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

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Apr 14, 2010

Interview with Gary Steinmehl

Gary Steinmehl, whose surname means "stone flour" according to our regular poster Spitzboov, has had over 165 puzzles published by various major newspapers, including LA Times, NY Times, NY Sun, USA Today, Chronicle of Higher Learning, etc.

No more introduction is needed. This interview is definitely one of the most inspiring and inspired ones I've conducted
.

What is your background? And how did you get into constructing crossword puzzles?

I started making crosswords at the age of 12. My mother was a very good solver, and I noticed that it didn’t seem hard for me to make them. I eventually made books of them for her and her friends. It all seemed to come to me naturally. Eventually, I sold a puzzle to Senior Scholastic magazine, what a thrill. (By the way, not long ago a junior editor of the NYT wrote me and said that he thought he had found the first crossword I ever sold, Dec. 1954 (That’s the one - I have a copy.) While in the Army, I made crosswords for the Army Newspaper using names of our personnel as the “theme”; later when working at ITT Gilfillan, I also made name and product crosswords for their newsletters (I retired there as a Publications Manager after 36 years). And, as an aside, all my Christmas cards for the past 25 years have been puzzles of one sort or another.

How does becoming a constructor affect the way you solve & enjoy a puzzle? Do you mentally rework a portion of others' grid when the part is surfeited with obscure answers/crosswordese/abbreviations?

For me, the main link between maker and doer primarily involves admiration for the very things I attempt to do: use of a good theme, interesting words, and clever clues. However, when some parts get a bit clumsy for my taste. I have been known to jot down in the margin a better version of a given corner.

You've had over 126 puzzles published by major newspapers since 2003. How do you maintain such productivity? What kind of magazines/books do you read every day for theme inspirations?

I am happy to report that, with today’s puzzle, I now have 165 puzzles published in the LAT, NYT, USA Today, Chronicle of Higher Learning, a large number of them in the NY Sun (no longer in business), and recently, one in GAMES magazine.

Motivation: about 6 years ago I was diagnosed with cancer, and was told that I should keep my mind stimulated by reading and doing crosswords. Well, I had been constructing them as a hobby since I was 12 years old, so I decided to step-up my hobby activities. I began constructing dozens of them, circulating them around to my friends, convinced that they were as good as the newspaper versions. Sadly, for quite a while. … rejection… , rejection… , rejection… , and finally, an acceptance by USA Today. What a thrill! It seemed to be a version of a glass ceiling breakthrough – because for a while thereafter, I was accepted more and more, particularly with the NY Sun. Since I was dealing with cancer, I was interested in fast turnarounds since my personal time frame was a priority. NY Sun received a submission and responded with yes or no in a day or two. Most of them were completed within a week; (NYT turnaround is about 4 months; LAT is a comfortable one month or so - I also enjoy working with Rich Norris.)

Typically, everyday news, advertisements, phrases, movies, events and names provide my inspiration - involving these elements and interesting words in clever ways. Sometimes my “cleverness” is so obscure that my editor wife doesn’t know what I’m talking about. They get discarded or seriously reworked.

I constantly am on the lookout for theme ideas in newspapers, literature, trivia sources, and I scribble notes of “good stuff” on little pieces of paper that clutter my pockets, and I mentally stack letter groupings for future use. My wife often kids me about staring off into space at inappropriate times, working on thematic ideas. It’s true, all quite puzzling. Since I am retired (now 73 years old) I have plenty of time to work on my creations. So far, the ideas just keep coming from deep inside somewhere. I don’t question or analyze the process, I’m just happy it happens.

What is a perfect puzzle to you? And what kind of themes/fill appeal to you and what kind do you try to avoid in your puzzles?

I enjoy clever word themes and amusing ideas – I am surprised when a particularly simple one appears. As far as fills, I can’t help but admire multiple words stacked up. I constantly play with trying to make them, but have some difficulty. I recently read where computers are used fill grids. That probably explains some of the stupendous built-up groupings. I still like to do them by hand. I try to keep crosswordese down to a minimum. Interestingly, solvers don’t seem to realize that we don’t want to use “those” words; rather (unfortunately) they’re a necessity when other good parts come together.

Which puzzles do you solve every day? And who are your favorite constructors?

My wife and I do the LA Times and NY Times crosswords daily over breakfast (on NYT Fridays and Saturdays we occasionally “cheat” with a Google answer or two.)

As far as favorite constructors, strangely enough, I don’t have any. I just approach each solution on its own merits. (Although out of curiosity, I recently have followed some of Dan Naddor’s work in the LAT more closely after sadly finding out about his passing from cancer.) Our syndicated version of the NYT does not carry the author’s name, so I don’t know who did them anyway.

Besides crossword, what are your other hobbies?

I am an avid amateur piano player (jazz and standards). I had two years of lessons when I was nine years old, and have played by ear ever since. I have also made a number of films as a hobby: a documentary to explain Jazz to non-jazz folks, one for each of my girls for their wedding program, one to commemorate my uncle's 90th birthday, and another more recently for my grandkids so when I'm gone they can see what their "Pops" was all about. I enjoy sports of every kind (as can be seen by many of my puzzle entries). All of which leads to activities with my wife and our five children and twelve grandchildren: trips by plane to Hawaii, by cruise ship to Mexico, and by pool parties in our backyard. And by the way, yes, those kids do make my life fuller and make me feel younger!

Wednesday April 14, 2010 Gary Steinmehl

Theme: SOAP (68A. This puzzle's theme) - The end of each theme answer is a brand of soap.

16A. Ingredient in some glazed chicken wings: ORANGE ZEST. Needs a bit of honey too.

30A. Dashboard tuner: RADIO DIAL

37A. 1982 McCartney/Wonder hit: EBONY AND IVORY. Here is a clip.

44A. It became Ghana in 1957: GOLD COAST. I only know Ivory Coast. Dennis uses Coast, I think.

62A. One of two in a Christmas song: TURTLE DOVE. "The Twelve Days of Christmas".

Nice theme, simple & clean! As the norm with most of the "unifier" puzzles, all of the above soap brands come out of a non-soap context phrases.

I love Olay and Lux brands, can't think of a similar way to phrase them though. What other soap brands are missing?

We also have BATH (67A. Bad thing to take in Vegas?), though clued as financial loss "Take a bath". I penned in ODDS.

