LA Times Crossword 11 Jun 23, Sunday

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Constructed by: Trent H. Evans
Edited by: Patti Varol

Today’s Theme: Let’s Do This!

Themed answers are common phrases with “DO” inserted:

  • 23A Finally send off that alumni check? : FACE THE DONATION (DO in “Face the Nation”)
  • 40A Bulletin forbidding residents from camping in the complex’s shared spaces? : CONDO TENT WARNING (DO in “content warning”)
  • 57A Bedtime message for Raggedy Ann? : AND TO A DOLL, A GOODNIGHT (DO in “and to all, a goodnight”)
  • 82A Salon job for a sunrise wedding? : UPDO AT THE CRACK OF DAWN (DO in “up at the crack of dawn”)
  • 99A Accusations of cheating at the Kennel Club agility competition? : DOG RACE UNDER FIRE (DO in “grace under fire”)
  • 119A Catchphrase for Earth lovers? : WE ADORE THE WORLD (DO in “We Are the World”)

Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers

Bill’s time: 12m 57s

Bill’s errors: 0

Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies

Across

5 NYC neighborhood with luxury boutiques : SOHO

The Manhattan neighborhood known today as SoHo was very fashionable in the early 1900s, but as the well-heeled started to move uptown the area became very run down and poorly maintained. Noted for the number of fires that erupted in derelict buildings, SoHo earned the nickname “Hell’s Hundred Acres”. The area was then zoned for manufacturing and became home to many sweatshops. In the mid-1900s artists started to move into open loft spaces and renovating old buildings as the lofts were ideal locations in which an artist could both live and work. In 1968, artists and others organized themselves so that they could legalize their residential use of an area zoned for manufacturing. The group they formed took its name from the name given to the area by the city’s Planning Commission i.e “South of Houston”. This was shortened from So-uth of Ho-uston to SoHo as in “SoHo Artists Association”, and the name stuck.

9 Bloviate : RANT

“To bloviate” is such a descriptive verb, one meaning “to discourse pompously”. “Bloviate” is mock-Latin and derived from “blow”.

18 Qatari monarch : EMIR

Qatar is a sovereign state in the Middle East occupying the Qatar Peninsula, itself located in the Arabian Peninsula. Qatar lies on the Persian Gulf and shares one land border, with Saudi Arabia to the south. Qatar has more oil and gas reserves per capita of population than any other country in the world. In 2010, Qatar had the fastest growing economy in the world, driven by the petrochemical industry.

19 Black suit : CLUBS

The suit in a deck of cards that we refer to as “clubs” comes from the standard French deck. In French, the suit is known as “trèfles” meaning “clovers”, as the club icon resembles a clover leaf. Our name “clubs” comes from the Italian-Spanish standard deck, in which the equivalent suit is “Bastoni”, meaning “batons”.

21 Beginning of a conclusion : ERGO …

“Ergo” is a Latin word meaning “hence, therefore”, and one that we absorbed directly into English.

23 Finally send off that alumni check? : FACE THE DONATION

An alumnus (plural “alumni”) is a graduate or former student of a school or college. The female form is “alumna” (plural “alumnae”). The term comes into English from Latin, in which an alumnus is a foster-son or pupil. “Alum” is an informal term used for either an alumna or alumnus.

26 Liechtenstein border river : RHINE

The river running through Europe that we know in English as the Rhine, is called “Rhein” in German, “Rhin” in French and “Rijn” in Dutch.

Liechtenstein is a tiny European country with an area of just over 61 square miles that is located in the Alps between Switzerland and Austria. It is one of only two doubly-landlocked nations in the world, the other being Uzbekistan. Liechtenstein has the highest gross domestic product per person in the world. The country is a winter sports haven attracting lots of visitors, and is also a tax haven with a strong financial center. There are actually more registered companies in Liechtenstein than there are citizens!

