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Jump to a complete list of today’s clues and answers
CROSSWORD SETTER: C.C. Burnikel
THEME: Leap Day … in honor of LEAP DAY, each of today’s themed answers ends with a synonym of LEAP:
37A. February 29th … and, based on the ends of 16-, 24-, 49- and 60-Across, this puzzle’s title LEAP DAY
16A. Mideast protest movement that began in 2010 ARAB SPRING
24A. Cash cache BANK VAULT
49A. Morally obliged DUTY-BOUND
60A. TV actor who played the Maytag repairman GORDON JUMP
BILL BUTLER’S COMPLETION TIME: 5m 45s
ANSWERS I MISSED: 0
Today’s Wiki-est, Amazonian Googlies
Across
10. Many GRE takers SRS
Passing the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is usually a requirement for entry into graduate school here in the US.
16. Mideast protest movement that began in 2010 ARAB SPRING
The term “Arab Spring” has been applied to the wave of protests, riots and civil wars that impacted the Arab world for 2010 to 2012. The uprisings were sparked by the Tunisian Revolution at the end of 2010 that led to the ouster of the longtime president and the institution of democratic elections. The period of instability that followed in some Arab League countries has been dubbed the “Arab Winter”.
18. Mount St. Helens outflow LAVA
Only two volcanoes in the Cascade Range in the northwest have erupted in the 20th century: Mount St. Helens in 1980 and Mount Lassen in 1915. The last significant eruption of Mount Shasta, a third volcano in the Cascades, was about 200 years ago. The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens resulted in ash being deposited in eleven US states and 5 Canadian provinces.
19. Cloud computing giant IBM
IBM was founded as the Tabulating Machine Company in 1896. The company changed its name to the Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation (CTR) in 1911 and was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1916. The name of International Business Machines (IBM) was given first to the company’s Canadian subsidiary, and then its South American subsidiary. In 1924, it was decided to adopt the International Business Machines name for the whole company. Good choice …
As I understand it, cloud computing negates the need for most applications to run on one’s computer, and instead one accesses those applications on remote servers on the Internet. I do it all the time. I write up this blog using applications that reside not on my laptop here, but in “the cloud”. That means that if my laptop crashes, I go grab someone else’s computer and just carry on, no harm done!
20. Crotchety oldster COOT
Geezer and coot are two not-so-nice terms for an old man.
22. “Little Broken Hearts” singer Jones NORAH
The beguiling Norah Jones is the daughter of famous sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar, and is one of my favorite singers. If you haven’t heard Jones sing her song “Come Away with Me”, you just haven’t lived …
24. Cash cache BANK VAULT
A “cache” is a secret supply. We imported the term into English from French Canadian trappers in the 17th century. Back then, “cache” was as slang term for a “hiding place for stores”, derived from the French verb “cacher” meaning “to hide”.
29. Tall tale YARN
The phrase “to spin a yarn”, meaning “to tell a tall tale”, originated in the early 1800s with seamen. The idea was that sailors would tell stories to each other while engaged in mindless work such as twisting yarn.
31. Bond or Bourne SPY
James Bond is the creation of the writer Ian Fleming. Fleming “stole” the James Bond name from an American ornithologist. The number 007 was “stolen” from the real-life, 16th century English spy called John Dee. Dee would sign his reports to Queen Elizabeth I with a stylized “007” to indicate that the reports were for “her eyes only”.
“The Bourne Identity” is a great spy novel written by Robert Ludlum, and first published in 1980. It has been ranked as the second best spy novel of all time, just behind the even more enjoyable “The Spy Who Came in from the Cold” by John le Carre. I’ll agree with that sentiment. Ludlum wrote two sequels, and all three parts of the Bourne Trilogy have been made into very successful movies now, starring Matt Damon in the title role. Ludlum died before he could write more than three novels featuring Jason Bourne, but five more titles in the series have been published, written by Eric Van Lustbader. I must check them out …
36. E-tailer’s address URL
Internet addresses (like NYTCrossword.com and LAXCrossword.com) are more correctly called Uniform Resource Locators (URLs).
