LA Times Crossword Answers 2 Jun 17, Friday










Constructed by: Paul Coulter

Edited by: Rich Norris

Quicklink to a complete list of today’s clues and answers

Quicklink to comments

Theme: Turn of Phrase

Today’s themed answers as shown in the grid are well-known words or phrases, but aren’t the answers to the clues. We have to TURN the words in the PHRASES to come up with the real answers:

  • 51A. “Nice” expression … and a hint to the answers to starred clues : TURN OF PHRASE
  • 19A. *Idle : NOTHING DOING (turns into “doing nothing”)
  • 27A. *Athlete’s time-out on a hot day : BREAKWATER (turns into “water break”)
  • 34A. *Maestro’s signals : BEATS DOWN (turns into “downbeats”)
  • 44A. *Returned : BACKHANDED (turns into “handed back”)

Bill’s time: 7m 20s

Bill’s errors: 0




Today’s Wiki-est, Amazonian Googlies

Across

1. Prickly case : BUR

“Bur” is a variant spelling of the word “burr”. Both terms apply to a seed vessel that has hooks or prickles on the outside.

4. Retired flier : SST

The most famous Supersonic Transport (SST) was the Concorde, a plane that’s no longer flying. Concorde had that famous “droop nose”. The nose was moved to the horizontal position during flight to create the optimum aerodynamic shape thereby reducing drag. It was lowered during taxi, takeoff and landing, so that the pilot had better visibility. The need for the droop nose was driven largely by the delta-shaped wings. The delta wing necessitates a higher angle of attack at takeoff and landing than conventional wing designs, so the pilot needed the nose lowered so that he or she could see the ground.

7. Wombat relatives : KOALAS

The koala bear really does look like a little bear, but it’s not even closely related. The koala is an arboreal marsupial and a herbivore, native to the east and south coasts of Australia. Koalas aren’t primates, and are one of the few mammals other than primates who have fingerprints. In fact, it can be very difficult to tell human fingerprints from koala fingerprints, even under an electron microscope. Male koalas are called “bucks”, females are “does”, and young koalas are “joeys”. I’m a little jealous of the koala, as it sleeps up to 20 hours a day …

Wombats are marsupials that are native to Australia. Apparently, wombats are often mocked in their native land, as they are viewed as fat, slow, lazy animals. The “unofficial” mascot of the 2000 Sydney Olympics was “Fatso the Fat-A***ed Wombat”.

14. School gp. : PTA

Parent-Teacher Association (PTA)

15. “Hannity” airer : FOX NEWS

Sean Hannity is a conservative political commentator who is perhaps best known from his syndicated radio broadcast called “The Sean Hannity Show”. Hannity also host the news show called “Hannity” on the Fox News Channel. Hannity has written a few bestselling books, including “Let Freedom Ring: Winning the War of Liberty over Liberalism”.

22. Protein producer : RNA

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) is an essential catalyst in the manufacture of proteins in the body. The genetic code in DNA determines the sequence of amino acids that make up each protein. That sequence is read in DNA by messenger RNA, and amino acids are delivered for protein manufacture in the correct sequence by what is called transfer RNA. The amino acids are then formed into proteins by ribosomal RNA.

23. “Eldorado” rockers : ELO

“Eldorado” is a 1974 song recorded by the Electric Light Orchestra (ELO). “Eldorado” is one of those songs that some claim has a hidden message when played backwards. In this case, some Christian Fundamentalists claimed that the message was satanic in nature. Dearie me …

26. Communiqué segue : AS TO

A “segue” is a transition from one topic to the next. “Segue” is an Italian word that literally means “now follows”. It was first used in musical scores directing the performer to play into the next movement without a break.

32. Extinct New Zealanders : MOAS

Moas were flightless birds native to New Zealand that are now extinct. The fate of the Moa is a great example of the detrimental effect that humans can have on animal populations. The Maoris arrived in New Zealand about 1300 AD, upsetting the balance of the ecosystem. The Moa were hunted to extinction within 200 years, which had the knock-on effect of killing off the Haast’s Eagle, the Moa’s only predator prior to the arrival of man. Moas were huge creatures, measuring up to 12 feet tall with their necks stretched upwards.

