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

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Apr 13, 2012

Friday April 13, 2012, Gareth Bain

Theme: ELVIS is in the house! What a fun theme for those of us who love anagrams, as each of the four central theme answers begin or end with an anagram of ELVIS. Perhaps on this Friday the 13th, the mystery of the true end of Elvis inspired the most competent and prolific Mr. Bain , who does lots of blogging and comments himself in addition to entertaining us with his work. Is it not fascinating how this all fit together, albeit in a 16 x 15 grid to allow the wonderful central theme answer and the unifier which brings back memories of the horror which was expressed when I was a child and Elvis first shook those hips. The first two have the anagram first, the last two at the end. Well be careful, here we go....

19A. *Casual-wear brand since 1873 (10) : LEVI'S JEANS.

25A. *Enters a witness protection program, say (11) : LIVES IN FEAR. Nice clue.

42A. *Compromised choice (16) : LESSER OF TWO EVILS. Like I said a sixteen letter answer which led to the grid.

58A. *Wedding shop array (11) : BRIDAL VEILS. Is it true women wear them to hide the inevitable zit in the middle of the forehead on the wedding day?

64A. Song that first topped the charts on 4/13/1957...or how its singer's name appears in the answers to starred clue (10) : ALL SHOOK UP. (1:51). Not many recordings of his early work.

Let us see where we go today.

Across:

1. In tears, say (5) : MOVED. Like Masters champ, BUBBA. Tricky start.












6. NPR's Totenberg (4) : NINA. The journalist most associated with the Supreme Court. During her long career she broke the Clarence Thomas/Anita Hill story. Also a tough beginning.

10. Pasta grain (5) : WHEAT. The base ingredient of of flour, even in Matzo.

15. Greenish shade (5) : OLIVE. Military uniforms, for example.

16. Hemoglobin material (4) : IRON. The same one found in the ground.

17. Like healthy soil (5) : WORMY. True but really an obscure fact.

18. Pie nut (5) : PECAN. Really nice clue, not the one who loves it, the one in it.

21. Work on film (4) : EDIT. So many choices beyond just movies,

23. Betwixt (4) : AMID. Mother used to say betwixt and between.

24. Familia member (3) : TIO. Spanish for Uncle.

29. Maine ___ cat (4) : COON. For all our kitty lovers (yes I know) LINK the first breed to win the cat show. A black one cross our paths? Oh oh.

30. Unbeatable service (3) : ACE. Pete Sampras' specialty.

31. Morlock prey (4) : ELOI. H.G. Wells will live forever in puzzles. As will 53D. Hollywood's Mimieux (6) : YVETTE.


32. Sister of Rachael (4) : LEAH. Both married to Jacob.

34. More than serious (4) : DIRE. Often associated with STRAITS. (9:47) It is long but but the anthem for this puzzle, fer sure!

36. Presaging times (4) : EVES. I guess this means passing from day to night.

38. Skin-care brand with a "For Men" line (5) : NIVEA.


46. Take off the TiVo (5) : ERASE. My cousin came to visit and while I was working she watched a movie I had recorded, when I came home I was rather shocked to learn she had erased the movie. What do you think?

47. Encrust, in a way (4) : SEAR. You can pan sear tuna in a crushed cashew crust. Yum.

48. Goddess of discord (4) : ERIS. This ONE, it is easier in Latin where she is Discordia and her opposite in Concordia.

49. Obi-Wan player (4) : ALEC. Not Baldwin, but Guiness, a great ACTOR.

52. On the road (4) : AWAY. Not this week.

54. "Imagine that!" (3) : GEE. Gosh.

55. Wyoming city near Yellowstone (4) : CODY. It is named for Buffalo Bill.

61. Distortion, perhaps (3) : LIE. That distortion Bubba had on the second hole of the playoff was wicked.

62. Little songbird (4) : WREN. Like THIS.

63. City on the Aare (4) : BERN. It should Bern you up if you forget this Swiss city.

68. Blink of an eye (5) : TRICE. Word has been around for centuries.

71. Bench clearer (5) : MELEE. From the French, and cousin to medley.

72. Pickup schtick (4) : LINE. I had a friend who used to ask girls if they liked cheese, but that was a long time ago.

73. "L'chaim!" is one (5) : TOAST. לחיים. Remember, Hebrew is read from right to left; it means to life, and so much more.

74. Seafood serving (5) : PRAWN. The shrimp was just a prawn in his game.

75. Author Blyton (4) : ENID. This WRITER was said to be more liked than JK Rowling, Jane Austen and, dare I say Shakespeare!

76. Els of the PGA (5) : ERNIE. The big easy. Along with Gary Player, this South African is a national hero who has a golf school which produced close friends Charl Scwartzel and Louie Oosthuizen. A bit of pride from our constructor.

Down:

1. Unruly do (3) : MOP. Hairdo that is.

2. Cry after Real Madrid scores (3) : OLE. Really, I thought it was Goal, Goal, Goal. We also have another 'football' reference from our South African constructor, 6D. Zero, in Real Madrid scores (3) : NIL.

3. With the order switched (9) : VICE VERSA. I'll take the vice, you can have the versa.

4. Give the slip (5) : EVADE. It seemed like so many "V"s in this puzzle.

5. 1990 Robert Frost Medal recipient Levertov (6) : DENISE. This British born but American POET is worth reading. CA, you out there? Poetry was one of my passions in college.

7. Fuming state (3) : IRE.

8. Super stars? (5) : NOVAE. Cute clue, misleading as the stars are exploding. Interestingly, we also have 27D. De ___: from square one (4) : NOVO. A standard for judges when reviewing lower court opinions, literally from of new. Are the words related?

9. Twisted balloon shape, often (6) : ANIMAL. So many long skinny dogs...

10. Christian bracelet letters (4) : WWJD. At last What Would Jesus Do.

11. Weed whacker (3) : HOE. The old fashioned way, no strings attached.

12. Muse for Yeats (5) : ERATO. I do not know the life story of this major POET but Erato was a muse by profession, it is what she did. I wonder if Yeats fascination with mysticism was the inspiration for his inclusion in this Friday the 13th offering.