27 Ahi tuna cut : STEAK

Ahi tuna is also known as yellowfin tuna and is a popular fish for sushi and sashimi. However, due to overfishing, ahi tuna populations are at risk.

28 “Beowulf” translator Heaney : SEAMUS

Seamus Heaney is an Irish poet and writer. I like Heaney’s response when asked if there was any figure in popular culture who aroused interest in poetry and lyrics. 64-year-old Heaney answered:

There is this guy Eminem. He has created a sense of what is possible. He has sent a voltage around a generation. He has done this not just through his subversive attitude but also his verbal energy.

“Beowulf” is an old epic poem from England, although the story is set in Scandinavia. Beowulf fights a battle, defending the Danish King Hrothgar from the ferocious outcast Grendel. Hrothgar had built a great hall for his people in which they could celebrate; singing, dancing and drinking lots of mead. Grendel was angered by the carousing and attacked the hall, devouring many of the incumbent warriors as they slept. A bit of an extreme reaction to noisy neighbors I’d say …

31 Vodka drink, briefly : COSMO

Like so many famous cocktails, the actual origins of the cosmopolitan are disputed. It is a very nice drink, in my humble opinion. One of the standard recipes is 4 parts citrus vodka, 1.5 parts Cointreau, 1.5 parts lime juice and 3 parts cranberry juice.

36 Immeasurably long time : EON

Geologic time is divided into a number of units of varying lengths. These are, starting from the largest:

  • supereon
  • eon (also “aeon”)
  • era
  • period
  • epoch
  • age

37 Quick bite : NOSH

Our word “nosh” has been around since the late fifties, when it was imported from the Yiddish word “nashn” meaning “to nibble”. We use “nosh” as a noun that means “snack”, or as a verb meaning “to eat between meals”.

40 Bulletin forbidding residents from camping in the complex’s shared spaces? : CONDO TENT WARNING

The terms “condominium” and “apartment” tend to describe the same type of residential property, namely a private living space with facilities shared with others residing in the same building or complex. The difference is that a condominium is usually owned, and an apartment is rented. At least that’s how it is in the US. The word “condominium” comes from the Latin “com-” (together) and “dominum” (right of ownership).

46 Org. concerned with climate adaptation : EPA

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

47 Wine label word : CRU

“Cru” is a term used in the French wine industry that means “growth place”. So, “cru” is the name of the location where the grapes are grown, as opposed to the name of a specific vineyard. The terms “premier cru” and “grand cru” are also used, but the usage depends on the specific wine region. Generally it is a classification awarded to specific vineyards denoting their potential for producing great wines. “Grand cru” is reserved for the very best vineyards, with “premier cru” the level just below.

48 Oklahoma city : ENID

Enid, Oklahoma takes its name from the old railroad station around which the city developed. Back in 1889, that train stop was called Skeleton Station. An official who didn’t like the name changed it to Enid Station, using a character from Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “Idylls of the King”. Maybe if he hadn’t changed the name, the city of Enid would now be called Skeleton, Oklahoma! Enid has the nickname “Queen Wheat City” because it has a huge capacity for storing grain, the third largest grain storage capacity in the world.

50 Taylor-Joy of “Emma” : ANYA

Actress Anya Taylor-Joy had quite the international upbringing. She was born in Miami, and raised in Buenos Aires and then London. She is perhaps best known for playing the title character in the 2020 film adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Emma”, and the lead role in the Netflix miniseries “The Queen’s Gambit”.

The 2020 film “Emma” is a very entertaining adaptation of the 1815 novel of the same name by Jane Austen. Anya Taylor-Joy plays the title role, and musician/actor Johnny Flynn plays “Mr. Knightly”. Veteran actor Bill Nighy makes a welcome appearance as Emma’s father “Mr. Woodhouse”. I enjoyed this one …

51 Scully in Dodger Stadium’s street address : VIN

Vin Scully was a sportscaster known for calling Dodgers games since 1950, when the team was still located in Brooklyn. When Scully broadcast the 1953 World Series between the Yankees and the Dodgers, he became the youngest person ever to call a World Series game, at only 25 years of age. When the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1958, Scully went with them.

