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Apr 17, 2009

Friday April 17, 2009 Daniel A. Finan

(Note from C.C.: Something was amiss with the original post. This is a copy and paste the old post with Google cached commments.)

 

Friday April 17, 2009 Daniel A. Finan

Theme: IT'S NOT YOU. IT'S ME (56A: Classic breakup line, and a hint to the formation of this puzzle's theme answers) MEU 16A: Step in a pizza recipe? MOMENT OF OLIVES (Mount of Olives) 20A: Simpson dad with a dozen donuts?: HAPPY HOMER (Happy Hour) 35A: Hook's mate in his formative years? A BOY NAMED SMEE (A Boy Named Sue) 49A: Headline about carpentry work for a financial institution? BANK FRAMED (Bank Fraud) I grokked the theme only after I got A BOY NAMED SMEE. SMEE is often clued as "Hook's mate". I like HAPPY HOMER the most, very evocative clue. MOMENT OF OLIVES and BANK FRAMED did not come to me easily. Do they sound natural to you? Lovely theme. I am really in awe of LAT constructors' creativity. I can't imagine going back to the familiar but drab TMS Daily. I think I commented "Good clue" probably once or twice a week then. But with the Rich Norris puzzles, I feel I am constantly entertained and challenged. My favorite clue today is ETE (12D: Quartier d'__: July/August Parisian festival). It's not flashy, no wordplay. And I've never heard of Quartier d'ETE before. But the months, the word quartier both point to the season ETE. I appreciate the constructor/editor's constant effort in coming up with new clues. Like yesterday's, today's grid also has 40 black squares (43 is the limit). Our old puzzle limit is 38. I guess that's because Williams does not allow cheater (helper) squares. Barry Silk says it makes constructing for TMS more difficult. Here is the defintion of cheater square: "Any black square which can be removed from a crossword diagram, along with its symmetrically opposite black square, without decreasing the total word count of the puzzle. A puzzle may be rejected if its diagram contains too many cheater black squares." In today's grid, the four cheater squares are (Fred, please correct me if I am wrong): the black square directly above PHI (18D: 21st Greek letter), the one directly under ADE (47D: Lime ending). They are symmetrical partners. And the one directly above MGM (39D: Vegas's __ Grand) and the one under XED (26D: Crossed (out). Another symmetrical pair. Most of the solvers are probably unaware and don't really care about the above information. I just want to share with you what I've learned. They can avoid obscure fills and make the grid smoother. A tough slog for me today. The lower left corner was too hard. Across: 1A: Butterfly units?: STROKES. Swimming. I was thinking of TWO TEES, as there are two letter T in butterfly. 8A: Home in the Alps: CHALET. Made of wood. 14A: "Again ...": I REPEAT 15A: Rock salt: HALITE. New word to me. Hal is a prefix for "salt". Wikipedia says it's used on the driveway to melt the ice. I thought this "Rock salt" is edible like Chinese rock sugar. 18A: Cotton plant originally from Peru: PIMA. Have never heard of PIMA cotton. It's "high-quality cotton Arizona Indian Pima cotton is named after the Pima Native Americans who first cultivated the plant in the US, but its origins date back to its cultivation in Peru." 19A: Tranquility: REPOSE. Somehow I always associate this word with death. 27A: November winners: INS. The election winners. I drew a blank. Since the 2009 World Series is scheduled to start on Oct 28, 2009, the "November winners" might be a baseball team. 28A: Suffix with Caesar: EAN. Caesarean. Straightforward clue. 29A: Touchy?: TACTILE. I knew it's a wordplay on "Touch-y" because of the question mark, but I was not capable of outsmarting this constructor/editor. 34A: Broadcast: AIRED. I adore the tense ambiguity in clues like broadcast, put & hit. 39A: Pooh pooh-bah: MILNE. I don't understand why "pooh-bah". I know "Winnie-the-Pooh" was written by A. A. MILNE. But "pooh-bah" has a negative connotation to me. Dictionary says Pooh-bah is a character in Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Mikado". He holds all of the high offices of state simultaneously and uses them for personal gain. 41A: Paul who played the principal in "The Breakfast Club": GLEASON. Which one is Paul GLEASON? I've never heard of him. The girl in pink looks pretty. I only know "Minnesota Fats" Jackie GLEASON. 52A: "Awakenings" Oscar nominee: DE NIRO. No idea. I've never seen this movie. Which is your favorite Robert DE NIRO movie? My husband never gets tired of "Casino". I like him in "New York, New York". 61A: Brunch fare: QUICHE. Here is some QUICHE for you. Not my "Brunch fare". I'd love to have this bento box. 62A: Actor whose birth name was Aristoteles: SALVALAS (Telly). Ha, gimmie. We had this Greek name discussion a while ago. See here. It says Telly means "Best" and is the diminutive of Aristotelis/Aristotle. Is Aristoteles and Aristotelis the same in Greek? 63A: Thermometer, e.g.: SENSOR 64A: Gold or silver: ELEMENT. Medal too. Down: 1D: One in Tarzan's family tree?: SIMIAN. I kept thinking ape something. 3D: Routs: TROMPS 4D: Cockney anticipation?: 'OPE. Hope. The sound "H" is dropped in Cockney accent. Kind of like French. 5D: Muscular doll: KEN. G.I. Joe is more muscular. 8D: "Ageless Body, Timeless Mind" author: CHOPRA (Deepak). See the book cover. See him on TV occassonally. Don't know this book or any of the 50 books he has written. 10D: Father-daughter boxers: ALI. Muhammad ALI and Laila ALI. 11D: Dynamo: LIVE WIRE. The answer is new to me. Maria Bartiromo (CNBC) is a LIVE WIRE then. 13D: Some NFL receivers: TES (Tight Ends). A gimme for many of you I am sure. But I was stumped again. Who is the most famous TE in NFL history? 17D: Dogs in shoes?: FEET. I did not know dogs are slang for FEET. Good clue. 18D: 21st Greek letter: PHI. Had trouble obtaining this answer. Total 24 letters in Greek alphabet. I only know the exact order of the first three: Alpha, Beta and Gamma & the last two: Psi and Omega. Pi is the 16th. 21D: Enthusiastic agreement: YES YES 22D: Chemistry Nobelist Otto: HAHN. Nobel 1944. Regarded as "the father of nuclear chemistry" and the "founder of the atomic age". Googled him last time when Williams clued an obscure answer HAHNIUM with a more obscure clue "Unnipentium". But I couldn't recall anything about him this morning. 23D: Fit for service: ONE A. See this complete list. 25D: Sailor's heading: ALEE. I don't get this. ALEE is an adverb, but the answer is asking for a noun. I wanted TACT, the term I just learned a week ago when SAILOR'S HEADING was clued as "Tact". 30D: City with a view of the Laramie Mountains: CASPER. See this map. I've never heard of this city. Don't know where the Laramie Mountains is. Wikipedia says Dick Cheney grew up here. He was born in Lincoln, Nebraska. 31D: Allen and Burton: TIMS 32D: Chaplin's last wife: OONA. And IDA (45A: Filmdom's Lupino). Both in Anne Bancroft's "Yma Dream" I linked yesterday. 36D: Assimilates: BLENDS IN. A habit I adopted from working for Pinkerton Investigations. Always BLEND IN, never stand out. 38D: German town: DORF. No idea. Maybe Kazie can explain to us in the Comments section. How is it different from Stadt? 39D: Vegas's __ Grand: MGM. Have you been there? 42D: __ dictum: passing remark: OBITER. Can you make a sentence for me? I've never heard of this Latin phrase before. 43D: Old-timey "not": NARY. Oh, I don't know it's "Old-timey". See "NARY a one" so often in the crossword that I thought it's a common phrase. 45D: Bo Diddley hit: I'M A MAN. See the clip. I got it from across fills. I've heard of "I'm Woman" though. It turns out there is also a song titled "I'm a Woman". 46D: Loathe: DETEST 50D: Western omen: NOOSE. Why? I thought NOOSE was the old lynching omen for black people. Golfweek fired their editor because of the NOOSE cover. 51D: Grocery section: AISLE 53D: Env. contents: ENCS (Enclosers). I wrote down SAES first. 54D: Manhattan area above Houston Street: NOHO. Stands for North of Houston Street. I wanted SOHO, which is South of Houston Street. 56D: Lex Luthor's 200, and others: IQS. Lex Luthor is the archenemy of Superman. I've never heard of him, so 200 meant nothing to me. Big stumper. 57D: Datebook abbr.: TUE. I need "Mon. follower" for the answer to be a gimme. 58D: Chi.-based flier: UAL (United Air Lines) 60D: Scot's topper: TAM. Made of wool. Answer grid. C.C.

80 comments:

  1. Good morning, C.C. and fellow head-scratchers - crashed and burned today. Problems all over the place. Finally got a bit of traction in the NE and then didn't know 'Chopra', and didn't see 'repose' as exactly synonymous with 'tranquility'. It didn't help that I couldn't pick up a theme as I went along.

    I'm running late for the gym, so I'll post more later, but suffice to say this one was a real bear, and I still loved it.

    Today is National Cheeseball Day AND National Blah Blah Blah Day. You can't make this stuff up.

    Today's Words of Wisdom: "Go ahead and do it. It's much easier to apologize after something's been done than to get permission ahead of time." - Mathematician Grace Murray Hopper (a most remarkable lady)

    Even more Fun Facts:

    - Spam filters that catch the word 'cialis' will not allow many work-related emails through because that word is embedded inside the word 'specialist'.

    - The average diameter of a raindrop is 1 to 2 millimeters, and they fall from the sky on average 21 feet per second.

    6 and a wakeup.

    Reply
  2. Dennis,
    A BOY NAMED SMEE tipped me off the theme. I disagree with the quote today. It's prudent to think twice before you speak or act. What is the diameter of tears then?

    Jeanne in PA,
    Yes, Sunday LAT is of the same difficulty level as Thursday's.

    Martin,
    Both Japanese & Korean sentences end in verb, don't they?

    Fred,
    Regarding the 140 ELHI the other day, did you refer to Cruciverb's database or some other resources? Also, am I correct about today's four cheater squares?

    Reply
  3. Nate & Treefrog,
    Hey! Now let's hear more from you two.

    Puzzled_in_pdx,
    Thanks for GOG & AGOG. I've been enjoying your posts in the past few days. We get quite a few solvers from Oregon area.

    Anonymous @9:38am,
    Very interesting take on HARD G.

    Anonymous @1:03pm,
    Great link. Please do leave your name next time.

    Reply
  4. Butterfly units?: STROKES.Doh! I thought of COCOONS but I didn't write that in because I was sure 5 DOWN was either (GI)JOE or KEN. (My brother had a GI Joe and my sister had a Ken doll. I'm sorry but Ken was a wimp compared to Joe so I think a "musculor doll" would be JOE and not KEN.)

    Brunch fare: QUICHE.I had OMELET.

    One in Tarzan's family tree?: SIMIAN. I kept thinking ape something.I had APE MAN.

    Some NFL receivers: TES (Tight Ends).I'm not familiar with the baseball term "tight end". To me the term "tight end" would refer to something else entirely.

    Sailor's heading: ALEE. I don't get this. ALEE is an adverb, but the answer is asking for a noun. I wanted TACTALEE is specifically a direction and you head in a direction. I don't understand why TACT would be an answer.

    Old-timey "not": NARY. Oh, I don't know it's "Old-timey". See "NARY a one" so often in the crossword that I thought it's a common phrase.But you will NARY here it in modern usage. :)

    I got HAPPY HOMER and IT'S NOT YOU: IT'S ME right away. All those hours watching The Simpons and Seinfeld weren't completely wasted. SAVALAS and ELEMENT were also gimmes but, alas, I was unable to take advantage of the good start and work my way up the grid.

    Martin

    Reply
  5. PromiseMe,
    D'oh. I got TELLS by wrong reason. Thanks.

    Wolfmom,
    It's fun for me to share with others what I know. I am so happy that you enjoy my daily babbles.

    Oberhasli,
    Like Windhover, you sound like a very intriguing person. When will you go blue?

    Kazie, Argyle, Elissa et al,
    As always, thanks for the answers yesterday.

    Reply
  6. Both Japanese & Korean sentences end in verb, don't they?I've been told that most Asian languages do. Chinese seems oddly familar to English speaking people because most Chinese sentences follow the subject(or topic)-verb-object pattern.

    Martin

    Reply
  7. Martin,
    Really? Including Arabic?

    Reply
  8. Lex Luther's IQ is 200. That explains 56D. You have to be a real Superman buff to get that one.

    I too had trouble with the theme clues: they just did not flow for me today.

    Beautiful morning in SE Virginia. Sorry for the folks in the west central states --- hope the flooding is not bad.