13. OB/GYN test (5) : AMNIOcentesis. When the men see the needle, they are very glad they are men.

14. Boxer with a cameo in "The Hangover" (5) : TYSON. Watch the CLIP.

20. Produce offspring (4) : SIRE. Not to be confused with DIRE.

22. Floor installer (5) : TILER. very literal.

25. Tureen utensil (5) : LADLE. You pretty much need to know what a tureen is.

26. Less chummy (5) : ICIER. Another ICE QUEEN?(4:24)

28. Feudal estates (5) : FIEFS.

29. Onion kin (5) : CHIVE. I thought I heard singing in refrigerator, but it was just Chive Talkin'

33. Suffix with oct- (3) : ANE. Good gas clue.

35. History test section, often (5) : ESSAY. Tee?

37. Start to fast? (5) : STEADfast.

39. Zachary Taylor, by birth (9) : VIRGINIAN. So many presidents were.

40. The senior Saarinen (5) : ELIEL Not as frequent as son Eero.

41. Beasts of burden (5) : ASSES. Man, we are really hauling here.

43. Sargasso Sea denizen (3) : EEL. I will always love alliteration.

44. Trumpet effect (4) : WAWA. Wow wow Wah Wah. (5:23) JzB?

45. Toothbrush choice (5) : ORAL-B. Brush.

50. The Aragón is a tributary of it (4) : EBRO. We have had this Iberian RIVER many times.

51. Southern language (6) : CREOLE. A shout out to Hahtoolah, our bayou babe.

55. Holding device (5) : CLAMP.

56. Refueling ship (5) : OILER. One of a few "er" words in this effort.

57. Street of many mysteries (5) : DELLA. Barbara Hale. Very nice clue.











59. Finalize, as a cartoon (5) : INK IN.

60. Program problem (5) : ERROR.

62. Timely question (4) : WHEN. Nice misdirection.

65. Patch, say (3) : SEW.

66. Prefix with corn (3) : UNIcorn.


67. "Xing" one (3) : PEDestrian.

69. Popular CBS procedural (3) : CSI. Crime Scene Investigation.

70. Parisian season (3) : ETE. For once, not a Nice clue.


Well, it is time for me to take my lemons and go until next week. Thank you GB for a very tough across puzzle made doable with a gentle down fill.

Apr 12, 2012

Thursday April 12, 2012 Bill Thompson

Theme: "Before and After". No, not those weight-reducing ads...

17A. *Place for after-dinner courses : NIGHT SCHOOL. Night cap. I need one right now...I'll never make it to trade school at this rate!

25A. *Repress : BOTTLE UP. Bottle cap...yes, pop one open for me, please! On second thought, I want to trade up to something like Remy Martin!

51A. *Skating exhibitions : ICE SHOWS. Ice cap. No thanks, Tinbeni would be horrified if I added ice!! Anyway, I can't drink while I am doing trade shows...

64A. *Delta's aptly named monthly : SKY MAGAZINE. Sky cap. Uh, I think he needs one. Maybe he should read about proper behavior for coaches in a trade magazine?

And the unifiers:

40A. See 33-Down, and word that can precede the end of the answers to starred clues : TRADE

33D. With "and" and 40-Across, emissions-reducing method whose first word (this answer) can follow the start of the answers to the starred clues : CAP. "Cap and Trade" is an environmental policy tool for delivering positive results with a mandatory cap on emissions...you have heard of your "carbon footprint", right?

Whew! This was a really convoluted theme reveal for the simple word "cap", that can follow the first words of the theme entries, and "trade", that can precede the second word. I hope the colors that I used will help you to "see" this theme. It certainly took me a few minutes before I realized the elegance of it! I blogged the last Bill Thompson LAT offering, and there was plenty of good stuff there, as well!!

Marti here, to explore the other beauties in this one.

Across:

1. Loathe : ABHOR

6. Poke into : PROBE

11. "Blue Hawaii" prop : UKE. OK, so we go back in time a bit for this one.

14. Rear : RAISE

15. Houston hockey team : AEROS

16. Frat letters : NUs. and 71A. Sorority letters : ZETAS

19. Banned pesticide : DDT

20. Magic show reaction : OOH

21. Lots : OCEANS. Tons, oodles, a whole bunch...

22. "Omertà" author : PUZO. Mario Puzo. Have you read it, Mari or Irish Miss?

23. Mystery writer John Dickson ___ : CARR.

27. Double-___: puzzle type : CROSTIC

30. German pronoun : SIE. Formal "you". Informal you is "du". But, be very careful that you never use the informal (familiar) form, until you are invited to do so!

31. When many Lyon Lions are born : AOUT. In August, in French.

32. Brownish purple : PUCE. Eeeww...that just conjures up bad images.

35. Certain commuter's aid : STRAP. On the bus. I've spent many hours hanging onto them!

39. Utter : PURE. Sheer, pure terror (like when facing an audience for the first time?)

42. Grinder : HERO. Sub, Po' Boy, Hoagie, Zep, Muffalata, Panini...What's yours?


43. Uncredited actor : EXTRA

45. Yani Tseng's org. : LPGA. Currently ranked # 1 in women's golf.

46. Home of Miami University : OHIO. Ha! Didn't fool me at all.

47. Neighbor of Leb. : ISR.ael

49. Neverending : ETERNAL

56. Fertile crescent land : IRAQ

57. Musty : DANK

58. Butter sources : CHURNS. Not nowadays, though.

60. American rival: Abbr. : UAL. United Air Lines.

63. "___ Fine Day": 1963 hit : ONE. The Chiffons, 1963. Oldie but goodie. (Ugh, I hate those YouTube ads!!)

66. Fly the coop : LAM. Usually, we hear "on the lam", but the actual meaning of "lam" is to break away, or escape.

67. Stud : HE-MAN. Like yesterday's "Ken" doll?

68. Assays : TESTS

69. Like some looks : SLY

70. Put up : ERECT. OK, I will leave this one alone...

Down:

1. River of Tuscany : ARNO. Obligatory geography lesson for the day. (Just above Florence.)

2. "Joanie Loves Chachi" co-star : BAIO. Scott. This "kid". My guess, is that Joanie is the one on the left?

3. Hearer of final appeals : HIGH COURT. Lemon and Hahtoolah can expand...

4. ___ Kosh B'Gosh : OSH. I never liked this clue/ans. "Kosh" and "Gosh" contain the entire thing, don't they??

5. Comeback : RETORT

6. Go to and fro : PACE

7. Post-op program : REHAB

8. Maine campus town : ORONO. Mainiac, where've you been?

9. Promotes : BOOSTS

10. Immigrant's subj. : ESL. English as a Second Language.

11. Excessive : UNDUE

12. Invasive Japanese vine : KUDZU

13. Prevent legally : ESTOP. (See comment on 3D)

18. What ad libbers ignore : SCRIPT. Great clue! And best show with ad libbers I have ever seen.

22. Overabundance : PLETHORA

24. Star : ASTERISK. *******

26. "My country, ___ ..." : TIS of thee...