Across:

1. Talk back to: SASS. Normally the right or down edge word.

5. Super Bowl XXXIV winners: RAMS. St Louis Rams, 2000.

9. Dance move: STEP

13. Super stars?: NOVAE. Have seen this clue before. Still like it.

14. Singer Brickell: EDIE

15. Land of the Incas: PERU

18. Bring in: REAP

19. Land a plane: SET DOWN

20. Charlie of "Two and a Half Men": SHEEN. Rich always gives us either a given name or a surname in the clues for Wednesday puzzles.

22. Morales of "Jericho": ESAI. Only know him as Tony from the "NYPD Blues".

23. Classified letters: EOE (Equal-Opportunity Employer)

25. Ming things: VASES. Ming Vases. Rhyme.

28. Throat problem: STREP

33. Hood's "piece": GAT. Slang for gun.

35. Drum effect: ROLL. Wrote down ECHO.

36. That, in Toledo: ESO. Alliteration.

41. Carte lead-in: A LA. A la carte.

42. Sanctuary section: APSE. Alliteration.

43. Elongated swimmer: EEL. Long indeed. Nice new clue.

47. American revolutionary who recruited Lafayette: DEANE (Silas). His name rang a faint bell. American's first foreign diplomat.

51. Conductor Previn: ANDRE

52. Rice or Curry: TIM. Fell into the ANN trap.

54. War deity: ARES. Greek god of War.

55. Chicago Eight defendant Bobby: SEALE. No idea. He co-founded the Black Panthers.

58. Gold diggers?: PANNERS. Great clue.

60. "NFL Live" airer: ESPN

64. Political group: BLOC

65. Bond's first movie foe: DR. NO

66. Fax predecessor: TELEX. I first saw a fax machine in 1994. Thought it was a miracle thing.

69. Ladies in Mex.: SRAS

Down:

1. Hurting the most: SOREST

2. 2009 film set in 2154: AVATAR. Several regulars on our blog have seen this movie.

3. City known for its zoo: SAN DIEGO

4. Bell-shaped lily: SEGO. Sego lily.

5. Nine Inch Nails founder Trent __: REZNOR. This dude stumped me last time. Again today. Lethologica!

6. Punch cousin: ADE

7. Overlook: MISS

8. Father of Enos: SETH

9. Large ranch, say: SPREAD. Oh, well, I suppose you can clue RANCH as "Large spread" too, though Dennis might come up with a different answer.

10. More minuscule: TEENSIER

11. Significant time: ERA

12. Litter yipper: PUP. Man, I have difficulty pronouncing the clue. You?

13. They're rubbed in Eskimo kissing: NOSES. Lovely clue.

17. Lea lady: EWE. Nice alliteration also.

21. Slowly developed: EVOLVED

24. Heartfelt: EARNEST

27. __-mo replay: SLO

29. It'll cure anything: PANACEA. Wish it were true.

31. Pentagon tenant, briefly: DOD (Department of Defense)

32. "Would __?": I LIE

34. Secretary's slip: TYPO. Another alliteration.

37. Tar Heel State university: ELON. In Elon, North Carolina. I can never remember it.

38. Comb-over target: BALD SPOT

39. Big-house link: AS A

40. Poisonous ornamental: OLEANDER

41. Ottoman VIP: AGA. So are BEY and PASHA.

45. Soak: DRENCH

46. Of the highest quality: TIPTOP

48. Ring of color: AREOLA. Ah, here you are again. JD, is your lily still blooming?

49. Reason for shaking hands?: NERVES. Your hands are shaking because you are nervous?

50. Devereux's earldom: ESSEX. Easy guess. Don't know who Devereux is.

53. Prefix with content: MAL. Malcontent.

56. 1960s-'80s Fords: LTDS

59. Circus safety features: NETS

60. Go out: EBB. Good clue too.

61. Gp. that kidnapped Patty Hearst: SLA (Symbionese Liberation Army). Any other way to clue SLA besides the Patty Hearst connection?

63. Genetic initials: RNA

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 13, 2010

Interview with David W. Cromer

Today is our 12th David Cromer puzzle since the TMS switch in March 2008, making him one of our most productive LAT contributors.

David had his crossword debut in January 2007. Since then, he has had 34 puzzles published by the LA Times. David's byline also appears regularly in Newsday.

What is your background and how did you develop an interest in crossword constructing?

I am 38 and have formal training in music, namely percussion instruments. I have been both a musician and songwriter. I always enjoyed solving crosswords but never gave much thought to their construction other than how difficult it must be to make them. I admired those who could do so. I was spurred by a friend to try to make one. That was a disaster, but I realized I could do it and by my third puzzle I was published.

How would you describe your style? Most of your puzzles we've had seem to focus on early week puzzles.

I guess I would describe my style as casual. I seem to gravitate toward easy themes. It is my experience that the majority of solvers prefer them as oppose to a "brain-buster". However, it can make my job harder to develop a theme that hasn't been done before so the key is to find a new angle.

What's the most proud puzzle you've made and why?

The puzzle I am most proud of would be a Sunday puzzle from the LA Times of June 2009. That was my first Sunday puzzle to be published and was a milestone for me.

I see your byline in other publications often. How do you maintain your productivity? And what kind of newspapers/magazines/websites do you read for theme inspirations?

I work at some aspect of crosswords everyday whether actively constructing or brainstorming themes. I read voraciously and theme ideas strike at any time. Most of my ideas come from a crossword dictionary. I will just peruse and can come up with something. I have also found ideas while solving a puzzle. A single clue sometimes leads me to a theme.

What puzzles so you solve every day and who are your favorite constructors?

I do the LA Times puzzle daily and the Sunday puzzle from both the NY Times and LA Times. I also do the Newsday puzzle on occasion. My favorite constructors are Elizabeth Gorski and Dan Naddor. Both of them really have a gift for this.

Besides crossword, what are your other hobbies?

When not wiling away at crosswords, I am usually reading. I am also a novice stock market investor which is more than enough excitement.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010 David W. Cromer

Theme: "GIMME A BREAK!" (63A. 1980s Nell Carter sitcom, and a hint to the puzzle theme found in the ends of 17-, 32-, 39- and 46-Across.)