    I remember the Grace Hopper quote as "it's easier to ask forgiveness than to get permission." I met Adm. Hopper in NY in the 70's --- she was truly remarkable. The midwife of modern computing. She also rumored to have coined the use of "bug" to describe a computer glitch and "debugging" to describe the process of fixing bugs. The legend is there was a moth in the works causing problems and she remarked they had to debug the system.

    Reply
  9. Martin,

    NFL is National Football League. Tight end is a football position, not baseball.

    Reply
  10. Bob,
    Hey! Is this your first time to visit the Comments section? What's the name of your newspaper? Interesting information on Grace Hopper & bugging/debugging.

    Frank
    Re: My brain kept saying, "Boy, there are a lot of gees in this puzzle", but the penny never dropped. What does "the penny never dropped" mean?

    Reply
  11. One slight mistake,Deniro was spelled wrong which also changes obiter for 42 down.

    Reply
  12. Good morning:

    A fun 23 minutes or so; I loved the misdirection of "Butterfly" as swimming certainly did not pop immediately to mind. Other than the rash of OSHEA, another creative effort. The theme was too subtle to be helpful, as I had the words filled before I had my V8.

    The girl in pink is MOLLY RINGWALD, PAUL GLEASON is not in the picture. He was a good actor, who did a fabulous job in Trading Places an Eddie Murphy, Dan Ackroyd comedy that is worth a watch.

    DORF i believe is simply the German word for Village, which I guess is also a Town. Many of you may have heard of Düsseldorf.

    Happy Friday.

    Reply
  13. Morning, all!

    Today's puzzle was certainly not a romp in the park, at least not for me. After about 15 or so minutes I managed to get most of it done, but a couple of thorny spots just wouldn't work for me, so I took a break. When I came back to the puzzle 20 minutes later I was able to finish it up pretty quickly.

    Part of the problem was that I didn't understand the theme right off the bat, even after getting the IT'S NOT YOU ITS ME answer. I was thinking that "you" needed to be replaced with "me" and it wasn't until I finally realized that it was "u" that needed to be replaced that things started to fall into place and I was able to get both MOMENT OF OLIVES and BANK FRAMED.

    Another problem was caused by a minor typo -- I put TIME instead of TIMS for 31D, which totally obscured CROPS (and which, interned, kept me from getting CASPER and DORF). When I came back from my break, I saw my mistake right away and that really helped.

    As for the rest of the puzzle, nothing terribly difficult for me, although nothing really came easily, either. Law school let me get OBITER Dicutum and I eventually remembered PIMA and HALITE from previous puzzles (possibly the NYT). I initially had SOHO instead of NOHO for 54D, so that held me up for awhile until I finally remembered that Robert DENIRO was in "Awakenings" (I didn't know he got an Oscar nomination for it, though). And before I erroneously had SOHO for 54D, I had OMELET instead of QUICHE for 61A. Oh -- and I also initially put SI SI SI instead of YES YES for 21D and was a bit peeved that the clue didn't include an indication that the answer was in Spanish...

    NOOSE, REPOSE and SENSOR were all common words that were very hard for me to get due to the cluing. In fact, I never did figure out NOOSE and it eventually got filled in solely via the perps.

    And I think the only totally unknown word for me today was HAHN. Fortunately, I was able to guess the final letter after getting HAH_, and that let me get 35A (which was key to me understanding the theme).

    So, all in all, definitely a challenging puzzle, but fun and fair.

    Reply
  14. C.C. Funnny you should say the girl in pink is pretty. Did you do it on purpose?

    With your love of the letter K, you meant tack (naut term) instead of tact, right?

    The penny dropped

    Reply
  15. Good Morning All,

    I went on my first bike ride of the season yesterday. Wow and ow! Its going to be a long road back this year. It was nice to get outside to work out.

    I attempted yesterdays puzzle last night due to a busy work day and opting for the bike. I quickly threw it in the wood stove. I couldn't get the theme. It would be quicker to list the clues I got rather than the problematic ones, but I'd prefer not to recall the misery.

    Today was a little better. I didn't get the theme and could only get parts of the answers. (Olives, Homer and Framed) That led to all sorts of problems so I came here. Thursday and Fridays continue to kick my ass.

    Crystal clear today. Temps expected in the 60s. I've got to meet the DirectTV guy today to fix our satellite. Therefore I won't get a ride in today. That's probably a blessing. Between yesterday's ride and the puzzles, I'm too sore!!

    Have a great weekend!

    Reply
  16. C.C. glad you enjoyed todays puzzle - us mere mortals hate it

    Mel

    Reply
  17. Bob, I think Grace Hopper said what's in the original quote, and it quickly became, as you said, 'It's better to ask forgiveness than permission.' Great words to live by. Also, she was famous for her visual aid in defining a nanosecond. She handed out 1-foot lengths of rope to show how far light traveled in a nanosecond. Good stuff about the 'bugging' and 'debugging' origins; I didn't know that, and I probably should have.

    Mainiac, I can relate - with temps here in the 60s, I'm taking my first decently long bike ride today after spending the winter on stationary bikes, and I know that damn hard seat is gonna make a lasting impression.

    Mel, hang in there - the more you do these, the better you'll be able to get through them.

    Reply
  18. Good morning, everyone. This one was a bear, but I did get it finished with some G help and a few red letters to light the way. Even after getting ITS NOT YOU ITS ME I didn't grok the theme. Once again C.C. showed the way. I think of "pooh-bah" as the "head honcho," without any negative connotations.

    Have a great Friday!!

    Reply
  19. Good morning,
    If Dennis can say he crashed and burned, I don't feel so bad. I started on paper, gave up and went to the regular skill level online. Used a lot of red hints and keyboard navigation to get it finished. Didn't figure out the theme until I got here, though a boy named smee sounded cute when I got it. it took 26:22 by the timer.

    I think doing it that way is unsatisfying because you're just looking at letters instead of using your noggin as much as on paper. I didn't even figure out that butterfly was the swim stroke after it was in there--I was wondering is that a special word for a flock of butterflies?

    Lemonade is right about Dorf. Technically it is a village. Düßeldorf is anything but, however. It's a sizable city, state capital of Nordrhein-Westfalen, on the edge of the famous industrial Ruhr Valley.
    Of course, like all cities, it probably started as a village and must have been named early on.

    These days, many villages are adjoined to larger towns as they've grown together and become suburbs. Also, because of the density of European populations, what we'd call a town, they still call a village. My town here has about 5,000 people and is the county seat. They'd still call it a village, like Susan Boyle's "village" of Blackburn.

    Another non-village, Munich, is known in advertizing locally as the "Millionendorf"--village of millions, implying that while it's a big city, it still has the heart of a friendly village.

    Re today's WoW, I like that attitude!

    Reply
  20. C.C.:
    I don't consider those cheater squares. The removal or addition of a cheater square shouldn't change the puzzle in any fundamental way. The center theme answer is 13 squares so it has to have a black square on each end. remove them and that answer can't exist. The beginning and ending theme answers are 14 squares each so they need one black square to finish off the 15 square line. Remove that square and those answers can't exist. So those squares would fundamentally change the grid. a cheater square isn't necessary to the integrity of the puzzle and these squares are. You can add them or subtract them and the integrity of the grid isn't affected either way.I've used cheater squares on occasion,I try not to, but they didn't change the integrity of the grid. They just made my life a little easier.

    Reply
  21. Fred, great explanation - thanks.

    Reply
  22. Tough puzzle for me today. Didn't get the theme until I read it here. Admiral Hopper was featured on 60 Minutes years ago. She was fixin' to give a speech, and gave out "nanoseconds" to everyone. Her nanoseconds were short pieces of wire that were cut to the length that light travels in a nanosecond.

    Alee in sailing is downwind. The helmsman calls "helm's alee" to let everyone know (s)he is tacking the boat. That means the tiller (helm) is going downwind, which pushes the bow of the boat upwind.

    CC asked me how often I sail. If all goes well, in season I race every Wednesday and Thursday evening, and either Saturday or Sunday. Weekday races are mostly casual and are almost universally known as "beer can" races. Folks tend to get more serious about the weekend races. Most spend thousands (some tens of thousands) of dollars every year in pursuit of trophies that could be bought for $20. High tech stuff - carbon fiber, Kevlar, Technora and the like - abounds on a modern racing boat.

    Reply
  23. C.C.

    I believe I like the new LA Times puzzles. I like all of the sailing clews (thats a little joke, the clew is the point on the main sail that attaches to the aft end of the boom).

    I enjoyed the picture of the flower that you attached for your review of yesterdays puzzle answer for Areola. Was that from your garden? I was surprised that I didn't see any risque comments from Clear Ayes about it.

    Have a great day!

    A.R.E.

    P.S. Jeannie asked me a week or so ago what I sail. Its a 1970 Catalina-22. I enjoy racing it regularly during the sailing season, which starts next week and runs through October.

    Reply
  24. C.C. The WoW quote does not mean you don't think twice, it just means you can't be too timid in acting.

    I think Pooh-bah has come to mean the head man or person in charge without the negative connotation.

    I knew that "dogs" were FEET, but I would have spelled it "dawgs" as in "My dawgs are killin' me."

    OBITER DICTUM is a legal term and not one you are likely to see in a sentence. In our legal system court decisions create precedents for future legal decisions and important phrases in decisions are often quoted in later cases. But there are a lot of passing remarks that may or may not be precedential. Lawyers will dismiss them as merely 'dictum'.

    I didn't like 'November winners' clue. Seems forced to me.

    Reply
  25. good morning c.c. and all,

    i LOVED this puzzle - a good workout. like c.c., it was A BOY NAMED SMEE that clued me in to the theme - which i thought was kind of random until CLASSIC BREAKUP LINE .. ohhhh .. just brilliant. circled around alot, and needed red letter help for the H in HAHN/OSHEA. very satisfying finish.

    got IQS with perps, seems terribly obscure to me.

    still trying to grok cheater squares .. so are there any in today's puzzle?

    hard to pick a favorite deniro film, but might go with a bronx tale.

    i think i'll skip the cheeseball, but i may do something without permission.

    Reply
  26. Good Morning, C.C. and all.

    This was a challenge. I finished it, but I would never have gotten it all without the guidance of the red letters in the Regular on-line puzzle. On paper, I would either have a lot of places so erased that there was no paper left, or a lot of spaces empty.

    The theme was so obscure that getting the one about Smee didn't help with the others, and MOMENT OF OLIVES really left me scratching my head.

    Like Martin, I wanted Omelet for QUICHE, but it finally fell in place.

    But....I FINISHED IT!

    Jim in Norfolk, I'm married to a guy who sails two days a week (in season), but doesn't race. I bet he'd love to be on the coast where he'd have more options, but he sails Lake Michigan, for now.

    I'm late, I'm late.... I hope you all have a great day!

    Reply
  27. One more thing about Adm. Grace Hopper. She was the oldest woman in the Navy, retiring at age 80. She was the second oldest person. Adm. Hyman Rickover, father of the Nuclear Submarine, retired at 82. But Rickover was a nasty SOB and Grace Hopper was universally admired as a brilliant scientist and great teacher.

    Reply
  28. C.C.:
    Yes, I used cruciverb.com's database for ELHI. I also used another database, but I don't know if they want to go public yet. It's used mostly by constructors.

    Today's puzzle was nicely hard. I did it in about 30 minutes. I didn't figure out the theme until A BOY NAMED SMEE, then everything fell into place. I had to look up OBITER,GLEASON, and DORF. all the other roadblocks I figured out thru the perps. I never heard of NOHO before. I put in soho.

    Reply
  29. Hi C.C. & gang,

    A very clever puzzle today. I had to use the online one again in red to make any progress.

    My wife said that the Friday puzzle must be done by a real psycho and it's hard to grok that kind of thinking.

    Re: Butterfly Units "STROKES"?

    I immediately thought of
    Michael Phelps record butterfly in the 2008 Olympics.

    Reply
  30. Hi c.c. and all,

    Well, tough puzzle for me today, but then it is a Friday. As KittyB said I didn't understand at all Moment of Olives. And, did not get the theme until I came here and c.c. once again explained it to me. Thanks c.c.!!!

    I also had omelet as others did, but once I changed it then IQs and Sensor got filled in. Had to google Chopra, Hahn and Dorf. This puzzle kicked my butt, but yet I still enjoyed it, why is that?

    Have a great day everyone, off to the gym!

    Reply
  31. I admit, I have never heard of Noho, though it makes sense. It was the home of Robert Mapplethorpe's studio, to keep all information intertwined.

