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

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Nov 19, 2024

Tuesday November 19, 2024 C W Stewart

On the Home Stretch.  The circles are needed for today's puzzle.  A circle is progressively added to each theme answer to slowly spell out the word HOME.

17-Across. Big spender in Vegas: HIGH ROLLER.

25-Across. Extremely volatile situation: HORNETS NEST.

44-Across. Southern breakfast side dish: HOMINY GRITS.  I think Grits are an acquired taste.

60-Across. Sigh from a weary traveler, and an apt title for this puzzle: HOME AT LAST.

Across:
1. Tenant's payment: RENT.

5. "F" on a test, often: FALSE.  Not a failing mark, but a mark on a True/False test.

10. One-named "Believe" diva: CHER.  Cher (b. May 20, 1946), whose given name is Cherilyn Sarkisian,  is a singer and actress.  She is also known for her outlandish outfits.



14. "A Streetcar Named Desire" director Kazan: ELIA.  Elia Kazan (né Elias Kazantzoglou; Sept. 7, 1909 ~ Sept. 28, 2003) makes frequent guest appearances in the puzzles.  He was born in what was then known as Constantinople (now Istanbul), Turkey.  He is also known for naming names before the House Un-American Committee in the 1950s.


15. Like days of yore: OLDEN.

16. In robust health: HALE.

19. Land in a lake: ISLE.  I don't associate an isle being in a lake.  I think of an Isle being situated in a larger body of water.


20. Had a dinner date: ATE OUT.

21. TV cooking competition hosted by Kristen Kish: TOP CHEF.  Kristen Kish (b. Dec. 1, 1983) is an American chef known for winning the tenth season of Top Chef. She became the host of Top Chef:Wisconsin earlier this year.


23. Flat French hats: BERETS.


24. Loafer, for one: SHOE.
31. "You go, __!": GIRL.

35. Kanga's son: ROO.


36. Running total: TALLY.

37. Like two jacks in a deck of cards: ONE-EYED.


39. Drool: SLOBBER.

41. Ward (off): STAVE.

42. "I Like __": 1950s political slogan: IKE.  Dwight David Eisenhower (Oct. 14, 1890 ~ Mar. 28, 1969) was the 34th President of the United States.


43. "No Ordinary Love" singer: SADE.  Sade (née Helen Folasade Adu; b. Jan. 16, 1965), is a Nigerian-born British singer.  Her parents began calling her Sade, a shortened form of her Yoruba middle name, Folasade, hence, that is how she is known.


48. Art hub in New Mexico: TAOS.
49. Desert that covers most of North Africa: SAHARA.



54. Item in a makeup bag: COMPACT.  Some are very expensive.


58. Connect to a power supply: PLUG IN.

59. __ the hump: OVER.

63. Musical Auntie played by Angela Lansbury: MAME.  Dame Angela Brigid Lansbury (Oct. 16, 1925 ~ Oct. 11, 2022) was a British actress.  She played Mame on Broadway in 1966 and was awarded a Tony for her portrayal.  She is probably best known to younger audiences as portraying Jessica Fletcher on the television series Murder, She Wrote.


64. Levels in some subscription plans: TIERS.  A tiered subscription provides different levels of services or products at different price levels.  For example, some magazine subscriptions have one price for on-line issues, but a different price for on-line and hard copy issues.

65. To __: perfectly: A TEE.

66. Sound of a stone skimming failure: PLOP.  We had a nearly identical clue in last Thursday's puzzle.

67. Celebrities: STARS.

68. Email button: SEND.


Down:
1. Post-surgery regimen: REHAB.
2. Crème de la crème: ELITE.

3. Chad neighbor: NIGER.  Niger is a landlocked country in West Africa.  Chad is not its only neighbor.  It is bordered by Libya to the northeast, Chad to the east, Nigeria to the south, Benin and Burkina Faso to the southwest, Mali to the west, and Algeria to the northwest.  Its official name is the Republic of Niger.