52 Natural dye : HENNA

Henna has been used for centuries as a dye, for leather and wool as well as hair and skin. In modern days, henna is often used for temporary tattoos.

56 Collectible for an animation buff : CEL

Animation cels are transparent sheets made of celluloid acetate that were used in traditional hand-drawn animation to create animated films. They were first introduced in the 1930s and were widely used in animation production until the late 1990s, when digital animation techniques began to dominate the industry.

57 Bedtime message for Raggedy Ann? : AND TO A DOLL, A GOODNIGHT

Raggedy Ann is a rag doll that was created by Johnny Gruelle in 1915 for his daughter, Marcella. He decided to name the doll by combining the titles of two poems by James Whitcomb Riley, “The Raggedy Man” and “Little Orphan Annie”. Gruelle introduced Raggedy Ann in a series of books three years later. Sadly, Marcella died at 13 years of age with her father blaming a smallpox vaccination she was given at school. Gruelle became very active in the movement against mass vaccination, for which Raggedy Ann became a symbol.

64 Umami enhancer, briefly : MSG

Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is the sodium salt of a naturally-occurring,non-essential amino acid called glutamic acid. It is used widely as a flavor enhancer, particularly in many Asian cuisines. Whether or not it is harmful seems to be still under debate. I say that something produced in a test tube shouldn’t be in our food …

Umami is one of the five basic tastes, along with sweet, sour, bitter and salty. “Umami” is a Japanese word used to describe “a pleasant savory taste”. Umami was proposed as a basic taste in 1908, but it wasn’t until the mid-1990s that the scientific community finally accepted it as such.

65 Podcaster Klein : EZRA

Ezra Klein is a journalist and blogger who writes for “The Washington Post”, “Bloomberg” and “MSNBC”. Klein’s contribution at “The Washington Post” is the most-read blog that the paper publishes.

67 Compose on the fly : AD-LIB

“Ad libitum” is a Latin phrase meaning “at one’s pleasure”. In common usage, the phrase is usually shortened to “ad-lib”. On the stage, the concept of an ad-lib is very familiar.

69 Snarky critic : HATER

“Snark” is a term that was coined by Lewis Carroll in his fabulous 1876 nonsense poem “The Hunting of the Snark”. Somehow, the term “snarky” came to mean “irritable, short-tempered” in the early 1900s, and from there “snark” became “sarcastic rhetoric” at the beginning of the 21st century.

70 Tostitos dip : SALSA

Tostitos are a brand of tortilla chips. If you’re a vegetarian, you might want to leave them on the supermarket shelf as Frito-Lay uses pork enzymes to “enhance” flavor.

78 Mobile platform since 2007 : IOS

“iOS” is what Apple now calls their mobile operating system. It was previously known as iPhone OS.

81 Twelve : NOON

Our word “noon”, meaning “midday”, comes from the Latin “nona hora” that translates as “ninth hour”. Back in ancient Rome, the “ninth hour” was three in the afternoon. Over the centuries, traditions such as church prayers and “midday” meals shifted from 3 p.m. to 12 p.m., and so “noon” became understood as 12 noon.

87 “OMG, enough!” : TMI!

Too much information (TMI)

89 Jeff’s wife on “Curb Your Enthusiasm” : SUSIE

Comedian and actress Susie Essman is perhaps best known for playing Susie Green on the comedy show “Curb Your Enthusiasm”. Essman is also a regular on “The View” and she is a good friend of the show’s co-host Joy Behar.

“Curb Your Enthusiasm” is an improv comedy show aired by HBO that was created and stars Larry David, the creator of “Seinfeld”. As an aside, Larry David sat a few feet from me at the next table in a Los Angeles restaurant a few years ago. I have such a huge claim to fame …

91 Dating word : ANNO

The Latin word for year is “annus” (plural “anni”). We often see it used in Latin phrases, but usually with a different spelling. In “anno Domini”, the “anno” is the ablative case of “annus” as the phrase means “in the year of the Lord”. Another example is “per annum”, in which “annum” is the accusative case as the literal translation of the phrase is “during the year”.

