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

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Feb 22, 2024

Thursday, February 22, 2024, Amanda Cook, Kelly Richardson

 

Someone's in the
Kitchen With Dinah!


Today's offering by Amanda Cook and Kelly Richardson reminds me of a puzzle by David Alfred Bywaters that I reviewed a few years back, all about things found in a Victorian kitchen.  In this case the constructors treat us to 5 punny clues loosely describing kitchen utensils (no stars, circles, or reveal) ...

18A. Reporters who cover the multiple-recalls beat?: LEMON PRESS.  Reporters (PRESS) specializing in faulty cars (LEMONS).  Here's an unpunned LEMON PRESS ...
23A. Championship match for competitive waitstaff?: SERVING BOWL.  The competitive waitstaff make their living SERVING and the BOWL doubles as either the final game in a series or the coveted award to the winner.  Here's a real bowl we use for serving salads ...
35A. Party where sparks really fly?: ELECTRIC MIXER.  A party thrown by the Mean Girls?

51A. Zero-star review that goes fully scorched earth?: ROASTING PAN.  I viewed a number of celebrity ROASTINGS for this clue, but they were all so HOT that I was a afraid that Blogger would PAN them.

57A. Professional purveyor of gossip?: TEA PITCHER.  One of my granddaughters taught me that TEA in her generation is synonymous with gossip.  The problem with this fill however, is that there is really no such thing as a TEA PITCHER in the kitchen.  Tea is brewed in TEA POTS, e.g.
Tea Pot
However in the summer we use a tea pot to brew very strong tea, add sugar, lemon, and ice to it, and use this PITCHER to serve ICED TEA ...
Tea Pitcher
Here's the grid ...
 

Here's the rest ...


Across:


1. Octopus octet: ARMS.  This rare octopus would have been clued "Octopus nonet" ...
 

Nine armed octopus found off the coast of Japan
5. Unmoored: ASEA.

9. "Ready or not, here __!": I COME.  I guess I'm IT!

14. Potting soil base: PEATPEAT is an accumulation of partially decayed vegetation or organic matter. It is unique to natural areas called peatlands, bogs, mires, moors, or muskegs. Sphagnum moss, also called peat moss, is one of the most common components in peat, although many other plants can contribute.  Dried peat is still used in rural areas in countries like Ireland for heating and cooking.

15. Melodious cadence: LILT.  More than that, lilting is a form of traditional singing common in the Gaelic speaking areas of Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man, though singing styles like it occur in many other countries.


16. Opera star Callas: MARIA.   Maria Callas (born Maria Anna Cecilia Sofia Kalogeropoulos; December 2, 1923 – September 16, 1977) was an American-born Greek soprano who was one of the most renowned and influential opera singers of the 20th century.  Here she sings Schubert's AVE MARIA ...

Lyrics w/translation

17. Anti-cruelty org.: PETASPCA fit as well, but didn't perp.  People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an American animal rights nonprofit organization based in Norfolk, Virginia (CSO to Jinx) and led by Ingrid Newkirk, its international president.  PETA says that its entities have more than 9 million members globally. 

18. [Theme clue]

20. Country star Haggard: MERLEMerle Ronald Haggard (April 6, 1937 – April 6, 2016) was an American country music singer, songwriter, guitarist, and fiddler.  I don't think that MERLE and MARIA ever met.  Here he laments the passing of the good old days ...

22. In a clingy way: NEEDILY.

23. [Theme clue]

26. "Breaking Bad" law org.: DEADrug Enforcement Administration.

27. Flounder and Scuttle's friend: ARIEL.  Would you believe -- Flounder and Scuttle are controversial now?

28. "Yikes": OOF.

29. Beanie Babies, Tamagotchi, etc.: FADS

30. The Masters gp.: PGA.

31. Kept in a barrel: AGED.  A CSO to Chairman MOE.  He had a birthday just last week. 😁

33. "Knives Out" actress de Armas: ANA.  This may look like a spoiler, but the movie doesn't actually end the way it looks like it ends ...
35. [Theme clue]

40. General on a Chinese takeout menu: TSO.  Natasha shows you how to make your own.
General TSO's Chicken
41. Stylish: CHIC.

42. Understand: GET.

44. Blanchett of "Thor: Ragnarok": CATE.   CATE has come a long way since she played Galadriel in Middle Earth ...
47. __ culpa: MEA.  Today's Latin lesson: "My fault" -- e.g. this review is MEA CULPA.
 