4. Lake between the Silver State and the Golden State: TAHOE.  Lake Tahoe is a large freshwater lake in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, on the border of California and Nevada.

5. Tender after too much walking: FOOT SORE.

6. __-purpose flour: ALL.  Everything you ever wanted to know about All-Purpose Flour.


7. "Bad" cholesterol, for short: LDL.  Low-Density lipoprotein cholesterol, is the "bad" cholesterol.  It is the type of cholesterol that can build up in your arteries and increase your risk of heart disease and stroke.  High-Density Lipoprotein cholesterol is the "good" cholesterol.  HDL helps remove excess cholesterol from your body and lowers your risk of heart disease and stroke.  Everything you ever wanted to know about your body's cholesterol.

8. Get hot under the collar: SEETHE.

9. Plant securely: ENROOT.

10. Hip and stylish: CHIC.

11. Corned beef __: HASH.

12. Fashion magazine with a French name: ELLE.  Elle means She in French.


13. Big name in flip-flops and surfing apparel: REEF.  I was not familiar with this company.

18. The "R" of the Supreme Court's RBG: RUTH.  As in Ruth Bader Ginsberg (née Joan Ruth Bader; Mar. 15, 1933 ~ Sept. 18, 2020).  She joined the United States Supreme Court in 1993.


22. Green sauce: PESTO.  Yummers!

24. __-cone: icy treat: SNO.


26. Curtain holder: ROD.


27. Grabs: NABS.

28. Actor Idris: ELBA.  In 2016, Idris Elba (né Idrissa Akuna Elba; b. Sept. 6, 1973) mad Time magazine's list of 100 most influential people.


29. Winter coaster: SLED.

30. One of four on a British car: TYRE.

31. Gentle expression of surprise: GOSH.


32. Division word: INTO.

33. Printer's package: REAM.


34. Strauss of jeans: LEVI.  This is the third week in a row that jeans have appeared in a Tuesday puzzle.

38. Blabbermouth: YENTA.

39. Compete in a slalom: SKI.


40. "I don't think we want any!": LET'S PASS.

42. April 15 agcy.: IRS.  As in the Internal Revenue Service.
45. America's Cup vessels: YACHTS.


46. "Get cracking!": GO TO IT.

47. Basic food preservative: SALT.  Everything you ever wanted to know about salt as a preservative.  Twenty-four years ago tomorrow (Nov. 20, 1980), an oil drilling company punctured a salt dome in Lake Peigneur in south Louisiana creating a massive sinkhole.  The salt dome was being mined by the Diamond Salt company.  Amazingly, all the workers in the salt mine survived.



50. Oahu dances: HULAs

51. Marble material: AGATE.

52. Out of the sack: RISEN.

53. Added a chip, say: ANTED.


54. Free ticket, casually: COMP.

55. Elongated circle: OVAL.

56. Note from the boss: MEMO.

57. Get ready, briefly: PREP.

61. __ culpa: MEA.  Today's Latin lesson.

62. Make a mistake: ERR.


Here's the Grid:


חתולה



Nov 18, 2024

Monday November 18, 2024 Amy Johnson and Katie Hale

  

Happy Monday, everyone! sumdaze here with a theme that seems to have arisen out of nowhere.
Theme:      Ta-da!

18 Across. Long garment with no waistline: TENT DRESS.
POP-UP TENT is a tent that is ready to use as soon as it is unfolded, without requiring a frame to be assembled first.  
a TENT DRESS and a POP-UP TENT

24 Across. "These aren't the droids we're looking for" speaker: STORM TROOPER.
Our constructors threw us a curve ball with this one. If you read the clue too quickly you might have wanted to answer Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi. However, Ben said "you're" and the STORM TROOPER responded "we're". Here is the scene from the 1977 Star Wars movie. (The STORM TROOPERs are wearing white body armor.) (1:29 min.)  
Read about a POP-UP STORM here.

