Thursday, April 21, 2022

Thursday, April 21, 2022, Stella Zawistowski

 



Good Morning, Cruciverbalists, Malodorous Manatee here with the post-puzzle summary.  Today marks my first puzzle recap featuring a puzzle for which Patti Varol served as the Editor instead of as the Assistant Editor and I am looking forward to taking a look at this puzzle.  Here is a link to the Tribune syndicate announcement:

Patti Varol Announcement

Patti obviously has a wealth of experience as does today's puzzle setter, Stella Zawistowski.  Here is a link to an August 2021 interview with Stella:

Browser Interview With Stella Zawistowski


We'll go with Ernie Banks' oft' cited quote to introduce today's puzzle:

LET'S PLAY TWO.  

At three places within the grid our constructor has placed the names of two popular tabletop games back-to-back.  The reveal employs a baseball reference - Doubleheader (two games played on the same day) - to clue us in as to what is going on.  The reveal:

58 Across:  Doubleheader feature, and what are literally found in 17-, 23-, and 44-Across: BACK TO BACK GAMES.

...and the application of this clever theme:

17 Across:  Mission to go after imaginary germs?: COOTIE OPERATION.  Cooties being imaginary germs and operation being a synonym (more or less) for mission.


23 Across:  Military vessel in terrible condition?: SORRY BATTLESHIP.  A warship in a SORRY state.  I always think of Bill and Ted when the Battleship game is mentioned.


44 Across:  Antitrust lawsuit, perhaps?: MONOPOLY TROUBLE.

And now for the rest of the story:

Across:

1. Epic __: FAIL.  A relatively modern bit of slang.


5. Family unit: CLAN.

9. App with Social and Promotions tabs: GMAIL.  The clue is a bit obscure but, hey, it's Thursday.  Adding Primary to the two listed categories would have made things a bit less obscure.  GMAIL sorts email into various piles.  

14. Instrument for a Swiss mountaineer: ALPENHORN.  A clever bit of misdirection.  Not gear for a mountain climber.  A musical instrument.


16. "The Big Bang Theory" co-creator Chuck: LORRE.  The first of (too?) many proper nouns used in this puzzle (YMMV).  The prolific Mr. Lorre also created MomTwo and A Half MenDharma & GregYoung SheldonBob Hearts AbisholaGrace Under FireCybillDisjointed and The Kominsky Method.  If you take a meeting with him, allow him to pick up the lunch tab.

19. Perfume samples: TESTERS.  The small spray bottles.  Not the people checking out the scents.

20. Loads: OCEANS.  Not the transitive verb.

21. Old French coin: ECU.  A rare coin that turns up (more often than rarely) in crossword puzzles.

22. "I'm so mean, I make medicine sick" boxer: ALI.  Muhammad ALI.  A pugilist often seen in crossword puzzles.

32. Calendar col.: TUE.  A bit of a punt.  One of seven days.

33. Sporty Camaro: IROC.  International Race OChampions.  My auto racing friend, Eric, uses Iroc in lieu of his name as his online "handle".



34. Huge herbivore: RHINO.  Elephant would not fit.  Hippo would fit but would not work out . . . except for the last letter.

35. Site to find a handmade wedding dress, perhaps: ETSY.  Site to find a handmade anything.  We've seen this type of cluing before where the clue refers to something very specific but the answer demands something far less so.

37. Powerful sharks: MAKOS.



39. Ventura County tourist town: OJAI.  Obscure, perhaps, unless you're familiar with SoCal geography.  Sometimes we see "Oh, Hi" as an answer to a clue such as "greeting upon running into someone unexpectedly."

40. Parting word: ADIOS.  We had to consider, and then discard, ADIEU although the first three letters worked just fine.

42. Epic party: BASH.  GALA   RAVE   BALL   FEST   FETE

43. __ Toy Barn: "Toy Story 2" shop: AL'S.



48. Hard water?: ICE.  Nice (not Nice, France) wordplay.

49. Abbr. on a pill bottle: USP.  A unit of potency.  United States Pharmacopeia.

50. Crowning point: ZENITH.  Also, a brand of electronics.


54. Break down: 
ANALYZE.  Not as in an emotional state.  More like, in current jargon, to do a deep dive and unpack it.   Still, evocative of this:

Tom Petty - Live At The Wiltern Theater Los Angeles, 1985

61. Benefit: AVAIL.  A computer teacher asks the class to turn to page 404.  The students search feverishly.  To no AVAIL.