48. Soaring apex predator: EAGLE.  Or a member of this rock band ...
And CSO to this early poster.

50. Actress Longoria: EVA.  Eva Jacqueline Longoria BastΓ³n (nΓ©e Longoria; born March 15, 1975) is an American actress, producer, director and business woman.  Apparently she started off young and restless and then became desperate.
Eva Longoria
51. [Theme clue]

54. "Dinner!": LETS EAT.  May I suggest 40A.

56. Meted (out): DEALT.

57. [Theme clue]

60. Conceited: VAIN.  Cue Carly  ...
She says this song is actually about 3 men,

62. Finalize, as a comic strip: INK IN.  A heavenly CSO to Don Carlton, one of the greatest INKERS of all time ...
Don Carlton
December 28, 1936 – May 16, 2023
63. Hindu festival: HOLI.  Here's the filming of the Holi Scene from the Good Karma Hospital (one of the greatest series of all time) ...
And a CSO to Picard who has celebrated
many HOLI festivals
64. Desire: ENVY.

65. Nickels and dimes: COINS.

66. Bookbinder's tools: AWLS.

67. Mushroom part: STEM.  While looking for the diagram below, I noticed that almost all of mushrooms shown were poisonous, although only a small percentage of those in the wild actually are.  If you can tell an oak leaf from a maple leaf you can probably identify the edible ones.  When I used to collect edible mushrooms here's the book I used. The basic rule is: IF YOU CAN'T POSITIVELY IDENTIFY THAT IT'S AN EDIBLE SPECIES - DON'T EAT IT! (FULL DISCLOSURE: I'm not a mycologist, I just play one on the Corner πŸ˜€).
Parts of a Mushroom
This reminds me that my close friends in high school
used to call me Bilious Mycelium πŸ˜ƒ
 
Down:

1. Oft-shared restaurant order, informally: APP.  And you may be able to order your APP ahead of time with your cellphone APP.

2. Surface again: REEMERGE.  Cicada's REEMERGE every 13 or 17 years depending on the brood and what part of the country they inhabit.  Here's everything you need to know, although it doesn't tell you how to escape them -- other than leaving your state for a couple of weeks.

3. Relevant: MATERIAL.

4. Treat a fever, per dubious folk wisdom: STARVE.  The bad news.  The good news is you can FEED a cold.  [Informal survey]: hand up if you've had all of your COVID vaccinations and haven't gotten a cold since.  Knock on wood, I haven't ✋.

5. "Grey's Anatomy" executive producer Debbie: ALLEN.  She's not only a producer of the show, but she also acts in it.  But those roles sound like the least of her accomplishments.
Debbie Allen
Kennedy Center Arts Honoree
6. "Sprechen __ Deutsch?": SIE.  Today's German lesson: "Do you speak German".  A CSO to our dearly departed Spitzboov.  I speak ein bishchen, but read it better -- most of which I learned by listening to German art songs (Lieder), an acquired taste.  Did you know that Franz Schubert wrote over 600 songs (not to mention tons of other stuff) in his short life of 31 years?  Here's the late, great Fritz Wunderlich singing Schubert's An die Musik (ODE to Music -- what other Lied would I play in a crossword puzzle πŸ˜€) ...
7. Blight-stricken tree species: ELM.

8. Many, many: A TON OF.

9. Urge: IMPEL.

10. Penalize in soccer: CARD.  Or a CSO to Ray - O.  😁

11. Tater Tots maker: OREIDA.  A portmanteau of Oregon and Idaho, the great potato producing states.

12. Hoodwinked: MISLED.

13. GPA-boosting classes: EASY A'S.

19. Fresh: NEW.

21. Purple blossoms: LILACS.  An image from the Walt Witman poem When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomed, an homage to Abraham Lincoln.

23. Tree product: SAP.

24. Movie trailer?: GOER.

25. Dress design options: BODICES.  A BODICE is an article of clothing traditionally for women and girls, covering the torso from the neck to the waist. The term typically refers to a specific type of upper garment common in Europe during the 16th to the 18th century, or to the upper portion of a modern dress to distinguish it from the skirt and sleeves. The name bodice is etymologically an odd plural spelling of "body" and comes from an older garment called a pair of bodies (because the garment was originally made in two separate pieces that fastened together, frequently by lacing).
Bodice
29. Once-common office fixture: FAX. Short for "facsimile", a FAX uses the phone system to transmit an actual image of a document, especially useful for signed documents.  Some medical facilities require them, e.g for the transmission of prescriptions.

