Sunday, July 21, 2019 | (2024)

LATDNF (Jenni)


NYTuntimed (Amy)


WaPountimed (Jenni)


Universal9:10 (Vic)


Universal (Sunday)15:49 (Vic)

Jason Mueller & Jeff Chen’s New York Times crossword, “Fifty Years On”—Amy’s write-up

NY Times crossword solution, 7 21 19, “Fifty Years On”

We’ve got a moon landing 50th anniversary theme:

  • 23a. [Name of a sea first visited in 1969], TRANQUILITY. The Sea of Tranquillity, that’s the spelling I’ve seen most often, even though it’s the British spelling.
  • 71a. [Newsmaker of July 1969], ARMSTRONG, Neil.
  • 110a. [Announcement of July 1969], THE EAGLE HAS LANDED.
  • 3d. [Long-distance traveler of 1969], APOLLO ELEVEN. Not loving the spelled-out number.
  • 14d. [Achievement of 1969], MAN ON THE MOON. See the little face inside the round moon in the grid’s center?
  • 32d. [What 71-Across took in 1969, as represented literally in a corner of this puzzle], ONE SMALL STEP. The small STEP is in a rebus square where 115d IN{STEP}S meets 124a {STEP}MOMS.
  • 36d. [What 71-Across took in 1969, as represented literally in another corner of this puzzle], ONE GIANT LEAP. The LEAP occupies four squares, much more space than the four letters in a single square for STEP.

I like the extension of the STEP and LEAP to the visual representation of their respective sizes/impacts. Also want COOKIE JAR to be thematic, since the grid’s got that stacked right on ARMSTRONG. Anyone have a good recipe for moon cookies?

Five more things:

  • 115a. [“A-O.K. for launch!”], IT’S A GO. Eh, random fill with a theme tie-in in the clue but not paired with another answer … meh.
  • 59a. [The Notorious ___ (Supreme Court nickname)], RBG. Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
  • 95a. [Wizards, but not witches], NBA TEAM. Great clue! Obscured required capital W for the Washington Wizards.
  • 117a. [Do-nothing’s state], IDLESSE. Say what? Never seen that form of the word before. But I’m changing this blog’s name to Idlesse Oblige.
  • 65d. [Nationality seen in most of Romania], OMANI. Clue could almost work for ROMANI, too.

The fill’s got some rough spots (your plural UMS and DETS, for example), but overall pretty solid. Four stars from me.

Kevin Christian and Tyler Hinman’s Universal Crossword, “Look Around!”—Judge Vic’s write-up

Sunday, July 21, 2019 | (2)

Kevin Christian and Tyler Hinman’s Universal Crossword, “Look Around!,” July 21, 2019, solution

THEME: Two of my friends team up for something special here.The first two and last two letters of the theme answers create four-letter words that can follow blind. Check it out, starting with the reveal:

58a [Surprises unpleasantly, and a hint to each starred answer’s first two + last two letters] BLIND SIDES
16a [*Science fiction barrier] FORCE FIELD–Blindfold.
24a [*Junk email sender] SPAM BOT–Blindspot.
36a [*”Scream” actor] DAVID ARQUETTE–Blind date.
48a [*Northwest Texas city] LUBBOCK–Blind luck.

Clever! Entertaining. Unusual. And, at 10-7-13-7-10, pretty dense. Other stuff that merits mention includes:

28a [End-of-dictionary instrument] ZITHER
34a [Emmy winner, e.g.] TV STAR
50a [Social justice hashtag] ME TOO
2d [Evaluate] LOOK AT
3d [Scale opening] DO RE MI
10d [Dirty tactic in a fight] HEAD BUTT
11d [Dramatis ___ (play characters)] PERSONAE
28d [Astrologer’s concern] ZODIAC
36d [False belief] DELUSION
37d [Mobile individual] ALABAMAN
43d [Like rooms with high windows] SKY-LIT
45d [Not seeing eye to eye] AT ODDS
46d [Useless] NO HELP
47d [End of a rhyming phrase meaning “relaxed”] GOOSEY

That’s a lot of good fill to go with a dense theme!

4.2 stars!

