Thursday, March 9, 2017

BEQ 8:06 (Ben) 

 


LAT 4:39 (Gareth) 

 


NYT 2:42 (Andy) 

 


WSJ untimed (Jim) 

 


Fireball 7:22 (Jenni) 

 


Jeremy Newton’s New York Times crossword—Andy’s review

NYT puzzle 3.8.17 by Jeremy Newton

There’s a lot to discuss about today’s puzzle, so let’s jump right into it!

The main revealer is at 55a, WORK-LIFE BALANCE [Challenge in a demanding job … or a feature of this puzzle?]. The black squares in rows 7-11 (and the central black squares in rows 5-6, I think) are meant to represent SCALES, as noted in 47d [What some black squares in this grid represent], and there’s a semi-thematic entry symmetrically placed in the grid at 45d, WEIGHS [Puts on the 47d]. 

Okay, so the black squares represent SCALES. On one side of those SCALES, there are four WORK rebus squares (36a, (WORK)(WORK)(WORK)(WORK) [One half of a 55-Across]); on the other side, four LIFE rebus squares (38a, (LIFE)(LIFE)(LIFE)(LIFE) [The other half of a 55-Across]). Hence, WORK and LIFE are balanced. Here are the eight entries that cross those rebus squares:

  • 1d, PIECE OF (WORK) [Unpleasant sort].
  • 2d, SAFE FOR (WORK) [Office-friendly, to YouTubers].
  • 29d, RE(WORK) [Overhaul].
  • 24d, NET(WORK) [Exchange business cards, maybe].
  • 26d, LOW(LIFE) [Good-for-nothing].
  • 31d, TO (LIFE) [“L’chaim!”].
  • 10d, MATE FOR (LIFE) [Have an unchanging, monogamous relationship].
  • 11d, SLICE OF (LIFE) [Peek into the everyday].

Cool concept, well executed. I found this one easier than Wednesday’s puzzle, but the gimmick is sufficiently Thursday-ish to warrant placing it on a Thursday, I think. Great use of left-right symmetry to make the visual part of the theme work.

Besides the theme answers, which were all lively (appropriately) and in-the-language, there was a lot of exceptional fill elsewhere in this 74-worder: VEGAN PIZZA, MAGIC LAMPS, TOO REAL, BBC NEWS, AS YOU DO, CIARA, PHOTO OP. Really nice Thursday puzzle — I only wish it had lasted longer!

Until next week!

Randall J. Hartman’s Fireball Crossword, “Several Names”  – Jenni’s writeup

I did indeed finish the puzzle correctly in the time noted above. It took me several more minutes to suss the theme – despite the revealer. Let’s see why.

There are a number of names in this puzzle that aren’t part of the theme. I don’t think that’s a deliberate misdirection, since the revealer tells us we’re looking at the long Down answers. Those are:

3/9 Fireball puzzle, solution grid

  • 3d [Eponym of a hat trick variant that consists of a goal, an assist, and a fight all in one game]. Apparently GORDIE HOWE did that frequently enough to have it named after him.
  • 21d [Bipolar explorer] was not, as far as I know, mentally ill. ROALD AMUNDSEN explored both the North and South Poles.
  • 7d [“On the Record” host before Brit Hume] is the grid-spanning GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, who requires a 15×16 grid.
  • 8d [Actor who delivered two lines in the American Film Institute’s “100 Years … 100 Movie Quotes” list and who played a character named in a third line] is JACK NICHOLSON delivered the 29th line on the list in “A Few Good Men” – “You can’t handle the truth!” In “The Shining” he said “Here’s Johnny!” and that’s #68. The third line isn’t #3 on the list – it’s #74, form “Chinatown.” Nicholson plays Jake, and Lawrence Walsh says “Forget it, Jake, it’s Chinatown.” This is a Peter Gordon Trademark Very Long Clue, and I cribbed the info from the answer sheet included with the puzzle. Thanks, Peter.
  • 35d [Lawyer played by Ed Begley Jr. in “Recount”] was apparently DAVID BOIES. That sure looked wrong, and it was the last thing I filled in, and it’s right. David Boies represented Vice President Gore in the recount lawsuit following the 2000 election. The movie was made in 2008 and shown on HBO.

