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Constructed by: Craig Stowe
Edited by: Rich Norris
Today’s Reveal Answer: Bomb Squad
Themed answers each end with a synonym of BOMB:
- 61A Specialized unit seeking explosives … or what the ends of the answers to starred clues comprise? : BOMB SQUAD
- 18A *Athletic brand for yoga class : LULULEMON
- 24A *Beachgoer’s footwear : FLIP-FLOP
- 39A *Stops smoking suddenly and entirely, say : QUITS COLD TURKEY
- 51A *Raid with a K-9 unit, perhaps : DRUG BUST
Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers
Want to discuss the puzzle? Then …
… leave a comment
Bill’s time: 5m 18s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
1 Poindexter : DWEEB
“Dweeb” is relatively recent American slang that came out of college life in the late sixties. Dweeb, squarepants, nerd; they’re all not-nice terms that mean the same thing, i.e. someone excessively studious and socially inept.
Poindexter is a character in the television show “Felix the Cat”, which originally aired in the late fifties. He is a nerdy type, wearing a lab coat and glasses with thick lenses. The character lends his name to the term “poindexter”, meaning just that, “nerd”.
6 Co. known for music compilations : K-TEL
K-Tel was founded in 1962 in Winnipeg, Manitoba by one Philip Kives. K-Tel’s recipe for success was the sale of inexpensive goods with a simple sales pitch and mail-order distribution.
14 Scarlett in love with a Butler : O’HARA
In Margaret Mitchell’s novel “Gone with the Wind”, when Rhett Butler finally walks out on Scarlett O’Hara he utters the words “My dear, I don’t give a damn”. Most of us are more familiar with the slightly different words spoken by Clark Gable in the film adaption of the story: “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”
15 Folk singer Guthrie : ARLO
Singer Arlo Guthrie is known for his protest songs, just like his father Woody Guthrie. The younger Guthrie only ever had one song in the top 40: a cover version of “City of New Orleans”. He has lived for years in the town of Washington, just outside Pittsfield, Massachusetts. His 1976 song “Massachusetts” has been the official folk song of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts since 1981.
18 *Athletic brand for yoga class : LULULEMON
Lululemon Athletica is a brand of athletic clothing that was founded by Chip Wilson in 1998 and is headquartered in Vancouver. The company’s name is very much associated with the activity of yoga in particular. Every Lululemon store offers a weekly complimentary yoga class.
28 Smidgen : BIT
Our word “smidgen” (sometimes shortened to “smidge”) is used to describe a small amount. The term might come from the Scots word “smitch” that means the same thing or “a small insignificant person”.
33 Portfolio item : ASSET
Our word “portfolio” comes from the Italian “portafoglio” meaning “case for carrying loose papers”. The Italian term comes from “porta” meaning “carry” and “foglio” meaning “sheet, leaf”.
36 Having all one’s marbles : SANE
Even though the game of marbles has been around since the early 1700s, the use of “marbles” meaning “one’s faculties, common sense”, probably has nothing to do with the game. Rather, the French word “meubles” meaning furniture, was brought into English as “marbles” in the mid-1800s to mean “personal effects, furniture”. It was “marbles” in this sense that evolved into “having one’s marbles”, a slang term from the late twenties meaning “having one’s faculties”.
38 Rap sheet abbr. : AKA
Also known as (aka)
A rap sheet is a criminal record. “Rap” is a slang term dating back to the 1700s that means “blame, responsibility” as in “to take the rap”, “bad rap” and “to beat the rap”. This usage morphed into “rap sheet” in the early 1900s.
39 *Stops smoking suddenly and entirely, say : QUITS COLD TURKEY
The phrase “cold turkey” surfaced in 1910 with the meaning “without preparation”. We started to use the phrase in the early 1920s in the sense of unprepared withdrawal from an addictive substance. The underpinning notion is that cold turkey is a food requiring little preparation.