34. *Maestro’s signals : BEATS DOWN (turns into “downbeats”)

“Maestro” is often used to address a musical conductor. “Maestro” (plural “maestri”) is the Italian word for “master, teacher”. The plural in English is usually “maestros”.

37. “Amadeus” director Forman : MILOS

Miloš Forman is a film director from former Czechoslovakia, where he learned his craft. Since starting to work in Hollywood in 1968, Forman has been at the helm of some memorable films including: “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”, “Amadeus” and “The People vs. Larry Flynt”.

The magnificent 1984 film “Amadeus” is an adaptation of Peter Shaffer’s 1979 stage play of the same name. Tom Hulce played Mozart, and F. Murray Abraham played Mozart’s rival, Antonio Salieri. Both Hulce and Abraham were nominated for that season’s Best Actor Oscar, with the award going to the latter. There hasn’t been a movie since “Amadeus” that garnered two Best Actor nominations.

41. Albanian coin : LEK

The official currency of Albania is called the lek. The first lek was introduced in 1926, and was apparently named after Alexander the Great.

50. Lively French dance : GIGUE

A gigue is a dance from the baroque era. Popular in France, the dance was derived from the British jig.

55. Group that’s mostly secretaries : CABINET

In the Westminster system, the Cabinet is a group of sitting politicians chosen by the Prime Minister to head up government departments and also to participate collectively in major governmental decisions in all areas. In the US system, the Cabinet is made up not of sitting politicians, but rather of non-legislative individuals who are considered to have expertise in a particular area. The Cabinet members in the US system tend to have more of an advisory role outside of their own departments.

58. Protein that allows skin to stretch or contract : ELASTIN

Elastin is a very pliable protein found in the body’s connective tissue. It is the elasticity of elastin that helps skin to return to its original position when it is pressed or pulled at.

63. Marienbad, for one : SPA

Mariánské Lázně is a relatively young spa town in the west of the Czech Republic, located close to the border with Germany. Known in German as “Marienbad”, the town was a very popular getaway for the European elite and was visited by the likes of Frédéric Chopin, Thomas Edison, and Richard Wagner, as well as the UK’s King Edward VII, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, and Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. Most of the ethnic Germans in Marienbad, which was part of Sudetenland, were expelled after WWII, and it came under communist control along with the rest of Czechoslovakia as a result of the 1948 coup d’état. The town was largely closed to foreigners for decades, but has been flourishing again as a tourist destination since the return of democracy in 1989.

Down

1. Dorm room seat : BEANBAG

The original beanbag chair was designed by an Italian company called Zanotta in 1969. That first model was called “il sacco” and is still made today. The idea came from staff at the Zanotta factory who would take their breaks sitting on bags filled with styrofoam.

4. Nautical pole : SPRIT

A sprit is a pole that extends out from a mast, often supporting a special sail called a spritsail.

5. “South Park” boy : STAN

“South Park” is an adult-oriented cartoon series on Comedy Central. I don’t do “South Park” …

7. Big bear : KODIAK

Brown bears are found over much of northern Europe, Asia, and North America. The biggest subspecies of brown bear is the Kodiak bear, which is the largest land-based predator in the world. Named for the Kodiak Archipelago in Alaska, the Kodiak bear grows to about the same size as the enormous polar bear.

9. Course for Crusoe?: Abbr. : ANAG

The name “Crusoe” is an anagram of the word “course”.

10. The Eagle, briefly : LEM

In the Apollo program, the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) was the vehicle that actually landed on the moon and returned the astronauts to the command module that was orbiting overhead. The third LEM built was named “Spider”, and it participated in the Apollo 9 mission which tested the functionality of the LEM design in space. The fourth LEM was called “Snoopy” and it flew around the moon in the Apollo 10 mission, the dress rehearsal for the upcoming moon landing. Apollo 11’s LEM was called “Eagle” and it brought Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to and from the moon’s surface. Another famous LEM was Apollo 13’s Aquarius. Although Aquarius never landed on the moon, it did serve as a “lifeboat” for the three astronauts after the explosive rupture of an oxygen canister in the Service Module.