37. February 29th … and, based on the ends of 16-, 24-, 49- and 60-Across, this puzzle’s title LEAP DAY
Leap day is February 29th in a leap year, which is usually a year that is divisible by 4. My baby brother was born on February 29th, in 1968. A woman in Utah gave birth on February 29th in 2004, on February 29th in 2008, and once more on February 29th, 2012. That’s in the Guinness Book of World Records …
43. Will Ferrell holiday movie ELF
“Elf” is a comedy movie released for the 2003 Christmas season. “Elf” was directed by Jon Favreau and stars Will Ferrell in the title role with James Caan supporting. It’s all about one of Santa’s elves who finds out he is human and goes to meet his father in New York City. The film was adapted for the stage as a musical that premiered in 2010.
48. 14-legged crustacean ISOPOD
Isopods are small crustaceans (meaning they have exoskeletons), with seven pairs of legs. Examples would be woodlice and pill bugs. The name “isopod” comes from the Greek “iso” (same) and “pod” (foot). All isopods have seven pairs of jointed limbs.
53. Dull finish MATTE
“Matte”, meaning flat and lusterless, comes from the Old French word “mat” meaning beaten down and withered. In turn, the French “mat” comes from the Latin “maddus”, meaning “maudlin with drink”. Sometimes I wonder about these derivations …
55. Laura’s classic “Dick Van Dyke Show” wail OH, ROB!
“The Dick Van Dyke Show” is a sitcom that ran from 1961 to 1966 starring Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore as Rob and Laura Petrie. This classic show was created by the great Carl Reiner, who also had a supporting role on screen.
56. Dubliner’s land EIRE
The city of Dublin, the capital of Ireland, is known as Baile Átha Cliath in Irish (“town of the hurdled ford”). The English name “Dublin” is an anglicized form of the older Irish name for the city “Dubh Linn”, meaning “black pool”.
58. Golfer’s double bogey, usually SIX
The term “Bogey” originated at the Great Yarmouth Golf Club in England in 1890, and was used to indicate a total round that was one-over-par (and not one-over-par on a particular hole, as it is today). The name Bogey came from a music hall song of the time “Here Comes the Bogey Man”. In the following years it became popular for players trying to stay at par to be “playing against Colonel Bogey”. Then, during WWI, the marching tune “Colonel Bogey” was written and named after the golfing term. If you don’t recognize the name of the tune, it’s the one that’s whistled by the soldiers marching in the great movie “The Bridge on the River Kwai”.
60. TV actor who played the Maytag repairman GORDON JUMP
The actor Gordon Jump played the Maytag repairman in commercials from 1989 until 2003. Jump also portrayed the bumbling manager of the radio station in the seventies/eighties sitcom “WKRP in Cincinnati”.
64. Headache relief brand ADVIL
Aleve is a brand name used for the anti-inflammatory drug Naproxen sodium.
66. Ginger __ ALE
The brand most closely associated with ginger ale is Canada Dry. “Canada Dry Pale Ginger Ale” was first formulated in 1904 by a Canadian chemist called John McLoughlin from Ontario. Prohibition in the United States helped sales of the drink as it was particularly effective in masking the taste of illegally-produced homemade liquor.
Down
1. “Encore!” AGAIN!
“Encore” is French for “again, one more time”, and is a shout that an audience member will make here in North America to request another song, say. But, the term is not used this way in France. Rather, the audience will shout “Bis!”, which is the Italian for “twice!”
2. Rich pasta dish CARBONARA
The “carbonara” pasta dish includes a sauce made with eggs, cheese, bacon and black pepper. Apparently, the name of the dish is derived from “carbonaro”, the Italian for “charcoal burner”. One suggestion is that it was first made for Italian charcoal workers in the mid-1900s.
4. It’s picked up in bars TAB
When we “run a tab” at a bar say, we are “running a tabulation”, a listing of what we owe. Such a use of “tab” is American slang that originated in the 1880s.
5. Cosmetic surg. option LIPO
Liposuction (lipo) dates back to the 1920s when it was developed by a surgeon in France. However, the procedure quickly lost favor when a French model developed gangrene after surgery. As a result it wasn’t until the mid-seventies that modern liposuction took off, after being popularized by two Italian-American surgeons in Rome.
