Thursday, April 22, 2021

Thursday, April 22, 2021, Grant Boroughs



Ah, Spring!  Just when some of us thought that the warmer weather might be here to stay, the cold weather makes a return appearance.  Malodorous Manatee, here, with a puzzle from Grant Boroughs who must have experienced a brain freeze because he used the same wintry clue three times.

I Don't Wanna Sound Complaining but Freeze, Freeze Me, Oh Yeah, Like I Freeze You.
17 Across. In the event of a freeze, ...: RESTART COMPUTER.  When our computers completely stop responding we say "My computer froze."  Restarting sometimes helps.

40 Across. In the event of a freeze, ...: WEAR WARM CLOTHES.  When it's  so very cold that water turns to ice, well, that's a deep freeze.  Bundle up to stay warm.

59 Across. In the event of a "Freeze!," ...: DON'T MOVE A MUSCLE.  When the cops, or the bad guys for that matter, tell you to stop right where you are they might yell "Freeze"!


Across:

1. Toddler's call: MOMMY.



6. The universal language, some say: MATH.

Tom Lehrer Explains It


10. "Time __ transfix the flourish set on youth": Shak.: DOTH.  In his works, Shakespeare used a grand total of 31,534 different words thus providing crossword constructors with a vast pool from which to select something that will fit in their grids . . . . even if the word hasn't been heard in four hundred years.

14. Red tide cause: ALGAE.

15. Bio, in a way, is aptly part of it: OBIT.  OBITuary.  Both the clue and the answer are abbreviations that have become accepted usage.

16. Most populous Hawaiian island: OAHU.  Maui is another four-letter Hawaiian island.

20. Little pigs or blind mice: TRIO.  . . . . and the Oscar goes to



21. Smelting residue: SLAG.

22. Lowland: VALE.



25. Title choice on a form: MRS.  Other options include Miss, Ms., Mr.  and decline to state.

27. Destroy, as files: SHRED.



31. Bitterroot Range st.: IDA.      "State" is abbreviated so the answer will be an abbreviation.  But, you knew that.  A segment of the Rocky Mountains, the Bitterroots run for approximately 300 miles along the IDAho and Montana state border.

32. Take on: ASSUME.  As in "to assume the role of".

35. Close: NEAR.  As in close the door?  Nope, as in close at hand.

36. Rye fungus: ERGOT.  This fungus seems to have developed a symbiotic relationship with crossword puzzles.

38. Underestimate, say: MISJUDGE.  A woman asked her husband to take a spider outside instead of squashing it.  He did.  He and the spider walked a bit and then had a chat over a couple of beers.  Upon returning home, the husband told his wife that he had MISJUDGEd the spider.  "He's a nice guy," said the husband "and he wants to be a web developer."

43. Shelter securely: ENSCONCE.



44. Tech support callers: USERS.


45. Like those who leap before they look: RASH.  At the drug store, I could not decide between the Lotrimin and the Tinactin.  I mulled it over for a while because I did not want to make a RASH decision.

46. More evil: DARKER.



49. Brown brew: ALE.



50. Aerodynamic: SLEEK.

52. Parker's wind: SAX.  Charlie "Bird" Parker was a world-renowned saxophone player

53. Ice cream brand: EDYS.  West of the Rockies, and in Texas, it's called Dryer's.  In the other parts of the country the same ice cream is called EDY'S.

54. Farm skyline sight: SILO.



57. Sharp barks: YAPS.  Sometimes, YIPS.

66. Jug: EWER.  Often seen in crossword puzzles.

Jim Kweskin and the Ewer Band


67. Michael Douglas' middle name: KIRK.  Hmmm.  Isn't that his father's name?

68. Daily delivery: PAPER.  As in newspaper.  A fast-fading ritual.  Pew Research reported in January, 2021 that 86% of Americans now get there news online using their smartphones.  The remaining 14% seem to get their news from "The Daily Show".

69. Sky and Storm org.: WNBA.  Two teams in the Women's National Basketball Association.  Organization is abbreviated so . . .


70. Mid-month day: IDES.



71. Turkey neighbor: SYRIA.  Neither Yams nor Stuffing would fit.


Down:

1. Deface: MARFreddy Mercury, Venus Williams and Bruno MARs all walked into the same bar . . . but they didn't planet that way.

2. Spanish shout: OLE.



3. Old British sports cars: MGS.  Some good friends of mine are purchasing this fully restored MG:

1950 MGTD


4. Finish choice: MATTE.  Obviously not Poronkäristys (sautéed reindeer) - as that would have required a double n in the clue.  A photo finish, or paint, choice.