    I also earlier in the week noted the passing of Harry KALAS, the voice of NFL films, and the Philadelphia Phillies and Mark "the Bird" Fydrych. Today, we hear that John Madden is retiring the bus; and I, belatedly learned thatMARILYN CHAMBERS died on Sunday. As we have discussed, many of us were introduced to pornography by the DEEP THROAT, BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR double bill. While I was not moved by either film, the fact that Marilyn was the Ivory Snow mom, was interesting.

    Reply
  32. Definitely more of a challenge today, but not impossible. I spent 21 minutes on it over breakfast, in permanent marker, offline. Got it all without outside help. I didn't fully understand the theme of replacing me's with u's until checking here. However, that didn't keep me from correctly completing the puzzle. Moment of olives and bank frames struck me as odd answers as well c.c., although I was on to the me's in each themed answer after figuring out the its not you its me clue.

    I thought IQs fair enough, but I didn't catch on until it became clear brunch item was quiche rather than the usual omelet answer. The classic criminal mastermind there, old Lex. Wonder what Moriarty's IQ had been?

    Reply
  33. If you're among the (seemingly growing) portion of loons here who happen to like the "tricky" clues, you might want to try googling for Cryptic Crosswords.

    I first heard of them as "English" crosswords in Games Magazine. The squares are not as populated in as these "conventional" grids. They have many black squares closer to a sort of checkerboard pattern.

    Here's a clue-answer pair, just for example:

    Clue: Make money and set out to be serious

    Answer: EARNEST

    Explanation:
    There are three parts to the clue.
    Make Money = Earn (the first syllable)

    Set Out--The word OUT means there is a scrambled word, so rearranging SET gives you EST, the second syllable of the answer.

    The third part is a redefinition, To Be Serious = EARNEST

    So, if you can figure out where to insert your own punctuation, it helps you read the clue:
    Make money, + set out: to be serious

    They aren't all exactly like that, though. Sometimes the answer is buried in the clue itself:

    Clue: The way out of complexity
    Answer: EXIT

    "The way out", defines the answer.

    Of complEXITy

    The word OF means it is contained in the next phrase. Sometimes you have to go across multiple words and ignore the space in between.

    Clue: A murder suspect one hears
    Answer: EARDRUM

    "A MURDER" is scrambled (SUSPECT) to make the word EARDRUM

    There are also easier(?) double definitions:
    This is truncated or the end's off: SHORTENED

    They can be a lot of fun and you really feel like you've done something if you can get most of them. Not for the faint of heart, though. And you don't get a lot of help from the perps. Sometimes I get an answer, but I still don't know why it is correct...

    Reply
  34. C.C.- Great group that you have here. I'm glad most are starting to realize how great the LAT puzzles are. For those that find the early week puzzles tough you'll find out in time that they're really not... just well-crafted.

    Fred's right about cheater squares. But, some of us constructors prefer to think of them as "Helpers". I think that defines them a tad better. Unless, of course, you truly are trying to make the job of filling easier.

    Reply
  35. Today's puzzle was hard for me - got the theme & some of the other theme lines - but the getting the theme didn't help me.

    I just noticed that Naples Daily News is now testing a second crossword (NEA Daily Crossword) because "some readers haven't liked the new puzzles--they're too hard, they're confusing", & asking for reader responses.

    Haven't botherd to do it yet -- spent all my time this AM in today's LAT challenge...but I like LAT for the fun of some of the clever clues, even when I give up & have to look up the answer.

    I enjoy mind games and stretchers, and there are some good ones here. I would hate to see the local puzzle dumbed down! Besides, as an old lady, I need the, um, er, mental exercise?

    Jeannette

    Reply
  36. CC: I`ll be "out of pocket" a few days...so I`m fine.

    Reply
  37. Good morning CC and all,
    This house is in mourning as the Sharks fell flat for the 1st play-off game.

    Am not delighted with my lack of knowledge today. I couldn't complete the NW nor the SW corners.1,14,& 16A stumped me;also 56,61,& 63 A.Had the N for Noho, but have never heard of it and knew it couldn't be Soho.Stumped!I had chapel for chalet, and even though I filled in Milne, I hated the clue.Have never heard of obiter dictum, but I like it. Now if I could just pronounce it.
    Clever puzzle, clever clues, but no "jump for joy" moments today.

    Reply
  38. Good Morning All, Oh, Fabulous Friday! See, I'm trying very hard to have a positive outlook on Friday puzzles. My only "G" was for Deepak CHOPRA. I should have known his name. There were so many others I wouldn't have figured out without the perps, HALITE, PIMA, HAHN, DORF and NOHO.

    As usual, I ALMOST got the theme. I had all the fills and saw the "ME", but it didn't occur to me to replace the "M" with a "U" to see the double meanings. I'll keep trying!

    NOOSE as a Western omen. How about the cover art for Goin' South, G.A.H.'s favorite Jack Nicholson movie.

    C.C. So many great DeNiro movies, it is difficult to pick a favorite. Raging Bull has to up there, as well as Taxi Driver and Godfather II.

    WoW, I'm sure Grace Hopper is brilliant, but "It's much easier to apologize after something's been done than to get permission ahead of time." is too broad a statement. Easier, yes, but is it the right thing to do? It all depends on what you've done that requires an apology. There are a lot of things that people would never get permission to do, so that a apology is a moot point. It seems it would also be a good way to get yourself thoroughly disliked, by stepping on a lot of other people's toes. "Gosh, I really needed the day off work. Sorry I didn't show up." "Gee, my car broke down, so I borrowed yours...Sorry." People might forgive one or two transgressions, but it wouldn't take too long before the response would be "#@&* you!"

    Reply
  39. Good afternoon CC et al., This puzzle made my 'halo' slide almost to a 90 degree slant! Like most of you, this one gave me a hard time. I enjoyed it though...no surprise...major personality flaw..something about hard things . Thought 45D'Im a man', 13D 'Tight Ends',& 1A 'strokes' were very exciting esp w/'tactile' and 'yes yes' nearby. I also liked how 'storm' (of activity) was nicely followed by tranquil
    'repose'. It all adds a new spin to 'happy homer', doesn't it.

    Loved the reference to MGM Grand since I was just there a few wks ago. And of course, I loved the name 'Ken' (my son) showing up.

    SBKaren: VaB now. To answer your Q a while back - staying in Pungo- becoming a 'flat lander'.

    Jeannie: I love VA...miss OK & those cowboys...but am very happy and comfortable here.

    Enjoy your wkend.

    Reply
  40. Al: Yes, I've looked at some of those heavy-on-wordplay puzzles in the past. Puzzitively diabolical!

    With English crosswords, you have all those cross-the-pond cultural differences to contend with as you try to solve them too. I find those even more challenging than the regional differences between xword publications stateside.

    Reply
  41. 27:52 today. The SW corner defeated me. I didn't know Lex Luthor's IQ, the "datebook entry" could be almost anything, and I don't know Latin, so OBITER had trouble emerging. Not to mention putting in OMELET initially.

    I never saw the theme--it was pretty well hidden, I thought. (MOUNT OF OLIVES means nothing to me, I suppose it's a biblical reference.) I initially had A BOSN AMED SMEE, thinking dear old SMEE was probably a BOSN. That tripped me up for a long time.

    And all the names (not my forte), CHOPRA, HAHN, DE NIRO (well, that one I knew, as well as MILNE), GLEASON (never saw Breakfast Club), and ERIK Estrada (I think he was in CHPS, which I also never saw), IDA Lupino, the two TIMS. Whew!

    Reply
  42. C.C. @6:59,

    The same as "I never saw the light" or "the bell never rang" or "I had no clue". Isn't English a great language!

    I see the "penny" expression most used in British writing. I think it means you put a coin in the slot, but it never went all the way down.

    I did not like the theme today. More NYT tomfoolery. Clever clue words: ins, feet, wax.

    Martin, I think alee means in a direction away from the wind. Ask Linda, she is a sailor.

    The Blue Angels are rehearsing for their performance this weekend in Corpus Christi. as I write this. I live about a mile from the NAS. Are they ever loud. One of the pilots learned how to fly in Corpus Christi a few years ago.

    Reply
  43. Contrary to my comment from last Friday, I decided to start todays xword and actually got moving after a couple of false starts and phone calls. Congratulated myself on getting way further than last week - I'll take my wins in small steps when I can get them. Felt the stress level rising so mowed the lawn, washed the Miata so I can put the top down later and cruise around then came back here to get help to finish. Never got the theme - how in the world CC does it is beyond me. Doh moment for me. Enjoyable puzzle though.

    Dennis - one of my favorite expressions is "better to beg forgiveness than ask permission" - the short version of your WoW. Has stood me in good stead. If today is National Blah Blah Blah day is there a National Yada Yada Yada day - and I do wonder if you make them up (actually okay with me if you do - they are still funny as heck).

    Great sunny day here at the beach with a gorgeous weekend predicted - life is good! Off to see what damage Lois does to beautiful downtown Pungo this weekend. Gotta warn the firemen and sailors.

    Reply
  44. C.C. Sincerely meant, as I come here for my lesson of the day, especially when I have crash and burn days at the end of the week. Much of what I learn from you and others gets put into play on later puzzles...like OSHEA today...

    I actually surprised myself at how much of this puzzle filled in with a lot of talking to myself, pencil chewing and head scratching. Had pretty much everything filled in with exception of the the bottom left as, like others I had put omelet. We just had Quiche for dinner last night, but could I think to put that in? Nope!

    I did actually figure out that there was trade out of U for ME and the MOMENT OF OLIVES gave me the concept. I actually knew PIMA cotton and have been CASPER Wy.

    The last of the themes to fall was the SMEE one, although I had very handily put SMEE in right away, I couldn't get the first part initially.

    I am so enjoying these puzzles and as I am "practicing" with NYT puzzles from my mega book, I find a lot of similarities in the cluing style.

    Dennis: re: last eve post...thank you.

    Reply
  45. Have never stayed at the MGM in L.V., but it has a wonderful lion display. Funny story: some years ago our grammar school was planning a reunion of all the classes. I decided to look up old friends from the past.. not an easy task because I didn't go to H.S. with any of them. Got a phone call from an old crush(sigh) and he said he was working for MGM. Turns out he was their CEO until he retired last year. Unfortunately, in today's news it says MGM/Mirage and may be going bankrupt.What a catastrophe! That includes 7 big hotels!

    @ noose- 1st thing that came to mind was the Clint Eastwood film,
    Hang 'em High.

    Our best friends live in Casper. It was at one time the largest city in WY,because of the "oil boom." When they stopped drilling people owed more on their homes than they were worth. Looks like it is going to happen all over again.I love visiting because of the deer and antelope everywhere.The town sits next to Casper Mt, beautiful in all seasons.

    Reply
  46. MGM Grand?

    I can remember a trip to there when I was still living in MN in the 1980's.

    They had a pair of Lions to walk by but the one thing that sticks with me is witnessing a lightning strike start a forest fire on one of the nearby hills.

    Just my 2 cents,

    ;-)

    Reply
  47. Another hard one for me. I wanted Eyore for Pooh pooh-bah. Eyore always said such negative comments. I got stuck in the lower left corner with quiche (I like quiche) and the NoHo area. But, nice enough puzzle, never did click on the theme.

    C.C. Go blue? I guess I will have to get help to figure out how to do that. I'm not very computer literate.

    Oberhasli

    Reply
  48. Hi JD,
    My condolences.
    I'm glad the ducks won even though I don't like them.
    I figure we (canucks) have a better chance beating the ducks the SJ. Who knows, anything can happen, still early yet.
    Good luck,
    Geri

    Reply
  49. The classic Western omen to me was 'smoke'. Smoke was never a good sign to see on the horizon: a nester burned out, Indians sending signals, the prarie ablaze. And it is five letters but none were of any help to the puzzle, so I eliminated it early on.

    Reply
  50. Can someone explain the answer for "November winners"? What does INS mean?
    Thank you

    Reply
  51. @C.C.: Awww shucks thanks! Your comment was very sweet.

    On to the rock salt! I don't think it's as purified as table salt/sea salt, thus you're not supposed to eat it. Growing up in the midwest I'm more than familiar with it's regular use. We also used it when making ice cream with the hand crank. You put the rock salt on the ice so that you can do the ice cream at a lower temperature. At least that's what I remember.

    Tough tough puzzle today, so I did it online like many others here. Red letters are my enemy! It makes me a little sad to see so many people complaining about the LA Times puzzles. Yes sometimes it's nice to finish a puzzle with little difficulty, but then really what have I learned? I'm enjoying the new clues and vocabulary I'm building. Later in the week I would never finish a puzzle without the online help, so I'm no pro solver. I guess I just like the challenge.

    ~puzzled_in_pdx

    Reply
  52. Anon @3:02 November has Election Day in it. The "Ins" are the ones now "in office", IOW, the winners.