6. Dress like Judge Judy ENROBE
Judge Judy of television fame is actually Judith Sheindlin, a retired family court judge from New York. Ms. Sheindlin reportedly earns $47 million per year for “Judge Judy”. That’s a tad more than she was earning on the “real” bench, I think, and it makes her the highest-earning personality on television by a long shot.
7. Curly-tailed guard dog AKITA
The Akita breed of dog is named for its point of origin, the Akita Prefecture in Japan. When Helen Keller visited Japan in 1937, she asked for and was given an Akita breed of dog, with the name of Kamikaze-go. Sadly, the dog died within a year from distemper. The following year the Japanese government officially presented Keller with a replacement dog. Supposedly Keller’s dogs were the first members of the breed to be introduced into the US.
8. Envy or lust SIN
The cardinal sins of Christian ethics are also known as the seven deadly sins. The seven deadly sins are:
– wrath
– greed
– sloth
– pride
– lust
– envy
– gluttony
9. An official lang. of Hong Kong ENG
Hong Kong first became part of the British Empire after the First Opium War in 1842. In 1898, Britain signed a 99-year lease to retain control of Hong Kong. That control ended 99 years later in 1997 with a formal transfer of sovereignty back to China.
10. Big mess SNAFU
SNAFU is an acronym standing for Situation Normal: All Fouled Up (well, that’s the “polite” version!). As one might imagine, the term developed in the US Army, during WWII.
11. “Bolero” composer RAVEL
Maurice Ravel was a great French composer of the Romantic Era. His most famous piece of music by far is his “Bolero”, the success of which he found somewhat irksome as he thought it to be a trivial work. Personally though, I love minimalism and simplicity …
21. TiVo, for one DVR
TiVo was introduced in 1999 and was the world’s first commercially successful DVR (Digital Video Recorder).
25. “Cagney & Lacey” law-enforcing gp. NYPD
On the eighties police drama “Cagney & Lacey” Christine Cagney was played by Sharon Gless, and Mary Beth Lacey was played by Tyne Daly. A few years after “Cagney & Lacey” ended its run, Gless married the show’s executive producer, Barney Rosenzweig.
26. Paddled boats KAYAKS
There is a type of boat used by Eskimo people called an “umiak”. . The term “umiak” means “woman’s boat”, whereas “kayak” means “man’s boat”.
28. Swim team swimsuit SPEEDO
Speedo brand swimwear was first produced in Australia in 1928, by a hosiery company that wanted to diversify. The brand name was chosen after a slogan competition among employees was won by “Speed on in your Speedos”. It was a long time ago, I guess …
30. Orbit, e.g. GUM
Orbit is a sugarless gum made by Wrigley’s. Orbit was first introduced during WWII, but was taken off the shelves in the 1980s when there was a concern that the gum’s sweetener was carcinogenic. Orbit was relaunched in 2001.
31. Sunscreen letters SPF
In theory, the sun protection factor (SPF) is a calibrated measure of the effectiveness of a sunscreen in protecting the skin from harmful UV rays. The idea is that if you wear a lotion with say SPF 20, then it takes 20 times as much UV radiation to cause the skin to burn than it would take without protection. I say just stay out of the sun …
38. Baseball’s Felipe or Moises ALOU
Moises Alou played major league baseball, as did his father Felipe and his uncle Matty.
39. Naval petty officers YEOMEN
In the US Navy, a yeoman is tasked with administrative and clerical work. In fact the position of yeoman is the oldest rating in the navy. You’ll also see a lot of yeomen in the background on “Star Trek”.
45. Org. concerned with pesticides EPA
Environmental Protection Agency(EPA)
49. Religious doctrine DOGMA
A dogma is a set of beliefs, with the plural being “dogmata” (or “dogmas”, if you’re not a pedant like me!)
50. Ryder rival U-HAUL
The U-Haul company was started by married couple Leonard Shoen and Anna Mary Carty in Ridgefield, Washington in 1945. The Shoens used $5,000 of seed money to build trailers in their garage, and then cleverly recruited gas station owners as franchisees with whom they would split the rental revenue. There are now about 15,000 U-Haul dealers across the country.