5. Orbital period: YEAR.  Different planets have YEARs of different lengths.  It always irks me when, on Star Trek, far, far away and centuries from now, they refer to minutes, hours, days or YEARs - finite lengths of time that are defined by the movements of a single, infinitesimal spec of the universe: planet Earth - as if the units are the intergalactic standard measurements of time.
    
6. Drives: MOTORS.  Aahhh, memories of waiting for the day when I would be tall enough to reach the sign at the Disneyland Autopia.

Circa 1955


7. Elementary sequence: ABC.  If you headed down the Periodic Table rabbit hole then this one might not have been as easy as ABC.

8. Spanish relatives: TIOS.  Uncles en ingles.

9. Web page standard: HTMLHyper Text Markup Language

10. Baker's dozen: DOUGHNUTS.  The preferred spelling.  For some reason this made me think of The Bangles.



11. Cereal grain: OAT.



12. Start of many band names: THE.  Why "band" ?  Why not?  Must be why 10 Down made me think of a band.

13. "Ben-__": HUR.  Ben Gay?  Ben Affleck?  Ben There Done That?



18. Crater borders: RIMS.

Crater Lake, Oregon - Rim



19. Faux __: PAS.  An embarrassing or tactless act or remark in a social situation.



22. Nielsen ratings units: VIEWERS.  The Nielsen TV Ratings attempt to measure ratings share and the total number of VIEWERS of a TV show.

23. Epinephrine-producing gland: ADRENAL.



24. "Cooking With Power" author: LAGASSE.

Emeril Lagasse


26. Seasons in the sun: SUMMERS.  This marine mammal referenced Jacques Brel and the Terry Jacks song the last time this situation arose.

28. Member of a league in a Sherlock Holmes title: REDHEAD.



29. With enthusiasm: EAGERLY.

30. Ballroom attire: DRESSES.



32. "Love on __-way Street": 1970 hit: A TWO.  Originally recorded by Lezli Valentine.  I was a student at U.C. Berkeley in 1970 and this is not the music to which we all listened.  Grant (or Rich) could have gone with Lawrence Welk's much satirized  "and a one and A TWO."



33. Open __ night: MIC.  It's part of the lexicon, I guess, but here it's a truncated answer (MICrophone) to a non-abbreviated clue.

34. Non-native speaker's subj.: ESLEnglish as a Second Language

37. Theater section: ORCHESTRA.

39. Soup du __: JOUR.  Soup of the Day, en français.

41. "What else?": AND.  Yes . . . ?

42. Electronics pioneer: RCARadio Corporation of America



47. Vessels with cockpits: KAYAKS.



48. Final, say: EXAM.  LAST would have fit in the allotted space.  As would TEST.

51. Kipling title orphan: KIM.


53. A 48-Down may include one: ESSAY.

55. Norse prankster: LOKI.  I first learned about LOKI  by reading Marvel comic books.


56. Poet banished by Augustus: OVID.  Banish cOVID.

58. Baby seals: PUPS.



59. Beads on blades: DEW.  As on blades of grass.

60. Have title to: OWN.

61. State east of Wyo.: NEB.  So. Dakota also adjoins Wyo on the east but, since the clue did not specifically ask for an adjoining state, it could also have been many others.

62. Afore: ERE.  Both the clue and the answer are considered to be archaic.

63. First aid skill, for short: CPR.  "For Short" suggests an abbreviation.  Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation

64. 16-Across garland: LEI.  In Hawaii, May First is Lei Day.

65. Timeline section: ERA.  One of twenty-four three-letter answers in this cwd pzl.


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MM Out

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Thursday, April 8, 2021, Jeffrey Wechsler



Good morning, cruciverbalists.  Malodorous Manatee here with his friend Shaun the Sheep.  Shaun seems in fine fettle on this spring day.  Easter, Passover and Flauschink have all come and gone (until next year) and it's a good time to sit back, relax, sip a piña colada, or two, and contemplate today's theme.  After giving the matter some thought, Shaun has suggested that we start with the reveal:

34 Across: Palm fruit ... or what the creator of this puzzle's theme apparently is?: COCONUT.  As in COCONUT Palm.  Watch for falling objects!

Theme:  I've Got A Lovely Bunch of Coconuts

Merv Griffin

 
Jeffrey Wechsler is a name quite familiar to those who hang out at the LAT Crossword Corner.  To say that he has constructed a shipload of puzzles published by the L.A. Times would be an understatement.   If I am not mistaken, this is his second within one week and his one hundred seventy-ninth overall.  For today's puzzle, Jeffrey has elected to riff on COCONUTS.  As he suggests in the reveal, Jeffrey has apparently gone cuckoo-for-cocoa-puffs due to all the research and writing and punning and cluing and re-writing.  Then he has to sit back as editors second guess everything he has done.  Oy!  There certainly exists a correlation between all of this and one's mental well being.  Whether or not there is causality is a matter best left to the judgement of you, dear reader.