27. Horn, for one : CAPE. Another geography lesson...

28. Gravy thickener : ROUX

29. Ringlet : CURL

34. Sidle : EDGE. Edge through the crowd, to the front of the line?

36. Burger follower : REHNQUIST. William, 16th Chief Justice of the US.

37. "Nessun dorma", e.g. : ARIA. Oh boy, I get to link an aria from Puccini's Turandot!! The aria is Italian for "None shall sleep". It's a long story, but basically the cold-blooded princess has to guess, before dawn, the name of the one who has won her hand (by correctly answering three riddles). She is repulsed at the thought of marrying him, and demands that no one shall sleep that night until his name is figured out. If the name is revealed, she is freed from the marriage demand. Kind of Rumpelstiltskin-esque, don't you think?

38. Combine, as assets : POOL

41. Using (up) : EATING

44. Fireplace powder : ASH

48. Chair on a porch : ROCKER. Cracker Barrel, anyone?




50. Fake : ERSATZ. Love that word!

51. Fan club focuses : IDOLS

52. Towpath locale : CANAL. They used to be used by donkeys towing barges through the canals. Now, it's mostly Sunday joggers.

53. She's not for you : ENEMY. Why "she"?

54. "What did I do to deserve this?" : WHY ME. ...why me?

55. "Poison" plant : SUMAC. Poison oak is much more allergenic.

59. Harangue : RANT.

61. Architectural pier : ANTA. Post or pillar on the sides of Greek temple entrances.

62. More, to a minimalist : LESS. "Less is more..."

64. Elle, across the Atlantic : SHE. HaHa, a reversal of the usual clue we see.

65. Bit of a snore? : ZEE. So now I have gone full circle from 71A ZETAS to ZEE tonight, so I'll say "Zo long".

Answer grid.

Hugs,
Marti

From C.C.:

Last Sunday Wisconsin State Journal published a thought-provoking letter Kazie wrote regarding student and teacher evaluation here in the US.

Below is the letter. (Thanks for the alert, Marge!)

"Having taught high school more than three decades, in four countries on three continents, I feel uniquely qualified to comment on education here. In Australia, I grew up and taught in a system where most student assessment relied on massive three-hour tests twice yearly--not the best way to foretell future success. However, I am also appalled that here, most testing consists of multiple-choice, fill-in-the-bubble guesses, very quickly gradable by computer, as opposed to subjective tests demanding active recall. The main concern at the end of the year, if teachers need more than 24 hours to get tests graded and results out, is how to entertain students after exams are done.

In contrast, French and German schools encourage daily, graded, student discussions of material they’ve studied, as well as long essay assignments throughout the year. Students can’t hide behind objective test guessing. Teachers there don’t just “lecture” in class, as is common here. Students participate actively in all their classes, resulting in more thorough comprehension and commitment to learning. The fault here is with the system itself. Changing student expectations, not just evaluation of teachers, will result in improved student performance, and that is the ultimate goal."


Apr 11, 2012

Wednesday, April 11 2012, Jack McInturff

theme: death and TAXES - TAXES is spelled out by the starting letters of all the theme answers.

benjamin franklin: "in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes." very timely. hopefully most of us are done with this annual nightma-- ... er, chore, for another year.

18A. Porterhouse relatives : T-BONE STEAKS. ribeye for me, please.

24A. Hannibal Smith underling : A-TEAM MEMBER. george peppard portrayed this character in the tv series.

36A. Any of five Wolverine films : X-MEN MOVIE. based on marvel comic's fictional character. had to look it up, i've never seen any of them.

54A. Some online shoppers : E-BAY BIDDERS. anyone here not an e-bayer?

59A. Pot holder, perhaps : S-SHAPED HOOK. like this.

32A. Org. concerned with the word spelled by the starts of 18-, 24-, 36-, 54- and 59-Across : IRS. internal revenue service.

melissa here. since april 15th falls on a sunday this year, we have some extra time to file. if you haven't filed yet, you really shouldn't be here. go do your taxes. we'll wait.

Across:

1. Great, in slang : BAD. she's built, she's stacked.

4. Take as one's own : ADOPT

9. Scenic view : VISTA

14. Fifth in NYC, e.g. : AVE. major thoroughfare in midtown manhattan, "most expensive street in the world."

15. Indian prince : RAJAH

16. Indian, e.g. : OCEAN. world's third largest ocean.

17. [Quoted verbatim] : SIC. notation that indicates words are transcribed exactly as spelled from the original source, complete with any mistakes.

20. Trading center : MART


22. Without __: pro bono : A FEE. "professional work undertaken voluntarily and without payment or at a reduced fee as a public service." then there's these pro bonos.

23. Chop : HEW. to cut, as with an axe.

28. Dined : ATE. a belated easter funny ...





29. Polish place : TOENAIL

30. MetLife, for one : INSURER

33. Muslim leader : IMAM

35. Popular dolls : KENS. how you doin'?




40. Jeer : GIBE

43. Geraint's lady : ENID. here is the wikipedia page.

44. Cookbook abbr. : TSP. teaspoon.

47. Elite athlete : ALL-STAR

51. Urban skyline standout : EDIFICE. a building of imposing appearance or size.


53. Actress Peeples : NIA

56. Receive : GET

57. Talker on a perch : MYNA. talking myna bird.

58. Aid companion : ABET

64. Reason for gaping : AWE

65. Immunity agent : T-CELL. lymphocytes.

66. Porter's "__ the Top" : YOU'RE. cole porter tune from the 1934 musical 'anything goes.'

67. Dastard : CUR. new to me, but both are synonyms for coward.

68. Halos : AURAE

69. Board game with an exclamation point in its name : SORRY! and
55d. Internet giant with an exclamation point in its name : YAHOO!

70. Mil. spud duties : KP'S. kitchen patrols.


down:

1. Long-grained Asian rice : BASMATI

2. One skilled in plane talk : AVIATOR

3. Fiats : DECREES

4. Legal hangings? : ART. haha.

6. Pancho's peeper : OJO. spanish for eye.

7. Jet age 2011-'12 TV drama : PAN AM. abc series.

8. Hoover led it for 37 yrs. : THE FBI

9. Political pollsters' targets : VOTERS

10. Winter glaze : ICE

11. Mollusk named for its pair of long earlike appendages : SEA HARE. pretty.

12. Rest : TAKE TEN. also, paul desmond's sequel to his monster hit 'take five,' that he wrote for the dave brubeck quartet.