The Ryder company was founded in 1933 in Miami, Florida by James Ryder. It started out as a concrete hauling company, but changed its focus a few years later to the leasing of trucks.
54. Yank in China, maybe EXPAT
The term “Yankee” originated back in the 1600s when Dutch settlers used to called English colonists “Jankes”, a disparaging term meaning “Little Johns”.
57. Chewy caramel candy ROLO
Rolo was a hugely popular chocolate candy in Ireland when I was growing up. Rolo was introduced in the thirties in the UK, and is produced under license in the US by Hershey. I was a little disappointed when I had my first taste of the American version as the center is very hard and chewy. The recipe used on the other side of the Atlantic calls for a soft gooey center.
For the sake of completion, here is a full listing of all the answers:
Across
1. Frequent-flier no., e.g. ACCT
5. Rental agreement LEASE
10. Many GRE takers SRS
13. Big, fancy dinner GALA
14. Finalize, as a comic strip INK IN
15. Tiny pest GNAT
16. Mideast protest movement that began in 2010 ARAB SPRING
18. Mount St. Helens outflow LAVA
19. Cloud computing giant IBM
20. Crotchety oldster COOT
21. Postpone DEFER
22. “Little Broken Hearts” singer Jones NORAH
24. Cash cache BANK VAULT
27. Win-win NO-LOSE
29. Tall tale YARN
30. Run fast GALLOP
31. Bond or Bourne SPY
32. [Oh, well] SIGH
36. E-tailer’s address URL
37. February 29th … and, based on the ends of 16-, 24-, 49- and 60-Across, this puzzle’s title LEAP DAY
40. Cow sound MOO
41. Sailboat staff MAST
43. Will Ferrell holiday movie ELF
44. Really into KEEN ON
46. Makeover REDO
48. 14-legged crustacean ISOPOD
49. Morally obliged DUTY-BOUND
53. Dull finish MATTE
55. Laura’s classic “Dick Van Dyke Show” wail OH, ROB!
56. Dubliner’s land EIRE
58. Golfer’s double bogey, usually SIX
59. Put on weight GAIN
60. TV actor who played the Maytag repairman GORDON JUMP
63. Sound-off button MUTE
64. Headache relief brand ADVIL
65. Part of town AREA
66. Ginger __ ALE
67. Take care of SEE TO
68. Second to none BEST
Down
1. “Encore!” AGAIN!
2. Rich pasta dish CARBONARA
3. New England shellfish sandwiches CLAM ROLLS
4. It’s picked up in bars TAB
5. Cosmetic surg. option LIPO
6. Dress like Judge Judy ENROBE
7. Curly-tailed guard dog AKITA
8. Envy or lust SIN
9. An official lang. of Hong Kong ENG
10. Big mess SNAFU
11. “Bolero” composer RAVEL
12. Set in motion START
15. Collects bit by bit GLEANS
17. Where subjects are taught SCHOOL
21. TiVo, for one DVR
23. Every bit ALL
25. “Cagney & Lacey” law-enforcing gp. NYPD
26. Paddled boats KAYAKS
28. Swim team swimsuit SPEEDO
30. Orbit, e.g. GUM
31. Sunscreen letters SPF
33. Uncertain words I’M NOT SURE
34. Happy days GOOD TIMES
35. Sweetie HON
38. Baseball’s Felipe or Moises ALOU
39. Naval petty officers YEOMEN
42. “Have a sample” TRY ONE
45. Org. concerned with pesticides EPA
47. Tidal retreat EBB
48. “Ta-da!” I DID IT!
49. Religious doctrine DOGMA
50. Ryder rival U-HAUL
51. All too familiar TRITE
52. Timid person’s lack NERVE
54. Yank in China, maybe EXPAT
57. Chewy caramel candy ROLO
60. __ station GAS
61. Flowery poem ODE
62. Quick punch JAB
Zero errors. Decent, yet typical kind of grid for a Monday.
Finished this one with minimal resistance, but there were still a couple of sticky spots I had to navigate.
I always thought le Carre novels were too slow. I much prefer Ludlum (among others) to him. Le Carre has been described to me as more cerebral rather than full of action, but I don't feel one should preclude the other. Just my $0.02
Best –
I was stumped immediately by 1A.