So those are our theme answers, and I couldn’t see anything they had in common. Then I got to the bottom of the puzzle, where I found 65d, [Disease whose awareness increased with the Ice Bucket Challenge, familiarly (or what can be found at the beginnings and ends of the long Down answers)]. The answer is ALS. I looked for AL at the beginning and end of each theme answer – nope. I looked for names that could be combined with AL – Roald Al? Al Roald? Greta Al? Nope. Finally I realized that GORDIE HOWE has GORE at the beginning and end, and he’s an Al. Aha! We also have Al ROSEN, Al GREEN, Al JOLSON (once I realized we weren’t looking for a Jackson) and Al DAVIS. Phew. Since I am only vaguely aware of Al Rosen and Al Davis, I did not find this to be a particularly satisfying theme. That’s a quirk of my knowledge base, and not a knock on the puzzle.

A few other things:

  • 20a [Email alternative to Thunderbird]. Is anyone still using EUDORA?
  • 29a [“Terrible” czar] gives him his numeral: IVAN IV.
  • 34a [Makeup of certain shakes] had me looking for ice cream or trendy kale-like substances. Nope. We’re talking about the shakes on houses, which are often made of CEDAR.
  • I usually think of KLUTE as a Jane Fonda movie, and forget that Donald Sutherland actually played the title character.
  • 49a [Actor who sucked in his most famous film role] is not a comment on the quality of the performance. It’s Bela LUGOSI, who famously played Count Dracula.

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: anything about Pascal’s triangle. David suggested it was south of the Bermuda Triangle. Wikipedia informs me that Pascal’s triangle is a triangular array of the binomial coefficients. The puzzle tells me that the second row is ONE ONE. I’m still not sure I actually know anything about Pascal’s triangle.

Alex Eaton-Salners’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Campus Leaders” — Jim’s review

This is one of those puzzles during which you say, “Wish I’d thought of that.”

Alex has taken phrases and names in which the first word is a three-letter anagram of a well-known American institute of higher learning. All (well, most) of the entries are solid and not without humor.

WSJ – Thu, 3.9.17 – “Campus Leaders” by Alex Eaton-Salners

  • 17a [Sophistication, in Fort Worth?] TCU CLASS. Cut class.
  • 24a [When the home team scores, in Troy?] RPI ROARING TIME. Rip-roaring time. This is the only entry that gave me pause. I think I more often see “rip-roaring good time.” Google returns 19k for the “good”-less phrase and 47k for the latter.
  • 39a [Culinary professional, in Cambridge?] MIT COOK. Tim Cook.
  • 52a [Student loan terms, in Provo?] BYU NOW, PAY LATER. Buy now, pay later.
  • 63a [Tuition bill, in Dallas?] SMU TOTAL. Sum total.

All in all, a pretty good theme set. Again, the RPI entry is a bit off, but it allows for the presence of the BYU entry which probably couldn’t have been done any other way. Still I wish RPI SNORTER could’ve been used ([One with an embarrassing laugh, in Troy?]).

Fill-wise, TURDUCKEN (using leftover meats from yesterday?) and ON THIN ICE are fantastic. TANKARD and BUS STOP are good as well.

There are a few eyebrow-raising entries. 66a STEROL [Waxy chemical], e.g. That’s about as crosswordesey as you get, and I’m glad we don’t see it too often. I also felt the crossing of MARTI [Cuban patriot-poet Jose] with MILO [Ventimiglia of “This Is Us”] was a little unfair. And the stacking of ORGY and ORAL in the center was eyebrow-raising in a different way.

Clues of note:

  • 15a [Mucilaginous vegetable]. OKRA. New favorite word alert! As you probably guessed, mucilaginous means “sticky or viscid.” I’ve never cooked with OKRA, so I didn’t know it was like that. Numerous methods for reducing the slime are available online.
  • 58a [Headed for the fence, perhaps]. HOT. Still scratching my head on this one. Anyone?
  • I love the slangy uses of SLAM [Sharply criticize] and BAIL [Leave unceremoniously].

Solid puzzle with good wordplay. See you next week!

Roland Huget’s LA Times crossword – Gareth’s review

LA Times
170309

Today’s theme is a little quirky, and a little thin. It helps if you’re familiar with cryptic crosswords, as these clues use a trope more commonly encountered in cryptics. The second part of the clue is the definition, and can be found after “in a” – [Comprehensive plan] = BLANKETC(OVER)AGE, [Government program] = CRIMEPR(EVEN)TION, and [Classic sports car] = FORDTH(UNDER)BIRD. The first part is a definition of over, even, and under, respectively with “in a” indicating they are found somewhere in the middle of the answers. (A true cryptic clue would have to account for all the letters in the first part of the clue in one way or another.)