62. Feature of many a TV show summary: SCREENCAP.  Screen Capture.

63. Aptly named novelist Charles: READE.  Born 08 June 1814 -  Died 11 April 1884.  Having failed to recall his appearance ten days ago (in precisely the same location within that grid) I was forced to suss this one out.  Fortunately, doing so was not difficult.

64. "I feel __": "It's like you know me!": SEEN.  A new idiom to this marine mammal.  Quite zen.

65. "Madam Secretary" actor Tim: DALY.  Sister of Tyne.


Down:

1. No mere opinion: FACT.  Where do facts come from?  The factory.

2. Part of a sunburn treatment, often: ALOE.  Often, indeed.

3. Deprivatization events, for short: IPOS.  Initial Public OfferingS.  Selling shares of stock in a company.   I had never before come across the word deprivatization but it was self defining.  Reminded me of antidisestablishmentarianism.  Another instance of a pluralized abbreviation.

4. Alphabet soup bite: LETTER.



5. Guardians of the Tree of Life: CHERUBIM.  The Tree of Life is a motif referenced by multiple cultures.

6. "Gigi" playwright Anita: LOOS.  A true pioneer.

7. Dada pioneer Jean: ARP.

Head With Mustache - 1926

8. 22.5 deg.: NNE.  North North East on the 360 degree compass.

9. Montana's __ National Park: GLACIER.  I have been lucky enough to ride the Going to the Sun Road on a motorcycle.



10. Sunbeam speck: MOTE.  Not photon.

11. Number for soprano Pretty Yende: ARIA.  An opera reference.

12. Hemoglobin mineral: IRON.  The combination of this answer and ORGAN MUSIC (as an answer last Saturday) brought this to mind:


The Simpsons -  "In The Garden of Eden" by . . .

13. Optometrist's concern: LENS.  Hand up for first thinking EYES.

15. Nash of "When They See Us": NIECY.  Unfamiliar with her.  Thanks perps.

18. Hand __: sushi order: ROLL.  An option other than a cut roll.

Cut Roll and Hand Roll

22. With no overhead added: AT COST.

23. Cook, as bao buns: STEAM.


24. One-up: OUTDO.

25. Piney ooze: RESIN.


26. Good for farming: ARABLE.  By definition.

27. Hungarian wine: TOKAY.  Also spelled TOKAJI.  A naturally sweet wine from the Tokaj district of northeastern Hungary.

28. "The Chi" airer, briefly: SHO.  A television/streaming reference.

29. Traditional religious garment: HIJAB.



30. As a whole: IN ALL.

31. Composure: POISE.

36. Fashion designer Jenny: YOO. Who?  Seems to be big in bridal gowns.

38. No longer large: SHRUNKEN.  Perhaps no longer as large.  Whatever was SHRUNKEN could still be quite large.  A star with a mass equal to our sun will leave behind a remnant white dwarf about the size of Earth.  Bigger than a bread box.

41. Angry speaker's droplet: SPITTLE.  Discomforting imagery to start the day.

45. Tres y cinco: OCHO.  Our combined Spanish and mathematics lesson for the day.

46. "August: __ County": OSAGE.  A book.  A play.  A motion picture.


47. Plateau: UPLAND.  Also a city in San Bernardino County, CA.

50. Energy snack brand for kids: ZBAR.


51. Nesting site: EAVE.  A bit of not-quite-misdirection.  Tree?  Limb?  Often clued with a reference to wasps.

52. Frozen Four org.: NCAA.  The Final Four refers to the NCAA basketball playoffs.  Frozen Four riffs on that for the NCAA ice hockey championship.


53. "Joke, joke": I KID.

Triumph The Insult Comic Dog

54. Hobby farm measure: ACRE.  Or a "real" farm measure.

55. Where it's fun to stay, per the Village People: YMCA.  I will pass on posting an audio/video clip of this bit of Americana.

56. Evangelist's quality: ZEAL.


57. 2021 award for Naomi Osaka: ESPY.  An award frequently handed out in crossword puzzles.  It helped if you knew that Naomi is a tennis player.