I don't fly and I thought you got "miles" for flying frequently.
ISOPOD was a little rough for me on Monday.
Finished correctly,but not too quickly.
See you back here tomorrow.
1a – idiotic clue
54a – what the hell is an expat?
An expat is a person who lives outside of their native land. I have a friend in the State Dept who has lived most of his adult life outside the US. He is an expat.
Matt
@Anon
EXPAT is a very common term used especially within a corporate environment. When someone is offered to go work in China, for example, for an American (Yank) firm, they are usually offered an expat package for spending a significant time there – usually extra bonus and/or living expenses. Expat is just a short way of saying expatriot.
Although the name Burnikel scared me, no problems. Never knew GORDON JUMP's name. Same with ISOPOD, though I used to love to play with pill bugs. A little nerdy, I used to make beds for dead bees by folding tissue into tiny matchboxes.
Technically, LAVA did not flow from Mt St. Helens…it was a lahar, or volcanic mudflow that reached all the way to the Columbia River. The initial explosion of the mountain created a pyroclastic flow of snow, debris, mud and rock from the crater.
Swimmer's don't wear SPEEDOs anymore. At least not in the sense you traditionally imagine.
I had a tougher time with this puzzle, considering this is a Monday – and a leap year extra day as I kept reminding my wife for the last 2 days !! I had atought time with 1 Across, and ignored or overlooked the fact that it was an abbr. Also not familiar with Isopod. But, with some confidence, I completed it, and enjoyed it.
I thought GRE – SRS, the cluing was 'off', but there are seniors in college undergraduate programs, as well. I should know, I sat for 3 GREs – in Engineering, Math and Management.
I thought Speedo was a brand name rather than a type of swimsuit.
Finally, as I just read :=) …. if you have to quibble about strict descriptions and regulations while solving crosswords …. may you should look for another line of work, er, entertainment. So true.
Have a nice Leap day, all. ( Look before you leap).
I have to put in my 3 cents for Ex-pat.
Strictly speaking, an expat is anyone who is working in another country where they are not a citizen of. Except, say, in USA, where to work you generally have to have a green card, which is eventually convertible to citizenship. So, you are generally not an expat for long – except for those under contract, or the H, G or V etc., visas… many of which are not easily convertible to a green card. Diplomatic personnel are always expats, except that many diplomats are always looking to find ways to settle down in the US. Then they too lose the epat status.
In the United Arab Emirates – where the citizen population is only 12% of the total population (really) most of the people are obviously expats. The citizens are called 'locals', emiratis or, genteely, 'nationals'. They are the top 10% of the income bracket – and with an starting income of USD$ 90k to $ 132 k, they dont care what you call them, so long as you are duly respectful ….
However, the term 'expat' has a nuanced status. British ( and this includes Welsh, Scot, Irish ) and Canadians and US citizens are always expats. So are the French, Germans, Swiss and other managerial types.
Indians ( 63% of the population !) or other SE asians are not called expats – merely foreign workers – even if you're, say, a doctor or a manager. Indonesians, malaysians, some chinese, thai and the ubiquitous philipinos are never expats, merely workers. Ironically, this includes other arabs, not Saudis, like tunisianas and lebanese and egyptians.
The southern europeans, especially greeks, serbains, romanians etc., are always jostling to claim to be called, expats, but they have a barrier, based on their job status, (and salary ) before they become expats.
Everyone knows everyone else's salary, and this is the most commonly discussed gossip. Read more in Wikipedia. Interesting microcosm.
End of rant.
Finished this one pretty comfortably, though I was stuck on ISOPOD for a while, as it seems other people were as well. Happy Monday!
Hi friends! I'm trying to add my photo here, a la Andrew, but so far can't make it happen. So, for now y'all are spared having to see me…
I too was stuck on 1A — usually a bad sign, flattened by the first pitch — but it's a Monday puzzle, so I figured it out.
I always thought of an EXPAT as someone who chose not to live in his/her native country. Josephine Baker comes to mind.
A happy Super Tuesday to all, and those of you in states holding primaries or caucuses, by all means DO VOTE!!
Sweet dreams~~™