    Forgot my favorite movie with DeNiro in it (not really a DeNiro movie) Stardust. He was hilarious.

    Reply
  53. Woo Hoo, I think I am finally blue. My husband showed me how to do it.:-)

    Reply
  54. Oberhasli,

    Congratulations on going blue! I look forward to seeing more of your posts.

    Reply
  55. Oberhasli, Welcome to "The Blue".

    Argyle, Right you are! Smoke on the horizon, absolutely one of the worst omens. If it wasn't the Indians attacking the settlers, it was the cattlemen going after the sheep ranchers and sometimes just a psychotic drifter going after anybody who got in his way. Whatever the movie, it always showed John, Audie, Clint, or another hero coming into the burned out homestead too late to help. He and his sidekick buried the dead and said a terse prayer over the mounded stones and makeshift cross. Then with a clenched jaw (maybe that was why he was a man of few words), he vowed revenge and set off on his over-ridden horse to do just that. I loved them when I was a kid and still do.

    Reply
  56. Well, we can all put another notch our computers. Another Friday has come and gone leaving us wiser though somewhat more weary. Since The Oregonian is not going to carry the LA xword, I've started doing it online after 11:00 P.M. I had been printing it out, but will save the trees and do it online. This doesn't seem to bother me, since I can still work the morning puzzle on paper, over coffee.

    Today's puzzle came together for me, but I don't quite understand why. Though I got the theme clue filled in correctly, it didn't help me to understand what I was doing. I was looking for some sort of object, subject relationship in the answers. Such as Happy Homer talking about himself rather than someone observing from the outside. I knew I was really stretching the point! The puzzle took me about 40 minutes, but no google, and all the boxes had the correct letters in them.

    Twisting my brain into this particular pretzel shape is starting to feel normal. Ouch!

    Feliz fin de semana a todos!

    Reply
  57. I haven't looked at the puzzle today as it was much too nice a day to spend my day off inside. My boat is almost ready to go...now if the bouy would magically appear...Anyway...on this day, April 17th...

    1492 Christopher Columbus received a commission from Spain's King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to seek a westward ocean passage to Asia.

    Imagine sailing the ship he had!

    1521 Martin Luther went before the Diet of Worms to face charges stemming from his religious writings.


    1790 American statesman Benjamin Franklin died in Philadelphia at age 84.

    His best invention? He had many.

    1951 Baseball Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle made his major league debut with the New York Yankees.

    Anyone have his rookie card? If so, what's it worth?

    1964 The Ford Motor Co. unveiled the Mustang.

    I owned a 1968. Anyone else out there?

    1969 A jury in Los Angeles convicted Sirhan Sirhan of assassinating Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.


    1970 The astronauts of Apollo 13 splashed down safely in the Pacific Ocean, four days after a ruptured oxygen tank crippled their spacecraft.

    I loved this movie. I also remember watching it in school at the time. It was a big deal to have a TV set in class.

    1993 A federal jury in Los Angeles convicted two former police officers of violating the civil rights of beaten motorist Rodney King; two other officers were acquitted.

    Where did Rodney King end up....yes, wrong at the time But...


    1998 Linda McCartney, wife of former Beatle Paul McCartney, died at age 55.

    What was/is your favorite Paul McCartney tune (solo)? Mine is "Maybe I'm Amazed."

    Reply
  58. Another Friday, and I couldn't complete the puzzle. I got about 3/4 of it, then went online to the regular version to finish. Strangely enough, I got some of the more obscure clues first. I immediately put in SIMIAN, and thought of KEN right away (like everyone else, felt GI JOE worked better, but certainly didn't fit). We had a gym teacher in high school that we used to call Ken Doll because of his resemblance. All the girls had a crush on him. I new DENIRO was in Awakenings so that filled in right away too. But I never did figure out the clue until coming here, and yet I was sure that MOMENT OF OLIVES was really supposed to be MOUNT OF OLIVES. We are just having some major brain farts these days.

    Like everyone else, OMELET was put in instead of QUICHE. Somehow, I always think of Quiche as more of a lunch dish and strata as being for brunch. Don't know why. Like CC, I think of REPOSE as being something related to the dead. Here are the many definitions per dictionary.com:

    –noun
    1. the state of reposing or being at rest; rest; sleep.
    2. peace; tranquillity; calm.
    3. dignified calmness, as of manner; composure.
    4. absence of movement, animation, etc.: When in repose, her face recalls the Mona Lisa.
    –verb (used without object)
    5. to lie or be at rest, as from work, activity, etc.
    6. to lie dead: His body will repose in the chapel for two days.7. to be peacefully calm and quiet: The sea reposed under the tropical sun.
    8. to lie or rest on something.
    9. Archaic. to depend or rely on a person or thing.
    –verb (used with object)
    10. to lay to rest; rest; refresh by rest (often used reflexively).

    WOW, so many uses for one word it can be confusing. CC - note #6

    Despite not always finishing late week puzzles, I think they are fun to work on. I am hoping soon that I will begin to complete more of them. I didn't think the proper nouns were too unfair, I just wasn't quite coming up with some of them today.

    Al, sounds like some interesting puzzle work. If I had more time I would take them up, but this blog sucks too much of my day as it is. When my husband asks what I did all day, it is too difficult to tell him that I was blogging about crossword puzzles. He thinks I am crazy already.

    ClearAyes, you and I think alike about the apologize after something's been done vs. getting permission ahead of time. I think that is part of the problem with the rich and famous. They just do what they like and apologize later, and it begins to ring hollow pretty quickly. I think CC is correct in that it is prudent to think twice before you speak or act. I have been caught foot in mouth too many times, and those who are prudent generally gain more respect, something I highly value.

    Hope everyone has a nice weekend. We have been having phenomenal weather, have been exercising outdoors as of late and loving it. Hopefully we will see some raindrops though as it is quite dry.

    Reply
  59. Jeannie: I too owned a 1968 Mustang. It was a bright red-orange V-8, and I was 20 years old. Were those the good old days? Yes!!!!!! My favorite Paul McCartney(my favorite Beatle) song was "Yesterday". Thanks for the nostalgic side trip. TTFN

    Reply
  60. I like these LAT puzzles. Not that I'm good at them yet, but I'm beginning to use my imagination more and beginning to fill in more squares. I did fill in all the squares today, but had to google some and guess at some, so I had to erase some. I always feel good when I know the answer to some that most of you have trouble with.
    On the other hand, you know a heck of a lot more answers than I do. Still, I think I'm gaining.
    I'm really enjoying the ride and all the comments.

    BTW, My bowling team just won its third "League Championship". (in a row).
    New league starts June 1st.
    Looking forward to a new season. I'm no "Boomer" yet, but after all, I'm 84 years (young). Don't expect too much. My average is about 160, but lately I've had some 200 games. Our leader has one 300 game and no handicap. He is consistently in the 220 to 250 range.
    C.C., You're still my hero.
    I admire you greatly.
    VAYA COM DIOS

    Reply
  61. Good Afternoon C.C. and Co.,

    Another brilliant puzzle. Once again, I was beginning to get concerned that I was not going to be able to finish this one. The SW corner was the last to fall and I was very pleased with myself for finally getting it. The key to getting it was to consider that the Lex Luthor clue might be asking for a plural answer. I was over-thinking it and thought that perhaps the answer was some kind of counter-part to the 'Justice League of America' or something. Once I decided to stick an 'S' in for the last letter SENSOR came to me which led to my being able to see QUICHE (I did not have 'omelet', I don't necessarily associate that with brunch) giving me IQS. I have to admit, though, that although I saw the common ME's in the theme answers it did not really help much and I never fully grokked the theme with YOU meaning 'u'. I wonder if Mr. Finan was thinking that 'OBITER Dictum' had something to do with an obituary. 'Quartier d'ETE' was a very refreshing way to clue ETE.

    "today's grid also has 40 black squares (43 is the limit). Our old puzzle limit is 38. I guess that's because Williams does not allow cheater (helper) squares."
    So each editor gets to make their own rules? Looks like I need to read a book or two about crosswords.

    "Any black square which can be removed from a crossword diagram, along with its symmetrically opposite black square, without decreasing the total word count of the puzzle. A puzzle may be ..."
    This is another mystery to me. If you remove a black square that leaves another empty one that needs a letter and, therefore, two new words. How can removing a black square ever reduce the word count?

    "Most of the solvers are probably unaware and don't really care about the above information."
    I am unaware, but I do care. I want to know so that I don't feel so stupid.

    Reply
  62. I had never heard of PIMA, but I got it right by finally getting the very questionable cluing for INS. 'November winners' was, hands-down, my least favorite clue. It took me 54:54 to get this tough one done. I am impressed that you did it in 23 minutes, Lemonade. Do you do it on paper? Do you Google? I do it on paper and never use Google or other resources, so I am not too unhappy with my time. I am mostly just happy that I could get it done.

    Every few years, my dive gloves wear out and I need to replace them. I continue to buy the same brand because I like their TACTILE quality.

    C.C., I think 'pooh-bah' is used loosely. It seems that the constructor or editor used it only to refer to someone ultimately responsible. MILNE was ultimately responsible for Pooh's existence.

    My favorite DENIRO movie is Flawless. Seeing that film told me a lot about DeNiro, the man. Since then, I have been a much bigger fan of his.

    According to Wikipedia, SAVALAS' given name at birth was actually Aristotelis, which seems to be what his parents thought was a more proper translation of the name we know as Aristotle. Aristoteles appears to be the German translation of the name.

    CHOPRA was a gimme for me. I read Ageless Body, Timeless Mind as well as Unconditional Life and Quantum Healing.

    "Who is the most famous TE in NFL history?" Dick Buttkiss

    Reply
  63. If Dick Buttkiss' name has anything to do with his being (or having?) a tight end, maybe that's what we all need to get rid of our flab.

    My favorite McCartney song is also "Yesterday".

    My first Ford was a 1963 English Cortina I bought when I started teaching in 1967.

    The verb "se reposer" in French means to rest too. The English version is probably one of those French words we got in spite of those we already had with the same meaning after the Norman conquest in 1066.

    Reply
  64. jeannie,
    Rodney King wound up an alcoholic working part time on a garbage truck. He's most recently been seen on the TV show, "Celebrity Rehab with Doctor Drew" and it's sequel, "Celebrity Rehab - Sober House". Looks like he's turning himself around. The show gave some interesting insights to his attack.

    Had an '88 Mustang convertible. Just the thing to cruise the beach. But my favorite Ford was a '69 T-Bird... Tuck and roll upholstery, wrap around back seat, power everything, pop-away steering column, and a 429ci Thunderjet under the hood. What a car!
    Did my first ever "Rockford" reversal in that thing, and have a lot of very good memories associated with it.

    Apollo 13 is an awesome movie!

    Agree with Argyle inre: smoke.

    Girding up for tomorrow!

    TJ in Osseo

    Reply
  65. Oh yeah, favorite DeNiro flick(s), "Analyze That" and "Analyze This". The first one anyway, I can never remember which is which.

    TJ

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  66. @pmt That Men in Football clip was a riot! Thanks for sharing!!

    Reply
  67. C.C.,

    Punjabi, Hindi, Korean, Japanese all follow the Subject-Object-Verb pattern. Arabic follows the Verb-Subject-Object pattern. Tagalog (Filipino) follows the Verb-Object-Subject pattern. Indonesian, Vietnamese and Thai, like Chinese and English, follow the Subject-Verb-Object pattern. Apparently German is also Subject-Object-Verb, which isn't a complete surprise because that pattern also appears often in French (as in "Je t'aime"). Oh and apparently Latin is/was SOV. Here's a link.

    Anyway, it seems I was mistaken when I said that sentences in most Asian languages end with verbs but linguists do describe it as a common feature of Asian languages (as opposed to European languages) and this website implies that it is true for all Asian languages, which is clearly not true.

    Martin

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  68. Martin,
    German doesn't follow just one pattern--the verb at the end is just for dependent clauses.

    Normally, the main verb must be second idea in a sentence. So if the dependent clause precedes the main clause, the main clause verb comes right after the dependent clause. If the main clause is first, you get normal word order in that clause. But there's a special order for adverbs and adverbial phrases too: Time then Manner then Place. So a sentence could go like this:

    "I went yesterday with Hans to town, because I something to buy needed." or:
    "Because I something to buy needed, went I yesterday with Hans to town."

    As well as this, you can actually start a clause with the adverb, object or anything else, but the verb will still come after that first idea, with the subject trailing after it. In the second example above, that is actually what you have, since the dependent clause is one idea: an adverbial clause of reason.

    Sounds like fun, doesn't it? This is why students of German really know their grammar!