12. 81-yr.-old ID : SSN

The main purpose of a Social Security Number (SSN) is to track individuals for the purposes of taxation, although given its ubiquitous use, it is looking more and more like an identity number to me. The social security number system was introduced in 1936. Prior to 1986, an SSN was required only for persons with substantial income so many children under 14 had no number assigned. For some years the IRS had a concern that a lot of people were claiming children on their tax returns who did not actually exist. So, from 1986 onward, it is a requirement to get an SSN for any dependents over the age of 5. Sure enough, in 1987 seven million dependents “disappeared”.

15. Musical Apple : FIONA

Fiona Apple is a singer-songwriter and pianist from New York City. “Fiona Apple” is the artist’s real name, although “Apple” is a given name. She was born Fiona Apple McAfee-Maggart.

24. “Malcolm X” director : LEE

Film director Spike Lee was born in Atlanta, Georgia but has very much made New York City his home and place of work. Most of Lee’s films are set in New York City, including his first feature film, “She’s Gotta Have It”. That film was shot over two weeks, with a budget of $175,000. “She’s Gotta Have It” grossed over $7 million at the US box office.

“Malcolm X” is a 1992 biographical film about the African American activist Malcolm X. The movie starred Denzel Washington in the title role and was co-written and directed by Spike Lee.

25. “Catch-22” pilot : ORR

The bomber pilot in Joseph Heller’s “Catch-22” is called Orr, and he has no other name, just “Orr”.

“Catch-22” is a novel by Joseph Heller set during WWII. The title refers to absurd bureaucratic constraints that soldiers had to suffer. Heller’s “Catch 22” was invoked by an army psychiatrist to explain that any pilot requesting to be evaluated for insanity, to avoid flying dangerous missions, had to be sane as only a sane man would try to get out of such missions. The term “catch-22” has entered the language and describes a paradoxical situation from which one can’t escape due to contradictory rules; one loses, no matter what choice one makes.

30. Prince Valiant’s son : ARN

In the comic strip, Arn is the eldest son of Prince Valiant and Aleta is his wife. Edward, the Duke of Windsor, called the “Prince Valiant” comic strip the “greatest contribution to English Literature in the past one hundred years”. I’m not so sure …

34. __ choy : BOK

Bok choy is a variety of Chinese cabbage. “Bok choy” translates as “white vegetable”.

35. Sandra who was the first to play “Gidget” : DEE

The actress Sandra Dee started out as a model before moving into film. After a promising start to her career it seemed to peter out, and the public became more interested in her 7-year marriage to Bobby Darin. And of course she will forever be remembered from the song in the movie and stage-show “Grease” called “Look at Me, I’m Sandra Dee”.

“Gidget” is an early “beach party film” that was released in 1959. The movie stars Sandra Dee as a teenage girl who falls in love with a young surfer. The surfer’s gang gives the young lass the nickname “Gidget”, a portmanteau of “girl” and “midget”.

37. CEO’s degree : MBA

A chief executive officer (CEO) might have a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree.

38. McKellen of “X-Men” : IAN

Sir Ian McKellen is a marvelous English actor, someone who is comfortable playing anything from Macbeth on stage to Magneto in an “X-Men” movie. On the big screen, McKellen is very famous for playing Gandalf in “The Lord of Rings”. In the UK, Sir Ian is noted for being at the forefront of the campaign for equal rights for gay people, a role he has enthusiastically embraced since the eighties.

39. TV screen type : LCD

Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) are the screens that are found in most laptops today, and in flat panel computer screens and some televisions. LCD monitors basically replaced Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) screens, the old television technology.

41. Ties surgically : LIGATES

In the context of surgery, a ligature is a suture tied around an anatomical structure, usually a blood vessel. The term “ligature” comes from the Latin “ligare” meaning “to bind”.

43. Soft tissue : KLEENEX

Even though “Kleenex” is sometimes used today as a generic term for a tissue, “Kleenex” is a brand name owned by Kimberly-Clark. Kleenex facial tissues came about after WW1. The material used in the tissue had been developed as a replacement for cotton that was in high demand as surgical tissue during the war. The material developed was called “Cellucotton” and was used in gas mask filters. It was first sold as a facial tissue under the name “Kleenex” in 1924.