13. Responds : ANSWERS

19. Espied : SEEN

21. Catch some rays : TAN. soon!

25. Injure severely : MAIM. ow.

26. Marceau, notably : MIME. marcel marceau.




27. Verve : ELAN

31. Don Ho's instrument : UKE. ukulele.

34. Sra.'s French counterpart : MME.
madam.

36. Crosses (out) : X'ES

37. A student's GPA blemish : ONE B. alright.


38. Caesar's "I saw" : VIDI. latin.

39. "__ it my way" : I DID. frank sinatra's signature song.

40. Kind of rap : GANGSTA. from wikipedia: "a subgenre of hip hop music that evolved from hardcore hip hop and purports to reflect urban crime and the violent lifestyles of inner-city youths."


41. Former Romanian president : ILIESCU.
President of Romania from 1990 until 1996, and from 2000 until 2004. a bit obscure.

42. Utter nonsense : BLATHER

44. Secure behind one's head, as long hair : TIE BACK

45. Make a mess of : SCREW UP

46. Really bugs : PESTERS

48. Synagogue : TEMPLE

49. "Rock-__ Baby" : A-BYE

50. Actor Quaid and pitcher Johnson : RANDYS

52. Pharm. watchdog : FDA. food and drug administration. also known as the f-duh.

60. According to : A LA. or, 'in the manner of.'

61. "__ Song": #1 country hit for Taylor Swift : OUR

62. Hockey great : ORR. bobby.

63. Opener on a ring : KEY

Answer grid.

melissa

Apr 10, 2012

Interview with David Steinberg

David Steinberg made his NY Times debut last June when he was only 14 years old, making him the second youngest constructor of the Will Shortz era, according to Jim Horne's wonderful Xword Info. He looks so sweet!

Today is only our second puzzle by David. But with his "picky" attitude, I'm sure we'll be entertained and challenged by many quality puzzles from him in the future.

First of all, thanks for putting HARMON (46D) in the grid. I'm curious, is "Long time Tiger Woods coach Butch __" your original clue? Harmon Killebrew is my all-time favorite.

You're welcome--in fact, I wasn't sure whether HARMON was famous enough when I originally decided to use it as an entry in my puzzle, since CRUCIVERB.com showed that it had only appeared three times in previous crosswords. So I asked my dad, who's a big sports fan and avid TV watcher, and he assured me that both Harmon Killebrew and Mark Harmon were very well-known. So, to answer your question, my original clue was "'NCIS' star Mark," because it seemed more contemporary. But I think Rich Norris made the clue better, more original, and a bit more Tuesday-ish.

How did this ABC embed idea come to you? What were the other theme entries you also considered?

I don't remember exactly how the idea came to me--I often think of crossword ideas at random times (at the dinner table, on the way home from school, etc.). The original version of this puzzle had the entry STAB CAESAR in it. Rich Norris initially rejected the puzzle--he liked the theme but thought STAB CAESAR was too contrived. So I wrote him back and suggested a few replacements, including CAB COMPANY, TAB CONTROL, TAB COLLARS, and DRAB COLORS. He liked CAB COMPANY and said he'd be interested in seeing a revision. I had to redo the whole grid because I couldn't come up with a good entry for ??Y?B. And that's how this puzzle came to be!

You're only 15 years old and already had 5 puzzles published by the NY Times and 2 by the LA Times. What prompted you to make your first puzzle?

I decided to try my hand at constructing crosswords after watching Merl Reagle make the process seem so amazingly simple in the documentary Wordplay. I figured that if Merl Reagle could make a puzzle so quickly, I might be able to make one too (though obviously a lot more slowly!). I made my first 10 crosswords by hand on graph paper when I was 12 and 13 because I thought using computer software was cheating. I then transferred them into grids I'd made in Microsoft Excel. It was a really complicated system, especially when I had to make changes. And putting the numbers in the Excel squares was really hard. Eventually I realized that most other constructors used computer software and that that wasn't cheating, so I bought Crossword Compiler. Looking back on my hand-constructed puzzles, I now realize they had a lot of flaws, which Will Shortz helpfully pointed out. After I switched to Crossword Compiler, I found the whole construction process a lot easier and more accessible. The hand construction did help me learn how to build my own grids, though, which I think is very valuable. All of this is how I eventually ended up where I am now!

Which part do you normally spend the most time on in the construction process: theme brainstorming, gridding or cluing?

I definitely spend the most time filling the grids--I'm very picky about what I put into my fills. I've gotten a lot pickier over time as I've seen more puzzles and read the critiques on the blogs, which make pretty clear what solvers like and what they don't. Because I am so picky, filling can take me several hours. But I think it's worth it--entries like TOM THUMB and SNOBBERY are more interesting than ones like ESNE and ANOA. As for cluing, I spend a lot of time trying to make my clues as original and clever as possible while sticking to the day of the week I'm aiming for.

What puzzles do you solve every day and which constructors constantly inspire you?

I solve the New York Times crossword every day, often the minute it's up online; the Los Angeles Times crossword in the newspaper, which we get every day (and the Sunday Los Angeles Times puzzle online or printed out); Merl Reagle's puzzle every Sunday; and the Newsday crossword in a local paper we get here. In addition, I recently subscribed to Fireball and try to solve those puzzles (often unsuccessfully--they're really hard!) every week. One constructor who constantly inspires me is Merl Reagle--it amazes me how he puts out a top-quality Sunday crossword every week! I also really admire the themeless puzzles by Barry Silk, Joe Krozel, and David Quarfoot. Kevin Der's rebuses are amazing, and Andrea Carla Michaels's early-week puzzles are always fun too.

Besides crosswords, what are your other interests?

Crosswords take up most of my life outside of school! But I'm also interested in computer science and table tennis. When I'm not working on crosswords for submission or doing homework for school, I run a custom crossword business www.customcrossword.com. I've also donated custom crosswords to help good causes.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012 David Steinberg

Theme: Jackson Five hit song(1970) Clip (3:31) - ABC spans each theme answer.

17A. It arranges pickups : CAB COMPANY

25A. Emir : ARAB CHIEF

36A. Simple ... or a hint to the hidden puzzle theme in 17-, 25-, 50- and 59-Across : AS EASY AS ABC

50A. Maryland seafood fare : CRAB CAKES

59A. Sit-up relatives : AB CRUNCHES

Argyle One here. David provided us with a test of general knowledge today with entries gleaned from all over the place and all ages.