94 Mario Andretti’s twin brother : ALDO

Mario Andretti is a retired Italian American racing driver who was named US Driver of the Year in 1967, 1978 and 1984. Both of Mario’s sons, Michael and Jeff are successful auto racers, as well as Mario’s nephews, John and Adam Andretti. John and Adam are sons of Mario’s brother Aldo Andretti. Aldo also raced cars, but quit after a crash in 1969 that severely damaged his face. Aldo is Mario’s identical twin brother, but there is no resemblance after the reconstructive surgery necessitated by the accident.

98 __ fever : HAY

The common term “hay fever” describes a type of seasonal allergic rhinitis, inflammation of the nose due to an immune reaction to airborne allergens. The term “hay fever” is quite the misnomer. It is not usually caused by “hay”, and there is no “fever”.

103 Pickleball barriers : NETS

Pickleball is a sport invented in the 1960s that combines elements of tennis, table tennis and badminton. Originally marketed as a game for children to play in backyards, pickleball is now played on purpose-built courts by many, many adults, but mainly in North and South America.

105 Crib bear : TEDDY

The stuffed toy known as a teddy bear was introduced in the early 1900s and was named for President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt. The toy was inspired by a political cartoon that was drawn in 1902 showing President Roosevelt on a bear hunt and refusing to kill a black bear cub.

108 Fashion designer Paloma : PICASSO

Paloma Picasso is a fashion designer based in Paris. She is the youngest daughter of Spanish artist Pablo Picasso and French author and painter Françoise Gilot.

112 Bernadette of “Mozart in the Jungle” : PETERS

Bernadette Peters is perhaps best known as a Broadway actress, and in particular for her performances in works by Stephen Sondheim. Off the stage and screen, Peters was noted for her 4-year relationship with Steve Martin in the seventies.

If you want to read a fun book (almost an “exposé”) about life playing the oboe, you might try “Mozart in the Jungle” by oboist Blair Tindall. Amazon Studios adapted the book into a TV comedy-drama series that first aired in 2014.

118 Actor Elba who DJs as DJ Big Driis : IDRIS

Idris Elba is a British actor and DJ. He was born in London to a Sierra Leonean father and a Ghanaian mother. Elba’s breakthrough role came in 2002, when he was cast as Stringer Bell in the HBO series “The Wire”.

123 Téa of “Spanglish” : LEONI

Téa Leoni is an American actress. One of Leoni’s early parts was in the great film “A League of Their Own” (a minor role: Racine at first base). She also played the fiancée of Sam Malone from “Cheers” on the spin-off sitcom “Frasier”. A leading role on the big screen was opposite Adam Sandler in “Spanglish”. My favorite of her more prominent movie roles was as Jane in “Fun with Dick and Jane”. Leoni started playing the title role in the drama series “Madam Secretary” in 2014, and that’s a show I quite enjoy …

“Spanglish” is a 2004 comedy film starring Adam Sandler, Téa Leoni and Paz Vega. Vega plays a poor Mexican single mother who is hired as a housekeeper by a couple played by Sandler and Leoni. Hilarity ensues, I am told …

124 “__ & Stitch” : LILO

“Lilo & Stitch” was released by Disney in 2002. Compared to other Disney feature-length cartoons, “Lilo & Stitch” was relatively cheaply produced, using the voices of lesser-known actors. One interesting change had to take place in the storyline during production, when Lilo was meant to fly a Jumbo Jet through downtown Honolulu in one sequence. This was replaced with a sequence using a spaceship instead, as the producers were sensitive to public sentiment after the September 11 attacks.