46. Beethoven’s __ : NINTH

Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony is his wonderful “Choral” symphony. When it was composed in 1824 it was the first time that a major composer had used voices in a symphony. By the time of the Ninth’s premier, Beethoven was essentially deaf. He insisted on sharing the stage with the musical director (who was conducting), and was visibly counting out time but was off by quite a few measures. When the last notes were played there was enthusiastic applause, although Beethoven was still conducting. The lead contralto had to walk over to Beethoven, stop him, and turn him to the audience to receive his adulation.

47. White wine apéritifs : KIRS

Kir is a French cocktail, made by adding a teaspoon or so of creme de cassis (blackcurrant liqueur) to a glass, and then topping it off with white wine. The drink is named after Felix Kir, the Mayor of Dijon in Burgundy, who used to offer the drink to his guests. My wife is particularly fond of a variant called a Kir Royale, in which the white wine is replaced with champagne.

50. Ivory Coast neighbor : GHANA

The name “Ghana” means “warrior king” in the local language. The British established a colony they called Gold Coast in 1874, later to become Ghana, as part of the scramble by Europeans to settle as much of Africa as they could. One of Ghana’s most famous sons is Kofi Annan, the diplomat that served as General Secretary of the UN for ten years until the beginning of 2007.

The Republic of Côte d’Ivoire is located in West Africa on the Gulf of Guinea. The country is often referred to in English as the Ivory Coast, the direct translation from the French. The official language of the country is French, as for many years it was a French colony.

51. Bleacher feature : TIER

At a sports event one might sit in the bleachers. “Bleachers” is a particularly American term used to describe the tiered stands that provide seating for spectators. These seats were originally wooden planks, and as they were uncovered they would be “bleached” by the sun, giving them the name we use today. Sometimes the fans using the bleachers might be referred to as “bleacherites”.

52. Ton, for one : UNIT

Here in the US, a ton is equivalent to 2,000 pounds. Over in the UK, a ton is 2,240 pounds. The UK unit is sometimes referred to as an Imperial ton or sometimes a “long ton”. Folks over there refer to the US ton then as a “short ton”. To further complicate matters, there is also a “metric ton” or “tonne”, which is equivalent to 2,204 pounds. Personally, I wish we’d just stick to kilograms …

53. Govt. enforcers : FEDS

A “fed” is an officer of a US federal agency, although the term usually applies to an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

55. Whiting cousin : COD

In the British Isles, the most common fish that is used in traditional “fish and chips” is Atlantic cod. Cod has been overfished all over the world, and is now considered to be an endangered species by many international bodies. Confrontations over fishing rights in the North Atlantic led to conflicts called “the Cod Wars” between Iceland and the UK in the 1950s and the 1970s, with fishing fleets being protected by naval vessels and even shots being fired.

Whiting is a food fish that is related to the cod. Both whiting and cod have been used for decades in the British favorite dish of “fish and chips”.

57. Source of support : BRA

The word “brassière” is French in origin, but it isn’t the word the French use for a “bra”. In France, what we call a bra is known as a “soutien-gorge”, translating to “held under the neck”. The word “brassière” is indeed used in France but there it describes a baby’s undershirt, a lifebelt or a harness. “Brassière” comes from the Old French word for an “arm protector” in a military uniform (“bras” is the French for “arm”). Later “brassière” came to mean “breastplate” and from there the word was used for a type of woman’s corset. The word jumped into English around 1900.

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Complete List of Clues and Answers

Across

1. Prickly case : BUR

4. Retired flier : SST

7. Wombat relatives : KOALAS

13. Pittsburgh-to-Scranton dir. : ENE

14. School gp. : PTA

15. “Hannity” airer : FOX NEWS

16. Loser : ALSO-RAN

18. Thoughtful guys? : IDEA MEN

19. *Idle : NOTHING DOING (turns into “doing nothing”)

21. Crow : BOAST

22. Protein producer : RNA

23. “Eldorado” rockers : ELO

26. Communiqué segue : AS TO

27. *Athlete’s time-out on a hot day : BREAKWATER (turns into “water break”)

31. “Holy cow” : GEE

32. Extinct New Zealanders : MOAS

33. Court call : ORDER!

34. *Maestro’s signals : BEATS DOWN (turns into “downbeats”)