Across:

1. Dark, to a poet : EBON

5. Tony who played a sitcom 17-Across employee : DANZA. He was in "Taxi".

10. Sitters' charges : TOTS

14. Lee with frozen desserts : SARA

15. Barkley who served under 41-Across : ALBEN. Served as Vice-President to 41A. FDR's successor : HST. Harry Truman. We've had him before but you can be forgiven if you don't remember him.

16. "... thunder, lightning, __ rain?": "Macbeth" : OR IN. Act 1, Scene 1 "When shall we three meet again? In ..." "When the hurly-burly’s done, When the battle’s lost and won."

19. Modest dress : MIDI

20. Like a crowd in awe : HUSHED

21. End-of-week exclamation : "TGIF!"

22. Vagrants : HOBOs

28. Mocedades hit whose title means "you are" : "ERES TU"

30. Golf units : ROUNDS

31. Slippery swimmer : EEL

32. How Dennis Eckersley pitched : SIDEARM. No, he didn't pitch wearing a side arm.

40. Desexes : NEUTERS

44. Outbursts that provoke blessings : ACHOOs

47. Harley alternative : YAMAHA

54. The Lusitania, e.g. : LINER. On May 7, 1915, the Lusitania, the British passenger ship, was sunk by a German U-boat off the Irish coast.

55. Sidewalk border : CURB

56. Guitarist, slangily : AXEMAN

58. Carlisle's wife in "Twilight" : ESME. Portrayed by Elizabeth Reaser. The loving couple.

63. It may be barred or bolted : DOOR. It may be barred by Katy.

64. Songs for two : DUETS

65. English aristocrat : EARL

66. __, meeny ... : EENY

67. Muslim god : ALLAH

68. June 6, 1944 : D-DAY

Down:

1. Key to the left of F1 : ESC

2. Sheepish reply? : "BAA". Shout out to WH? Or would that be a "bleat out"?

3. Heavenly body : ORB

4. Cheese-topped snacks : NACHOS

5. Electricity generators : DAMS. Oh please, the dams don't do anything except hold back water. It's like saying dams sawed wood or ground grain.

6. ___-Bits: cereal : ALPHA. Cereal for cruciverbalists.

7. Pro hoopster : NBAer

8. "The Prisoner of __" : ZENDA. An adventure novel by Anthony Hope, published in 1894.

9. Vague quantity : ANY

10. Tiny fairy tale hero : TOM THUMB. OK, give us another Tom Thumb but not one that's already been given. I'll start.


11. Starting point : ORIGIN

12. Cleaned (up) : TIDIED

13. Searches like a detection dog : SNIFFS

18. Give the boot : OUST

22. Donkey syllable : HEE - haw.

23. Cinnabar or magnetite : ORE

24. Lugosi of "Dracula" : BELA

26. Having a lot of nerve : BRASSY

27. Chef Cat __ : CORA. She is featured as an "Iron Chef" on the Food Network.

29. Patriotic Olympics chant : "USA!, USA!"

33. Believer's suffix : IST

34. Gray hair disguiser : DYE

35. Place for a ring : EAR

37. Elitism : SNOBBERY

38. Fed. anti-discrimination org. : EEOC. (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission)

39. Biggers's detective : CHAN. Earl Derr Biggers (1884 – 1933)

42. 54-Across pronoun : SHE

43. Pit goo : TAR. Most famous are the Rancho La Brea Tar Pits in the heart of Los Angeles.

44. Acquiesce : ACCEDE

45. Defoe title surname : CRUSOE. (Robinson)

46. Longtime Tiger Woods coach Butch __ : HARMON. Master's tie-in?

48. Astronaut Shepard : ALAN

49. Chopped, as garlic : MINCED

51. Afghan capital : KABUL. Today's geography lesson. Map.

52. Stand out in a field : EXCEL

53. Mattress giant : SERTA

57. Sled dog command : MUSH

59. Drillers' org. : ADA. (American Dental Association)

60. "I've been __!" : HAD

61. Important time : ERA

62. Surreptitious : SLY


Argyle

Apr 9, 2012

Monday, April 9, 2012 Gerry Wildenberg

Theme: Hidden Gun Emplacements - Your mission is to locate the camouflaged anti-aircraft guns(ACK-ACKs) in the four longest entries. Good luck.

17A. Donald Duck's title adventures, in a '90s Disney series : QUACK ATTACK. Donald's Quack Attack was a television series on the Disney Channel (later rerun on Toon Disney) which ran from 1992 to 1994, and featured Disney animated short films, especially those with Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy. Each episode lasted about 28 minutes, leaving about 2 minutes for commercials. Per Wiki

31A. Retrace one's steps : BACKTRACK

44A. Lunch box pudding brand : SNACK PACK

57A. Expert : CRACKERJACK. This term dates back to the late 1800's, and means "superb" or "excellent". In 1896 the name was trademarked (as CRACKER JACK) for the caramel popcorn product. In 1908 Jack Norworth wrote the lyrics for Take Me Out to the Ballgame, which mentioned the name of the candy propelling it to fame. This song is now sung during seventh inning stretches at baseball games. Wiki article here.

Argyle here. This appears to be a debut puzzle from Gerry. While I liked the theme there were 26 three-letter entries, some crosswordese and some entries that for those just starting out may not get.

Across:

1. Info in a folder : FILE

5. Mystical secrets : ARCANA

11. Polynesian paste : POI

14. Prayer ender : AMEN

15. Mazda roadsters : MIATAs

16. Landers with advice : ANN

19. Vigor : PEP

20. Ten Commandments verb : SHALT

21. The house, to José : LA CASA

23. __ pig: experiment subject : GUINEA

27. Hallway : FOYER

28. West Coast capital : SALEM. (Oregon)

33. Lament for Yorick : "ALAS". Hamlet, Act 5, Scene 1: "Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio: a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy"

34. Pan-cooked in oil, say : SAUTEED

35. Reach one's limit on, as a credit card, with "out" : MAX

36. Heavy wts. : TN's. Now that is just being silly, you don't need to abbreviate TON.

37. Pres. or gov. : LDR. (leader)

38. Fell with an axe : HEW

41. Luau cocktails : MAI TAIs

43. Galileo launcher: Abbr. : NASA

47. Emcees : HOSTS

48. "Dog the Bounty Hunter" channel : A AND E

49. __ Pieces : REESE'S

51. H.S. class with microscopes : BIO LAB

53. Jenna, to Jeb : NIECE. Bush. Family pic.

56. Ancient : OLD

62. Casual shirt : TEE

63. Like some Coast Guard rescues : AIR/SEA

64. Native Nebraskan : OTOE. Indians.

65. Disruptive '60s campus gp. : SDS. (Students for a Democratic Society)

66. "__: rewind": VCR rental reminder : BE KIND

67. Skinny : BONY. Bony Maronie.(3:07)

Down:

