Rose Conlon’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s recap
I think the puzzle was a notch or two easier than my solving time suggests, since I generally nod off a bit during these Monday- and Friday-night NYT puzzles. No disrespect to the constructors, I assure you! It’s just how it goes after a dialysis treatment. My blood is clean but I am tuckered out.
Lots of zippy material in this puzzle. To wit: the complimentary “I HATE YOU,” “OH, DAMN,” MATH TEAM, SLAPSTICK, LOVE LANGUAGES (I confess I’ve paid no mind to the system, but it’s a good phrase), GALENTINE’S DAY (puzzle should have come out on 2/8, a few days before Galentine’s Day), Apple’s GENIUS BAR, LADY GAGA, HUMAN CANNONBALL, ART CARNEY, and MILK DUDS. And KATSU, definitely with chicken and not pork.
35D. [Great Plains aquifer that supplies over a quarter of U.S. irrigation water], OGALLALA. I didn’t know of this, but the names Ogallala and Oglala are well-known. Know your aquifers!
Four stars from me.
Zhouqin Burnikel’s Los Angeles Times crossword — Stella’s write-up
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Los Angeles Times 2/22/25 by Zhouqin Burnikel
A time that’s closer to four minutes than it is to three is not something I associate with a Zhouqin Burnikel puzzle! For the most part, the difficulty was satisfying, with one major exception: the 30A/24D crossing of SHH with AHH. Earlier this week I complained about the indistinguishability of UH NO and UM NO; AHH versus AAH is just as annoying. It’s a good thing when a clue in a Saturday puzzle points plausibly to two or more very different entries and you have to think about multiple meanings the clue could have to choose between them, but when you’re choosing between two variant spellings of the same word…sorry, I hate it.
But on to the rest of the puzzle, which had a lot to like:
- 21A RYE and 23A PASTA crossing 21D RAMEN: Two foods crossing another food feels very Burnikelian. (Also, Zhouqin is probably the only constructor who can get away with the green-paint-y PLUM TORTE in the lower left, especially since there’s also TOMATO PIE in the opposite corner.)
- 25A [Brought up the rear?] Really liked this clue for STOOD.
- 35A [Start without a key] It took me an embarrassingly long time to parse this clue: It’s HOT-WIRE, as in starting a car.
- 40A [Food that never decays] Very interesting fact about HONEY.
- 56A [Total variety] is RAISIN BRAN, a potent combo of deceptive placement of a proper noun at the beginning of a clue and Zhouqin’s penchant for food in puzzles.
- 61A [Travel at night, maybe] Liked this tricky clue for SLEEPWALK.
- 2D [Dead zone?] …and this amusing one for HADES.
- 13D [Approximate weight of some large butterflies] is GRAM, another interesting new-to-me fact.
Randolph Ross’ Wall Street Journal crossword, “On the Other Hand …” — pannonica’s write-up
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WSJ • 2/22/25 • Sat • “On the Other Hand …” • Ross • solution • 20250222
Today we’re simply suffixing -OR to familiar names and phrases.
- 23a. [Heavyweight opera performer?] THE BIG TENOR (The Big Ten).
- 25a. [Country estate voted #1 in the nation?] BEST MANOR (best man).
- 38a. [Particularly rousing Sunday sermon?] A BLAST FROM THE PASTOR (a blast from the past). This was the first themer I encountered. With ABLA— in place, I immediately thought of the original phrase, then just as quickly confirmed the suspected wordplay by glancing at the puzzle’s title for the first time.
- 56a. [Math question during division lessons?] IS THAT A FACTOR (is that a fact).
- 64a. [Dresser at a polo match?] PONY TAILOR (ponytail).
- 73a. [Insult Stephen King’s hometown?] SLAM BANGOR (slam-bang).
- 78a. [MVP of the Gold Rush?] TOP PROSPECTOR (top prospect).
- 96a. [Scruffy Amtrak employee?] DISORDERLY CONDUCTOR (disorderly conduct). This and the other 19-letter entry (38a) seem like the theme highlights to me; good job finding them for the grid.
- 114a. [Town manager in Provincetown?] CAPE MAYOR (Cape May).
- 116a. [Romantic hopeful with good manners?] CIVIL SUITOR.
Decent enough theme. A few of the entries don’t venture too far from their original meanings.
44a [Cut off] ALONE.
When I’d completed filling in the grid, I was informed that it wasn’t entirely correct, and it took some time to uncover my error. Turned out to be the crossing of 93d [Balkan native] and 125a [Dinner party duds]. For the latter I’d had BONES, which I wasn’t happy with but reasoned that it was conceivably a slang term for formal attire unfamiliar to me. After all, KOSOVAN seemed solid. The correct answers are BORES and KOSOVAR.
- 7d [Unique events] ONE-OFFS. The basis of the theme for this past Thursday’s New York Times crossword.
- 18d [Dressing sites] SORES. Wasn’t expecting that.
- 46d [Princess who’s second in line of succession to the Swedish throne] ESTELLE. Is this something we’re expected to KNOW (119a)? Or is it just reaching for some new cluing angle? It’s flanked by the weakish phrases LISTS AT and ATE LATE, so this was my least favorite part of the grid.
- 57d [Scary canine?] FANG. Didn’t fool me for a moment, thanks to the question mark. On the other hand, I needed several crossings for 69d [Sun shunner] VAMPIRE.