32. Classic Pontiac: GTO.

33. Bordeaux buddy: AMI.  French for "friend".  The grape varietals Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc are also Bordeaux buddies.

34. __ Creed: church recitation: NICENE.  The NICENE Creed,  also called the Creed of Constantinople, is the defining statement of belief of Nicene or mainstream Christianity and in those Christian denominations that adhere to it. The original Nicene Creed was first adopted at the First Council of Nicaea in 325 and was later amended in 381.  It is recited by the congregation at every Sunday Catholic Mass, immediately after the scripture readings and the homily.

36. Avignon summer: ETE.  More French.

37. Catch up, maybe: CHAT.  Often done by texting these days or in Internet CHAT rooms.

38. Parmigiana choice: EGGPLANTHere's a recipe.  We used to make it, but now I'm on a low salt  diet and salt is required to de-moisturize the eggplant slices.  It's a lot easier to make with yellow squash or zucchini (particularly useful if you don't keep an eye on them in the garden and they morph into Italian baseball bats!).
Eggplant Parmesan
39. Second cousin, e.g.: RELATIVE.

43. Big __ Conference: TEN.  The Big Ten Conference is the United States' oldest Division I college athletic conference. Most of its 14 member institutions are in the Midwestern United States. The conference footprint will expand to the country's Pacific coast in 2024.  Sounds like it's
 
and getting BIGGER

44. Like the Irish language: CELTIC.  Closely related to Irish are the CELTIC languages spoken in Wales, Brittany, Scotland, Cornwall, and the Isle of Man (see 15A).

45. Maker of Positively Radiant skin care products: AVEENO.

46. Japanese food prep method that translates to "pounded": TATAKI.  I thought it just meant "seared", as that's what Tuna TATAKI is advertised as in the sushi restaurants we frequent.  Perhaps Renee can shed some light on this.

47. Green tea ice cream ingredient: MATCHA.  I started adding a few tablespoons of MATCHA powder to my smoothies and within a few days my blood pressure was elevated.  When I stopped using it the BP went back to normal. Teri later verified that it has this effect on BP.

49. Mezcal plants: AGAVES.  Mezcal  is a distilled alcoholic beverage made from any type of agave plant. The word mezcal comes from a Nahuatl word meaning "oven-cooked agave".  Agaves are endemic to the Americas and are found globally as ornamental plants.  Apparently agave is becoming a popular crop with farmers in drought stricken areas of California.

51. Harness straps: REINS.

52. Nondairy milk: OAT.

53. Elba of "Thor: Ragnarok": IDRIS.  I think Amanda and Kelly must have a "Thor" spot for RagnarΓΆk (see 44A), which I just discovered is a Scandinavian word for "Doom of the Gods".  This is a blatant ripoff of Richard Wagner's Twilight of the Gods, the final opera in his epic Ring Cycle.  I hope Marvel Studios is paying his estate royalties! πŸ˜€

58. "No matter __ you slice it ... ": HOW.  No matter HOW you slice it, this review is just about finished!

59. Tetris shape: ELL. You can play this while the clock runs out (be sure to read the ABOUT TETRIS section on the addictive nature of this game before you start -- you may never make it to the comments section!)

61. Queens team, in box scores: NYMNew York Mets.

Cheers,
Bill

And as always, thanks to Teri for proof reading and for her constructive criticism.

waseeley


Feb 21, 2024

Wednesday, Feb 21st, 2024, Natalie Tran & Sean Ziebarth

GREATEST AMERICAN


Suddenly I'm up on top the world....

A fine puzzle that was a good challenge for me with some fresh clues, and nary a name in the mix~!  (OK, there was one*).  I know that the appearance of circles puts a fair number of people off; I'm OK with them - I didn't really notice the circles, but as I got close to finishing, I only had a partial fill for the reveal at 55A. Despite knowing that the word was spelled wrong, I was trying to figure out what "hero(e)s AND _ich" meant.  And then the V-8 can - it needed to be parsed the other way....I believe this may be a debut construction for Natalie Tran.