In essence, this is a OVER/EVEN/UNDER hidden word theme, with 3×15, with the clues trying to lend an extra layer of wordplay. I didn’t find it works out too well, personally…

[Gamer’s game face] for AVATAR was my favourite clue – referring to a similar phenomenon to what you can register here with WordPress. Personally, I deactived my Gravatar, as it wanted to show up all over the shop…

[Tigers Hall of Famer Al] KALINE was today’s mystery name. His parents had a weird sense of humour!

2.5 Stars
Gareth

Brendan Emmett Quigley’s website crossword – “Can You Hear Me Now” — Ben’s Review

Today’s BEQ is a perfectly-timed and well-executed theme.  Hot on the release of the VAULT 7 (1A) info dump from Wikileaks earlier in the week, we get a puzzle that’s all about surveillance:

  • 18A:Steinbeck novel about surveillance agents?— OF MICS AND MEN
  • 25A:Lifting a piece of surveillance? — PICKING UP THE TAP
  • 42A:Place where surveillance doesn’t work any more? — THE BUG STOPS HERE 
  • 49A:Hides surveillance in a hamburger? — WIRES THE BEEF

Again, this was cute and clever and the themers were perfectly punny without stretching things too far.

Other thoughts:

  • 55A:Very rare blood type — A NEGATIVE (Tried to initially make this AB NEGATIVE, but quickly realize I didn’t quite have the squares for that to be the case)
  • 3D:Kind of hat for a conspiracy theorist — TINFOIL (see the above Rockwell song for the perfect tinfoil hat anthem.)
  • 31D:Got at least a D- — PASSED (I’d hardly call a D Minus passing, but this is why I’m not a teacher.)
  • 43D: Any one of the “You Should Be Dancing” singers — BEEGEE (I have “If I Can’t Have You” stuck in my head now.)

4/5 stars

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37 Responses to Thursday, March 9, 2017

  1. Re: Fireball.

    Oh. Sever Al names. Count me as another who didn’t understand the theme while solving and took a while afterwards to see how it worked.

  2. John says:

    I had 36A and 38A as WORK and LIFE (no rebuses). I think the puzzle still works this way, despite not getting marked correct for it.

    • Huda says:

      I did that but Across Lite didn’t like it. You had to have WWWW and LLLL (or a rebus in each) for it to work.

    • Jeremy Newton says:

      Hi John – I was also hoping the digital version would allow you to write in WORK and LIFE, no rebuses. But I figured it likely required some non-trivial technical hurdles to make all options work for apps. When constructing, I envisioned the “weights” could be entered both ways. As discrete quartets, as well as simply the words WORK and LIFE. Solver’s choice. Ah well. I figure it’s only a slight hiccup until people realize they need rebuses. Cheers! JN

  3. Dedie says:

    I have lived in the UK over 20 years and have NEVER heard ‘as you do’ or seen it in writing…get a grip

    • Jim Peredo says:

      Not sure who you’re telling to “get a grip.”

      I lived in the U.K. for only seven years, and my good friend and neighbour would often say “as one does.” He may have slipped in an AS YOU DO on occasion, but I think he preferred the more formal version.

      I’m not too keen on the clue [Naturally]. It doesn’t convey the humorous effect of understatement in the same way. Examples might include, “I was having tea with the queen, as one does…” or “Naked, I traipsed across the moors, as one does…”

    • Lise says:

      Tolstoy used the expression “as one does” or its relatives, often, in The Death Of Ivan Ilyich, which I recently read. His is the first instance of that expression that I have seen. I thought it was a Tolstoy-ism – did not know it was an expression used by others.

  4. PJ Ward says:

    WSJ – A fence is someone who buys stolen (HOT) goods.

  5. Huda says:

    NYT: very cool puzzle. Great theme beautifully executed, with 10 theme related entries and some great fill.
    Scales are an interesting concept. I don’t know whether kids nowadays experience the balance idea in such a concrete way. When I was a kid in the Middle East store owners used large scales built like the scales of justice…handheld with no stand, to weigh produce. I don’t think I’ve ever seen one in the US. I have a miniature version I got in China for weighing heroin (!) –part of my collection of opium and other drugs of abuse paraphernalia.

  6. jack says:

    WSJ: Headed for the fence. Stolen goods are often sold by a fence. They are hot.

  7. Bruce N Morton says:

    One of my favorite Thurs. NYTs ever!