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  69. I forgot, French only puts objects before the verb if the objects are pronouns--not nouns.

    Je t'aime, mais je n'aime pas ton ami.

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  70. Crockett1947,
    My pleasure. I remembered that shtick, but not exactly the one I linked. The way I recall it, the one says, "Dick Buttkiss...wuddn't he a tight en?" to which the other one replies, "He was ... now he a wide receiveh!"

    Martin,
    You are amazing. Keep it coming, please. You too, Kazie. I love the language talk.

    "Western omen: NOOSE. Why?"
    My stepfather's ancestor was the last person to be hung by the vigilantes prior to Montana becoming the 41st state. I am pretty sure that when he saw that noose, it was a bad omen.

    Lois, does KENny ride during the winter or he is happy that the snow is finally gone?

    "I initially had A BOSN AMED SMEE, thinking dear old SMEE was probably a BOSN. That tripped me up for a long time."
    Embien, if BOSN had been part of the answer that would have tripped everyone up. Talk about obscure!

    Geri, I didn't realize you are in Vancouver. Pretty place. Well, since I live in a hockey backwater, I guess I will wish both the Canucks and the Sharks good luck. I assume Dennis is a Flyers fan, so I will wish them luck, too. I think the Sabres are still smarting over trading Briere and Drury.

    Maria, Boyd, SaminMiam ... don't be shy.

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  71. Hey: Thanks PMT, I do Wednesday through Saturday on paper, and I put the puzzle down and do something else rather than going to Google. I am on a pretty good streak, which by mentioning probably means a crash and burn tomorrow. Today was one of those days when things just fell like Dominos. I had DE NIRO, HALITE, QUICHE, KEN and others without much work, and then it was just a question of filling in the long ones. My grandfather was a tailor, so I knew PIMA, and the French clues help. I really did not get the theme until I was done, but I seldom do, though I have a sense of what is going on, like yesterdays G fest. I sometimes struggle more with the easy ones. When I am done, if it is before C.C. has posted, I will go online and see if it is happy with my answers, and even then it takes me more than 3 or 4 minutes to type the answers I already know.

    Well I am finally feeling back to PAR; time to get back to tending the IRONS I have in the fire, and keep out of the WOODS, so I don't get the SHAFT. Driving to see my sons, who are CHIPS off the old block. I will PITCH them to come home for a while in the summer. Maybe we will PUTTER around together. Well, that's all I can WEDGE in for tonight. Not in your class for DF, but I am trying my comeback, Lo-li-ta.

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  72. Ah piss! It looks like I screwed the pooch on that Danny Briere link. No biggie. It was just an old article speculating as to whether he might wind up back in Buffalo. It was, most likely, just wishful thinking on the part of the journalist. Apparently, the Flyers are down 2-to-1 in the first round series versus the Penguins. I'd like to see them win it (sorry Dick). Crosby showed his true colors a few months back when he jumped Panther's forward Brett McClean right off the face-off, without a word said. Apparently, there was a lot of talk about that on the Internet. We all make mistakes, but if he continues with that kind of behavior it will speak loads to his character.

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  73. Oberhaski, a true blue welcome!

    Geri, thanks, I think. And you too, Promiseme. Hopefully we'll see some good hockey.

    Clear Ayes, I loved Audie Murphy in those cowboy and war movie days. Then along came the musicals! I'm so glad they are sort of coming back.

    Jeannie, I had a blue 65 Mustang convertible with white interior.Our white shepherd looked so regal riding around in it.Unfortunately, I had to trade it in for a stationwagon when 1st baby came along.My husband got to keep his TR3 or4 or 6A, whatever.

    I think I just lived up to the Blah Blah day.

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  74. A.R.E. a 22' 1970 Catalina? I would love to be your jiber on her.

    Lemonade, as I "approach the marker", with the "line of play" in sight; I will try not to "lie" as I might have "loose impediments" and "loft" a "lost ball". Okay, now I have a "lip out" and am causing a "lateral water hazzard." I might just have to "lay up".

    Reply
  75. Hi Jd and other hockey fans.
    It is getting better all the time. Canucks won tonight. Now they will be off to St Louis for the next two games, they are a loud crowd there.
    Good luck to all!
    Geri

    Reply
  76. PMeThis
    Thanks for rooting for us!
    Geri

    Reply
  77. Damn, loose impediments; those hurt. And being laid up is not usually a good thing; you wonder about words and how much a little up changes things. George Carlin would have fun with that concept: laid = good; laid up = bad; laid down = neutral.

    Which brought me to Lay Lady Lay.

    Too bad everyone is sleeping....

    Reply
  78. As you said,pooh-bah is slang for the person in charge. AA Milne wrote the Pooh stories for his son,and they took place in the woods ,at the farm he owned.So Milne was the Pooh pooh bah.

    Reply
  79. CC,

    Robert Deniro named was misspelled.

    Reply
  80. Thanks. I just corrected my mistake.

    Reply

Apr 16, 2009

Thursday April 16, 2009 Don Gagliardo

Theme: GEES (66A: Yegg's thousands)

17A: Toxic defoliant in Vietnam: AGENT ORANGE

27A: 1930s Fred Astaire partner: GINGER ROGERS

38A: Study of rock groups?: GEOLOGY

45A: Show runner: STAGE MANAGER

58A: "Adam Bede" novelist: GEORGE ELLIOT

Plus 23 more theme answers I will list later.

The above 5 long theme answers all have 2 or 3 G's each and are symmetrically placed. GINGER ROGERS is my favorite, the only one with 3 G's. Have never seen her full name in a puzzle before. Looks cool in the grid. GEOLOGY clue is made interesting with a question mark.

Just amazing puzzle! Total 21 G's. NY Times' record is 19. All soft G theme answers are positioned in Across, and hard G' in Down. Out of the 78 words in this puzzle, 28 are theme answers (14 Across and 14 Down). And if I counted correctly, there are only 60 non-theme black squares. That would be 125 theme squares, about 68% of theme fills. Definitely a first for me.

It reminds me of the Sept 19, 2008 Newsday "52 of a Kind" puzzle. Every word in the grid has a letter L, some are long, some are short. I asked Stan Newman if all of them are theme answers. He said yes, but "of course this is a special case".

Very creative puzzle. I enjoyed a lot. I wonder why SOFT G is not clued in the grid. Is it structurally impossible?

OK, here we go, more soft G (Across) theme entries:

4A: Sharp-witted: AGILE. Wrote down ACUTE recklessly.

9A: O. Henry's "The Gift of the __": MAGI. Read this story in Chinese. It's in our high school western literature class.

14A: Taunts: GIBES

16A: Windy City superstation: WGN. Owned by the Tribune Company, which also owns Chicago Cubs, Chicago Tribune, LA Times and of course Tribune Media Services (TMS) which syndicates LA Times and the old TMS Daily puzzle.

32A: Rowlands of "Another Woman": GENA

50A: Golden __: AGERS. Didn't we just see this clue the other day? Time for teen AGERS.

62A: Red-and-white supermarket logo: IGA (Independent Grocers Alliance). Sigh! I can't remember this chain name. It's clued as "Supermarket grp." in early April.

66A: Yegg's thousands: GEES. Feels weird to see G spelled out as GEE.

67A: Letter appearing only in down answers; its opposite appears in across answers: HARD G

68A: Glue is one: GEL

And hard G Down theme entries:

2D: Billiards player's consideration: ANGLE

4D: Tennis great who retired in 2006: AGASSI (Andre). Two-US Open champ, as clued in yesterday's puzzle.

5D: Prefix with hertz: GIGA. Only know gigabyte.

9D: Address to a pal, in Pamplona: MI AMIGO. "My friend" in Spanish. This refers to male friend only, correct?

11D: Satanic nation in Revelation: GOG. No idea. Got it from across fills. Is that how we got AGOG?

20D: '70 Olympics name: OLGA (Korbut). OLGA means "Holy".

29D: Skilled in: GOOD AT

32D: Tenet's CIA successor: GOSS (Porter). Gimme gimme. Leon Panetta is the current boss. Someone just mentioned on the blog yesterday that CIA's nickname is "The Company". NSA's nickname is "The Puzzle Palace".

38D: Donate, in Dundee: GIE. Scottish for "give".

39D: Club appearance: GIG

42D: Overlooks: IGNORES. Overlook is a Janus word. It means IGNORES, but it also means "to watch over".

44D: Logician's connector: ERGO

52D: Antisocial elephant: ROGUE. Is "Antisocial elephant" a slang? I am not familiar with this phrase.

55D: __ Khan: AGA. Sometimes it's clued as "Turkish title". Literally "Lord". Here is Anne Bancroft's "Yma Dream" again. AGA Khan is one of them. AVA Gardner, AVA Gabor, OONA O'Neill, IDA Lupino, Abba EBAN, UTA Hagen, Ida Lupino and most of the crossword stalwarts are in the clip too.

58D: Comical bit: GAG

Non theme fills (Across):

1A: Late-night name: JAY. JAY Leno. Another kind of soft G, right?

13A: Prop extension?: ANE. Propane. I like this clue. Much better than our old "Chemical ending".

15A: Key that often sounds gloomy: MINOR. Oh, I was unaware of this. So MAJOR keys are cheerful?

19A: Charlie Parker's instrument: ALTO SAX. Would not have got the answer without the down fills. I could only think of saxphone.

21A: Novel type: DIME

22A: Sings, so to speak: TELLS. "Where do I begin? To tell the story of how great a love can be?..."

23A: Philosopher __ tzu: LAO. LAO literally means "old" in Chinese. LAO-Tzu is "Old Master". My husband calls me LAO Po, literally "Old wife".

35A: Place for a stud: LOBE. Stud earrings.

36A: Tribute with a wink: ROAST. Like the annual Gridiron Club Dinner. Obama skipped his this year.

37A: Siouan speaker: OTO. Or OTOE.

40A: Old touring car: REO. The old Olds.

41A: 2005 horror sequel: SAW II. Easy guess. I don't watch horror movies.

43A: Artist who worked on Hitchcock's "Spellbound": DALI. Another guess. I only know the 2002 documentary "Spellbound". I bet those kids are great at solving crosswords. Have never heard of Hitchcock's "Spellbound". DALI was a close friend of Mia Farrow.

44A: O.K. Corral name: EARP. Learned from doing Xword.

48A: Certain, for sure: Abbr.: SYN (Synonym). I don't get this one? What does SYN stand for? (Note: Certain is the synonym of "sure". I am going to bang my head at the wall now.)

49A: LAX tower gp.: ATC. Air Traffic Control. I got the answer from down fills also.

54A: Actress Cusack: JOAN. John Cusack's sister. She is Cynthia in "Working Girl".

64A: "Lovergirl" vocalist __ Marie: TEENA. Here is the clip. I am not familiar with this singer. Wikipedia says she is nicknamed Lady T and her real name is Mary Christine Brockert. Why TEENA intead of Tina then?

65A: Rapa __: Easter Island: NUI. Here is a map. I had no idea that Easter Island is also called Rapa NUI, the Polynesian name meaning "Big Rapa". Wikipedia says it's coined by labor immigrants from Rapa in the Bass Islands, who likened it to their home island in the aftermath of the Peruvian slave deportations in the 1870s. Maybe you can tell me where Bass Islands is.

Non-theme Down:

1D: Scold: JAW AT. Is JAW AT a phrase? I only know JAW.

3D: Streisand title role: YENTL. I still don't know the exact meaning of YENTL. But it's the root word of YENTA.

6D: Alpine goat: IBEX. The wild mountain goat with terrifying horns. Does IBEX shed their horns as buck does with their antlers?

7D: Sportscaster Berman: LEN. Ah me, I forgot his name. I recognized those bobbleheads, so I must have linked this picture before.

8D: More than -er?: EST. Cute clue.

10D: "Archie Bunker's Place" costar: ANNE MEARA. Ben Stiller's mother.

15D: Hospital scanner: MRI

23D: Matt of "Joey": LeBLANC. A rare gimme. Liked him in "Friends". Have never seen "Joey" though.

24D: Anatomical ring: AREOLA. The nipple rings. Are(a) + Ola. The plural is AREOLAE.

26D: "Mr. Triple Axel" Brian: ORSER. Got his name from across fills. A Canadian figure skater. How tall do you think he is?

28D: Marlins' div: NLE (National League East). Braves, Phillies, Mets and the Nationals are the other members. Our Twins belong to ALC (American League Central).

30D: Access ending: ORY. Accessory.

34D: "When pigs fly!": NO WAY JOSE

46D: Nape growth: MANE. The nape of lion/horse.

47D: Livestock identifier: EAR TAG. See this picture. I can almost feel the pain when his ear is pierced.