- 63a [Fold, spindle or mutilate] MAR. One transitive verb sense of spindle is “to impale, thrust, or perforate on the spike of a spindle file” (m-w.com)
- 89a [Princess Leia, e.g.] HEROINE. We could clue her as a general of the Resistance, too.
Brad Wilber’s Newsday crossword, Saturday Stumper — pannonica’s write-up
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Newsday • 2/22/25 • Saturday Stumper • Wilber • solution • 20250222
A workout today.
Solving path:
First, a few entries in various parts of the grid, gradually slightly more in the upper half. Some of these were: 4d [Shout from a Looney Tunes mouse] ANDALE, 6d [Any of the Seven Dwarfs] MINER, 19d [Fish with a prehensile tail] SEAHORSE, 37d [“Worldwide Leader in Sports”] ESPN, 48a [Group in a shell] CREW.
Second, concentrating on the upper left, with the cross-referenced MS PAC-MAN and ARCADE (1a, 18a) being instrumental.
Third, getting all three of the long across entries stacked in the middle: 38a [Time’s Best Comedy Sketch of the 20th Century] WHO’S ON FIRST was a snap, with just a couple of crossing letters, 35a [Chart-topping instrumental of ’76] yielded THEME FROM –––– rather quickly, but I needed more time to come up with SWAT (after dismissing MASH as too early and FAME as too late), 32a [Headed for a stall, quite possibly] OVERHEATING was pretty obvious once the first letters were in.
Fourth, the upper right section. This broke open after SWAT from 35-across. Prior to that, I’d had loTr for 26d [Book on the Celebrate the Century stamp sheet with FDR] GWTW. It was also helped by 19a [Contemporary conversation starter] ’SUP; I figured it would be either SOO or ’SUP, and when I tried the latter, the crossing 9d [Initial inductee in the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame] KRUPA revealed itself. From there, it was a snap.
Fifth, the lower left. For 35d [Scrollwork from its bow can be seen in Bangor] THE MAINE should have been easy, but I nevertheless was insanely thinking about THE MAYFLOWER and THE MARIA (whatever that might have been!). 36d [You might do it for your own sake] HOMEBREW is funny because I had considered that ‘sake’ might be the rice wine, but couldn’t see how that would play out.
Finally, the lower right. Had a lot of mis-fills here, which took quite a while to untangle and sort out. Examples: 55d [Fair] EXPO, not SO-SO; 49d [“__ triumph from toil and risk”: Teddy Roosevelt] WREST, not WE ALL; 41a [E, as in some 37-Down telecasts] AT PAR (even), not ERROR; 42d [Sleuth, at times] TRACER, not EDUCER; 50a [Don’t settle] ROVE, not MOVE. As you can see, it was a lot.
Whew.
i agree with your assessment of the NYT Amy: easy for a Saturday but a delight. lots of great fill.
“Saturday” is missing in the title of this post.
Fixed now.
Lucky me. When I finally feel confident enough to tackle an NYT saturday, it’s an easier one.
Nice Saturday NYT. I had GREATANACONDA at first, and put the -LL- in the wrong place in OGALLALA, but no major pauses apart from those hiccups.
I guess I am too old to understand how IHATEYOU might be a compliment.
Think of it as a substitute for “I’m so jealous”
I made the same GREAT vs GREEN mistake. I had no idea on the currency and it took me a minute to figure out bElts vs bAlts which obviously made no sense.
NYT – I must be in the minority, but I wasn’t feeling this one at all. Some fill went fast, but then I got stuck in the corners. ART CARNEY? PEORIA for vaudeville? I didn’t know either of these. LAP DANCE made me groan. Ick.
“Gamay” and “locs” stumped me; these are terms I was utterly unfamiliar with. Yet Art Carney I knew right away. Is Math Team a commonly used term? I’ve taught high school for more than 30 years and have never heard it used. Math Club, yes. Math Honor Society (Mu Alpha Theta), yes. But Math Team? Nope.
Math teams compete in math competitions. I’m sorry that your school is apparently unaware of them.
A recent episode of “Law & Order: SVU” mentioned a Math League, and I was in Mathletes in high school. I feel like MATH TEAM is a generic term for programs where high-schoolers have math competitions against other schools.
I was a mathlete, too, in H.S.
NYT: Sorry to be so dense, but I am wondering how LOCS, which I get is slang for dreadlocks, are protective? (46A: Protective hairstyle, familiarly).
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protective_hairstyle for info.
Thanks, Amy. I should have googled it myself. I appreciate learning this. It makes sense.
I like when I learn things from a puzzle; for example, that green anacondas can weigh up to 500 lbs. Eek!
Stumper: “Whew!” is right! Got the lower left first, then “Who’s on First” and “seahorse,” then the upper right. After that, the middle. However, that left the upper left and the bottom right. Had “axe” at first for 7D, which didn’t help and have never heard of “sorrel” in spinach pie (parsley and oregano, but sorrel?). Had “so-so” at first for 55D and “dissolve” for 61A. It didn’t help that I’ve never heard of ASTA (American Society of Travel Advisors), nor that “e” is used for “at par.” Ugh!
E for even par.
NYT: Excellent Saturday puzzle today, even though a) I fell into the I DO trap for too long at 1A, and b) I hit a natick* at the crossing of GREEN ANACONDA (where I had guessed GREat) and NAIRA (pooched by the t).
—–
* Lowercase because it’s not a town in Massachusetts.