17A. Manhattan rail hub: PENN STATION (STATION BREAK)

32A. Mattress support: BOX SPRING (SPRING BREAK)

39A. Cherished: NEAR TO ONE'S HEART (HEART BREAK)

46A. "Hold your horses!": "NOT SO FAST!" (FAST BREAK). FAST and fast duplication in the clue for LOOSE (52A. Fast partner?). Play fast and loose.

Argyle here.

Gimme a Break! was aired on NBC from 1981 until 1987. The series stars Nell Carter(in red) as the housekeeper for a widowed police chief and his three daughters.

PENN STATION and 47D. New York tribe, city or lake: ONEIDA. gives this puzzle an East Coast SKEW.(61D. Depict in a biased way)

FAST BREAK is when a basketball team attempts to move the ball up court and into scoring position as quickly as possible, often ending in a LAY-UP.

A nice Tuesday puzzle.

Across:

1A. Fuzzy fruit: KIWI. Alliteration.

5A. Royal headgear: DIADEM. And 48. Pageant winners' wear: TIARA.

11A. "...__ an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers": "Romeo and Juliet": 'TIS

14A. Viking war god: ODIN

15A. Draw in: ENTICE

16A. Pictures on the wall: ART

19A. Vert. opposite: HOR.. Old TV knobs. (vertical and horizontal)

20A. Lose support: SAG Reminds me that Lois would have a b...a good time with the DF in this puzzle.

21A. Go bad: ROT

22A. Ida of Hollywood: LUPINO. Nice to have her surname as answer for a change.

24A. "The March King": SOUSA. John Philip Sousa

27A. British boarding school: ETON

28A. First name in spydom: MATA. 6A yesterday.

35A. Like many notebooks: SPIRAL Pertaining to the binding.

38A. Unmoved: ALOOF

44A. Hi-tech greeting: E-CARD

45A. Dogpatch cartoonist: AL CAPP. "Li'l Abner" comic strip.

50A. Highland toppers: TAMS Flat Hat.

51A. Part of BTU: UNIT

55A. Social service?: TEA SET. Alliteration.

58A. R.E. Lee follower: REB He was the leader CSA army; REBELS to the Northerners.

59A. Hef's party wear: PJs. Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner hosted parties in his pajamas.

62A. Downed Russian orbiter: MIR. It was deliberately de-orbited on March 23, 2001.

67A. Educator LeShan: EDA. Crosswordese.

68A. Worldwide: GLOBAL

69A. Gutter site: EAVE

70A. One of the states of matter: GAS

71A. Summer ermines: STOATS. (Weasel)

72A. Oedipus' arrogance, e.g.: FLAW

Down:

1D. "Keystone" bunglers: "KOPS"

2D. Inventor's starting point: IDEA

3D. Hospital section: WING

4D. Quaint stopover: INN

5D. "Star Wars" surname?: DETOO. Droid, first name: Artoo.

6D. Where to find three men?: IN A TUB. In the nursery rhyme, "Rub-a-dub-dub, Three men in a tub, The butcher, the baker, the candlestick-maker".

7D. Firm pro: Abbr.: ATT. Law firm attorney.

8D. CCLI x 11: DII. 251 x 2 = 502

9D. Earth Day sci.: ECOL.. (Ecology)

10D. List of options: MENU

11D. Island from which the Bounty sailed: TAHITI. But the crew didn't want to leave.

12D. Attach, as a patch: IRON ON

13D. Able-bodied: STRONG

18D. 18-yr.-old high schoolers, usually: SRs

23D. Ideal: PERFECT

25D. What's-her-name: SO-AND-SO

26D. Car bar: AXLE

28D. AOL rival: MSN

29D. Barbary beast: APE. The Barbary Macaque population in Gibraltar; they are known locally as Barbary Apes or Rock Apes, because they are a tailless species, despite the fact that they are monkeys.

30D. Relative of Juan: TIA

31D. Rap sheet listings: ARRESTS

33D. Former Cubs slugger: SOSA (Sammy)

34D. Sci-fi author Frederik: POHL. Any readers out there?

36D. The Coasters' record label (coincidentally, all its letters appear in their name): ATCO. Don't Talk Back.

37D. Bread knife target: LOAF

40D. Like some tough tests: ORAL

41D. Org. for drivers: AAA

42D. Tach no.: RPM

43D. "Decorates" with bathroom tissue, for short: TPs. Throwing rolls of toilet paper(TP) in the trees around someone's house.

46D. Nog spice: NUTMEG. Connecticut is known as the NUTMEG state.

49D. Tried to rip open: TORE AT

53D. Shuts tight: SEALS

54D. Recede: EBB

56D. Quiche base: EGGS

57D. Pinball foul: TILT

59D. Ring out: PEAL

60D. Joe: JAVA. Coffee.

64D. Bovine bellow: MOO. One more alliteration.

65D. Wall St. exec's degree: MBA

66D. NFL whistle blower: REF. Great clue.

Answer grid.

Argyle

Apr 12, 2010

Monday April 12, 2010 John Lampkin

Theme: Vowel Progression - Orderly vowel (before GGY) change in the first 5-letter word of each two-word common phrase.

17A. Loose-hanging trousers: BAGGY PANTS

25A. 1957 hit for Buddy Holly and the Crickets: "PEGGY SUE"

36A. Coin collector?: PIGGY BANK

53A. Gershwin song set in London, with "A": FOGGY DAY

62A. Carriage outings: BUGGY RIDES

Argyle here. Mundane Monday.
PEGGY SUE (Rare footage) and A FOGGY DAY by the Velvet Fog.

Across:

1A. A dog may pull on one during a walk: LEASH

6A. __ Hari: MATA. WWI spy

10A. Engrave with acid: ETCH

14A. Navel type: INNIE. This begs for a picture.
Here.

15A. Medical suffix: OSIS. As in halitOSIS - bad breath.

16A. Rise sky-high: SOAR

19A. Soaks (up): SOPS

20A. Coiled hair style: BUN. The famous sidewheel
BUNS.

21A. Slanted type style: Abbr.: ITAL

22A. Buddies: PALS

23A. Most sickly: ILLEST

28A. Sharpshooter: DEADEYE

30A. Painting props: EASELS. I did think of stage props for a sec.

31A. Tight as __: A DRUM. See 20A.

32A. Hired thug: GOON

35A. 4:00 London social: TEA

40A. Not prem., as gas: REG.