51D: "Dallas" name: EWING. This has become a gimme. Williams clued EWING as "Adlai Stevenson's middle name" a couple of times.

53D: Slow mollusk: SNAIL

57D: Tegucigalpa's country: Abbr.: HOND (Honduras). Tegucigalpa is the capital city. We just had ESTO clued as "This, in Tegucigalpa" a week ago. But I forgot it completely. New abbreviation to me also.

59D: Summer in the cité: ETE. Rather tepid clue. I like last time's "When the French fry?".

60D: Ordinal suffix: ETH. Sometimes it's clued as "Biblical verb ending".

61D: Meadow: LEA. I've never seen this meadow word in any book, but EWE might have.

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 15, 2009

Interview with Dan Naddor

Dan Feyer mentioned in his interview that Dan Naddor is one of his favorite constructors. Barrel of A Pencil and a few other fellow solvers also told me that they are huge fans of Dan Naddor.

Dan is one of the regular contributors to LA Times Crossword. I thought it would be a good idea for us to get to know him better.

I asked Dan a few questions, and I found his answers to be very informative and fascinating.

What's your background? Who inspired you to construct your first crossword?



I grew up in Baltimore as a precocious kid who loved baseball and used to read Time Magazine cover to cover. That triggered a lifelong appreciation for the incredible depth and quirkiness of the English language. I became a dreaded know-it-all and developed a love of wordplay and puns at an early age (to the chagrin of my teachers and classmates). I remember vividly sitting in math class in high school with a problem on the board involving multiple colored dice, four of which were clear. The clear ones were 2, 3, 5 and 6, something like that. So I announced “So, on a clear die you can never see four”, punning on “On a Clear Day You Can See Forever”. Dead silence. No one got it. You get the picture – I was quite the geek. When I first heard of “A MAN, A PLAN, A CANAL, PANAMA” I was thrilled and astounded. In college, though, I soured a bit on academics but blossomed socially and became better-rounded as a person. Eventually I became an investment real estate dealmaker in Southern California. I’m ashamed to say the only reading I do these days is the newspaper.

In the mid-90’s I began solving crosswords at lunch as something to do. The Los Angeles Times puzzle, in fact, pre-Rich Norris. I’d finish them easily, underwhelmed with their caliber, and then think about how I could improve on them. I didn’t understand why so many had only three or four theme entries. I tried a few NYT puzzles but found my solving skills not nearly up to the challenge. But my interest in construction was piqued.


I've only solved 2 of your puzzles, but I found the state & city (I titled it as "Texas Lolita's Favorite Things) to be very creative. How would you describe your style? What kind of themes/fills are you gravitating to or trying to avoid? And what's your view on low word/low black square counts?


I guess I’d describe my puzzle style as original and theme-laden. My goal is to excite my solvers with clever themes and colorful non-crosswordese fill. And there’s no reason my solver shouldn’t get at least four or five “aha moments”, as Will Shortz describes them. If I’m working on a puzzle idea and can’t come up at least four themers, I punt. But if I can squish seven or eight quality themers in, that’s panacea for me as a constructor. It makes crafting a good fill tougher, to be sure. But it’s like laying out your stuff on the bed for a trip, seeing it’s more than your suitcase can possibly hold, and still managing to squeeze everything in without leaving any items behind. I like that challenge.

First of all, I want my grids to be attractive to the eye. Ideally, I strive for a block arrangement with lots of well-defined, open areas. And I shoot for at least 20 entries of 6 letters or more in my puzzles, the non-themers as colorful as possible. Themewise, I’ll tackle anything that lends itself to humor or wordplay – irony, puns, deleted/added/switched letters, hidden words. I steer clear of tributes and themeless puzzles because I find them lacking in “aha moments”. And I love coming up with punny clues that gently pull my solver’s leg, like “Altar ego” for BRIDE, “Grasshopper’s soda” for NEHI, and “Blow-out merchandise” for CANDLES.

Because of my love of heavy “themage”, most of my puzzles tend to be low word count and high black square count. If I can find ways to lower either without compromising my fill, I do it in a heartbeat. I spend a lot of time up front positioning the theme entries in the grid so that I can create not only an appealing look, but opportunities for enhancing fill by stacking themers wherever possible and finding longish words that can run vertically through the horizontal traffic jam. If I don’t do that, I end up needing more than the allowable 42 black squares. As it is, I spend hours and hours on fill.

Dan Feyer mentioned that you only contribute to LA Times. Is there a special reason for that? How long have been contributing to LA Times and what is it like working with Rich Norris?


I sent Rich Norris ten puzzles in the summer of 2006 before he finally accepted one (probably out of pity because it had 80 words, two over the limit). I’ve had 91 published since then and another 50 or so waiting in queue.

Rich is a remarkably talented, patient editor whose collaborative but disciplined style fits well with my creative, gung-ho approach. I have learned an enormous amount from him about theme tightness, consistency, “quality of fill trumps quantity of theme” and making sure the difficulty of the fill is commensurate with the day of the week for which the theme is suited (e.g. no obscure words for a Monday puzzle). He has rescued many of my more abstract themes with his terrific cluing ability. And when he rejects a submission (it happens over 50% of the time), he gives me a thoughtful explanation of his rationale. So rather than train/endure another editor while learning the craft, I’ve stuck with Rich exclusively. As time goes on I may branch out.


What kind of puzzles do you solve every day? Who are your favorite constructors and why?


To be honest I don’t do much solving at all. I solve the LAT every morning to keep abreast of what others are doing and what Rich is allowing. And I read Amy Reynaldo’s terrific blog daily. But that’s about it. I’d rather be creative with my time. In a way, I think my disdain for obscure words would be dulled if I were a serial solver and looked at them every day.

Patrick Berry is my favorite constructor – great themes and marvelous, uncluttered fill. It’s a real treat for me when he shows up in Amy’s blog.


Besides solving/constructing crosswords, what else do you do for fun? What would people find one thing that's most surprising about you?


I am blessed with a wonderful wife, Tracie, sons Mike and Alex and daughter Courtney. When I’m not with my family, and not constructing, I love playing competitive golf with my buddies, usually for money. I’m getting a bit older and don’t sink the pressure putts like I used to. Watching the Masters this year was awesome – I’m a big Tiger Woods fan (who inspired a cute puzzle I’m currently working on).

Actually, the thing most people find surprising about me is my prolific puzzle-making. For some reason most people I interact with, including the well-educated ones, aren’t into crosswords. I guess I must keep my intellectual side, born from childhood, under wraps pretty well.

Thanks for inviting me into your domain, CC. It was fun to be asked such insightful questions about my hobby/obsession!

Added later by C.C.:

1) Dan passed away on Dec 28, 2009. He was 53 years old. I felt comforted that his last birthday (Oct 16) was celebrated on our blog and he knew how much he was loved and admired in our community. For those who can't access
Dan's Facebook, here are a few of his favorite things:

Favorite music: Yo Yo Ma; Classical; Musical Theatre (West Side Story)

Favorite TV shows: Wild Wild West

Favorite movies: Wizard of Oz; Shawshank Redemption.

Favorite Quotations: Never, Never, Never Give up (Winston Churchill); Always Do the Right Thing (Dan Naddor).

2) Dan Naddor obit in LA Times.

3) His friends called him "Mr. Duck", and he nicknamed himself
"Dr. Squish" for "his propensity to crowd theme-related clues into his puzzles".

4) Dan Naddor Wordplay Tribute (March 25, 2010)

5) Here is a summary of all of Dan's LAT puzzles (April 17, 2011)

Wednesday April 15, 2009 Dan Naddor

Theme: Tough Ending

17A: Loaf pan filler: BREAD DOUGH

29A: Mistletoe branch that was Aeneas' pass to the underworld: GOLDEN BOUGH

39A: Something to lead a horse to: WATER TROUGH

52A: "The Thorn Birds" author: McCULLOUGH

11D: "Cut it out": THAT'S ENOUGH

24D: Make a dramatic recovery: PULL THROUGH

I did not know GOLDEN BOUGH or the author of "The Thorn Birds" Colleen McCullough. I do know historian/author David McCullough though. Heard so many of his interviews when he promoted "1776".

This is an incredible puzzle. Four 11-letter entries, Two 10-letter entries. All with different pronunciation. Last time Kazie and someone else (Doreen?) discussed *OUGH ending words in detail on the blog. I don't think they covered McCullough though. Dan Naddor ploughed through the whole field and left no stone unturned. Amazing. Lots of clever fills too.

I cottoned to the theme very earlier on and was able to fill in lots of blanks. Had trouble with lower left corner though. I was so sure that the answer for 48A (WWII torpedo vessel) is U-BOAT. Have never heard of E-BOAT before. With letter U in place, my 44D (Pop or bop) became MUSIC rather than GENRE. Then I wanted ABUZZ instead of ABOIL for 45D: "Full of excitement".

By the way, crossword constructor Justin Smith is running a Metacross Contest starting tomorrow. See here for details.

Across:

1A: St. with a panhandle: OKLA. Wow, 9 states with panhandle. I thought only 3. Whenever I see the abbreviation St, I think of "saint" first.

5A: Polio vaccine developer: SABIN. He developed oral vaccine. Salk's is injection.

16A: "Now I get it": AH SO. Often clued as "Charlie Chan's comment". The complete Japanese interjection is "AH SO desu ka" (That is so). "AH SO desu ka?" means "Is that so"?

19A: Mane man of film?: LAHR (Bert). The Cowardly Lion in "The Wizard of Oz". Great clue.

20A: Fruity rum drink: COLADA. Ah, must be a gimme for Clear Ayes. She loves piña COLADA.

22A: Give authority to: EMPOWER

25A: Gets in the crosshairs: AIMS AT

26A: English subjects?: NOUNS. The ? mark makes this clue very interesting. Without ?, the clue is legit too.

27A: One may be proffered at a wedding: HANKIE. I have this 1991 Twins Championship Homer Hanky. I also have the original 1987 Twins World Series one.

32A: Eavesdropping org.: NSA (National Security Agency). "The Puzzle Palace". What is the nickname for CIA? I wonder if the author of "Enemy of the State" worked in NSA before. Great movie.

35A: First name in jazz: ELLA (Fitzgerald). I wrote ETTA. She is a jazz singer too. Very interesting: ETTA James said her mother told her that her father was "Minnesota Fats." How could that be?

38A: It's 0 at the equator: Abbr.: LAT (Latitude). Ecuador got its name from its equator location.

41A: Rained hard?: HAILED. Another great clue. I wanted POURED.

44A: Used Scope, say: GARGLE. I like Listerine.

46A: Dogs: POOCHES

48A: WWII torpedo vessel: E-BOAT. My disaster area. Wikipedia says it's commonly held that the E stood for "Enemy", but it is likely that it in fact stood for "Eilboot" ("fast boat"). Looks too big to be a torpedo vessel.

49A: Poe's "The Murders in the Rue ___": MORGUE. The first detective story ever. Unknown to me. All I know about Poe is "The Raven" and "Annabel Lee".

51A: We, to Henri: NOUS. Also "Us, to Henri".

56A: Fixes, in a way: RIGS

57A: Two-dimensional surface: PLANE

59A: Pre-coll, catchall: ELHI. El(mentary) + Hi(ghschool). Last time several ex-teachers said they had never heard of ELHI.

Down:

1D: Heavenly body: ORB. I thought of GOD. What's the first thing that popped into your mind? Victoria's Secret Angels?

2D: It can precede plop or plunk: KER. I like last time's "Plunk starter?" clue.

4D: Amazon predator: ANACONDA. Oh my goodness, so huge. I've never heard of it before. Wikipedia says it's mostly found in water, such as Nile or Amazon. I thought all snakes live on land. (Note: Here is the Sea Eagle Vs. Banded Snake clip PromiseMe provided).

5D: Move furtively: SIDLE

6D: Like Niagara Falls: AROAR

7D: Data transmission rate: BAUD. I forgot. It's named after Émile Baudot the French inventor.

8D: Swenson of "Benson": INGA. Swedish for "Hero's daughter". I tend to confuse her with Gloria Swanson.

9D: Disease research org.: NIH (National Institutes of Health)

10D: A hero might hold it: SALAMI. Hero sandwich. My favorite clue. Of course, I was picturing a war hero holding a flag.

12D: Dublin-born actor Milo: O'SHEA. Now I see why Rich Norris clued O'SHEA as "__ Jackson: rapper Ice Cube's birth name" yesterday. No repetitive clues on consecutive days.

13D: Razzie Award word: WORST. I like this clue too. I had never connected Raspberry Award with "blow a rasberry" until last time when BOOER was clued as "Raspberry blower" in our puzzle.