1. Website info source : FAQ

2. Don of talk radio : IMUS. Now in syndication through Citadel Broadcasting after being fired by CBS.

3. Jacob's first wife : LEAH

4. Confines, as a pet bird : ENCAGES

5. Violin maker Nicolò : AMATI. Italian luthier (1596 – 1684)

6. Slowing, in mus. : RIT. (ritardando) Italian terms for change in tempo.

7. Siamese or Burmese : CAT

8. __ loss for words : AT A

9. Most common food additive, to a chemist : NaCL. (salt)

10. Inquire about : ASK AFTER

11. Tropical fruit : PAPAYA

12. "Almost ready!" : "ONE SEC!". not "in a sec"

13. Garaged for the night, gearwise : IN PARK

18. Heidi of "Project Runway" : KLUM. Television series on Lifetime Television, previously on the Bravo network. Heidi

22. Light rope : CORD

24. Jeremy Lin or Kobe Bryant, e.g. : NBA STAR

25. __ de Cologne : EAU

26. Imitate : ACT LIKE

28. "Casablanca" pianist : SAM



29. Chicken __ king : À LA

30. Southern Cal. airport : LAX. (L.A. International Airport)

32. Popular sneakers : KEDS

34. Barbershop sound : SNIP

36. Eschew the subway and bus : TAKE A CAB

38. Owns : HAS

39. N.Y. clock setting : EST. but not at this time.

40. Used to be : WAS

41. 1450, in old Rome : MCDL. Hey! That's what I have; motorcycle and commercial driver license.

42. Get an "A" on : ACE

43. Rhinoplasty : NOSE JOB. We had rhinitis yesterday. [from Greek rhis, rhin: indicating the nose or nasal]

44. Wooden shoes : SABOTS. Wha...??



45. Got an "A" on : NAILED

46. Battery terminals : ANODEs

47. Estate beneficiary : HEIR

50. Three-time Masters winner Sam : SNEAD. Yesterday's finish wasn't great but the potential for greatness kept me glued to the set.

52. Soft French cheese : BRIE

54. "Elder" or "Younger" Roman statesman : CATO

55. Financial subj. : ECON. (economy)

58. Noah's refuge : ARK

59. CBS forensic series : CSI

60. Barbie's boyfriend : KEN

61. Phi Beta Kappa symbol : KEY

Argyle

Apr 8, 2012

Interview with Steven J. St. John

This is our 4th puzzle from Steven J. St. John. All his previous LA Times creations fell on Tuesdays, all with light and fun themes: from "Airline inconvenience", to "The King", to the last scrabbly "HIDDEN GEMS" with amazing theme entry intersections.

As many of you do, I always enjoy reading Steve's theme inspiration and original clues. And I hope this interview will give you a better understanding of his mind set.
What's the inspiration for this puzzle and what are the other theme entries you considered but failed to make the cut?
Looking back at my notebook, I think RAISIN DETRE was the first entry I came up with. I really liked the clue – Grape in the sun? The translated answer “Raisin to be” gives a laugh (hopefully) only after you unpack two layers – the bad translation and the life history of a raisin. I was able to brainstorm most of the other entries pretty quickly. They were all under 15-letters, so I had to decide if I wanted to take my best 4-5 and make a daily puzzle, or “go for it” and try for a Sunday.
My notebook has 11 theme answers, but I couldn’t “pair off” all of them (if you have one 8-letter answer, you need another to fit in the opposite part of the grid). So I liked, but couldn’t use PADEDEUX (Father of two?). Likewise, I had no match for MALDEMARE (Horse sickness?). With a 9-letter answer like MALDEMARE you can sometimes use it without a pair in the center of the grid, but I also had 3 11-letter entries and I wanted to save the center for one of those.
So from my initial list, I only had 9 entries I could use, and because all of the entries were fairly short (10-13 letters), I figured I needed to use all of them. That’s an uncomfortably thin margin when working a Sunday – and add to that I had never submitted a Sunday before. Imagine my surprise then when I was not only able to fill the puzzle, but that the puzzle seemed, to my eyes, to have very few iffy words (one, ADENITIS, Rich Norris would later edit out, to my appreciation). I thought it was a bit miraculous that I could fill the puzzle with no extra theme entries to spare.
Then, a couple of days later, I made a very disappointing discovery! As I started to write clues, I realized that I had somehow completely overlooked the fact that I had used two theme entries that played off of the same French root: LAISSEZFARE (Cabby gives a free ride?) in the center and SAVOIRFAIR (Mensa event?). I was stunned at my stupidity! Even though the puns are different in each case, I was pretty sure no editor would let me milk the same root word twice. Plus I knew that I had already been on every “French phrases used in English” internet list site there was and had zero acceptable ones left.
A few days later I took what I assumed to be the last look at the puzzle. It’s an unusual grid: 3 theme answers are partly stacked in the middle. (One of those, LAISSEZFARE, was one of the words that killed the puzzle, and since it was in the center there was no hope of replacing it.) Because the theme answers are also short, it occurred to me that maybe I could extract SAVOIRFAIR in the NE and save the rest of the puzzle – presuming I could come up with an alternative that happened to be 10 letters long and whose first letter makes sense with the last letter in ESPRITDECORE. I honestly don’t know where TRUMPLOEIL came from – it’s a term I first heard because my wife is a talented painter – but it struck me as a funny entry (especially with Trump all over the news – he was musing about running for President at the time) and it had some pretty friendly letters. I never in my wildest hopes thought I’d get JUJUBES and JAILCELL out of it – to think that a last-minute desperate hope theme entry actually improved the fill was just too lucky.