43A. Chewy Hershey's candy: ROLO. Most of us must recognize
this candy by now.

44A. "__ my case": I REST

48A. Beethoven symphony originally dedicated to Napoleon: EROICA. Italian for "heroic" crossed by 41D. Art of a sexual nature: EROTICA which may require "heroics".

51A. Erode gradually, as savings: EAT INTO

56A. Coast Guard operation: RESCUE

57A. Do bar duty: TEND. Making drinks.

58A. Wander: ROAM

60A. Like two peas in a __: POD

61A. Cylindrical pasta: ZITI

65A. Grammy co-winner for the rap song "Back on the Block": ICE-T

66A. Theater award: OBIE

67A. "__ evil ...": SEE NO.
SEE NO Evil, Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil.

68A. Super Bowl, e.g.: GAME

69A. Avoid flunking: PASS

70A. Admin. aides: ASSTS.

Down:

1D. Ad-__: improvise: LIB

2D. Made possible: ENABLED

3D. Lean and bony: ANGULAR

4D. Enrolled: SIGNED UP

5D. Attention-getter: HEY

6D. Castle protector: MOAT

7D. "Easy!": "A SNAP!"

8D. Lancelot's was "Sir": TITLE

9D. Barnyard brayer: ASS

10D. Some exam answers: ESSAYS

11D. Handyman's must-have: TOOL SET. A nail SET might be part of a tool KIT

12D. Word after time or timed-release: CAPSULE

13D. Time measures: Abbr.: HRS.. Hours.

18D. Feel sorry for: PITY

22D. Links org.: PGA

23D. Snake River st.: IDA.. In the state of Idaho.

24D. Big road rig: SEMI

26D. Actress Rowlands: GENA

27D. That, in Tijuana: ESA. Spanish.

29D. "Leggo my ___!": EGGO

33D. Popeye's Olive: OYL

34D. Woodwind quintet member: OBOE

37D. Alum: GRAD

38D. Evening, commercially: NITE. Adspeak.

39D. Crunchy cereal brand word: KRISPIES

40D. Foul caller: REF Wanted ump.

42D. Rah-rah encouragement: "GO GET 'EM!"

45D. Scrambles to keep secret: ENCODES

46D. Pupil: STUDENT

47D. Corn site: TOE. Corn - a local hardening and thickening of epidermis (as on a toe).

49D. Set ablaze: IGNITE

50D. Charisse of "Singin' in the Rain": CYD. What
gams!

52D. Military force: ARMY

54D. Vacation isle near Venezuela: ARUBA

55D. Bear and Berra: YOGIS

59D. Ripens, as cheese: AGES

61D. Sharp turn: ZIG

62D. Jazz style: BOP

63D. Pretoria's nation: Abbr.: RSA. Republic of South Africa. South Africa has three capital cities: Cape Town, the largest of the three, is the legislative capital; Pretoria is the administrative capital; and Bloemfontein is the judicial capital. I wonder why.

64D. "H-E-L-P!": "S-O-S!"

Answer grid.

Happy Anniversary to Kazie, who met her husband 39 years ago today.

Argyle

Apr 11, 2010

Sunday April 11, 2010 Tom Heilman

Theme: The Last Shall Be First - Common words/phrases with the component word order reversed.

23A. Hayride musical group?: WAGON BAND. Bandwagon.

25A. Results of a burglar's bumps and bruises?: TAKING PAINS. Painstaking. Someone please explains the clue/answer rationale to me. Why "burglar"?

38A. Bleating art?: GOATSCAPE. Scapegoat. Goatscape is like landscape I suppose, at least, in the Windhover Farm.

42A. Brief film on kneading and baking?: BREAD SHORT. Shortbread.

61A. Contest related to the knife toss?: FORK PITCH. Pitchfork. Hello, Iowa!

78A. Violinist who loves the spotlight?: STRING HAM. Hamstring. My favorite theme entry.

96A. Handy lint-removing tool?: POCKET PICK. Pickpocket.

98A. Primitive projectile that's like new?: MINT SPEAR. Spearmint.

118A. Disaster at a Ritz factory?: CRACKER FIRE. Firecracker. Very evocative.

120A. Astronaut's alien squeeze?: MOON HONEY. Honeymoon. But there's no life on the Moon, where does the astronaut get the squeeze?

All the base phrases are simple and solid. I intuited the gimmick immediately with the rather self-revealing puzzle title. Then the second theme entry quickly confirmed my instinct. I picture today's constructor Tom Heilman is fun to be around, from the way he clued his theme answers alone.

Also loved his clue for FRI (119D. Time assoc. with a common superstition). Friday the 13th. Disliked the clue for YOS (77D. Informal his). The "his" in the clue is a plural of hi, isn't it?

Across:

1. Prayer start: LORD. Crossing DOOMSDAY (4D. End of the world).

5. Assertive comeback: AM SO

9. Sir Toby of "Twelfth Night": BELCH. Shakespeare's stuff often stumps me.

14. Done with: RID OF

19. 1970 Neil Young protest song: OHIO

20. Spa option: PEEL. Honey & sea salt exfoliates rather well.

21. Donovan who played Amber in "Clueless": ELISA. Total stranger to me.

22. January, in Juárez: ENERO

27. Choice: PRIMO. I was thinking of noun "choice".

28. "The Thieving Magpie" composer: ROSSINI

30. Jumpers, e.g.: DRESSES

31. "Thou shouldst not have been old till thou __ been wise": "King Lear": HADST

32. Like a hoops shot: ARCED

33. Sexually attractive: NUBILE. One of Buckeye's favorite words.

35. Justice Dept. org.: DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration)

37. Valuable deposit: ORE

47. "Full Metal Jacket" gp.: USMC (United States Marine Corps). Gimme for Dennis/Argyle. I've never seen "Full Metal Jacket".

48. __ populi: VOX. The popular opinion. Vox = Voice.

49. Not easy to hang onto: EELY

50. Some have prizes inside: CEREALS. I'll go nuts for those small bobblehead promotions.

52. "Alrighty then": OKEY DOKE

56. Rock genre: EMO

57. Director Vittorio De __: SICA. I've yet to see his "The Bicycle Thief".

58. Matched, as a bet: SEEN. Keep forgetting the card bet meaning of "see".

60. Parroted a Persian: MEOWED. Cat.

64. Afternoon celeb: SOAP STAR

67. Ruin: SPOIL

68. Hipbone prefix: ILIO. The hip bone is ILIA.

70. Trim: NEAT

71. Carpentry files: RASPS

75. Early development: NASCENCY

80. Phrase on a mailing label: SEND TO

83. Semi-convertible auto roof: T-TOP

85. Vermilion and cardinal: REDS

87. Fund source: TREASURY

90. Unlike the life of the party: ASOCIAL

92. __ Blair: George Orwell's birth name: ERIC. Unknown to me.