44 Cheers for matadors : OLES
The term “torero” is used to describe all bullfighters. The term “matador” is reserved for the bullfighter whose job is to make the final kill. Aptly enough, “matador” is Spanish for “killer”.
46 Kabul native : AFGHANI
Kabul is the capital and largest city of Afghanistan. The city has been the site of major conflict for much of the 3,500 years that it has been in existence. In the past, this conflict was mainly driven by the city’s strategic location on the major trade routes of south and central Asia.
49 PC-to-PC system : LAN
Local area network (LAN)
56 “Let __ be light” : THERE
“Fiat lux” translates from Latin as “Let there be light”. The phrase was originally written in Hebrew, as it comes from the Book of Genesis in the Bible. It is included in the opening verses:
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.
And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.
And God saw the light, and it was good; and God divided the light from the darkness.
69 Italy’s capital : ROME
According to tradition, Rome was founded by the twin brothers Romulus and Remus. The pair had a heated argument about who should be allowed to name the city and Romulus hit Remus with a shovel, killing him. And so, “Rome” was born, perhaps instead of “Reme”!
Down
1 “__ harm”: Hippocratic Oath principle : DO NO
“First, do no harm” is a translation of the Latin phrase “Primum non nocere”. The phrase is a principle used in the world of medicine that reminds a provider of healthcare that to do nothing might be better than intervening in some situations. It is often said that “First, do no harm” is found in the text of the Hippocratic Oath, but that’s just not true. What is true is that the line “I will use those dietary regimens which will benefit my patients according to my greatest ability and judgement, and I will do no harm or injustice to them” is included.
The Hippocratic Corpus is a collection of about 70 medical works that were at one time believed to have been written by the Ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, although authorship has been called into question. Within the collection is a document known as the Hippocratic Oath (but again, the authorship has been questioned). The oath is still used today as the basis for oaths taken by medical graduates before they enter into medical practice.
3 Canvas holder : EASEL
The word “easel” comes from an old Dutch word meaning “donkey”, would you believe? The idea is that an easel carries its load (an oil painting, say) just as a donkey would be made to carry a load.
6 Superman’s birth name : KAL-EL
Jor-El was a scientist on the planet Krypton who was married to Lara. Jor-El and Lara had an infant son named Kal-El who they were able to launch into space towards Earth just before Krypton was destroyed. Kal-El became Superman. In the 1978 movie “Superman”, Jor-El was played by Marlon Brando, Lara was played by Susannah York, and Kal-El/Superman was played by Christopher Reeve.
7 Cape Cod town : TRURO
Truro is a town in the Outer Cape, close to the northern tip of Cape Cod in Massachusetts. The area was settled in the late 1600s by English colonists who named it for the city of Truro in Cornwall, England. Truro is home to the Highland Light (also called “the Cape Cod Light”), which was the first lighthouse to be built on Cape Cod. The first Highland Lighthouse was built in 1797, and the current structure was erected in 1857. The whole structure had to be moved a tenth of a mile inland in 1996, as it had become endangered by coastal erosion.
9 Comical Costello : LOU
Lou Costello was half of the Abbott & Costello double act. One tragic and terrible event in Lou Costello’s life was the death of his baby son, Lou Costello, Jr. Lou was at NBC studios one night for his regular broadcast when he received word that the 11-month-old baby had somehow drowned in the family swimming pool. With the words “Wherever he is tonight, I want him to hear me”, he made the scheduled broadcast in front of a live and unsuspecting audience.
10 Verdi works : OPERAS
Giuseppe Verdi was an Italian composer, mainly of operas, who was active during the Romantic era. Equally as famous as Verdi’s operas, are arias from those operas such as “La donna è mobile” from “Rigoletto”, “The Drinking Song” from “La Traviata” and “The Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves” from “Nabucco”. Verdi was a big fan of William Shakespeare and wrote three operas based on the Bard’s plays: “Macbeth”, “Otello” and “Falstaff”.