126 Curiosity org. : NASA

There have been several rovers sent to Mars from Earth. The Soviet Union’s Mars 2 landed in 1971, and failed. Mars 3 landed the same year, and ceased operation just 20 seconds after landing. NASA’s Sojourner landed in 1997 (what a great day that was!) and operated from July through September. The British rover Beagle 2 was lost six days before its scheduled entry into the Martian atmosphere. NASA’s Spirit landed in 2004, and operated successfully for over six years before getting trapped in sand and eventually ceasing to communicate. NASA’s Opportunity also landed in 2004, and operated for over fourteen years. And then NASA’s Curiosity made a spectacular, hi-tech landing in 2012 and is continuing to explore the planet today. Based on the Curiosity design, NASA’s Perseverance rover landed in 2021, along with the Mars helicopter named Ingenuity. The China National Space Administration landed its first rover, named Zhurong (“Rover” in English), five months after Perseverance started its mission on the planet.

128 Beyoncé’s “Brown __ Girl” : SKIN

“Brown Skin Girl” is a 2019 recording by Beyoncé that features Blue Ivy Carter, Beyoncé’s daughter. The song was used in the soundtrack that Beyoncé created for the 2019 remake of Disney’s “The Lion King”.

129 Genre for BTS and Blackpink : K-POP

K-pop (Korean pop) is a genre of music from South Korea that emerged in the early nineties.

BTS is a boy band from South Korea with seven members. The initialism “BTS” stands for the phrase “Bangtan Sonyeondan”, which translates literally as “Bulletproof Boy Scouts”. BTS is the best-selling musical act in the history of South Korea.

Blackpink is a girl group from South Korea that was formed in 2016. By all accounts, Blackpink has gained more international success than any other female Korean act.

Down

1 Some whistle blowers : REFS

Back in the early 17th century, a referee was someone who examined patent applications. We started using the same term for a person presiding over a sporting event in the 1820s. “Referee” is a derivative of the verb “to refer”, and literally describes someone who has the authority to make a decision by “referring” to a book, archive etc.

2 Part of a Latin trio : AMAT

“Amo, amas, amat” translates from Latin as “I love, you love, he/she/it loves”.

5 TCU or UGA : SCH

Texas Christian University (TCU) is a private school in Fort Worth, Texas. TCU used to be called AddRan Male & Female, named after AddRan Clark, the son of Addison Clark who died at the age of 3-years-old from diphtheria. Poor young AddRan was named after his father and his brother, Addison and Randolph.

The University of Georgia (UGA) is primarily located in Athens, Georgia. UGA was founded in 1785 and was the nation’s first state-chartered university. UGA’s sports teams are called the Georgia Bulldogs (sometimes just “Dawgs”).

6 Fútbol cheer : OLE!

In Spanish, a “fútbol” (football, soccer) supporter might shout “olé!” (bravo!).

7 “Sully” river : HUDSON

The Hudson River flows through eastern New York State from Henderson Lake in the Adirondacks to the Port of New York and New Jersey. The river is named for the English explorer Henry Hudson, who navigated the waterway in 1609.

“Sully” is a 2016 film directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Tom Hanks in the title role. The movie is based on the autobiography “Highest Duty” by Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger, the captain of US Airways Flight 1549 that crash-landed in the Hudson River in 2009. Although the film covers the crash and miraculous escape of all aboard, it is more about the investigation that seemed intent on proving that the accident was caused by pilot error. Sully managed to clear his name. He was listed second on “Time” magazine’s list of the “Top 100 Most Influential Heroes and Icons of 2009”, right after Michelle Obama.

8 Bassoon kin : OBOE

We’ve all probably heard the phrase “‘tis an ill wind that blows nobody any good”. The poet Ogden Nash made a “punny” statement about the oboe, calling the instrument “an ill wind nobody blows good”. I must say though, I disagree …

Our modern bassoon first appeared in the 1800s and has had a place in the concert orchestra ever since.