20. Make a fool of: PUT ONE OVER ON - Neo, hero of "The Matrix" movies

34. Hide-and-seek exclamation: THERE YOU ARE~! - Rey, hero(ine) of the three "Star Wars" second series of sequels, from Disney, not Lucasfilm

42. Determines the age of, as archaeological finds: CARBON DATES - Bond, James Bond - 'nuf said - and a gratuitous image for C.C. of the last actor to portray him....

IMO, he was the best - but I was born 10yrs after the franchise began

55. Sub, and an apt description of 20-, 34-, or 42-Across: HERO SANDWICH - hero, hoagie, grinder, Italian, and a couple I was not familiar with - wedge and spuckie - are alternate names for the submarine "dish", depending on your region

I guess that makes these people the "meat", huh~?

And Away We Go~!

ACROSS:

1. Glow of virtue: HALO

5. Fort Knox supply: GOLD - speaking of Bond, Auric the villain was going to contaminate the GOLD stored at Fort Knox with nuclear fallout in the third installment film "Goldfinger"

9. Wet: RAINY - I like rainy days; we get a LOT of them here in NE CT

14. __ of March: IDES - Iron Maiden would warm up before a concert with this instrumental


The Ides of March

15. 57-Down for a diva: ARIA

16. Run onstage?: EMCEE

17. Some inbox attachments: PDFs - we had this yesterday - Portable Document Format; I thought it was "PRINTable"

18. Change course suddenly: VEER

19. Puts together: MAKES

23. Decline, with "out": OPT

24. Sounds of pain: OWs -and- 46. Sounds of relief: AHs -and- 11D. Grossed-out reaction: ICK -and- 30D. Verbal stumbles: ERs - there's a lot of "noise" in this grid today~!

25. Pencil topper: ERASER

29. Air filter acronym: HEPA - High Efficiency Particulate Air (filter)

31. Christmas poem contraction: 'TWAS

33. Smooching on the kiss cam, say: PDA - Public Display (of) Affection

37. Bae: LUV - cringe - I have gotten "bae" twice now as a guest blogger; I'd rather have "ALOE"


38. Charged particles: IONS

39. Joan of __: ARC - Jane Wiedlin, guitarist from the "Go-Go's", played Joan in "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure"


40. Harmful habit: VICE

41. Big name in anonymity: DOE - Family members John and Jane; they work in the morgue

47. In case that's the case: IF SO

48. Masseur's supply: OILS - How about body paint~?  Look closely; it's two women - let's hope it's acrylic paint~!

Artist Johannes StΓΆtter

49. Astronaut Ellen Ochoa, for one: LATINA

51. Sock part: TOE

52. Seasoned pro: VETeran

59. Wedding figure: GROOM

62. Invalidate: VOID

63. Pasta __ checca: trattoria dish: ALLA

64. Animated British piglet of kid's TV: PEPPA - I knew this - I've watched many an episode with my buddy's two-year old daughter


65. Feminine Spanish pronoun: ELLA

66. Shutter section: SLAT - meh.  Part would have been better

67. Fleming subjects: SPIES - IMHO, "Fleming" makes this a dupe with the theme - anything other than the author of James BOND would have been more appropriate

68. In someone's business: NOSY

69. Loved ones blessed at the Feast of St. Francis: PETS - filled via perps; it was not until I wrote up the blog did I see this clue/answer


DOWN:

1. River-dwelling mammal related to whales and dolphins: HIPPO - I tried OTTER first; Bzzzt~!

2. Tally: ADD UP

3. Flew off on one's own: LEFT THE NEST - Eleven-letter non-theme fill

4. Bone, in Italian: OSSO

5. Collapsed: GAVE WAY

Gallopin' Gertie - The Tacoma Narrows Bridge, 1940 - poor Tubby

6. Double Stuf treats: OREOS - I like these cookies, but my spellcheck doesn't like this plural

*7. Actor Schreiber: LIEV - this guy

8. Be bold enough: DARE


9. Guilty feeling: REMORSE

10. Kitchen appliance brand: AMANA

12. Wedding page word: NÉE

13. "Let's": YES - the "Y" was my last fill - "let us, tomato"

21. "Forget it": "NOPE."

22. Foster: REAR

26. Potential "destination" for a troubled relationship: SPLITSVILLE - now this clue/answer I like; I can't check if this is the first time it's made it into a crossword puzzle - and it's the other 11-letter non-theme fill

27. Elicit: EDUCE - I do the DOWN clues first; tried EVOKE first; 40% correct

28. Gushes: RAVES - not FLOWS; a mere 20%

31. __Tax: Intuit software package: TURBO - 'Tis the season~!