12 God with a bow : EROS
As always seems to be the case with Greek gods, Eros and Aphrodite have overlapping spheres of influence. Aphrodite was the goddess of love between a man and a woman, and Eros was the god who stirred the passions of the male. The Roman equivalent of Aphrodite was Venus, and the equivalent of Eros was Cupid.
13 Hawaii’s state bird : NENE
The nene is a bird that is native to Hawaii, and is also known as the Hawaiian goose. The name “nene” is imitative of its call. When Captain Cook landed on the islands in 1778, there were 25,000 nene living there. By 1950, the number was reduced by hunting to just 30 birds. Conservation efforts in recent years have been somewhat successful. The nene was named State Bird of Hawaii in 1957.
22 Young salamander : EFT
Salamanders are lizard-like amphibians found all across the northern hemisphere. They are the only vertebrate animals that can regenerate lost limbs.
26 Lily pad habitats : PONDS
Water lilies have leaves and flowers that float on the surface of a body of water. However, the roots of the plant are embedded in soil, soil at the bottom of the pond or lake.
34 Steak : turf :: lobster : __ : SURF
The phrase “surf and turf” hasn’t been around that long, with first known use dating back to 1961 in the “Los Angeles Times”.
36 State of matter : SOLID
When I was a schoolkid, I was taught that there were three fundamental states of matter: solid, liquid and gas. I think it is now generally accepted that there is a fourth fundamental state matter, namely plasma. Plasma is a state without a definite shape or volume, and in that sense is similar to a gas. In a plasma, electrons have been ripped away from their nuclei, forming a conductive electron “sea”. Plasmas are created from gases by applying a massive voltage difference or an extremely high temperature.
37 Part of IPA : ALE
India pale ale (IPA) is a style of beer that originated in England. The beer was originally intended for transportation from England to India, hence the name.
42 Contact lens solution brand : RENU
ReNu is a brand name of contact lens products sold by Bausch & Lomb.
47 Grammy-winning jazzman Hancock : HERBIE
Herbie Hancock is a jazz pianist from Chicago who was notably a member of Miles Davis’s Second Great Quintet. Hancock started out as a classical pianist, and was considered to be a child prodigy. IN 1952 when he was 11 years old, Hancock played the first movement of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 26 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
52 Gaucho’s rope : RIATA
A riata is a lariat or a lasso. “Riata” comes from “reata”, the Spanish word for lasso.
A gaucho is someone who lives in the South American pampas, the fertile lowlands in the southeast of South America. The term “gaucho” is also used as the equivalent of our “cowboy”.
54 Serialized daytime TV : SOAPS
The original soap operas were radio dramas back in the fifties. Given the structure of society back then, the daytime broadcasts were aimed at women working in the home as housewives. For some reason the sponsors of those radio shows, and the television shows that followed, were soap manufacturers like Procter & Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive and Lever Brothers. And that’s how the “soap” opera got its name …
56 Vanishing ski lift : T-BAR
A T-bar is a ski lift on which the skiers are pulled up the hill in pairs, with each pair standing (not sitting!) either side of a T-shaped metal bar. The bar is placed behind the thighs, pulling along the skiers as they remain standing on their skis (hopefully!). There’s also a J-bar, which is a similar device but with each J-shaped bar used by one skier at a time.
57 __ sapiens : HOMO
The literal translation of “Homo sapiens” from Latin is “wise or knowing man”. The Homo genus includes the species Homo sapiens (modern humans), but we’re the only species left in that genus. The last known species related to humans was Homo neanderthalensis (Neanderthal Man) which died off about 24,000 years ago. However, another species was discovered in Indonesia in 2003 that has been dubbed Homo floresiensis (Flores Man … sometimes called “hobbit”), and it may possibly have lived as recently as 12,000 years ago. Watch this space …
62 Gridiron VIPs : QBS
Quarterback (QB)
63 180-degree turn, in slang : UIE
Hang a “uey” or “uie”, make a u-turn, make a 180.
65 Fall Out Boy genre : EMO
Fall Out Boy is a rock band from Chicago that formed in 2001.