93. Classified ad letters: EEO. And TYPE (129. Classification).

94. Boss: HEAD

102. Covert __: spy missions: OPS

103. Soft & __: DRI

104. Beat: RHYTHM. Nice strings of consonants.

105. Prepare, as merchandise for a sale: RETAG

108. Cruise, for one: ACTOR. Tom Cruise.

112. Tenor Pavarotti: LUCIANO. Italians are so expressive.

115. Impose: OBTRUDE. With "upon".

117. Joe of "Hill Street Blues": SPANO. He's in "NYPD Blue" also.

122. German thanks: DANKE. And ERDE (124. German earth). For Kazie.

123. Like the verbs "cast" and "cost": Abbr.: IRREG. Chinese verbs have no past tense.

125. Part of NEA: Abbr.: EDUC

126. Dispatches, as a dragon: SLAYS. Dispatch = Kill.

127. 1980s-'90s Olds: CIERA. Cutlass Ciera. Stumped me.

128. Certain title: DEED

Down:

1. Like acidic detergents: LOW PH. Got me.

2. "BUtterfield 8" novelist: O'HARA (John). I've never heard of the book (film). Why is U capitalized?

3. Stiff: RIGID

5. LAPD broadcast: APB

6. Anne of "Awakenings": MEARA. Rich picked "Awakening" for alliteration purpose.

7. Hombre's address: SENOR

8. It's often hard to settle: OLD SCORE. Great clue.

9. Happen: BETIDE

10. Vigor: ELAN

11. Preferences: LIKINGS

12. Drama set in Vegas: CSI

13. Return, as graded papers: HAND BACK. Can't wait for Lois to return.

14. Staves off: REPELS

15. "Hang on!": IN A SEC

16. Agnus __: Mass prayers: DEIS. Agnus Dei = Lamb of God. Uncommon to see its plural form.

17. D-day invasion river: ORNE. The Normandy river.

18. Composer Lukas: FOSS. First encounter with this guy.

24. Wrote down: NOTED

26. Mettle: GRIT

29. Perfect Sleepers, e.g.: SERTAS

34. Man of Messina: UOMO. Italian for "man". I was at sea. Messina is a seaport in NE Sicily. Alliteration again.

36. Computer data acronym: ASCII

39. State purposefully: AVOW

40. Nudge: POKE

41. Left one's mark on: EX'ED. My grandma did not read.

44. Ecuadoran province named for its gold production: EL ORO. Literally "the gold". I've never heard of it before. Makes perfect sense.

45. Feverish: HECTIC

46. Divine counselor: ORACLE

47. Apply to: USE ON

51. Bandleader Brown: LES

53. 911 respondent: EMT

54. Has strong desires: YEARNS

55. Biker's headgear, perhaps: DORAG

57. Water balloon impact sounds: SPLATS

59. Rob Roy refusals: NAES. Scotish for "no".

62. In a manner of speaking, slangily: KINDA. Sorta.

63. Suggestion: HINT

65. "The Alamo" co-star Jason __: PATRIC. Another foreign name to me. The name is crying for K.

66. Unbroken sequence: STREAK

69. Oars in a quad scull, e.g.: OCTAD. Two oars for each of the four rowers then.

72. Lewis with Lamb Chop: SHARI

73. Go to pieces: PANIC. "Go to pieces" is a new idiom to me also.

74. Slap: SMACK

76. Insignificant amount: SOU. Not worth a sou.

79. Whittled on the porch, say: IDLED

80. Restrain: STEM

81. "Oh the joys that came ... __ was old!": Coleridge: ERE I. Got it from crosses.

82. Night light: NEON. Rhyme.

84. Corny gadget?: POPPER. Oh, popcorn.

88. Bombast: RHETORIC

89. "Righto": YEAH

91. Like some ball attendees: COSTUMED

92. Milton or Virgil: EPIC POET

95. Large wardrobe: ARMOIRE

97. Criticize severely: TRASH

99. Devious: TRICKY

100. Jiggles: SHAKES

101. Joe __, confrontational '50s-'60s talk show host: PYNE. No idea. Hosts are not supposed to be confrontational.

102. Former Sandinista leader: ORTEGA (Daniel). President of Nicaragua. I was ignorant of the Sandinista Party.

106. Dig deeply?: ADORE. I dig this clue.

107. Glittery rock: GEODE

109. Frequent Cronyn co-star: TANDY(Jessica). Hume Cronyn was her husband.

110. Outdo: ONE-UP

111. Automaker Henry: ROYCE. Founder of Rolls-Royce.

112. Some time displays, briefly: LCDS

113. River through Magnitogorsk: URAL. The Europe/Asia boundary river.

114. Site of Jesus' first miracle: CANA. Where Jesus turned water to wine.

116. Fox's title: BR'ER. Uncle Remus tales.

121. Novelist Buntline: NED

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 10, 2010

Interview with Mel Rosen

Most of the regulars on our blog know the word cruciverbalist (a crossword aficionado), but probably few are aware that the word was first introduced to the crossword by today's constructor Mel Rosen and Stan Kurzban.

Mel Rosen (His wife Peggy on his left) is author of the book "Random House Puzzlemaker's Handbook". He also served as the puzzle editor of the Crosswords Club, currently headed by our LA Times Daily Crossword editor Rich Norris.

Besides the LA Times, Mr. Rosen's puzzles have also appeared in the NY Times, the Wall Street Journal, CrosSynergy, the Washington Post, etc.

What is your background and how did you develop an interest in crossword construction?

I was a computer programmer for IBM (going back to when the smallest computers were the size of large refrigerators), so there's analytical wiring in my head. My mother taught remedial reading and my father spent Sunday morning solving the puzzles, so words were always important. My wife's parents also enjoyed puzzle solving, so it seemed natural for us to buy and solve puzzle books when we went on vacation. One day it occurred to me that if we paid money to buy the books, maybe the puzzle writers got paid. It was literally that straightforward. The first puzzle I wrote was a Double-Crostic that Thomas Middleton bought(!) for one of his Simon & Schuster collections and the rest, as they say, is history.