59. Degrees for EEs: BSS.  I didn't get this one.  I took EE to mean electrical engineer.  BSS most often refers to Bachelor of Specialized Studies or Bachelor of Social Studies or Bachelor of Social Sciences.  There are, I am sure, people here who are far more familiar with the application of the BSS designation than I am.

60. Unreturned serve: ACE.  A tennis reference.


I hope everyone had a good Easter week and/or is having a good seven (or eight) days of pesach or month of Ramadan. 

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- This Year's Seder Plate -
Exhibiting A Bit Of Improvisation

From the X (word) Files:  Last night I picked a NYT puzzle book off the bookshelf.  The collection contained 250 puzzles originally published in 2000.  I randomly opened it to puzzle number 199.  The constructor?  Rich Norris.

... and on that note


Thursday, April 7, 2022

Thursday, April 7, 2022, Bruce Haight

 


A Marvelous Morning to all of you cruciverbalists.  Malodorous Manatee here with an mm mm good puzzle by Bruce Haight.  Let's start with the reveal because, while the theme is, ultimately, quite simple it's application is a bit less so and also exhibits unstated, but much appreciated by this author, alliteration.

61 Across:  Country leaders, and along with names in parentheses, a hint to 18-, 24-, 39- and 49-Across: HEADS OF STATE.

At four places within the grid, Bruce has started the answers with a two-letter USPS abbreviation for a  U.S. state name.  Left unsaid is that in all cases both words of the two-word answers start with the letter M.  MM.  He still holds "in reserve" an additional four states starting with M so, perhaps, we'll see a M&M Part II puzzle at some point in the future employing the other four.  On the other hand (see 32 Across), he has used all of the M-followed-by-a vowel abbreviations so the Part II puzzle (employing (MT, MS, MD, and MN) would be more difficult to create.

Here are the themed answers:

18 Across:  Bracketology event (Cambridge): MARCH MADNESS.  Cambridge, MA (Massachusetts).  Tne NCAA basketball championship tournament concluded earlier this week.  Great comeback, Jayhawks.


24 Across:  Series that included Bugs and Daffy (Augusta): MERRIE MELODIES.  Augusta, ME (Maine)


39 Across:  Risky operations often with code names (Ann Arbor): MILITARY MISSIONS.  Ann Arbor, MI (Michigan)


49Across:  Science class visual aid (Joplin): MOLECULAR MODEL.  Joplin, MO (Missouri)

Here is how this looks in the grid:




. . . . and now for the rest of the story:


Across:

1. Reminder trademark: POST IT.


7. 1994 National Women's Hall of Fame inductee: OPRAH.  OPRAH Winfrey.  Is there another?

12. One having a ball: DEB.  DEButant

15. Kia model: OPTIMA.

2022 KIA OPTIMA

16. Magna cum __: LAUDE.

17. Get rid of: AXE.

20. Narrow waterway: RIA.  Often seen in crossword puzzles if rarely elsewhere.

21. Soup served with chopsticks: PHO.  Vietnamese.  Pronounced Fuh.

22. Chill-inducing: EERIE.  Spooky, not cold.

23. Sensed: FELT.

29. Paso __, Calif.: ROBLES.  While still overshadowed by it's more famous northern counterparts (e.g. Napa, Sonoma) there are several world class wineries in the Paso ROBLES area.

31. Radamès' love: AIDA.  An opera reference.

32. Texter's "But ... ": OTOH.



33. Lured: BAITED.

36. Frat letter: TAU.  One of twenty-four letters in the Greek alphabet although only six of them have three letter "names".

43. Tire pressure fig.: PSIPounds per Square Inch

44. 12-step offshoot: ALANON.  Alcoholics Anonymous

45. A, B or C, but not X, Y or Z: NOTE.   A music theory 
reference.

46. Move like water: FLOW.



47. Acted as an informant, in Ipswich: NARKED.  An English English slang reference

55. Second word of many limericks: ONCE.   Nice interplay of Second and ONCE.  I think that I have shared this one once before:

There ONCE was a girl from Madras

Who had a magnificent ass

Not rounded and pink

As well you may think

It was gray, had long ears and ate grass


56. "Cheers" server: DIANE.  DIANE Chambers was a character on the TV show.