32. City on the Brazos: WACO - Here's a bridge that did NOT collapse

Check out this website

34. Word with pool or basin: TIDAL

35. Ruckus: HOO-HA - ado/to-do/hullabaloo - free-for-all/a rhyme for you~!

36. Dinghy duo: OARS
It's TWO oars, they're just, uh, joined....
40. Actor Kilmer: VAL

42. Projection places: CINEMAS

43. Hardly a hop, skip, and a jump away: AFAR

44. Time when shadows are shortest: NOONDAY - spellcheck thinks this is just fine, but where I'm from, no one says "noonday" - it's just "noon"

45. Petered out: DIED

50. Optimist's words: "I HOPE"

51. Follows surreptitiously: TAILS - Still making my way through the "Nero Wolfe" detective series; about once every other book, Archie, or Saul Panzer, who is the best at it, "tails" some character

53. Brilliance: Γ‰CLAT - I knew there was a "tk" over a vowel in the word somewhere....

54. Dean Martin's "__ Amore": THAT'S

56. Baker: OVEN - slight misdirection; another clever clue/answer

57. Song for one: SOLO

58. Insect that first appeared in the Jurassic era: WASP - I did not know this

59. Family docs: GPs - General Practitioners; does it bother anyone else that a musician can "perform", while a doctor can only "practice"~?

60. Sales agt.: REP

61. Brand at a nail salon: OPI - becoming a crossword staple that's catching up with "ERA"

Splynter





Feb 20, 2024

Tuesday, February 20, 2024 Eric Rollfing

Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.

18-Across. *  Many stadium screens: JUMBOTRONS

The Jumbotron at Death Valley at LSU.

24-Across. *  Seven-star pattern in Ursa Major: BIG DIPPER.

39-Across. *  Curly-haired dogs: STANDARD POODLES.

53-Across. *  Skimpy garment credited to fashion designer Mary Quant: MINI SKIRT.  The Mini Skirt seemed so radical at the time.  Its designer, Mary Quant (Feb. 11, 1930 ~ Apr. 13, 2023) died just last year at age 93.

And the unifier:

60-Across. Cornerstone of the KonMari method, and the progression found at the starts of the answers to the starred clues: DOWN-SIZING.  Hand up if you immediately recognized the KonMarie method.

Across:
1. Stretched the truth: LIED.

5. Takes a break: RESTS.

10. GarΓ§on's workplace: CAFΓ‰.  Today's French lesson.



14. Actress Kendrick: ANNA.  Anna Kendrick (nΓ©e Anna Cooke Kendrick; b. Aug. 9, 1985) starred in the Pitch Perfect film series, some of which were filmed on the LSU campus.  [Name # 1.]


15. Love, in French: AMOUR.  More of today's French lesson.

16. Operatic high point: ARIA.

17. Folk singer Joan: BAEZ.  Joan Chandos Baez (b. Jan. 9, 1941) visited us last Tuesday also.  [Name # 2.]


20. GI field fare: MREs.  Meals Ready to Eat.  Don't they look yummy - Not!


22. Phoenix suburb: MESA.

23. Fannie __: federal mortgage agency: MAE.

27. Little League precursor: T-BALL.  //  And 24-Down. Clubs for 27-Across: BATS.


29. "__ thoughts?": ANY.

30. Vegetable in a pod: PEA.


31. Fr. holy woman: STE.  A continuation of today's French lesson.  A holy French woman would be a Saint.

32. Ballet garb: TUTU.

34. Piece of advice: TIP.

36. Insensitive, in a way: NON-PC.

43. Spreadsheet software: EXCEL.  I hate having to use this program.


44. "Low" rapper __ Rida: FLO.  I am not up on my rap musicians nor their music.  Apparently Low was a # 1 song in 2007.  Flo Rida (nΓ© Tramar Lacel Dillard; b. Sept. 16, 1979) is from Florida, hence is moniker.  [Name # 3.]


45. "Smooth Operator" singer: SADE.   Sade (nΓ©e Helen Folasade Adu; b. Jan. 15, 1959) is a Nigerian-born British musician.  She goes by Sade, which is a her Sade a shortened form of her Yoruba middle name, Folasade.  [Name # 4.]