37. “Amadeus” director Forman : MILOS

40. Sushi kitchen supply : EELS

41. Albanian coin : LEK

44. *Returned : BACKHANDED (turns into “handed back”)

47. See 20-Down : … KILL

48. “Go on … ” : AND …

49. In shape : FIT

50. Lively French dance : GIGUE

51. “Nice” expression … and a hint to the answers to starred clues : TURN OF PHRASE

55. Group that’s mostly secretaries : CABINET

58. Protein that allows skin to stretch or contract : ELASTIN

59. Monstrous : OGREISH

60. Get into : DON

61. Time to prepare : EVE

62. Scarcity : DEARTH

63. Marienbad, for one : SPA

64. Census datum : SEX

Down

1. Dorm room seat : BEANBAG

2. Let free : UNLOOSE

3. Put another way : RESTATE

4. Nautical pole : SPRIT

5. “South Park” boy : STAN

6. Pungency : TANG

7. Big bear : KODIAK

8. Big bovines : OXEN

9. Course for Crusoe?: Abbr. : ANAG

10. The Eagle, briefly : LEM

11. Amazement : AWE

12. 81-yr.-old ID : SSN

15. Musical Apple : FIONA

17. Quite : OH SO

20. With 47-Across, in a drop-dead gorgeous outfit : DRESSED TO …

23. LAX posting : ETD

24. “Malcolm X” director : LEE

25. “Catch-22” pilot : ORR

27. Fluffy accessory : BOA

28. Double-crosser : RAT

29. Blows away : WOWS

30. Prince Valiant’s son : ARN

32. Dovetail : MESH

34. __ choy : BOK

35. Sandra who was the first to play “Gidget” : DEE

36. Dated : OLD

37. CEO’s degree : MBA

38. McKellen of “X-Men” : IAN

39. TV screen type : LCD

41. Ties surgically : LIGATES

42. Hard to pin down : ELUSIVE

43. Soft tissue : KLEENEX

45. From the top : AFRESH

46. Beethoven’s __ : NINTH

47. White wine apéritifs : KIRS

50. Ivory Coast neighbor : GHANA

51. Bleacher feature : TIER

52. Ton, for one : UNIT

53. Govt. enforcers : FEDS

54. Fall, as into a chair : PLOP

55. Whiting cousin : COD

56. Sensitive subject, to some : AGE

57. Source of support : BRA

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20 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword Answers 2 Jun 17, Friday”

  1. 11:08, no errors. An easy one, but I stumbled blindly about for a bit before getting my mental legs under me. And LIGATES instead of SUTURES was a late surprise.

    @Carrie … Thanks for reminding me of @Pookie’s Wednesday link! How odd that I can now look back with a sense of fond nostalgia to the days of the Shrub! … ?

  2. Good Friday challenge. I had the same time as Dave as long as you don’t count the first 24 minutes I worked in it…

    I got the theme with BREAKWATER being “water break” and so on. I even got TURN OF PHRASE. But I don’t understand how “Nice” expression = TURN OF PHRASE. Is it something they say in France? Does TURN OF PHRASE mean “nice” in some form? I’m lost. Usually when it’s something Bill doesn’t explain, it’s something obvious. So I’m prepared to feel foolish when someone explains it to me…..

    How many people got a baroque dance (!!!) without resorting to crosses? GIGUE? I actually got LEK by remembering it from past crosswords.

    I’ve never tasted a KIR or creme de cassis, but as I understand it whenever a wine taster describes a “hint of blackcurrants” in a wine, that is a euphemism for a cat urine aroma. I heard this in the wonderful documentary film “Somm” about a group studying to become master sommeliers (only about 200 people worldwide have ever passed the exam in the last 50 years). Point is, I won’t be seeking out any creme de cassis any time soon……

    Vidwan –
    You raise some interesting questions. I only have a possible answer for one of them. I know that some counterfeiters have attempted what you are suggesting. The hardest thing to copy on a U.S. bill is the paper itself. So they attempt to bleach a real $1 and then make it a $20 or $100 or whatever. The fact that that is a possibility may be why the treasury doesn’t (can’t) do it. Something in the paper might be designed to prevent this.

    More likely, it’s just cheaper to use new sheets rather than try to bleach and recycle old ones. Those things are mass produced on large sheets. Recycling them would have to be a “one at a time” endeavor.