Alan Olschwang’s Sunday Universal Crossword, “Pieces of Eight”—Judge Vic’s write-up

Sunday, July 21, 2019 | (3)

Alan Olschwang’s Sunday Universal Crossword, “Pieces of Eight,” July 21, 2019, solution

THEME:What a delight to work out this extremely clever theme from one of my oldest friends in the biz–Alan Olschwang, Esq., of Southern California! How do I explain it?

Well, consider that THE 7-YEAR ITCH crosses NOT 1 BIT at the numbers and, pursuant to a directive in the cluing, the solver is to add two numbers and use their sum at the crossing. Now, see title. See also the following:

26a [Marriage challenge (Hint: Enter the sum of two numbers … in square 4)] THE 8-YEAR ITCH
crosses
4d [Zilch (… in square 4)] NOT 8 BIT.

29a [Regular guy (… in square 4)] JOE 8-PACK
crosses
13d [Was a bad dancer (… in square 4)] HAD 8 LEFT FEET.

62a [CBS cop series (… in square 7)] HAWAII 8-O
crosses
53d [Early sitcom featuring the Douglas family (… in square 3)] MY 8 SONS.

68a [Deck supports (… in squares 1 and 4)] 8 BY 8S
crosses
39d [Small French cake (… in square 6)] PETIT 8and
68d [Slightly below maximum spiciness (… in square 1)] 8-ALARM.

77a [Mohawk tribe’s confederation (… in square 1)] 8 NATIONS
crosses
77d [Sort of circus or binder (… in square 1)] 8-RING

107a [High salary, informally (… in square 1)] 8 FIGURES
crosses
107d [Box office bargain (… in square 1)] 8FER

111a [2016 Denzel Washington movie, with “The” (… in square 12)] MAGNIFICENT 8
crosses
115d [Smallest kind of band (… in square 1)] 8-MAN

In the solution grid, you will see eightwritten in, rather than the digit. An argument can be made that some of the entries’s usage in the language call for digits, and some call for spelled-out numbers. Forget that! This, to me, seems like a brilliant piece of cruciverbalism.

Consider also the following items:

34a [Solar and lunar events] ECLIPSES
41a [Book borrower’s concern] DUE DATE
47a [Mosaic piece] TESSERA
50a [Way-out cases] X-FILES
64a [On the loose] AT LARGE
75a [Commonplace] PROSAIC
92a [___ value (old car statistic)] TRADE-IN
96a [Cityscape feature] EDIFICE
99a [Signaled] GESTURED
8d [Football throw to a specific place] SPOT PASS
11d [1988 Olympic track star, familiarly] FLOJO
12d [“Good gravy!”] MY WORD
55d [Lake group in the Adirondacks] SARANAC
63d [Specifically] IN PARTICULAR
88d [Apt job for someone named Buster?] DEA AGENT

Good fill! I’m not saying there is no marginal fill. See, if you must

INES,TAI,YEPS,GAI,ITER,REI,DEI,STIC.

You know what? I felt like I had to scrape through the grid to find these eight items, as they were not jumping out at me as I solved. Possibly because I was enjoying the theme answers and the non-theme fill highlighted before the immediately preceding list so much. That, I believe, tells me the above eight were a cheap price to pay for this nice puzzle.

Way to go, Alan and David!

4.5 stars!

Evan Birnholz’s Washington Post crossword, “Turn Signals” – Jenni’s writeup

I liked this puzzle a lot. It took me a while to grok the theme,and I had to go back and track down some of the theme answers that I’d filled in without understanding what was going on.

Each theme answer turns a corner, and the clue gives the direction of the turn.

Washington Post, 7/21/2019, Evan Birnholz, “Turn Signals,” solution grid

  • 24d [East River] turns right:WATERWAY.
  • 26a [North Americans] turns up (north):YANKEES.
  • 42a [North Star] is aPENTAGRAM.
  • 57d [West End] turns left:FINALE
  • 72d [East Coast] isSEABOARD.
  • 92d [West Point] isPOSITION
  • 94a [South Bend] turns down:COMPROMISE.
  • 115a [South Side] also turns down:FACTION.

Very elegant!Each answer is the geographically correct quadrant of the puzzle and each one has a standard word before the turn. I enjoyed finding them after I’d finished the puzzle.