38 Across. Activity for a green-thumbed apartment dweller: WINDOW GARDENING
POP-UP WINDOW is a small advertisement or banner that appears in the foreground of one's screen while browsing a website.  
a WINDOW GARDEN and a POP-UP WINDOW I often see on Blogger

49 Across. Aftereffects of a great read: BOOK HANGOVER. I do not recall hearing this term before today but I have definitely experienced one. Here is how one blogger describes it:
A “book hangover” is the slangy shortcut for the feeling when a reader finishes a book—usually fiction—and they can’t stop thinking about the fictional world that has run out of pages. The story is over, but the reader misses the characters or the atmosphere of the novel. 
I bought this elaborate POP-UP BOOK for my grandmother when she developed dementia.
It turned out to be a good gift because her visitors enjoyed looking through it with her.

Now for the reveal:

60 Across. Right-click result, often, and where the starts of 18-, 24-, 38-, and 49-Across can be found?: POP-UP MENU.
If you right-click on your PC*, a MENU of options POPs-UP. Here is an example:  

The reveal clue also says that the starts of the themed clues can be found on a POP-UP MENU. I take that to mean that if you were looking at a menu (list) of things that POP-UP, you might see these four items:  TENTSTORMWINDOW, and BOOK.

Before we POP on over to the rest of the clues, here's a CSO to all the POPS on the Corner.  

Across:

1. Financial liability of concern to creditors: DEBT.     and     
6 Down. Have a 1-Across with: OWE TO.  

5. "Gilmore Girls" daughter: RORY.  Do we get a lot of Gilmore Girls cast member clues or is it always RORY? I never saw the show so these questions are always ESPs for me.  

9. Lightning streak: BOLT.

13. Dickens villain Heep: URIAH.  Uriah Heep is such a great name! He was the creep in David Copperfield. I chose this book 
for my senior literature project when I was in high school.

15. Tot's scrape: OWIE.

16. Grammy winner India.__: ARIE.  My trick for remembering this XWD staple fill is she sings an aria, but with an "e" at the end.

17. "So anyway," e.g.: SEGUE.  Def: (noun) a transition made without pause or interruption.
Regardless, this was a fun word to find in the grid.

20. TV channel with a large film library: TCM.  Turner Classic Movies

21. Sidesplitters: RIOTS.  Def:  (noun) an exceedingly funny story or joke.

23. German sub dangerous to Allied ships: U-BOAT.

27. Goat pen noises: MAAS.  

28. Anchorage locale: ALASKA.  Anchorage is ALASKA's most populous city with 286,075 people. ALASKA's capital, Juneau has 31,555 people.  
North to Alaska  ~  Johnny Horton  ~  1960

32. Calvin of fashion: KLEIN.  As it turns out, Calvin Richard Klein celebrates his 82nd birthday tomorrow. He was born in The Bronx, NY. He graduated from the Fashion Institute of Technology in 1962.

34. Anti-inflammatory antioxidant berry: ACAI.  Will the accolades to this berry never cease?

37. Backdrop of many novels set in the 1940s: WAR.  This one took me a bit, but after I got it I thought, "Fair enough."

42. Recipe no.: AMT.     and     
55 Down. Report card nos.: GPAS
"Number(s)" is abbreviated in these clues, so is "AMounT" and "Grade Point Averages".

43. Top-tier: A-ONE.  Also top-tier is the XWD staple, A-Team.

44. Date opening: MONTH.  In the U.S., dates are usually (but not always) written as MONTH/day/year. Since MONTH comes first, it is the opening.

45. Apple download: IOS APP.  iOS is the iPhone Operating System. iOS APPs are designed to take advantage of an iPhone's built-in features, like its camera, microphone, GPS, etc.