14 Across:  Attempted coup participants: CO-CONSPIRATORS.  A coup d'etat (French for "blow of state" as used, also, in final blow or "coup de grace") often shortened to "coup" is the seizure of a government and its powers.  In 1799, Napoleon and his CO CONSPIRATORS staged a successful coup against the ruling French Directory.  Napoleon was, himself, the intended target of a coup.  Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose.

Napoleon Bonaparte et Amis

20 Across:  Many an 18th-century painter: ROCOCO ARTIST.  ROCOCO is an elaborately ornamental style of painting.


42 Across:  Environmentally concerned: ECO CONSCIOUS.   ECO, ECO-friendly, and ECOlogical were added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2008.

51. Source of an organic fiber: SILKWORM COCOON.

Silkworm Cocoons on a Mulberry Leaf


Let us now take a look at the other clues and answers.  Puzzles are sort of like responsive reading, aren't they?

Across:

1. #1 Toto song that mentions the Serengeti: AFRICA.  Toto is a band originally formed in Los Angeles in 1977.  Depending on the source cited, the name came either from the canine in The Wizard of Oz or from the the phrase "in toto" meaning all encompassing and which was scrawled by the band, as a means of identification, on some of their early demo tapes.  The Serengeti is a region of AFRICA renown, among other things, for its large lion population.


7. Whittling, for one: CRAFT.

12. Wavy patterns in some op art: MOIRES.  Although it is a word that few of us have occasion to use, and as a plural on even fewer occasions, we do come across MOIRE not infrequently in puzzles.


13. Cool one's feet at streamside, say: DANGLE.  A shaman gave a man a potion for erectile dysfunction.  The instructions were to take only a single teaspoon and then count out loud:  one, two, three.  "How do I stop it from working?" asked the man.   "Say one, two, three, four" replied the shaman.   That evening when he and his wife were in the bedroom he followed the instructions.  His wife became quite excited and, while taking off her clothes, asked "What was the one, two, three for?"  This is why we should never end our sentences with a preposition.  We might end up with a dangling participle.

 
17. Stretching muscles: TENSORS.   Today's other anatomy lesson.

18. Iowa State city: AMES.  Alternatively, a State University location often seen in crossword puzzles.

24. Low-quality: POOR.

26. CFO's degree: MBA.  A company's  Chief Financial Officer might, or might not, hold a Masters of Business Administration degree.

UCLA Anderson School of Management
Class of 1979


27. Intelligence org.: NSA.  National Security Agency.  We need to be careful, and not be too hasty, because sometimes it turns out to be the National Security Council.

28. Form close ties (with): BOND.

29. "Let's have at it!": GAME ON.

Wayne's World


32. Point: AIM.



33. Circle segment: ARC.


35. __ dog: TOP.  TOP Dog means someone who is dominant, or apex, in their field.


36. Classic Pontiac: GTO.  Gran Tourismo Omologato loosely translates to Grand Touring Homologated (a vehicle, or engine, approved for sale or for a particular use).  I had a 1999 Suzuki SV650 motorcycle that was homologated  for sale in California.  When I went back to the dealer to ask why the owner's manual had me in shifting into sixth gear at 35 miles per hour when you could hit about 50 mph in first gear, the salesperson just smiled silently.


1969 Pontiac GTO


37. Not moving: AT REST.


38. Desires: YENS.

39. Bellows of "The Agency": GIL.  "The Agency" was a television show about the CIA.  GIL Bellows is an actor who appeared in that show and who also, among other roles, played Tommy in "The Shawshank Redemption" motion picture.


40. Dessert order: PIE.

41. Flower holders: BEDS.  A reasonable attempt to device us but the use of the plural meant the neither VASES nor STEMS was going to fit.  URNS would have fit but . . . .

47. Old Venetian judge: DOGE.  The DOGE's Palace, en Venezia Italia has many murals on its walls painted by Tiziano Vecellio who we know as Titian.  He was famous for his use of reds (the colors, not the barbiturates).

Doge Andrea Gritti by Titian


48. Catching a glimpse of: ESPYING.

There was a young lady named Hannah

Who slipped on a peel of banana

As she lay on her side more stars she espied

Than there are in the Star Spangled Banner


56. Most cunning: SLIEST.

57. When Rome wasn't built?: IN A DAY.  Per the old saw.  Rome was not built in a week either or, for example, was it built in the 10th century BCE.  It was, according to legend, founded on April 21st 753 BCE.