  8. Ethan Friedman says:

    That Thurs NYT was a blast

    • Lise says:

      Yes! Loved it, but was a little sad when I realized that I had filled in the last square… Very nice execution.

  9. Joe Pancake says:

    Enjoyed today’s NYT puzzle, but I hated the clue for NHL: “Org. that penalizes icing.” Icing is *not* a penalty in hockey; it’s only an infraction. Even if penalize is meant in a general sense, I still contend the clue is wrong since in the context of hockey, penalize has a very specific definition — to assess a penalty, i.e., to remove a player from the ice and put them in the penalty box. This doesn’t happen with icing.

    On a different note, CIARA has been in the news a bit lately for an, um, interesting pic she posted on Instagram (see here). It’s a family photo, and yet it still might not be totally SAFE FOR WORK.

    • Martin says:

      “Even if penalize is meant in a general sense, I still contend the clue is wrong since in the context of hockey, penalize has a very specific definition…”

      With all due respect, if penalize is meant in a general sense the specific meaning in hockey is irrelevant. The result of the infraction, a face-off in your territory, IS a penalty in the general sense, if not in the language of hockey.

      I agree that it’s not a good idea to phrase a clue counter to the meaning in the specific domain of the entry.

      • Joe Pancake says:

        “With all due respect, if penalize is meant in a general sense the specific meaning in hockey is irrelevant.”

        How can it be irrelevant when the clue is specifically *about hockey*?

        The context is everything here as it often is in determining what the “correct” interpretation of language is.

        If you say icing is a penalty in hockey you are wrong. You are not technically correct because a penalty can be defined as “a punishment imposed for violating a rule.” Just like in baseball if a batter grounds out to the shortstop, he didn’t get a hit even though his bat did in fact hit the ball.

        • e.a. says:

          *sees photo of lebron dribbling w/ caption LeBron James travels down the court*

          “actually you’re wrong,,,”

        • Martin says:

          No argument with anything you say, except what “general sense” means. It is the opposite of “what it means in hockey.”

          It means, in the words of MW-11, “a disadvantage (as loss of yardage, time, or possession of the ball or an addition to or subtraction from the score) imposed on a team or competitor for violation of the rules of a sport.” Moving the puck to the violator’s territory with a face-off is such a disadvantage. The clue is okay if you interpret it in the general sense. It’s not very good if you use a hockey-specific, rather than general, interpretation.

        • Steve Manion. says:

          Joe,

          So happy to see someone going apoplectic over a tone deaf sports clue. Maybe hockey is the new golf, which has not had many problems in the past few years.

          Steve

  10. Glenn says:

    Does anyone have a solid explanation of the LAT theme for today?

    • Lise says:

      I feel like I didn’t exactly get it. I understand, I think, how OVER fits but not the other two. Feel free to weigh in with an explanation – I’m ready to do a head smack.

      • Glenn says:

        @Lise
        As Gareth wrote, the first part of the clues are literalisms expressed by “in a”, and the last part is what you pay attention to in terms of what the answer is. As for the first parts of the clues, treat them as “other” crossword clues ([Done]: OVER / [Tied up]: EVEN / [Out]: UNDER) and you pretty much get what’s going on.

        • Lise says:

          Thank you! After I read your explanation, I resurrected the puzzle from my recycle bin and read it more carefully. Then executed head smack. I have done cryptic crosswords and should have seen this myself.

    • Glenn says:

      @Gareth
      Thanks. You confirmed what I thought it was.

  11. Len Elliott says:

    “craving” in the clue for 53-A; CRAVE the answer for 24-D

  12. hmj says:

    Reference the LAT: Where I grew up,(24-D) having a jones for meant being sexually aroused by. This would often lead to the (37-D) lunchtime tryst, or nooner as the answer says!

  13. Scott says:

    NYT. 43 minutes! Am I really that slow?

  14. sandirhodes says:

    BEQ: 62A Villa d’____, Tivoli crossing 50D Model _____ de la Fressange

    Quelle??? Brendan, you rascal you.

  15. doug says:

    Re: BEQ 6D “of the cloth” = clerical. “NOT of the cloth” = LAIC. Or am I missing something? Also, can someone explain the answer for 11D?

    • pannonica says:

      Had hoped someone would mention that LAIC thing!

      Best I can do with 11d [Treasure of the Sierra Madre?] BEBÉ, is that a baby (Sp., bebé) is a mother’s (Sp., madre) pride and joy, or ‘treasure’. That question mark does a lot of heavy lifting, and the the M is gratuitously capitalized to hide its real meaning in the clue.

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