9 Adjusted a trumpet slide again, say : RETUNED

We get our word “trumpet”, describing the brass instrument, from the Old French word “trompe”. A “trompe” was a long, tube-like instrument, and a “trompette” was a smaller version.

11 The Carter Center, e.g., briefly : NGO

Non-governmental organization (NGO)

The Carter Center was founded by President Jimmy Carter in 1982, not long after he lost the 1980 US presidential election. The center focuses on advancing human rights and alleviating human suffering around the world. It was the work that President Carter did through the Carter Center that resulted in him being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

12 Actress Collette : TONI

Toni Collette is a marvelous actress from Australia who really started to garner the public’s attention playing the title role in the 1994 film “Muriel’s Wedding”. She went on to take major roles in films like “Emma” (1996), “The Sixth Sense” (1999), “About a Boy” (2002), all of which are favorites of mine. Collette also played the lead in the excellent Showtime comedy-drama “United States of Tara”.

13 __ trick : PARLOR

Back in the early 13th century, a “parlur” was a window through which someone could confess to a priest, and also a room in a monastery that was used by the monks for conversations with visitors. The term “parlur” arose from the French “parler” meaning “to speak”. Today, we sit in the “parlor” to enjoy our “conversations”.

14 2023 Super Bowl halftime performer : RIHANNA

Singer Rihanna was born and grew up on the island of Barbados and moved to the US when she was 16-years-old to pursue a singing career. “Rihanna” is her stage name, as she was born Robyn Rihanna Fenty. The name “Rihanna” is derived from the Welsh name “Rhiannon”. And, Rihanna sometimes goes by the nickname “RiRi”, which is also the name of her line of beauty products.

20 Like some Tupperware lids : SNAP-ON

Back in the 1930s, Earl Tupper was working at the DuPont Chemical Company, and from DuPont obtained inflexible pieces of polyethylene slag. Tupper purified the slag and shaped it into unbreakable containers. He added airtight lids with a “burping seal” that provided tight seals similar to that provided by the lids on paint cans. He called his new product Tupperware.

24 Ring decision, briefly : TKO

Technical knockout (TKO)

25 Prized violin : AMATI

The first of the Amati family to make violins was Andrea Amati, who lived in the 14th century. He was succeeded by his sons Antonio and Girolamo. In turn, the two brothers were succeeded by Girolamo’s son Nicolo. Nicolo had a few students who achieved fame making musical instruments as well. One was his own son, Girolamo, and another was the famed Antonio Stradivari.

35 Broadcast captioner, for short : STENO

Stenography is the process of writing in shorthand. The term comes from the Greek “steno” (narrow) and “graphe” (writing). A stenographer might be a court reporter, or a person provided captions accompanying a live television broadcast.

37 Driest U.S. state : NEVADA

The driest state in the Union is Nevada, if one considers average precipitation for the whole year. When considering seasonal precipitation, the driest state in the winter is North Dakota, and in the summer is California.

39 Teva product : SANDAL

Teva is a brand of sandal marketed as a sport sandal. The first design was the creation of a river guide working the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. The design was patented in 1987.

44 No, to Nabokov : NYET

Vladimir Nabokov was a Russian-American novelist who achieved international recognition only after he moved to the US and started to write in English. His most famous work has to be the 1995 novel “Lolita”. As well devoting time to writing, Nabokov had quite the reputation as a composer of chess problems, and as a lepidopterist. In fact, the butterfly genus Nabokovia was named in his honor.

47 Comic Margaret : CHO

Margaret Cho is a Korean-American comedian and actress who was born in San Francisco in 1968. As well as performing as a comedian, Cho has also had a successful acting career, appearing in films such as “Face/Off,” “Bam Bam and Celeste,” and “All About Steve,” as well as TV shows such as “Drop Dead Diva” and “30 Rock.”

53 Eggy drink : NOG

It’s not really clear where the term “nog” (as in “eggnog”) comes from although it might derive from the word “noggin”, which was originally a small wooden cup that was long associated with alcoholic drinks.