What is the highlight of your crossword construction career and what's the best puzzle you've made? And why?

Highlight? Certainly being asked to be the second puzzle editor for The Crosswords Club, succeeding Will Weng, was right up there. And of course every puzzle is the best. Seriously, I was proud of a tribute to Frannie Hansen for one of John Samson's S&S collections. It emulated her occasional "interview with a..." format. My wife suggested and I wrote a puzzle for the NYT marking Ellen Ripstein's having -- finally! -- won the annual ACPT. That was another good one.

Doug Peterson mentioned that your book "Random House Puzzlemaker's Handbook" introduced him to crossword construction. How has the book affected your personal and professional career?

That book was a revision and update of an earlier work, "The Compleat Cruciverbalist", written with Stan Kurzban, who devised some very clever diagramless puzzles published by Eugene Maleska. The earlier book, probably more than anything else, brought the word "Cruciverbalist" into the language; it had been coined several years before by a puzzle-constructing priest. Abigail Van Buren cited it in a column.

Where do you normally find your crossword muse? What kind of books/magazines/websites do you read for theme inspirations?

Anywhere and everywhere. Unlike some constructors, I do not keep a "theme notebook". If I read or hear something that tickles my brain, I'm off to the races. When I was with the CrosSynergy team I was actively looking for material all the time. Now that I'm strictly a free-lancer I can wait for inspiration.

What kind of puzzle do you solve every day? And who are your favorite constructors?

I solve three or four online crosswords and three or four online sudoku puzzles every day. (Including those at the LAT sites.) I enjoy too many favorite constructors to single out one or two. And no, I'm not running for office.

Besides crosswords, what else do you do for fun?

I play tennis at least once a week. I'm a jazz keyboardist. I sit in every week at a jam session at a local restaurant ... for 15 minutes up to an hour. I'm just finishing up an album for my family and friends.

Saturday April 10, 2010 Mel Rosen

Theme: None

Total words: 66

Total blocks: 26

Lower word/block count than our normal Saturday puzzles.

The puzzle is anchored by two grid-spanning 15-letter entries that cross each other right in the middle of the grid:

32A. Text necessity, often: TELEPHONE NUMBER. We also have SCREEN (56A. Listen to before answering).

8D. "The King and I" song about illicit romance: WE KISS IN A SHADOW. Gimme for Clear Ayes, perhaps. I am not familiar with the song at all.

Quite a few tricky clues in this puzzle. I nailed some, and was stumped by some.

Across:

1. Act in the Senate: PASS A LAW. PASS LAWS sounds a better answer to me.

9. Trees yielding beans: CACAOS. Cacao beans. Source of cocoa, chocolate.

15. Pride's prey: ANTELOPE. Lion's prey. Alliteration.

16. Friend of Pete Fountain: AL HIRT. Full name in the clue, full name in the answer. Wikipedia confirmed that they were indeed buddies, both grew up in New Orleans. Mr. Rosen mentioned in the interview that he's a jazz keyboardist.

17. TV show that has spawned 11 movies: STAR TREK. Nice intersecting with ANTENNAE (2. Features of some alien costumes).

18. C&W singer Morgan: LORRIE. No idea. She looks pretty.

19. Mega- squared: TERA. Prefix for "trillion". Mega is prefix for "million". Giga "billion". Stumped me.

20. Fire department practice structure: DRILL TOWER. Was unaware of this special term.

22. Like Dvorák's Symphony No. 8: IN G. The gimme crossing 3D made the G part easily obtainable for me today.

23. Palace overseas: ELYSEE. Elysée Palace, the French "White House".

24. "Buddenbrooks" Nobel Prize winner: MANN (Thomas). Have never heard of the book.

25. Zip: ENERGY

27. Unlike a good excuse: SAD

28. Artist who rejuvenated his career with 1960s serigraphs: ERTE. Stymied me. Just learned that Erte died in 1990 when he was 97 years old.

29. Not fresh, in a way: SALTY. OK, in a way.

30. Municipal: CIVIC

38. "__ Bulba": 1962 epic: TARAS

39. Held up: BORNE. Epitomized the trickiness of today's clues.

40. Simple stuff: ABCS. Alliteration.

44. Sound from a wok: SSS

45. Abdicate: RESIGN

46. Certain sausage, for short: BRAT

47. Execute, in old France: BEHEAD. The clue seems to be asking for guillotine, isn't it? Beheading was a common practice in old China too.

49. "__ me ae spark o' Nature's fire": Burns: GIE. For "give", I suppose.

50. Alloys' principal components: BASE METALS

52. Former NBA star Dave __, now mayor of Detroit: BING. And CHROME (11D. Trim in Detroit). Car trim. I liked the Detroit clue echo. Both clues got me.

53. Menu choice: ENTREE

54. Involuntary exile: DEPORTEE

57. Bath unit?: ONE METER. Bath is the city in England. They used meter there. I don't like the addition of ONE.

58. Photographs: SHOOTS. Verb/noun.

59. Singing birds: WARBLERS

Down:

1. Most ashen: PASTIEST

3. 1979 N.L. co-MVP Willie: STARGELL. Gimme for me. Willie Stargell spent his entire career with the Pirates. Hall-of-Famer.

4. Word sung by Day: SERA. "Que Sera, Sera".

5. Letters on a PC key: ALT

6. Grand and noble: LORDLY

7. Copycat's activity: APERY

9. Joined a talk show, perhaps: CALLED IN. Nice clue/answer.

10. Bushels: A LOT

12. High-flying action: AIR WAR

13. Familiarize: ORIENT

14. "Tristram Shandy" author Laurence: STERNE. Someone mentioned this book on the blog before. Clear Ayes? Lemonade?