    Sorry for the long post. It’s just that I’m very busy today and the minute I finish here, I have to go face reality…Sigh. At least it’s Friday!

    Best –

    1. Jeff … A clever way of saying something is sometimes referred to as a “nice turn of phrase”, so one might infer that a “turn of phrase” is an expression. (I thought the clue was a bit awkward, but I think that’s how it’s meant to be interpreted.)

      I have seen “gigue” in crossword puzzles before, but I have no idea what kind of dance it is. (One of my contributions to the general welfare of society is that I do not dance … or sing … ?.)

      1. I guess I was thinking more of “turn a phrase” . Turn of phrase can be “particularly memorable or artful” according to wiktionary. Ok – I guess I can sort of seeing that all thrown into the “Nice” category, but it’s really a stretch. Because it’s in quotations I was really looking for the word “Nice” to play a key part in the theme, but I’m not sure it does. Why have it in quotes at all? I still think I’m missing something.

        Oh well. To steal a word from Bill – enough of my palaver…

        Best –

  3. The SE corner took awhile. What really began the final run to completion was suddenly seeing “Kleenex” as the answer to 43 Down after I had spent many minutes trying to come up with some anatomical term for soft tissue. D’oh!

  4. Spent yesterday doing crosswords while my husband had a routine procedure. I think I got something wrong, but don’t remember what it was now.
    Gave up on today’s puzzle.
    @ Jeff I don’t know what the theme means either.
    What’s NICE have to do with anything?

  5. Hannity is currently on “vacation” from FOXNEWS after continuing to support on his show a discredited conspiracy theory about the shooting death of a DNC staffer. Unknown whether he will join Bill O’Reilly on permanent “vacation”.

  6. Today’s crossword wasn’t hard but it required, at times, one to think less cross-wordy. I think that made it fun. Some of the answers were so obvious that I missed them at first.

  7. @Pookie I have the same question as to the “Nice” part of the clue. Even assuming it’s the south of France I still don’t get it.

    @Piano Man My understanding is that we were all going to leave politics out of this however since you mentioned it, number one Hannity is on the air – he’s back from his Memorial Day vacation, and number two, I, like millions others, also believe that Seth Rich was murdered; that issue has yet to be resolved, barring continued cover-ups. When it initially happened last summer the first thing I said to my husband was that he was murdered. Julian Assange practically admitted that he was the email leaker. Seth Rich’s death remains under investigation.

  8. UNLOOSE — as sensible as “preheat.” SPRIT — huh? And it was the quotes that made NICE confusing.
    @RestMyCase — And Hillary personally shot Vince Foster, too, right? Trump has you brainwashed FOX zombies right where he wants you.

    1. @Joe Bleaux

      All opinions are tolerated – indeed welcome – on this board. Your opinions are as valued as anyone else’s – no more no less. I’d say that goes for everyone that posts here.

      However, please leave the name calling and personal attacks for the kids on the playground. I come to this board to get away from that nonsense. Please take that sort of talk elsewhere.

  9. @Mr. Bill
    Do you have any hints as to the the theme?
    “Nice” expression … and a hint to the answers to starred clues.
    This is really bugging me.
    It makes no sense whatsoever.
    Bill, or anyone else???????
    Mr. Coulter? Rich Norris?
    We take these things seriously. 🙁

  10. I had a tough time, as usual, with this Friday puzzle. But I got it done, and actually enjoyed a few of the clues …. even those I did not understand …..
    Regarding Jeff and Pookie’s query, I will login back and see again here tomorrow, to see if Bill has proffered his expert opinion, in his answers to your queries ….

    With my limited knowledge, and experience, may I suggest a possible answer ? I think “Nice” probably equates to something like a euphemism … Doing Nothing probably sounds better ( and nicer – ) than “Nothing doing” ……. downbeats sound nicer than beats down, and water break sounds nicer than breakwater . ( although the breakwater on a pier or wharf or beach is innocuous, ( and functional, to prevent erosion on the beach – ) , the other breakwater is what I think what happens before an actual delivery.) I don’t know if this paragraph even makes sense.

    Have a nice day, all.

