit: GLUT
47. Fluted on the march: FIFED. I fell for the "PIPED" trap at first, but didn't take long to correct it.
48. Jungian inner self: ANIMA. I think I knew this, but the crosses filled it in for me.
50. Momentary error: LAPSE
52. Fades to black: ENDS
54. Bit: IOTA
55. Stops shooting: CUTS. I like that movie and TV directors still have megaphones; I saw a lot in use when I worked on the lot at Warner Bros.
56. "Stat!": ASAP!
59. Gabor of "Green Acres": EVA. Her sister, Magda, was briefly married to George Sanders, who had been previously married to the third sister, Zsa Zsa. Keepin' it in the family!
I think that about covers it for today. Here's the grid, with the circled "compass rose" in the center.
Steve
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