Read on, or …
… return to top of page
Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 Poindexter : DWEEB
6 Co. known for music compilations : K-TEL
10 Sign of things to come : OMEN
14 Scarlett in love with a Butler : O’HARA
15 Folk singer Guthrie : ARLO
16 Funeral rite heap : PYRE
17 __ spray: decongestant : NASAL
18 *Athletic brand for yoga class : LULULEMON
20 Iron mine output : ORE
21 Look creepily (at) : LEER
23 Get up : ARISE
24 *Beachgoer’s footwear : FLIP-FLOP
27 More, for Miguel : MAS
28 Smidgen : BIT
29 Like the simplest instructions : ONE-STEP
33 Portfolio item : ASSET
36 Having all one’s marbles : SANE
38 Rap sheet abbr. : AKA
39 *Stops smoking suddenly and entirely, say : QUITS COLD TURKEY
43 Coffee dispenser : URN
44 Cheers for matadors : OLES
45 Must-haves : NEEDS
46 Kabul native : AFGHANI
49 PC-to-PC system : LAN
50 Chair support : LEG
51 *Raid with a K-9 unit, perhaps : DRUG BUST
56 “Let __ be light” : THERE
58 “No __”: “Beats me” : IDEA
59 Whiskey barrel wood : OAK
61 Specialized unit seeking explosives … or what the ends of the answers to starred clues comprise? : BOMB SQUAD
64 Poke fun at : TEASE
66 Mine, in Montreal : A MOI
67 Chomp or nip : BITE
68 Like recycled bottles : EMPTY
69 Italy’s capital : ROME
70 Blacken on the grill : SEAR
71 Medicine amounts : DOSES
Down
1 “__ harm”: Hippocratic Oath principle : DO NO
2 Pier : WHARF
3 Canvas holder : EASEL
4 Historic period : ERA
5 Kids’ play boxes with plastic spheres : BALL PITS
6 Superman’s birth name : KAL-EL
7 Cape Cod town : TRURO
8 Building wing : ELL
9 Comical Costello : LOU
10 Verdi works : OPERAS
11 “I stand corrected” : MY MISTAKE
12 God with a bow : EROS
13 Hawaii’s state bird : NENE
19 Poor, as an excuse : LAME
22 Young salamander : EFT
25 “Dream on!” : I BET!
26 Lily pad habitats : PONDS
30 Ice hockey target : NET
31 __ out a living : EKED
32 Forks over : PAYS
33 Color akin to turquoise : AQUA
34 Steak : turf :: lobster : __ : SURF
35 Divorced female parent : SINGLE MOM
36 State of matter : SOLID
37 Part of IPA : ALE
40 Fast one, so to speak : CON
41 At full strength : UNABATED
42 Contact lens solution brand : RENU
47 Grammy-winning jazzman Hancock : HERBIE
48 Grows older : AGES
49 L, on clothes: Abbr. : LGE
52 Gaucho’s rope : RIATA
53 Milker’s handful : UDDER
54 Serialized daytime TV : SOAPS
55 Sample, as food : TASTE
56 Vanishing ski lift : T-BAR
57 __ sapiens : HOMO
60 They open doors : KEYS
62 Gridiron VIPs : QBS
63 180-degree turn, in slang : UIE
65 Fall Out Boy genre : EMO
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26 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 14 Jul 20, Tuesday”
Comments are closed.
2 dumb errors. Messed up on 63D. UEE instead of UIE. Left 67A as BETE instead of BITE. … UEY, UEE and UIE walked into a bar ….. They all did a 180 and left. Ha!
Never heard of LULU LEMON. My wife does Yoga so I’ll ask her.
Quick work with my pen and paper. About 12 minutes.
One write-over, ekes instead of EKED.
Later, saw I needs the Ds.
Never heard “ballpits” I got it on crosses. When I googled it, I realized that my son had played in one at McDs when he was a child. Just never heard anyone refer to one by name.
Evidently, the first of these pits was created in the 70s and became a huge hit.