  11. @Jeff @Piano Man @Joe Bleaux
    Thanks, Jeff. As to @Joe Bleaux’s comment, this is the kind of manure spewing from leftist ideologues, using ad hominem attacks when the facts don’t pan out their way.

  12. Jeff, thanks to the answer to my question about them not recycling the chopped up dollar bills. You’re probably right, the paper may be so dense, than it cannot be bleached, to be reused. The green color may have reacted with the fibre etc., also maybe it is very difficult to raise the watermark at the right place, or the security thread in the old chopped up dollar bills may interfere. The question was casually asked to someone, who as a docent, I would have thought would have atleast wondered about the possible answers. Unfortunately, when you get a permanent cushy job with the government, you also lose your inquisitiveness and your mind becomes dull as a serf and you really dont give two hoots about the job other than punching your time clock and measuring the time when you can takeoff and go home. That kind of upset me, but I should learn to have more patience and tolerance of other people.

    Jeff, I don’t know whether I linked this before but there is a security feature of many, many higher denominations currencies all around the world, that is called a EURorion constellation. I will let wiki explain this. It occurs in the US 5 dollar bills and higher.

    And, for fun, check out these one dollar origami animals and fish and much more.

  13. It seems odd to me that 51A is occasioning so much discussion here. When I saw the clue for it, I thought, “Oh, I’m being asked for a common expression containing the word ‘nice'”, and the first thing that popped into my head, given that I already had a few letters of the entry filled in, was “a nice turn of phrase” which I’ve heard many, many times. And each theme entry is a two-word phrase which has been “turned” by putting the two words in the opposite order (as suggested by “turn of phrase” – “nice” has nothing to do with that). Apparently, the expression “a nice turn of phrase” is not as common as I would have said it was …

    As for the latest kerfuffle over the expression of political opinions here: I am in general agreement with Jeff and I think that “brainwashed Fox zombies” was over the top, as was “s–t spewing from leftist ideologues” (later cleaned up slightly to avoid the four-letter word). The toxic nature of the current political situation here in the US is almost unprecedented and I am doing my best not to become any more depressed by it than I already am … but I can’t help but think about it a lot … and occasionally that leaks out in what I write.

    Sadly, I will probably not be attending an older brother’s 80th-birthday celebration back in Iowa, simply because the political divide between us is too profound to ignore … ?.

  14. 48 minutes, zero errors. “Nice” in that clue is a synonym of “good” or “favorable”, as in “Nice car!” or something like that. “turn of phrase” is simply word choice. As far as the theme goes, it’s about as simple as one gets for a Friday grid – basically Mr. Coulter found expressions of two words which could be put in any order and make some sense, and then clued them in the opposite order.

    As for the rest of the stuff here, I’m of the view to stick to crosswords here and the less said about contentious topics the better, especially since I can’t say can look at a whole lot of it too positively at all, without the usual depression and anger seeing what’s going on in all corners.

    Caught up for now, so onto Sat stuff (LAT/Newsday) and trying to figure out the WSJ meta. Along with other stuff I’m sure.

  15. Fairly straight-forward Friday puzzle; took about 45 minutes, no errors. Had EvaSIVE before ELUSIVE and kELp before EELS. KLEENEX was the last to fall. Checked out a few GIGUEs on YouTube; seems like fancy French/Irish tap dancing to me.

    I see the “Nice” discussion the same way as Dave and Glenn. I guess I just skipped the fact that Nice was in quotes and didn’t think at all of France.

    As far as the rest: Joe Bleaux’s comment seems to hit the nail on the head, to turn a phrase.

  16. Hi all!
    Dave has it right: it’s common to say something’s a “nice turn of phrase,” so the constructor had that expression in mind when he put “nice” in quotes. Course, I can say that now that I’ve finished the grid. I also thought it had something to do with France, ESPECIALLY since the clue above had the word French in it!?
    This puzzle bugged me! Twisted-up phrases! Without getting the theme, I was stumped by BREAKWATER and BEATS DOWN, and used a lotta​ Wite Out there. Didn’t think I’d make it out alive…. but I did.
    Bill! Thanks for yesterday’s note!!?
    To paraphrase our Jeff, my time was about the same as Bill’s on this, if you don’t count that first hour… LOL!
    @Dave — I hear you … ?
    Sweet dreams~~™???

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