55 Some Korean cars : KIAS

Kia Motors is the second-largest manufacturer of cars in South Korea, behind Hyundai (and Hyundai is a part owner in Kia now). Kia was founded in 1944 as a manufacturer of bicycle parts, and did indeed produce Korea’s first domestic bicycle. The company’s original name was Kyungsung Precision Industry, with the Kia name introduced in 1952.

58 Simple chord : TRIAD

A triad is a group of three and, specifically in music, a chord made up of three notes.

60 Native Mexican : AZTEC

The Aztec people of Central America dominated the region in the 14th – 16th centuries. Two traits of the Aztec people are oft cited today. They built some magnificent pyramids, and they also engaged in human sacrifice. The two traits were linked in a way … for the consecration of the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan, 84,400 prisoners were sacrificed over a period of four days.

61 Oscar winner Garson : GREER

Greer Garson was a British actress who made a name for herself in Hollywood films in the 1940s. One of Garson’s most famous roles was playing the title character in the 1942 film “Mrs. Miniver”, starring alongside Walter Pidgeon. Garson married a much younger man in 1943, actor Richard Ney who played her son in “Mrs. Miniver”. That role earned her an appearance in the “Guinness Book of World Records” for having given the longest Oscar speech ever, at 5½ minutes. After that speech, the producers of the Academy Awards instituted a time limit.

69 Kermit’s greeting : HI-HO

Kermit has to be the most readily recognized puppet character created by the late great Jim Henson. Henson came up with Kermit way back in 1955 when he appeared on a puppet show called “Sam and Friends” that aired in Washington, D.C. Kermit is loved so much that he even has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

75 Royal digs : PALACES

Our word “palace” ultimately comes from the name of Rome’s Palatine Hill, “Mons Palatinus” in Latin. The original “palace” was the house of Augustus Caesar, which stood on the Palatine Hill.

76 Thespian’s domain : STAGE

A thespian is an actor. The term “thespian” derives from the name of the Greek poet of the 6th century Thespis, who is known as the father of Greek tragedy.

78 Hosp. area : ICU

An intensive care unit (ICU) is found in a hospital (hosp.).

80 Evening affair : SOIREE

“Soir” is the French word for “evening” and a soirée is an evening party. The French word “soirée” has an acute accent over the first “e”, but we tend to drop this when using the word in English.

83 __-pong : PING

Ping-Pong is called table tennis in the UK, where the sport originated in the 1880s. Table tennis started as an after-dinner activity among the elite, and was called “wiff-waff”. To play the game, books were stacked in the center of a table as a “net”, two more books served as “”rackets” and the ball used was actually a golf ball. The game evolved over time with the rackets being upgraded to the lids of cigar boxes and the ball becoming a champagne cork (how snooty is that?). Eventually the game was produced commercially, and the sound of the ball hitting the racket was deemed to be a “ping” and a “pong”, giving the sport its alternative name. The name “Ping-Pong” was trademarked in Britain in 1901, and eventually sold to Parker Brothers in the US.

84 Fly-fishing target, perhaps : TROUT

Trout are freshwater fish that are closely related to char and salmon. Most trout live exclusively in freshwater lakes and rivers, but a few species live at sea and return to freshwater to spawn.

96 Laundromat array : DRYERS

If you go looking for a laundromat in the UK or Ireland, folks will likely know what you’re talking about. However, the local name for such a facility is “launderette” or sometimes “laundrette”.

101 Kathmandu native : NEPALI

Although Kathmandu (sometimes “Katmandu”) is the capital city of the lofty nation of Nepal, it sits in a bowl-shaped valley at an elevation of only 4,600 ft. Air pollution is a huge problem in the city. Industry and residents launch a lot of smog into the air, and given the surrounding geography and climate, any pollution blown away during the day tends to fall back into the valley at night.