A few other things:

  • 25a [Garment deemed a “ludicrous invention” in “The Female Eunuch”] is aBRA. Right on, Germaine Greer.
  • 29d [Like a certain seasonal team leader] isRED-NOSED – Rudolph, of course.
  • 55a [Fails, as a bit] isFALLS FLAT. The “bit” in question is a comedy bit.
  • Obscure music clue of the day (at least obscure to me): 76d, [1988 hit by When in Rome vowing “If you wait around a while, I’ll make you fall for me”]. Apparently it’sTHE PROMISE.
  • I filled in 97d from crossings and couldn’t figure out what aKRATION was. It’sK-RATION, clued as [Old war fare].

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: see above re: “When in Rome.” I also had never heard ofSASHA Velour, and I have no idea whoLISA and Johnny are in the “The Room.” (update: they are two of the protagonists of a 2003 film).

I leave you with “The Promise.”


Alex Vratsanos’s LA Times crossword, “Touchdown” – Jenni’s write-up

This was a slog. I didn’t understand the theme until I was almost done, and it wouldn’t have helped if I had. There were some very obscure words, starting with 1d, which you can see in the grid I had to reveal. I suppose if you were raised on the story of the Magi and knew that one of them was namedCASPAR, that would have helped, butCOIGN really doesn’t look like a normal word – I’ve never seen it before – and the clue [__ of vantage: favorable position] didn’t help at all.

So the theme. Did youknow that yesterday was the 50th anniversary of the first moon landing?Both the NYT and LAT decided to get in on the anniversary action, even if it is a day late. The revealer at 111a explains the theme: [Arrive as astronauts did 7/20/69 … and what’s literally seen in seven pairs of puzzle answers]. It is, of course,LAND ON THE MOON. Each themeclue is a planetbody in the solar systemand each answer is one of that planet’s body’s moons. ETA: thanks to the commenter who pointed out that the word “land” sits above each moon. This takes it from “not terrible” to “good” as far as the theme goes, and the added constraints probably explain the horrible fill, but the fill is still horrible.

Los Angeles Times, July 21, 2019, “Touchdown,” Alex Vratsanos, solution trid

  • 29a [EARTH] isLUNA.
  • 34a [MARS] isDEIMOS.
  • 56a [JUPITER] isEUROPA.
  • 73a [SATURN] isTITAN.
  • 89a [URANUS] isMIRANDA.
  • 109a [NEPTUNE] isTRITON.
  • 116a [PLUTO] isCHARON.

They’re in order from closest to furthest away from the sun, although we’re missing Mercury and Venus because they don’t have moons. It’s not a terrible theme. I’m not the space geek in the family so I had to get most of them from crossings –TITAN andEUROPA were the only ones I knew. Ok, I knowLUNA but I don’t usually think of it as the name of the moon; the moon is just the moon because I’m terrocentric. It’s also confusing to have the theme answers not be the longest ones in the puzzle, but the upper-case clues make that easier.

The theme isn’t terrible. The fill, on the other hand…in addition toCOIGN, we haveADNOUN, clued as [“Meek,” in “Blessed are the meek”]. Wikipedia tells me that’s a “word that is usually an adjective but is being used as a noun.” In this sentence, it’s standing in for “meek people.” I am not a grammar professional, but I consider myself a fairly sophisticated amateur and I have never seen this word before, nor do I consider myself enriched by having seen it here. We also haveTILLAGE for [Farmwork] and I assume I’m not the only one who put inTILLING first. Plus we haveGDPDSM ESA ACS MMA RBI CALC, the nonstandard abbreviationS DAK, and [Sicily’s only landlocked province],ENNA. And has anyone under forty heard of BobEUBANKS and “The Newlywed Game?”

A few other things:

  • 20a [Hot wings did him in] is a fun clue forICARUS.
  • 33d [Shape, as dough] is an odd clue forBALL UP. I most often bake challah, so I braid it. I can’t think of any dough I’veBALLedUP except for monkey bread.
  • 70d [Swiss Roll-like snack] is the iconicYODEL. Oh, THAT’S why it’s called aYODEL.
  • Raise your hand if you knew the answer to80a [Cosmonaut Vladimir]. It’sTITOV.
  • 103a [Architect’s task] isPLAN DESIGN. Designing a plan? Planning a design? Is this a phrase that architects use?

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: see above re: COIGN andADNOUN. I also did not know that ChuckNORRIS wrote a book. I did not need to know that ChuckNORRIS wrote a book.

Sunday, July 21, 2019 | (2024)

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