48. Duck, duck, goose shape: RING.  Duck, Duck, Goose is a children's game in which the players sit in a circle.

55. Figure on a wedding cake, maybe: GROOM.  

58. Steel support for concrete: REBAR.  

59. Ida. neighbor: ORE.  There is a movement for some eastern OREgon counties to join IDAho.  GreaterIdaho.org website 

62. "Hakuna Matata" composer John: ELTON.     and     
11 Down. WNBA great Leslie: LISA.
We have two double firsties in today's puzzle. Those always throw me off.

64. Hymn finale: AMEN.

65. Give off: EMIT.

66. Shoe material that shouldn't get wet: SUEDE.  You shouldn't step on SUEDE either. Elvis sang a song about that.  

67. "__ my regards": SEND.  not "give"  

68. Loose tops: TEES.

69. Went up a size: GREW.  
The Grinch's heart GREW. (45 sec.)

Down:

1. Does some light housekeeping: DUSTS.  
Treadmills are also good for hanging laundry.

2. Not hunched over: ERECT.

3. Life-changing events: BIG MOMENTS.

4. "T," on sorority row: TAU.  
Greek alphabet

5. Helicopter part: ROTOR.

7. Classic Unilever laundry soap: RINSO.  Unilever is the company that owns the brand name RINSO...among other well-known brands.


8. "So close, __ so far": YET.  

9. Streisand of "Yentl": BARBRA.  The story is that she was born "Barbara" then changed the spelling of her name when she was 18 because she wanted to be unique but did not want to change her name.

10. Cookie with a Coca-Cola variety: OREO.

12. Rorschach __: TEST.  
The test consists of a series of 10 symmetrical blots where the subject states what they see. These slides are shown in the same order to align modern observations with historical performance. You can see the 10 cards here.
This is a 22 sec. clip from Batman Forever (1995) with Val Kilmer and Nichole Kidman.

14. Boy of la familia: HERMANO.  Spanish for "brother"

19. "Hamilton" climax: DUEL.  I liked this clue!  The song from that scene is called The World Was Wide Enough. It is a great message for today's quarrels as well! 

22. "__ showtime!": IT'S.

25. Midnight snack expedition: RAID.

26. Reimbursed: PAID.

29. Person who is a big factor in a two-party election: SWING VOTER.

30. Philosopher Immanuel: KANT.  (1724-1804) He was born in Germany and is one of the Enlightenment thinkers. Basically, he believed in humanity's ability to be rational about morality and wrote about categorical imperatives. The internet says Kant was 5'2" (157.5 cm.).

31. "Grr": ARGH.

32. River in an epic film title: KWAI.  The Bridge on the River Kwai was the highest-grossing film of 1957. It won seven Oscars, including Best Picture.

33. Bachelorette party hire, perhaps: LIMO.

34. Before now: AGO.

35. Food drive item: CAN.  a good November reminder to help out

36. "__ you sure?": ARE.  No, I'm sumdaze.

39. D.C. paper: WAPO.  WAshington POst

40. Some asylum seekers: EMIGRES.

41. Improper action: NO-NO.  
46. Teem: ABOUND.

47. Showy splendor: POMP.  I thought of the graduation march POMP and Circumstance by Edward Elgar, a name I've seen in a few puzzles.

48. Biochem molecule: RNA.

50. Krispy __: KREME.  

51. Figure skater Sonja: HENIE.  (1912-1969) Henie won more Olympic and World titles than any other female figure skater. She was born in XWD's favorite capital, Oslo.

52. Shares an edge: ABUTS.

53. Eat away at: ERODE.  During the Ice Age, glaciers ate away at the granite in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, creating Yosemite's Half Dome.  

54. Affirm again, as vows: RENEW.  

56. Italy's capital: ROME.

57. Willing to listen: OPEN.

61. Encountered: MET.

63. Carry with effort: LUG.  

Here's the grid, with a POP of color:

Have a great day! I'll POP by later to read the comments.

*Note to Mac users:  According to the Apple Support website, a right-click on a Mac is called a 'secondary click' or 'Control-click'. To open shortcut menus, Control-click an item using your keyboard and mouse or trackpad.