21. Fall collection?: LEAVES. Nailed it.

23. "Aida" setting: EGYPT

26. MapQuest.com abbr.: RTE

30. Curve enhancer: CORSET. Some girls just have incredible body.

31. Like kabobs: CUBED

33. Over-the-hill gang?: HAS-BEENS

34. Wks. on end: MOS (Months)

35. Nielsen of "Rocky IV": BRIGITTE. I peeked at the answer sheet. Her face looks very familiar.

36. Driver who's on track?: ENGINEER. Railroad track.

37. Promise breakers: RENEGERS

40. Big sister?: ABBESS. I suppose SUPERIOR can be clued this way too?

41. Bank outlet: BRANCH

42. Big name in convertible sofas: CASTRO. Man, who knows?!

43. Sound buy?: STEREO. So simple in retrospect.

45. Gravelly voiced speaker: RASPER. I wanted BRANDO.

48. Dementieva of women's tennis: ELENA. The answer emerged itself.

51. Intersect: MEET

52. Belgian composer Jacques: BREL. Belgian's most famous musician.

55. White House fiscal planning gp: OMB (Office of Management and Budget). New abbreviation to me.

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 9, 2010

Friday April 9, 2010 Jack McInturff

Theme: PO' BOY (63A. N'awlins sandwich, and this puzzle's title) - PO is inserted into the start of the second word of a two-word common phrase.

21A. Criticize a small town?: SLAM (PO)DUNK. Slam Dunk. Podunk = Small town.

26A. Checking for doneness at the grill?: BURGER (PO)KING. Burger King, our cream cheese contest-winning Jeannie's client.

42A. Certain pork thief?: BELLY (PO)ACHER. Ah, OK, bellyacher is actually one word. Poacher = Thief.

49A. Spelling contest notice?: BEE (PO)STING. Bee Sting.

As the clue says, PO' BOY is a just a title, not the exact theme tie-in word we are accustomed to. So you won't find BOY anywhere.

All the above inserted POs are pronounced with long O sound in the new phrases, very consistent. I've never had Po' Boy. Looks delicious. It always has fried seafood in the middle, right?

As the norm with the late week puzzle, I went straight to the bottom for the unifier, then worked my way up. Not really a proper course order. The constructors/editor place the unifying "Aha" at the very end for a reason. It's served as a dessert.

Across:

1. Large swallows: GULPS. Large amount swallowed. I was thinking that there might be a large bird swallow I was not aware of.

6. Loosen (up): WARM. Wanted EASE.

10. Joseph who brought Shakespeare to Central Park: PAPP. He founded the New York Shakespeare Festival. Unknown to me.

14. Director Kurosawa: AKIRA. Must be a happy fill for Annette.

15. Plant with thick, fleshy leaves: ALOE

16. Morlock prey: ELOI. The race in "The Time Machine".

17. Elementary particle: MESON. From Greek "mesos", meaning "middle". I simply forgot. It appeared in our puzzle before.

18. Neeson of "Nell": LIAM. Have never seen "Nell". Liked his Oskar in "Schindler's List".

19. Undecided: TORN. Between decisions.

20. Abbr. followed by a year: ESTD (Established)

23. Old Ford: PINTO. Must be named after the horse then. We also have EL CAMINO (38D. 1950s-'80s Chevy utility vehicle). Literally "the road" in Spanish.

25. Bad luck: HOODOO. Voodoo too.

30. Jackie Chan and others: ASIANS. Chinese, to be exact.

31. Magic 8-Ball response: YES. And NO, I presume.

32. Rug feature: NAP

35. Giving word?: UNCLE. Giving up. Nailed it.

36. Fertilization targets: OVA. Was in the soil direction. Fertility would be an easier clue.

37. Priestess in Bizet's "The Pearl Fishers": LEILA. Total blind spot for me.

39. West famous for "Come up sometime and see me": MAE. Mae West. Lois would love this clue.

41. Scarecrow portrayer: BOLGER (Ray). And BAUM (26D. Munchkin creator). "The Wizard of Oz".

45. St. Clare's town: ASSISI. Saint Clare of Assisi. I've only heard of St. Francis of Assisi.

48. Finish by: END AT

52. Name on some Kmart shoes: MCAN. The Thom McAn shoe brand. Learned from doing Xword.

55. Subordinate: AIDE

56. Mountain lake: TARN. The glacier-formed lake.

57. Op artist Bridget: RILEY. Easy guess. Not not familiar with this English painter.

58. List of games, briefly: SKED (Schedule)

59. Presque Isle's lake: ERIE

60. Bury: INURN. You wanted INTER, don't you?

61. __ d'oeuvre: HORS

62. Opposite of bleak: ROSY

Down:

1. Hunter's quarry: GAME

2. Some are made from koa wood: UKES

3. Amount rarely paid: LIST PRICE. True.

4. Spendthrift: PRODIGAL. Nice entry.

5. __ Bernardino: SAN

6. Belt or sock: WALLOP. Great clue.

7. Et __: ALIA. Neutral plural of et al; et alii is masculine plural, et aliae is feminine plural.

8. Knock around: ROAM

9. Tennessee's largest city: MEMPHIS. And IRIS (51D. Tennessee state flower).

10. Eddie of "Frasier," for one: PET DOG. Thought Eddie is just a person, as I've never watched "Frasier".

11. Orally: ALOUD

12. Blue books?: PORNO. "Blue" can mean off-color.

13. Cold War put-down: PINKO. Slang for "communist", isn't it? Why pink instead of red?

21. Narrow waterways: Abbr.: STRS (Straits)

22. Bass attachment?: OON. Bassoon. I wanted IST.

24. Endangered state bird: NENE. Hawaii state bird.

27. Annapolis sch.: USNA

28. Kvetch's words: OY VEY. Tell me you thought of Barry G. I did.

29. Mauna __: KEA. Mauna Kea (white mountain), Hawaii's highest peak. Kea = White. Loa = Long. Mauna Loa (long mountain).

32. Bouncer employer: NIGHTCLUB. Awesome strings of consonants.

33. Opposite of aweather: ALEE

34. Henry VIII's sixth: PARR (Catherine). The last wife of Henry VIII. I often confuse PARR with PAAR (Jack)

36. Olive __: OYL. The BYE in the crossing 40A. Tournament pass (BYE) prevents me from penning in OIL.

37. Burden: LOAD. Fell into the ONUS trap.

40. Runner's problem: BLISTER

41. Big bell sound: BONG

42. Two-footers: BIPEDS. Of course, I was picturing those two-footers on the green.

43. Spanish pronoun: ESO

44. Retailer whose middle name was Cash: PENNEY. J.C. Penney.

45. Put to shame: ABASH

46. Watch handle: SEIKO. D'oh, the watch brand "handle".

47. Feast that includes the Cup of Elijah: SEDER. Can a non-Jew join a Seder feast?

50. Tropical tuber: TARO

53. Nautical leader?: AERO. Aeronautical. We've got three ex-Navy guys in our blog: Spitzboov, Frank & EddyB. Who else?

54. Big Apple ltrs.: NY NY

57. Tear: RIP

Answer grid.