18D: Use a divining rod: DOWSE

21D: One of about 19 million Indians: SIKH. Hindu for "disciple" or "learner". Wikipedia says they wear turban, both man and women. Hello, can you hear me now?

22D: Georgia of "Coach": ENGEL. No idea. Is she very famous? Wikepida says she is in "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" also.

23D: Dinero: MOOLA. Both slang for money. I used to mix up MOOLA with those Muslim Mullah.

27D: Rinsed, as a driveway: HOSED

28D: Violin virtuoso Leopold: AUER. Impossible vowel-heavy name. I bet I will forget it next time. I like the alliterative "Violin virtuoso".

30D: Author Zora __ Hurston: NEALE. The author of "Their Eyes Were Watching God". Saw this clue somewhere before.

31D: Diminish: BATE. My was FADE.

37D: Expel: FORCE OUT

33D: Smooth transition: SEGUE

39D: Droop: WILT

40D: "High Sierra" director Walsh: RAOUL. No idea. What's wrong with his right eye?

42D: Two-time U.S. Open champ Andre: AGASSI

46D: Cut back, as a branch: PRUNE

47D: Gave the eye: OGLED. "Give someone the eye" is a new phrase to me.

49D: Mid-12th century date: MCLI. 1151.

50D: One __: kids' ball game: O' CAT. See here for more information. I've never heard of One/Two/Three/Four O' Cat ball game. Why Cat instead of Dog?

52D: AWOL chasers: MPS (Military Polices)

53D: troupe for troops: Abbr.: USO. Learned this morning that USO was already established in WWII.

54D: Prizm maker of yore: GEO (1988-1997). The answer revealed itself.

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 14, 2009

Tuesday April 14, 2009 Billie Truitt

Theme: They R Different

17A: 11:00a.m. restaurant patrons?: BRUNCH BUNCH

29A: Fraternity nerd?: GREEK GEEK

39A: Advice from the auto club?: TRIP TIP

48A: Whimsical Barbie?: DROLL DOLL

63A: Quite small-minded?: PRETTY PETTY

The first three pairs rhyme. The last two don't. Adding one letter R is like adding a stroke to a Chinese character, the meaning and the pronunciation of the word can change dramatically. The same with letter L: FLAIR, FAIR; FLOUR, FOUR; GLUT, GUT, etc.

I like seeing REAR (23A: Caboose's place) & END (36A: Caboose's place) with the same clue. The same with EVEN (37A: Deadlocked) and TIED (52A: Deadlocked). Nice pair.

My favorite clue today is TAR (66A: Seasoned salt?). Of all the slang for sailor, gob is the strangest. But I learned yesterday that gob is actually short for gobshite, old English for wad of spit chewing tobacco or tobacco juice. I don't know, maybe sailors like chewing tobacco?

The STUD clue (58D: It may be ear-piercing) is cute too. I used to think all STUD earrings are penetrative, then Argyle found some clip-on STUD earrings on internet. So "may be" here is quite accurate.

Oh I got several questions regarding Dan Feyer's best time. Dan said his paper record is 1:56 for Monday March 9, 2009 NYT puzzle. And his online record (Across Lite) is 1:17 for an old NYT. Do you think he will break 1 minute threshold?

Across:

1A: E-junk: SPAM. Wikipedia says Rolex and Viagra-type drugs are two common products advertised in SPAM e-mail.

5A: Honshu port: OSAKA. Literally "large hill" or "large slope". Its Japanese Kanji and Chinese characters are the same, both are 大阪市. I did not know it's so close to Kyoto.

10A: No.-crunching pro: CPA

13A: Shakespearean betrayer: IAGO. The villain in "Othello".

14A: Fancy calligraphy strokes: SERIFS. I would not call SERIFS fancy. These calligraphy strokes are fancy. Does Chinese word "love" look complicated to you?

20A: Ocean color: SEA GREEN

21A: Em and Bee: AUNTS. Another famous one is Aunt Jemima.

34A: Ace the exam: NAIL IT

38A: Banned bug killer: DDT. Banned in the US in 1972. I think we still used it on apple orchard in 1980's.

45A: Big oaf: APE. This reminds me of my babu (baboo) and baboon confusion. I always thought Seinfeld calls the Indian immigrant Baboon.

46A: Crocodile hunter of film: DUNDEE. Learned this film from doing Xword.

58A: Answer: SOLUTION

62A: "__ said it": YOU. I wanted I'VE.

67A: Patriot Adams: SAMUEL. Why emphasizes "Patriot" here?

68A: Organ knob: STOP

Down:

3D: Juanita's water: AGUA. Shui, in Chinese. Like Feng Shui. Feng is literally "wind".

4D: Mutt: MONGREL

5D: __Jackson: rapper Ice Cube's birth name: O'SHEA. No idea. Only know him as Ice Cube. O'SHEA is often clued as "Actor Milo". Ice-T's original name is Tracy Marrow, which appeared in our TMS Daily before.

6D: Jean of "Saint Joan": SEBERG. Unknown to me also. Wikipedia says Jean SEBERG had an affair with Clint Eastwood while shooting "Paint Your Wagon".

7D: Make __ for it: A RUN

9D: Org. with Patriots and Jets: AFC. The answer emerged after I filled in the across. I don't know which teams are AFC, which are NFC. Most of the time I just fill in NFL.

11D: Animal hide: PELT

15D: Predatory lender: SHARK. Hmm, no California hockey reference here. Too bad, JD, maybe Rich Norries does not like San Jose Sharks.

18D: Plastic, so to speak: CREDIT. Good clue.

24D: Out of shape?: BENT. I like this clue too.

26D: Like most movie rentals: ON DVD

28D: Explosive stuff, briefly: NITRO (Nitroglycerin). Always thought NITRO is a complete word itself.

32D: Went sniggling: EELED. Koreans men eat eels for "stamina". Vietnamese men drink snake blood for "stamina". Weird, isnt it? Snakes and eels actually look quite similiar.

33D: Patched pants parts: KNEES. I like the alliteration in the clue.

35D: Livelihood: TRADE

40D: Product with earbuds: iPOD. Use mine mainly for NPR podcast.

41D: Upper body strengthener: PUSH-UP

44D: Crunchy sandwiches: BLTS. Have never had a BLT in my life. Can't get used to the mayonnaise taste.

49D: Speaks like Daffy: LISPS

60D: Plains native: OTOE. The "Plains" here refers to "The Great Plains", right?

61D: Big Apple enforcement org.: NYPD. Reminds me of "NYPD Blue" and crossword stalwart ESAI Morales.

64D: It's used for battering: RAM. The long pole in the middle? Vaguely remember someone explained battering RAM to me before.

65D: Flightless bird: EMU. Dennis just mentioned at the Comments section that EMU can't walk backward. Nor can kangaroo. Both are in Australia's coat of arms. They signify Australia's "Forward with Pride" spirit.

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 13, 2009

LA Times Puzzle Poll Result

Poll question: How do you like LA Times puzzle so far?

Total votes: 704

Much better than TMS Daily: 103 (14%)

No different than TMS Daily: 16 (2%)

I miss my old TMS Daily: 520 (73%)

Need more time to think: 65 (9%)

Thanks for the participation.

C.C.

Monday April 13, 2009 Fred Jackson III

Theme: Gas Gauge

20A: Conceited: FULL OF ONESELF

38A: Plan not completely thought after: HALF-BAKED IDEA

57A: Much campaign rhetoric: EMPTY PROMISES

Ah, a puzzle from our own Fred Jackson III. What a pleasant Monday morning surprise! Congratulations, Fred.

This puzzle seems to be tailor-made for solvers at my level. No obscure dead actor/actress or old TV series name. Three lively theme answers. I really like 15*15 grids with 3 or 4 theme entries. My cup of tea. 5 makes the grid look busy. And weird abbreviations or obscure ESSY Persson style name tend to creep up when there are 6 or 7. Maybe advanced solvers adore them, I don't.

A bit of a French sub-theme:

19A: Parisian river: SEINE

30A: French love: AMOUR

69A: Canonized Mlles: STES

53D: Gallic girlfriends: AMIE

All of them are clued straightforwardly. No trickly "Parisian flower?" for SEINE misguide.

Across:

1A: Put below, as cargo: STOW. Why "below"? I don't grok it.

5A: Potentially painful precipitation: HAIL. Some flowers are surprisingly strong. ROSES (55D: Thorny flowers) are easily damaged by hailstorms.

9A: Treasure map measures: PACES. How come? I got the answer from down fills. I've never seen a treasure map. I suppose it has its own scale term?

15A: __ Domini: ANNO. AD. Nominative singular is ANNUS, and plural is ANNI (anniversary). This is confusing. Is ANNO in ANNO Domini dative singular or ablative singular?

18A: Composer Stravinsky: IGOR. Sometimes it's clued as "Operative prince". And IAGO (60D: "Othello" fellow). I used to confuse those two, both contains GO. And two ao in Golfer Isao Aoki's name.

23A: Brit. record label: EMI (Electric & Musical Industries Ltd.). Just found out this morning that the "Big Four" record companies are EMI, Sony Music, Universal Music and Warner Music.

24A: Former Egypt-Syria alliance: Abbr.: UAR (United Arab Republic, 1958-1961). Egypt continued to be called UAR until 1971. So Nasser was the president of UAR until his death in 1970. Don't confuse UAR with UAE (United Arab Emirates). Still remember the UAE Dubai port scandal?

25A: Beers and ales: QUAFFS. I thought ale is a kind of beer.

33A: Last: Abbr.: ULT

37A: Scott who sued for his freedom: DRED. And he lost. I finally remember his name this time.

42A: Suffix with hard or soft: WARE. My first thought is BALL.

43A: Seashell seller, in a tongue twister: SHE. I am not good at tongue twister, English or Chinese. Are you?

44A: Retirement org.: SSA. And "Seniors' org" is AARP. Many AARP members are not retired.

45A: "Slippery" tree: ELM. Easy guess. Why is it called "Slippery ELM"?

46A: Archaeological fragment: SHARD. I think the broken piece of my bobblehead is called SHARD too.

48A: Like some poetry: LYRIC. Some are EPIC.

52A: Prefix with sphere: STRATO. ATMO is also "prefix with sphere".

56A: "Foucault's Pendulum" author Umberto: ECO. Here is the bookcover. Wikipedia says the book has been described as a "thinking person's Da Vinci Code". I can't remember who, but one of our fellow solvers has read his "The Name of the Rose".

61A: Count with a keyboard: BASIE. Stumper for me. I can't figure out how one can count with a keyboard. Have never heard of Count BASIE. Is this nickname Count inspired by Duke Ellington?

63A: Warts and all: AS IS

65A: Group of eight: OCTET. Sometimes the answer is OCTAD.

66A: Stroll in the shallows: WADE. I kept reading the clue as "Stroll in the shadows".

67A: Head over heels in love: GAGA. I like this clue.

68A: Out of fashion: PASSE. Does Britney look sexy to you in this low-rise jeans?

Down:

1D: Fixed charge: SET FEE

2D: Psychological injury: TRAUMA. Like what we suffered during Chinese Cultural Revolution.

3D: Like many old-fashioned lamps: OIL-LIT. Aladdin's genie lamp is OIL-LIT.

4D: Wishing place: WELL. Odin traded his right eye for wisdom from the WELL of Mimir.

5D: Israeli port city: HAIFA. Here is the map. Third largest city in Israel, after Jerusalem & Tel Aviv.

9D: Charlatan: POSEUR

10D: Journalist __ Rogers St. Johns: ADELA. Learned her name from doing crossword. I don't understand how anyone can be surnamed St. Johns. Also at a loss over Edna St. Vincent Millay's name. How can they call themselves St? By the way, Fred Astaire's sister is ADELE, very close to ADELA.

11D: Hairdo: COIFFURE. Used to have difficulty rememering this word. Then I realized coif is the root, and ure is just a noun suffix, as in pressure.

21D: Words before sight and mind: OUT OF

26D: Dog collar target: FLEA. No idea. Why? I am not a dog/cat person. I thought the dog collar is used to control and restrain dogs.

27D: Benchmark: Abbr.: STD

29D: Dot on an ocean map: ISLE. "Dot in la mer" will be ILE.

35D: Air rifle ammo: BB SHOT. Will BB gun kill a squirrel?

38D: "Stop right there!": HALT. "Stop right here!" would be WHOA, right?

41D: Faith of more than 1 billion: ISLAM. Oh, that's a lot. Here is more information. There are about 2.1 billion people of Christian faith. That's about 1/3 of the world population. ISLAM literally means "submission" (to God).

42D: Craven of Horror: WES. The director of "A Nightmare on Elm Street".