57. More than -er: EST.  EST as in the hostess with the most-est, e.g.  Not an Erhard Seminar Training reference.  Did you get it?

60. Pot part: LID.  This clue either refers to a kitchen item or a dope deal.  Our grandchildren will probably never know what "down to seeds and stems, again" means.  See also 37 down.

65. Group of scenes: ACT.  As in a stage play.

66. Triumphant cry: I RULE.  I have never heard anyone actually say this.

67. Anti-anxiety med: ATIVAN.  Trade name for Lorazepam.  
68. Gun, as an engine: REV.

69. Player in 18-Across: CAGER.  Slang for basketball player.

70. Firmly held ideas: TENETS.  Not to be confused with TENANTS.

Down:

1. Fanfare:  POMP.  Depending on the circumstances.

2. Large deep-water fish: OPAH.  Not OPRAH.

3. The Blue Fairy helped Pinocchio escape from him, in the Disney film: STROMBOLI.  Not, in this case, the pastry.

Stromboli

4. Eye twitch, maybe: TIC.

5. Arrival cry: I'M HERE.  If you are a cat it's likley FEED ME.

6. They might hold chairs at a circus: TAMERS.



7. iHeartRadio fare: OLDIE.

8. "The Hunger Games" land: PANEM.  Not being a fan of the referenced opus I had to rely on the perps.

9. French way: RUE.  Français for street.

10. Some taxi toppers: ADS.


11. Fellows: HES.  

12. "__ say it?": DARE I.  Apparently, yes.  Or not.


13. Banish: EXILE.

14. Rhythms: BEATS.

19. NFL's Cardinals, on scoreboards: ARI.



23. OTC watchdog: FDA.



25. K-12, in brief: ELHI.  A term sometimes seen in crossword puzzles.  Elementary School thorugh High School.

26. __ kitchen: EAT IN.  I first tried HELL'S.  I failed to notice that kitchen was not capitalized.

27. "Balderdash!": LIES.  Can you believe this?

28. Numbers with a colon: ODDS.  Ratios would not fit.

29. Lopsided win: ROMP.  Had to wait just a bit to see if it would be ROUT.

30. Publisher Chandler: OTIS.  Los Angeles Times publisher from 1960 to 1980.  My how the editorial slant of the newspaper has changed subsequently.

33. Game delay cause: BRAWL.  Rain would not fit.



34. Writer Rand: AYN.  
She also visited us on Tuesday.



35. "If u ask me ... ": IMOIn My Opinion.  OTOH, . . .

36. Said goodbye to, with "of": TOOK LEAVE.  Often used with "of one's senses".


37. Part of a pot: ANTE.  A card game reference.  See also 60 Across.

38. Exploited: USED.

40. Locker room powder: TALC.  The subject of recent law suits.

41. MLB family name: ALOUMajor League Baseball


Felipe, Jesus and Matty ALOU

42. About: IN RE.



46. Charge: FEE.  Not run at.  A bit of misdirection.

47. Milk for losers: NONFAT.  Is this what the 1% drink?  The 2%?

48. Carol opener: ADESTE.


Adeste fideles - Luciano Pavarotti

49. It might be crowned: MOLAR.  A dental reference.

50. Cooled by rocks, in a way: ON ICE.  Rocks being slang for, well, ice cubes.

51. High-def screen: LCDTV.  Abbreviated clue.  Abbreviated answer.  This stands for Liquid Crystal Display TeleVision.

52. Flummox: ADDLE.



53. Choral platform: RISER.

54. World leader with a distinctive suit: MAO.


58. Assists, e.g.: STAT.  STATistic.

59. Till stack: TENS.  Till as in cash drawer.  Might have been ONES.

61. Brand with a Grabbin' Grape flavor: HI-C.


62. Laundry brand: ERA.  Fab!



63. Mo. named for an emperor: AUG.  AUGustus Caesar.  JULius (July) was the other possibility.

64. Pewter, mostly: TIN.  Pewter is a malleable alloy consisting of TIN (85-99%), antimony (5-10%), copper (2%), bismuth and sometimes silver.

And on that note . . .


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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...