Now I know!
One Natick Google: LULULEMON crosses KAL EL.
Did not know the Chucky Cheese thing was called a BALL PIT, and just as they’re closing down.
And T-BARS are vanishing? Just when I learned what they were.
I’m trying to imagine a crossword world, with URNs and ewers and etuis, and ARLO yelling OLE at the NENE in the OAK, and EROS, AKA Amor, LEERing at the O’HARA girl.
Don’t forget to bring your epee and Oreos and then go asea!
😜😜😜!
Very unchallenging puzzle with clues such as capital of Italy….. comic Costello…. L on clothes…. historic period … building wing… and divorced female parent. All that was missing was OTT and ORR!
One dumb error as I didn’t check my work when finished.
Typical me.
AFGHANI is the currency of Afghanistan. We were taught the people are Afghans.
I wondered about that, too. According to Wiktionary, the usage is “uncommon and deprecated by some style guides”:
https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/Afghani
But, it exists … 🙂.
6:05, no errors, no complaints.
10 minutes, no errors.
16:00 no errors…I didn’t bother with the theme as the puzzle was already finished…all the “never heard ofs” are again in one spot and cross each other i.e. 6&7D &6& 18A. It’s just paranoid me again.
Stay safe…now I am putting my tin foil hat on cause you never know.
I really need to get out!,!!!!
I was all set to challenge Bill and Glenn, but it took me longer to circle the ones
that I knew. So, I said my Serenity Prayer (never an active member) and went
on to something else. One error – 7D – could not find the town in Cape Cod in my
dictionary and didn’t think to Google it. I took issue with 46A; seems like AFGHANI
would be plural and the clue was singular. But, I will settle for one error.
Stay safe, everybody. Like I mentioned earlier, Louisiana residents are now mandated
to wear when inside public buildings, but it looks like everybody didn’t get the message!
39A is quitS cold turkey
Why do these puzzles always contain clues that require a knowledge of Spanish, French, Italian, etc.? DOES make it much, much harder. And why never any clues in Urdu?
It seems that it is a bonus to be multilingual when going through these puzzles, and it’s a crapshoot as to when you get to cash in the bonus, or if you have to rely on crossfills to help you out. There are French, German, Latin, Spanish and even Yiddish clues and fills from time to time. Also Christian, Jewish and Islamic references, too.
I don’t mind these, as long as they don’t lean too heavily on any one particular tongue or religious tradition.
Thanks, Roger, for catching that typo. All fixed now. I appreciate the help.
About 9 minutes, no errors. No issues, either, which is a rarity these days.
Note to Rich Norris – if you are going to continue editing crosswords perhaps you should learn how to correctly use the word “comprise” (61 across). This is the second puzzle of yours I’ve seen within a week in which the word was used incorrectly.
Separate things COMPRISE a collective thing. A collective thing IS COMPRISED OF separate things. A lemon, a flop, a turkey, and a bust COMPRISE a bomb squad. A bomb squad IS COMPRISED OF a lemon, a flop, a turkey, and a bust. Stowe’s clue, and Norris’s editing, were without fault.
Got Truro from watching Doc Martin.
I had no errors and finished under 30 min. Oh, don’t tell me it was an easy puzzle. Let me continue to believe I was just on my game today. You’ve burst my bubble!
5:01 5 errors! Breezed through carelessly, and didn’t realize two words were almost completely wrong. Also the cat is on my desk, asking for dinner.
I’ve learned bits and pieces of several languages, but I’ve never studied French or German except in crossword puzzles.
4:26, no errors.
Nice quick Tuesday for me; forgot to time, but about 15 minutes with no errors. I did have to change DRUGraid and SEre, when crosses no longer supported my original guesses.
re Fiat Lux is the motto of my Alma Mater UCSC, so I got that one right away.
re Urdu, as a a potential clue source – Having sold my honey to people from many cultures, I learned the transliteration of honey works out to “Shehad” from a Pakistani lady. Which works a little better than شہد