58. Weighty reading: TOMES.

59. Guiding principles: TENETS.



Down:


1. Film lover's TV option: AMC. Originally known as American Movie Classics, AMC Network debuted in 1984 and originally focused on airing motion pictures made prior to 1950.  As of 2015, almost 95,000,000 American households received the channel.

2. Pay, as a bill: FOOT.  The idiom "FOOT the bill" is derived from an earlier idiom: to "foot up" or total the items on a bill at the bottom, or foot, of the bill.  By the 1800's it had come to mean to pay the total at the foot of the bill.

3. It may be fried or puffed: RICE.

Fried


4. Piece of rebar, essentially: IRON ROD.  Rebar is short for reinforcing bar.


5. Suppress, in a way: CENSOR.

A Hayes Code Certificate
See 44 Down



6. Part of NAACP: Abbr.: ASSOC.   NAT'L would have left us a bit short so National ASSOCiation for the Advancement of Colored People it was.

7. Jaguar, e.g.: CAR.  It could have been CAT but Co Coconspitators would have been a real stretch.  Jeffrey used a different clue for CARs last Friday.

8. Genetic molecule: RNA RiboNucleic Acid acts as a messenger carrying instructions from DeoxyriboNucleic Acid.

9. Actor's rep.: AGT.  AGENT  One of about a dozen abbreviations in this puzzle - depending on what you chose to include.

10. Parade staple: FLOAT.

The "Animal House" Classic - 1978


11. Closed: TERMINATED.

The Terminator


13. Data storage medium: DISC.


15. Country club employee: PRO.   As in golf PROfessional.

16. Stretches on a couch?: SESSIONS.  A bit of misdirection.  Not stretches such as one might do before exercising but stretches as in lengths of time.    In this case, at a psychiatrist's office.

19. Some can be used forever--but only once: STAMPS.  A nice riddle.


21. Signs: OMENS.



22. In the neighborhood of: ABOUT.


23. Overblown critique: RANT.

What Have The Romans Ever Done For Us?



24. Elaborate entryways: PORTICOS.




25. Physician wearing a pink ribbon, perhaps: ONCOLOGIST.  




28. Like potato chips, often: BAGGED.

What's In The Bag?

29. Showed up: GOT IN.  Appeared wouldn't fit nor would arrived.  In fairness, showing up and getting in are not quite the same thing . . . except, perhaps, on Saturdays.

30. Farm measures: ACRES.

31. Curly slapper: MOE.  Hmmmm. let's see.  As clued, MOE Howard from the Three Stooges.  MOE Szyslak from "The Simpsons"?  Moe Green, Moe Drabowsky?  Naaah.  Let's go with our very own.

Chairman Moe



34. Crime boss: CAPO.

Carmine Sabatini and the Stock Market


38. "That's well within my abilities": YES I CAN.



41. How to receive a freebie, perhaps: BUY ONE.  A BUY ONE GET ONE Free offer sometimes appears in our puzzles.

43. Yo-Yo strings?: CELLO.  Yo-Yo Ma is a world-renown cellist.  I have had the pleasure of seeing him perform in person.  My favorite recordings are the ones he did with Mark O'Conner and Edgar Meyer.  O'Connor is a National Fiddle Champion and Mayer is the only  bassist ever to be awarded the Avery Fisher Prize for outstanding achievement in classical music.

Chief Sitting In The Rain / College Hornpipe


44. Official doc.: CERT.  A candy mint?  A breath Mint?  Oh, it's a necessary-evil-let's-truncate-a-word-to-fit-the-grid moment.  Hey, it happens.  Official Document = CERTificate.  See, for example, 5 Down.


45. Belief system: ISM.  What is the correct way to pronounce nihilISM?  Doesn't matter.


46. In the previously mentioned work, briefly: OP CIT.  An abbreviation for OPus CItatum or OPere CItato.

49. Connection point: NODE.

50. Initialism for Tom Brady, according to most: GOAT.  GOAT is often used to denote the player who's  blunder causes a sports team to lose a game.  In another context, as used here, it becomes the acronym Greatest OAll Time.  Polar opposites.

52. 2000s toon heroine __ Possible: KIM.  I am familiar with many animated series but I did not know this one.  Fortunately, the answer was only three letters.  Thanks, perps.


53. Tiny: WEE.

Wee Willie Winkie

54. CIA predecessor: OSS.  The Office of Strategic Services


55. Finger Lakes locale: Abbr.: NYS.  New York State.  For the second time in a row, the puzzle I recap ends with a punt.


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MM OUT

Friday, May 3, 2024, Jay Silverman

Watch the Birdies Good Morning, Cruciverbalists.  It's the first Friday of the merry month of May and it is time for yours truly, Malodo...