C.C.

Apr 8, 2010

Thursday April 8, 2010 Jascha Smilack

Theme: HORSE (67A. Word to add to 20-, 37- and 54-Across to make sense of the answers) - Horse needs to be fastened to the end of each common phrase to make sense of all the "uneasy" clues.

20A. Uneasy about a farm team member?: DODGING THE DRAFT(horse). Farm team member = Draft horse.

37A. Uneasy about a long shot?: AFRAID OF THE DARK(horse). Dark horse = Long shot. Nyctophobia refers to fear of darkness. I used to sleep with our closet light on all night.

54A. Uneasy about an aquarium fish?: CHICKEN OF THE SEA(horse). Aquarium fish = Seahorse. Used in Chinese herbal medicine.

We also have a cross-referenced SENATE (50A. Where Caligula reputedly tried to seat his 67-Across). A fact I was unaware of. But Galigula was an eccentric weirdo, so no real surprises.

A unique spin of our normal change letter string theme, in which the theme phrases often induce groan and only make sense when the letter string is dropped/added/substituted. Today, all the grid-spanning 15-letter theme entries are perfectly fine common phrases. You just need to tag HORSE to make horse sense of the clues. Loved the "uneasy" tie-in.

Also loved the side-by-side placement of GOLF (12D. Go for a Masters?) and SYST (13. CBS part). Golf fans all know that CBS has been covering the Saturday/Sunday Masters tournaments for years. But why "Go for a Masters" instead of "Go for Masters"? Why extra "a"?

Google shows that today's constructor Jascha Smilack is a Ph.D student in Chinese literature in Harvard. This seems to be his crossword debut. Gong Xi, Gong Xi!

Across:

1. Must: HAS TO

6. "Iron Chef America" chef Cat __: CORA. Needed crosses for her name. I did enjoy the few episodes of "Iron Chef America" I saw. Liked the Japanese flavor.

14. Dickens's mysterious Mr. Drood: EDWIN. Easy guess. I've never heard of "The Mystery of Edwin Drood", Dickens' final novel.

15. Fidel's successor: RAUL. The Castro brothers. Quite a few names in this puzzle.

16. "__ Named Sue": A BOY. And A DROP (2D. __ in the bucket). Partials.

17. Israeli ambassador Moshe: ARENS. Again, his name emerged itself. Not familiar with this guy at all. When was he the ambassador?

18. Like some profs.: ASST (Assistant)

19. Web links: URLS

23. Michael Phelps sponsor: SPEEDO. OK, for Jeannie. Phelps survived his drug scandal quite well.

24. "Dies __": IRAE. "Dies Irae", the Latin hymn. Literally "Days of Wrath". Dies = Day. Irae = Wrath.

25. Humble: DEMEAN

28. Play footsie, say: FLIRT. Directly above TOE TAP (36. Shoe part for Astaire).

32. It may be up: JIG. The jig is up. Rich used the identical clue a while ago, still got me. Lethologica!

41. Maps: CHARTS. Verb.

42. Fair-hiring abbr.: EOE (Equal Opportunity Employer). EEO = Equal Employment Opportunity.

43. Hi or lo follower: RES (Resolution)

44. "Flowers for Algernon" author Daniel: KEYES. Rang a faint bell. See the book cover.

45. "Analyze That" star: DE NIRO

48. Top-shelf: A ONE

59. Winery prefix: OENO. Oeno is Greek goddess of wine.

60. Casual top: POLO

61. Stock phrase: AT PAR

62. Exploit: DEED

63. Etonic competitor: AVIA

64. Peachy: SWELL

65. Wood shaper: ADZE. Or adz.

66. Appear dramatically: LOOM. I associate loom with ominously rather than dramatically.

Down:

1. Call before the game: HEADS. "Heads or tails?". We had this clue before.

3. Stockholm native: SWEDE

4. Colored a bit: TINGED. Wrote down TINTED first.

5. Like some daring football kicks: ONSIDE

6. Steep outcropping: CRAG. The rugged rock.

7. Brewery feature: OAST

8. Act like fools?: RUSH IN. Fools rush in. Nailed it today.

9. Let out, say: ALTER. Oh, the hemline. Nice clue.

10. Honored with a crown of foliage: LAURELED.

11. Start of a spell: ABRA. The start of Abracadabra.

21. Roaming types: NOMADS

22. Green Goblin portrayer in Spider-Man films: DAFOE (Willem). I only remember Tobey Maguire.

26. Rock producer Brian: ENO

27. Newspaper revenue component: AD FEE

29. __-Tass: news agency: ITAR (Information Telegraph Agency of Russia).

30. Red inside: RARE

31. I-90 in Mass. et al.: TPKS (Turnpikes)

32. Magic harp thief: JACK. From "Jack and the Beanstalk" the fairy tale. I peeked at the answer sheet.

33. "__ hollers, ...": IF HE. "Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, /Catch a tiger by the toe./If he hollers let him go..."

34. __ matter: GRAY. Felt silly not getting this one immediately.

36. Believer: THEIST

38. First three numbers, in some directories: AREA CODE

39. "Not a problem!": IT'S OK

40. Cargo unit: TON

45. Again, to Gaius: DE NOVO. Latin for "From the beginning".

46. Talk out again: REHASH

47. "Old" punches?: ONE-TWO. One-two punch. Why "old"?

49. High country: NEPAL. High in the Himalaya. I hope you were not thinking of Tibet, because it's not a country. It's part of China.

51. According to: AS PER

52. Dabbling ducks:: TEALS. Teals belong to the dabbling ducks, which feed by dabbling in the shallow waters.

53. Bogart's "High Sierra" role: EARLE. No idea. I've never seen the movie.

54. Musical ending: CODA

55. Follow: HEED. As advice.

56. Don Juan's mother: INEZ. Spanish for Agnes, meaning "pure".

57. Random collection: OLIO

58. Fire suppressant: FOAM

Answer grid.

C.C.