46D: Tampa neighbor, briefly: ST. PETE. Wikipedia says it's nicknamed "The Sunshine City" because it has some 360 days of sunshine every year. Is it true? I find it hard to believe.

47D: Pooh-pooh: DERIDE

49D: Shoot again: RESNAP

51D: Marquee name, often: CO-STAR. Spencer Tracy received top billings in all the movies he co-starred with Katharine Hepburn.

58D: Swerves at sea: YAWS. "Swerves in the air" too. Someone please give me a lesson today. I can never remember the differences among roll, pitch and YAW. I do know Dennis's thrust though.

59D: Juniors' H.S. exam: PSAT (Preliminary SAT). Oh, I don't know it's for juniors only. How about LSAT? Are juniors allowed to take it also?

61D: '40 jazz: BOP. Did not know BOP was developed in the '40. I thought it existed in '20 already.

62D: Here, in Spain: ACA. Mine was ICA. Don't speak Spanish. I thought if French is ICI, why not ICA for Spanish?

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 12, 2009

Sunday April 12, 2009 Jack McInturff

Theme: On the Fly

21A: Genesis no-no: FORBIDDEN FRUIT (Fruit Fly)

43A: Flower named for a legendary best: SNAP DRAGON (Dragonfly)

51A: Fruity spread: APPLE BUTTER (Butterfly)

69A: Unstable, metaphorically: BUILT ON SAND (Sandfly)

79A: Stylish but simple dress color: BASIC BLACK (Black Fly)

101A: 1964 Burt Lancaster thriller: SEVEN DAYS IN MAY (Mayfly)

30D: Take some heat: COME UNDER FIRE (Firefly)

34D: Put away platefuls: ATE LIKE A HORSE (Horsefly)

Ah, I believe I can fly. This puzzle is so doable. Must be an eased-up one.

All of them are insects, aren't they? Sandfly, black fly and mayfly are all new to me. I wonder why Noah Webster did not change fruit fly and black fly into one word during his spelling reform.

I like the golf referrences on this Masters Sunday:

20A: Golfing countryman of Seve: SERGIO. Dubbed as "The Best Golfer Never to Win a Major". This should be gimme to those who read my blog regularly. I like SERGIO Garcia a lot. He plays with passion. Close friend of Rafael Nadal (Tiger's buddy is of course Roger Federer). Seve Ballesteros is fighting brain tumor now. What a genius around the green!

43A: Putting concession: GIMME. You should never concede to those who yip.

59D: __ game: golf competition: SKINS. For some reason, Fred Couples dominates the SKINS Game. Only 4 players are invited to this match-play style competition. Each hole has a different value.

I got IGN (14D: Starter: Abbr.) because Argyle blogged it last time. Wayne Williams once clued it as "Elec. switch". Most of the other clues are quite straightforward. Several clue/Answer repetitions in today's grid. A WHILE is the answer for 85D: "For a little bit". Then it's part of clue for TOMES (110A: They took a while to read). I've never read a TOME, unless you count my dictionary as one.

"Madama Butterfly" accessory would be a great clue for OBI (27A) on any other day, but as BUTTER (fly) is part of the theme answer for 51A, I think a simple "Kimono closer" works better. The button-like fixture on man's kimono is called netsuke. Remember these highly collectible erotic netsukes I linked last time? The small case attached to kimono is called INRO.

Across:

5A: "For Whom the Bell Tolls" actor Tamiroff: AKIM. Stranger to me. Wikipedia says he is the first Golden Globe Award-winning actor for Best Supporting Actor (1944). Emil Jannings is the first Oscar winner for Best Actor (1927).

9A: Early bird?: EGG. Of course! I should eat a worm, as I did not get it until the very end.

12A: Ben Franklin's belief: DEISM. How is it different from theism? And why single out Ben Franklin? Somehow I thought he advocated self-discipline.

17A: "A Chapter on Ears" essayist: ELIA. Easy guess. I've never heard of this essay. Since TIN EAR (66A: Musical liability) is an answer in the grid, I wish the clue were just a simple "Charles Lamb's pen name".

19A: Lot, often: ACRE

24A: Stat: PRONTO. Stat here is doctor's "Immediately". From Latin statim. I was thinking of baseball stat.

25A: "My Fair Lady" girl: ELIZA. ELIZA Doolittle. And Professor "Enry Higgins.

26A: Bars bought dry: SOAPS. Not the bars I was picturing. Good clue.

31A: Former French coin: ECU. I put SOU first.

32A: Exercise done on a bench?: ETUDE. Why? Do pianists call their chair "bench"?

33A: Luggage checker: SKYCAP. A portmanteau of Sky and Redcap.

38A: Maine campus town: ORONO. We have a city named ORONO here in MN too.

40A: From __: slight progress: A TO B. Is it a slang? I am not familiar with this phrase.

45A: Bridge expert Culbertson: ELY. No idea. According to Wikipedia, this guy was the most significant American Contract Bridge personality and was widely regarded as "the man who made contract bridge". What is contract bridge?

49A: Skirt feature: SLIT. Too much?

50A: Dallas school: SMU. The new Bush Libary will be here. It's Laura Bush's alma mater.

55A: A-list: ELITE

56A: Two-time Golden Lion winner: ANG LEE. He won for "Brokeback Mountain" (2005) & "Lust, Caution" (2007). Golden Lion is Venice Film Festival's best film award, just like Palme d'Or in Cannes. I would not have got the answer without down fills. ANG/AN means "Peace" in Chinese. My favorite ANG LEE movie is "Eat Drink Man Woman".

58A: Scrub the launch: ABORT

59A: Quenches: SLAKES

60A: Hinder: DETER

61A: Old Greek assembly area: AGORA. I am used to the marketplace clue, you know, Socrate's shopping mall. Had no idea it can refer to a political assembly area.

62A: Perform using blades: SKATE

65A: Trial answers: PLEAS. Consist of "Guilty", "Not guilty" and "No contest", correct?

72A: Carpooler's __ Lane: HOV (High-Occupancy Vehicle)

74A: Flabby: SOFT. Made me think of Greenspan and his "We've hit a soft patch".

75A: Mediation agcy: NLRB (National Labor Relations Board). New agency to me.

77A: Studio stance: POSE. Say "Qiezi" (eggplant)! Chinese way to elicit a smile. Like our "Cheese".

78A: ABC dramedy "__ Stone": ELI. Have never heard of this TV series. Dramedy (Drama & Comedy) is a new word to me.

83A: Long eared bounders: HARES. What's the difference between HARES and Rabbits? Latin for hare is lepus.

84A: Old Italian bread: LIRA. Or LIRE. Bread here is slang for money.

86A: Enzyme suffix: ASE. Our old editor liked to clue ASE as "Peer Gynt's mother".

88A: Assembles: SETS UP

89A: Last to come out: NEWEST

91A: Flip call: HEADS

92A: "... the grace of God __": GO I. No idea. Is it a very famous Bible quote?

93A: Superfund enforcer: Abbr.: EPA. I did not know that superfund is the US environmental policy. But since SUPER is the answer for 43D: "Very, in slang", I am not fond of this clue. So many ways to clue EPA. The old "Air quality org." works just fine.

94A: Word heard before hiking?: HUT. Big stumper for me. I don't understand football at all. I might have heard of the "hut, hut, hut" noise though.

95A: "__ porridge hot ...": PEASE. Nursery rhymes stumps me often too. Peas/PEASE porridge does not sound appealing to me.

96A: Steinbeck family: JOADS. From "The Grapes of Wrath''. I learned it from doing Xword. I finally watched "East of Eden" the other day. Now I will remember James Dean's Cal (Caleb).

98A: Horror dubbed "Mistress of the Dark": ELVIRA. No idea. She looks very calculating. Wikipedia says ELVIRA is Arabic for "white".

106A: Gob: SAILOR. Did not know "gob" is a slang for SAILOR. Salt and tar, yes.

107A: Seine sights: ILES

111A: Old map letters: SSR. On pre-1991 maps.

112A: Old Sinclair rival: ESSO

Down:

1D: Exec often seen in his PJs: HEF. Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy magazine. Thought of Chris in LA's Playboy GROTTO visit.

2D: Band with the 1977 album "Out of the Blue": ELO. Here is the album cover. I guessed.

4D: Broccoli __: RABE. Very popular veggie in southern China. Also called rapini. It needs to be blanched because of the bitter taste. Cantonese like to stir-fry Broccoli RABE with a little garlic (no red pepper flake), then serve it as a side dish to seafood. See also STALK (62D: Broccoli part), though I call it as stem. STALK is for celery.

5D: Nut: ADDICT

6D: Invasive Asian vine: KUDZU. Japanese origin.

7D: It can be half-baked: IDEA. I like this clue.

9D: Home of the volcano Chimborazo: ECUADOR. Chimborazo (inactive) is ECUADOR's highest summit, according to Wikipedia. Cotopaxi (active) is the second highest summit.

11D: Laughs at: GETS. One of the reasons I don't watch TV series is because it's difficult for me to get the jokes.

12D: Rounded felt hat: DERBY. Also known as bowler hat.

13D: Symphony that includes a funeral march: EROICA. Beethoven's Symphony No. 3. Originally dedicated to Napoleon. EROICA is Italian for "heroic".

15D: Watch the kids: SIT

20D: Pacific Northwest metropolis: SPOKANE. Mine was SEATTLE. Wikipedia says SPOKANE means "Children of the Sun" in Salish, whatever it is. And Gonzaga University is located here.

22D: Graff of "Mr. Belvedere": ILENE. No idea. It's 80's TV show. She is wearing purple, Mr. Belvedre is the one with the moustache.

23D: SLR setting: F-STOP

33D: Smith, at times: SHOER. SHOER is a person who shoes horses or other animals.

37D: Places to see smileys, briefly: IMS (Instant Messages)

38D: Scott Turow memoir: ONE L. It's about his first year in Harvard. Very intense reading.

39D: Lace end: AGLET

41D: Memory units: BYTES

44D: Media workers' org: AFTRA (American Federation of Television and Radio Artists). Union representing professional actors, dancers, singers, and broadcasters. Another new org. for me.

47D: Celerity: SPEED. I kept reading the clue as "Celebrity".

49D: Roofing material: SLATE. Also the name of the online Ezine SLATE.com.

52D: Bread that's boiled before it's baked: BAGEL. BAGEL & lox, sandwich in heaven.

53D: Lusitania sinker: U- BOAT

54D: Trunk: TORSO

55D: Savanna grazer: ELAND. The spiral-horned antelope.

57D: "The Maids" playwright": GENET (Jean). Have never heard of "The Maids". It's about two housemaids who construct elaborate sadomasochistic rituals when their mistress is away., according to Wikipedia. Sounds awful. Not familiar with the author either. Looks like a hard man.

61D: Defendant's need: ALIBI. Hmm, perp's need. Our jargon "perp" simply means perpendicular.

63D: Lemon of the '50s: EDSEL. Collectible item now, correct?

64D Concertmaster's instrument: VIOLIN

65D: Race prize: PURSE. I wanted medal.

67D: Rebelled: ROSE UP. The answer feels like a clue, the clue feels like an answer.

69D: Big blowout: BLAST

70D: Creeps up on: NEARS

73D: "Roman Holiday" scooter: VESPA. Loved the movie. Can't remember the name of the scooter. It's manufactured by the Piaggio, which has operations in 50 countries, including China.

75D: LeBron James, e.g.: NBA STAR

80D: Chop chopper: CLEAVER

81D: Reasons for recusal: BIASES

83D: Fictional Swiss miss: HEIDI. Shirley Temple is so lovely as HEIDI. This real German Heidi (Klum) is lovely too.

88D: In order that one might: SO AS TO

90D: Cypriot currency since 2008: EUROS. Easy guess. I was unaware that Cyprus adopted EURO on Jan 1, 2008. It joined EU in 2004. Now Turkey wants to join EU too.

91D: Cads: HEELS

92D: "The Nude Maja" and "The Clothed Maja": GOYAS. Gimme to you, correct? I've linked both "The Nude Maja" and "The Clothed Maja" several times before. Both are housed in Museo del Prado.

95D: Omega preceders: PSIS

96D: Penny holders: JARS. Also holders for pickles.

98D: Ballpark fig.: EST (Estimate). ERA, RBI are Ballpark fig. too.

99D: Mekong River native: LAO. See this map. Their language is called LAO as well. See the China part? We call it Lancang River.

100D: Pep: VIM. Reminded me of JFK's special way of pronouncing "vigor".

102D: Capital of Denmark?: DEE. First letter of Denmark, which is capitalized. Good clue.

103D: "Cool" amount: MIL. Who says this? Those millionair rappers?

105D: Archery wood: YEW. I wonder how they get rid of the poisonous element when making archery bows.

Answer Grid.

C.C.