What's your background? What prompted you to make your first crossword?
I’m a physiological psychologist/neurobiologist. I used to do the crossword every day in my college newspaper, and later I tried to make several by hand. I found some of those first ones not long ago, and the only ones I ever completed apparently were those that broke the rules (e.g., had two letter words).
I was always more interested in making games than playing them. I spent hours as a kid making sports simulation games. In school I programmed (in BASIC and later Visual Basic) a computerized version of Yahtzee, I sent word-searches to friends in letters, I “modded” computer games like Civilization, I was the “Dungeon Master” in D&D. I used to spend days making golf courses (rather than playing them) in the Tiger Woods golf game by EA Sports.
Which part do you normally spend the most time on in the construction process: theme brainstorming, gridding or cluing?
I’m not good at generating themes. I’m trying to get better and cleverer. I think today’s puzzle is an example of where I got a bit lucky. But this is a hard question to answer because those 3 components are so different. Cluing takes a set amount of time: you’ve got about 76 words (or, for a Sunday, 140 words) you have to write clues for. It’s very rewarding to come up with a really clever clue (from a rejected puzzle of mine: DEFROSTED: Took out for dinner?), and sometimes you’ll work really hard to get some fresh clues. But it doesn’t pay to do that for all 76 words because no one would publish a puzzle that’s all misdirection like that. Also, it can be fun as a constructor to tie in the words with one another, but too much cross-referencing (Son of 24-Across) gets really annoying for the solver. So cluing takes as long as it takes – you can’t get it done faster and there’s not much profit in over-thinking it.
Gridding on the other hand can take an hour (with a computer program assisting you, of course) or weeks. If you really like a theme but have some tough letters or constraints, you may try every combination under the sun to get it to work for you. On my hard drive I have a Working Folder, and there are some puzzles that have been in there for months waiting for me to find the right combination of black squares and the right order of theme entries. Others move from the Working Folder to the Submitted Folder on the same day (or next day – I make sure to have a “cooling off period” before submitting a completed puzzle).
As for theme brainstorming, that has two parts: the jot down the idea part, which takes about 15 minutes (just enough to ensure it deserves wasting one piece of paper) and the let’s get serious and cover all the basis part, which for a linear thinker like me, can take a long time and end with disappointing results!

How does constructing change your solving experience? And what kind of themes/fill fascinate you as a solver?
I solve now with a purpose beyond just enjoying myself. I’m looking for inspiration – great words, clever ideas. If you’ve ever started a puzzle and thought you guessed the theme and then it turned out the theme was going somewhere else – well, I’m hoping for that kind of mistake. Because then maybe I can use the theme I thought of while solving!
I’m definitely most impressed by themes or ideas I know I never would have thought of, or would have thought of but never would have tried to execute because I was sure it was too hard to pull off. I love astronomy, and I could imagine coming up with the idea of hiding the names of the planets in phrases, but I never could in a million years imagine myself pulling off the planetary orbits puzzle that Patrick Berry put in my Sunday paper one day in 2008 (http://www.xwordinfo.com/Crossword?date=12/28/2008).
I tend to be most-impressed with pun themes that make me laugh, because in my brainstorming of theme ideas, that tends to be where I’m weakest. Again, today’s puzzle feels like a lucky break given my tendencies.
What puzzles do you solve every day and which constructors do you find most inspiring?
My paper, the Orlando Sentinel, prints the LA Times puzzle Monday through Saturday, so I do those every day. For some reason it does not print the Sunday LA puzzle, but prints the NY Times Sunday puzzle (2 weeks out of date) and Frank Longo’s syndicated puzzle. Also, the college I teach at provides the NY Times Monday-Friday during the Fall and Spring semesters, so I almost always do that one as well. Every once in a while I will download recent puzzles from the Chronicle of Higher Education and work those as well. I have submitted one puzzle there (rejected) but would someday like to publish a puzzle there.
If I see Patrick Berry or Elizabeth Gorski’s name on a puzzle, I can’t wait to start working on it. I think Merl Reagle and Frank Longo are other-worldly geniuses. Kevin Der has produced some pretty amazing puzzles, especially his Chinese Zodiac puzzle (http://www.xwordinfo.com/Crossword?date=1/30/2011) with Jessica Hui. There’s 10 or 12 others in my pantheon, including some of the themeless maestros (Manny Nosowsky et al.).
Besides crosswords, what are your other hobbies?
I love playing and watching sports and I love all things related to science, including science fiction. I wish puzzles were more sports and science friendly because I’m sure I would have a thicker theme notebook if they were. I have two smart, beautiful kids, the eldest of whom (at 10) tends to dive in to all of my interests, and she has, on more than one occasion, handed me a page full off phrases to add to my word list. She’s even generated a couple of themes (though I’m not sure we’d be able to sell SEEINGRED, FEELINGBLUE, BLUSHINGORANGE, TURNINGPURPLE, GOINGFORTHEGOLD). The kids make me smile a lot.

Sunday April 8, 2012 Steven J. St John

Theme: Failing French - Puns on common French-rooted English.

23A. Sense of unity among apples? : ESPRIT DE CORE. Esprit de corps. Morale.

28A. Deceptively realistic painting of The Donald? : TRUMP L'OEIL. Trompe-l'œil. Literally "deceive the eye". L'œil =Le + œil (eye, masculine). Tricky spelling.

45A. Terrible night's sleep? : LAY MISERABLES. "Les Misérables". Dennis loves the musical. I think he brought this to us before everyone was aware of Susan Boyle.

60A. Having a weed-free lawn? : COUP DE GRASS. Coup de grâce. Literally "blow of mercy".

65A. Passenger who doesn't bug the cabbie? : LAISSEZ FARE. Laissez-faire. Literraly "let do".
Savoir-faire means "know what to do".

73A. Justification for a dried grape? : RAISIN D'ETRE. Raison d'être. "Reason for existence".

89A. Garden figure taking up arms? : GNOME DE GUERRE. Nom de guerre. Literally "Name of war". I don't know why it morphed into pseudonym. Nom de plume makes sense to me.

104A. Ocean trip with a skeleton crew? : BONE VOYAGE. Bon voyage.

114A. Perfume at Garfield's house? : ODIE TOILETTE. Eau de toilette. "Toilet water" is not an apt translation. Toilette comes from TOILE the woven cloth, then the diminutive suffice "ette", so, "little woven cloth".

I thought of Splynter & Barry G immediately after I downloaded the puzzle. Their "affection" for French is well-known on the blog.

Fun romp for me. I was entertained by the the theme clues and just know enough French to mangle the language.

Construction wise, the grid has a relative low black square count. Only 68. I mentioned last Sunday that 74-78 is our Sunday norm. And it's Steve's first Sunday! Look at the middle theme entries: 6-letter overlapping. Not easy to do.