46. Actor Pacino and singer Green: ALs.  Al Pacino (nΓ© Alfredo James Pacino; b. Apr. 25, 1940) portrayed Michael Corleone in The Godfather.   Last year, at age 83, he and his 29-year-old girlfriend had a baby boy.  Al Green (nΓ© Albert Leornes Greene; b. Apr. 13, 1946) was big in the 1970s.   [Names # 5 and 6.]

47. Alias letters: AKA.  Also Known As.

49. Summer shade: TAN.  My first thought was and ELM tree.

50. Nile Valley country: EGYPT.  //  And 48-Down. Snake once sacred in 50-Across: ASP.


56. Summer sign: LEO.  Hi, Leo III.  Come back!  We miss you.


57. "Firefly" actor Tudyk: ALAN.  I am not familiar with the television series Firefly which aired in the early 2000s.  Apparently it was a space Western drama that took place in 2517 on other planets and moons.  I didn't recognize the name of Alan Tudyk (nΓ© Alan Wray Tudyk; b. Mar. 16, 1971), but when I looked him up, I recognized his face.  [Name # 7.]


59. Brad of "Moneyball": PITT.  Brad Pitt (nΓ© William Bradley Pitt; Dec. 18, 1963) gained recognization after his appearance in the 1991 film Thelma and Louise.  [Name # 8.]


64. Draw (in): LURE.


66. Nurse Jackie portrayer Falco: EDIE.  Edie Falco (nΓ©e Edith Falco; b. July 5, 1963) also portrayed Carmela Soprano on The Sopranos.  [Name # 9.]


67. Spanish title: SEΓ‘OR.  Now it's time for today's Spanish lesson.

68. Poems of praise: ODES.

69. Wetlands plant: REED.


70. "Fire away!": ASK ME!

71. Flow slowly: SEEP.

Down:
1. R&D setting: LAB.  Research and Development.

2. "Almost ready": IN A MINUTE.


3. Fuel surcharge, e.g.: ENERGY TAX.

4. Stunned: DAZED.

5. "The Big Bang Theory" chum of Sheldon and Leonard: RAJ.  I never saw the attraction this show, but it was very popular.  [Name's # 10, 11 and 12, all fictional.]


6. 6-foot Aussie bird: EMU.  Emus make frequent guest appearances in the puzzles.

7. WWI battle site in France: SOMME.  Everything you wanted to know about the Battle of Somme but didn't know to ask.

8. Potato or yam: TUBER.

9. Low-budget hotels, for short: SROs.  I thought SRO stood for Standing Room Only, but in the case of low budget hotels, it means Single Room Occupancy.

10. Mustang or Pinto: CAR.  Also breeds of horses.

11. Enticing odor: AROMA.


12. End-of-term exam: FINAL.

13. Equipment used in oil production?: EASEL.  Cute misdirection.


19. Result of some needlework: TATTOO.

Why?

21. Opposite of guzzle: SIP.

25. Blossom parts: PETALS.

26. Duo: PAIR.

Iconic and dynamic duo.

28. Road curves: BENDS.

31. "Jersey Shore" nickname: SNOOKI.  Her given name is Nicole Elizabeth Polizzi (b. Nov. 23, 1987).  [Name # 13.]

33. Take the lid off: UNCAP.


35. Adobe creation: PDF.  Portable Document Format.

37. Insipid remark: PLATITUDE.

38. Source of fragrant wood: CEDAR TREE.  The flag of Lebanon has a Cedar Tree in the center.


40. Triangular river formations: DELTAs.  Everything you wanted to know about River Deltas but didn't know to ask.


41. Strategy: PLAN.

42. Inbox subfolder: SENT.

50. Respected leader: ELDER.

51. Rock with inner beauty: GEODE.  Loved this clue.


52. "That smarts!": YOWIE.

53. Some puzzle book offerings: MAZES.

54. How paper contracts are signed: IN INK.

55. Metric weights: KILOS.

58. Middle Simpson kid: LISA.  [Name # 14, fictional.]



61. Actor Beatty: NED.  Ned Beatty (nΓ© Ned Thomas Beatty; July 6, 1937 ~ June 13, 2021) was primarily a character actor.  He was in a lot of movies, but is probably most remembered for his role in Deliverance.  
[Name # 15.]


62. Snack, in slang: NOM.  Meh!

63. Higher ed hurdle: GRE.  As in the Graduate Record Examination.

65. Telepath's claim: ESP.  As in ExtraSensory Perception.

Here's the Grid:




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