Across:

1. __ finish : PHOTO

6. Latin for "heads" : CAPITA. Or TETEs in French.

12. Tease : JEST

16. Uncouth one : OAF

19. Like hayseeds' hangouts : RURAL

20. Issue in May-December romances : AGE GAP. This kind of marriage is often solid.

21. Straighten out : UNTANGLE

25. Place to dry out, in oaters : JAIL CELL. I still thought of "Rehab center", despite the "osters" qualifier.

26. Goddess with a European capital named for her : ATHENA. Athens.

27. "Fooled you!" : NOT

30. Dressed : CLAD

31. Much souvenir shop merchandise : KITSCH. Lovely entry. Consonants heavy.

34. Concert wind : OBOE

35. Egg source : HEN

36. Triumphs : WINS

37. Horn, in Hastings : HOOTER. Did not know British call "Horn" as "Hooter", Steve!

39. They may have soft shoulders : ROADS

44. Point at the dinner table : TINE

47. "__ Irish Rose" : ABIE'S

50. Heyerdahl craft : RA I. Poor Aishwarya Rai. She never gets the credit she deserves in LA Times.

52. Vacation souvenir : TAN

53. Come through : DELIVER

54. "Porgy and Bess" aria : SUMMERTIME

57. Tease : RIB

59. Many families begin at them : ALTARS. Where weddings are held.

62. Humble reply to a compliment : I TRY

64. Nurse's tool : HYPO. So sorry to hear the bad news about your brother, Lucina.

68. Michigan-based financing co. formed in 1919 : GMAC. Now called Ally Financial.

72. Workbench tool : VISE

75. Early online bookstore : AMAZON

79. QB protectors : RGs

82. Admitting, as a lesser charge : PLEADING TO

83. Restraint : LIMITER

85. Pasture : LEA

87. Cholesterol initials : LDL. The bad one.

88. Allergy season runners : NOSES

92. Latvian Academy of Sciences home : RIGA

94. Syrian president : ASSAD. His wife is nuts about Louboutins.

95. Charming, e.g. : PRINCE. Oh, Prince Charming.

96. "Law & Order" panel : JURY

97. 33 1/3 rpm spinners : LPs

100. Country lowland : GLEN

101. New York town named for its salt-mining industry : SALINA. Never heard of it. Makes sense with its salty sounding name.

103. Enjoy a hot tub : SOAK

110. American __ : LIT

111. Saudi neighbor : QATARI. Crossing 93D. Citizen of Basra : IRAQI. Both U-less.

113. Allergic inflammation : RHINITIS. New word to me.

117. Louis Sachar kids' book heroine : ANGELINE. Never heard of this book.

118. Empty __ : NESTER

119. Bill who said, "It's all been satirized for your protection" : MAHER. "Real Time with Bill Maher" is funny at times.

120. "Silly me!" : D'OH

121. Certain tech sch. grad : ENGR

122. Zen enlightenment : SATORI. Literally "awakening"/"understanding". I just call it "D'oh".

123. Downhill racers : SLEDS

Down:

1. Take the pulpit : PREACH

2. Try to catch up : HUSTLE

3. Oliver Twist, e.g. : ORPHAN

4. Accounted for the container : TARED. Wow, TARE can be a verb also?

5. Actress Lena : OLIN

6. Dishonorable dude : CAD

7. Representatives : AGENTS

8. Carlsbad's river : PECOS.

9. "Makes sense to me" : I GOTCHA

10. Deck swabber : TAR

11. In __: miffed : A PET

12. Movie goodies : JUJUBES. Chinese dates is also called JUJUBES. That are not sweet as medjools.

13. Smitten : ENAMORED

14. R.E.M. frontman Michael : STIPE

15. One way to walk : TALL

16. Curved molding : OGEE

17. Sheryl Crow's "__ Wanna Do" : ALL I. That song was quite popular when I first arrived in the US.

18. Dropped : FELL

22. Cpl., e.g. : NCO

24. "__ It to the Streets": Doobie Brothers hit : TAKIN'. Here is a clip.

29. Spiral pasta : ROTINI

32. Helium or neon : INERT GAS

33. Knuckleballer Wilhelm : HOYT. Hall-of-Famer of course. He retired when he was 49 years old. Same as Jamie Moyer.

36. Became less reckless, say, with "up" : WISED

38. Poet Khayyám : OMAR

39. Pre-closing bell excitement : RALLY

40. Dead lines? : OBIT. Nice clue.

41. Inventing middle name : ALVA. Thomas Alva Edison.

42. A hundred bucks, maybe : DEER. English is so irrational. Why can't DEER be plural?

43. Estonia and Armenia, once: Abbr. : SSRS

44. Conductor's beat : TEMPO

45. Green beans : LIMAS. They're not green when dried.

46. Hit from behind : REAR END

47. Social psychology pioneer Solomon : ASCH. Nope. Stranger to me.

48. Elevate : BUOY

49. "It's not too early to call" : I'M UP

51. Less stuffy : AIRIER

55. Put a new layer in, as a jacket : RE-LINED

56. Road race challenge : ESS

58. Not neutral : BIASED

61. Rev.'s address : SER

63. Test : TRIAL RUN

66. Skip over, as ads : ZAP

67. Future femme : FILLE. "Daughter" in French.

68. Middle Ages rival of Venice : GENOA

69. Conf. table events : MTGS (Meetings). And 71. Conf. table heads : CEOs.

70. Renoir output : ARTE. French for "art".

72. Chose, with "for" : VOTED

74. Not at all bright : DINGY

75. Pond organism : ALGA

76. Hr.'s 60 : MINS

77. Singer Tori : AMOS

78. Old Coors product pitched as "Zomething different" : ZIMA

80. Grade school art activity : GLUING

81. Experienced : SEEN. Hi there, Seen!

84. Dealing with an invitation : REPLYING

86. Fly ball paths : ARCS

90. Pomaded '50s subculturist : GREASER. Look here, Wiki says they liked Converse Chuck. I like my Vans.

91. Idealist's opposite : REALIST. Too many similar letters in clue/answer.

96. TV image fluctuations : JITTER. New word to me also.

97. Detest : LOATHE

98. "When We Two __": Byron poem : PARTED

99. Downhill racers : SKIERS

100. Arrived : GOT IN

102. Mislead : LIE TO

103. Rip off : STEAL

104. Thin fastener : BRAD

105. [Gasp!] : OH NO. My mouse suddenly stopped working earlier. Putting in new batteries did not help. Had an "Oh no" moment..

106. Near : NIGH

107. Dallas-to-Memphis dir. : ENE

108. Contemptible : VILE

109. Long times : EONS

112. Benevolent donations : ALMS

115. Narc's employer : DEA

116. "Do it, __ will!" : OR I

Answer grid.

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C.C.