103 Stockings : NYLONS

The polymer known as “nylon” was developed by Dupont in the 1930s. The first application for the new product was as bristles in toothbrushes, in 1938. The second application became more famous. The first stockings made from nylon were produced in 1940, and since then stockings have been known as “nylons”. The polymer was developed as a replacement for silk, which was in short supply during WWII.

107 __ Jones : DOW

Dow Jones & Company was founded as a publishing house in 1882 by three newspaper reporters, Charles Dow, Edward Jones and Charles Bergstresser. Today, the company’s most famous publication has to be “The Wall Street Journal”. In 1884, Charles Dow started reporting the average dollar value of the stock of eleven companies, an index which spawned a whole host of metrics that carry the Dow Jones name to this day. The most famous of these metrics is the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), also known as “the Dow 30” or simply “the Dow”.

108 Tablet : PILL

“Pill” is the name given to small, ball-like fuzz found on woolen garments. The term comes from the Latin “pilula” meaning “little ball”, which also gives us the word “pill” that is used for a tablet of medicine.

111 Birds capable of 270° head turns : OWLS

Owls have 14 vertebrae in their necks (compared to our 7). The extra bones in the neck, along with other adaptations allow owls to rotate the head and neck about 270 degrees.

116 To whom Rick says, “We’ll always have Paris” : ILSA

Rick Blaine and Ilsa Lund were played by Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in the 1942 movie “Casablanca”. I love the words of one critic describing the chemistry between Bogart and Bergman in this film: “She paints his face with her eyes”. Wow …

117 Dutch cheese : EDAM

Edam cheese takes its name from the Dutch town of Edam in North Holland. The cheese is famous for its coating of red paraffin wax, a layer of protection that helps Edam travel well and prevents spoiling. You might occasionally come across an Edam cheese that is coated in black wax. The black color indicates that the underlying cheese has been aged for a minimum of 17 weeks.

120 Apt. feature, in ads : EIK

Eat-in kitchen (EIK)

121 Med. plan option : HMO

Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)

122 Psychic ability : ESP

Extrasensory perception (ESP)

Complete List of Clues/Answers

Across

1 Boat launch aid : RAMP
5 NYC neighborhood with luxury boutiques : SOHO
9 Bloviate : RANT
13 Top-shelf : PRIMO
18 Qatari monarch : EMIR
19 Black suit : CLUBS
21 Beginning of a conclusion : ERGO …
22 Prepared to putt : AIMED
23 Finally send off that alumni check? : FACE THE DONATION
26 Liechtenstein border river : RHINE
27 Ahi tuna cut : STEAK
28 “Beowulf” translator Heaney : SEAMUS
29 Cruise stops : ISLANDS
31 Vodka drink, briefly : COSMO
34 Glass sheets : PANES
36 Immeasurably long time : EON
37 Quick bite : NOSH
40 Bulletin forbidding residents from camping in the complex’s shared spaces? : CONDO TENT WARNING
46 Org. concerned with climate adaptation : EPA
47 Wine label word : CRU
48 Oklahoma city : ENID
49 Wormlike fish : EEL
50 Taylor-Joy of “Emma” : ANYA
51 Scully in Dodger Stadium’s street address : VIN
52 Natural dye : HENNA
54 Be stealthy : SNEAK
56 Collectible for an animation buff : CEL
57 Bedtime message for Raggedy Ann? : AND TO A DOLL, A GOODNIGHT
63 Letter opener : DEAR …
64 Umami enhancer, briefly : MSG
65 Podcaster Klein : EZRA
66 Lead the cast : STAR
67 Compose on the fly : AD-LIB
69 Snarky critic : HATER
70 Tostitos dip : SALSA
74 Mountains where the 26-Across rises : ALPS
77 “Got it” : I SEE
78 Mobile platform since 2007 : IOS
81 Twelve : NOON
82 Salon job for a sunrise wedding? : UPDO AT THE CRACK OF DAWN
87 “OMG, enough!” : TMI!
88 Spanish “Of course” : CLARO
89 Jeff’s wife on “Curb Your Enthusiasm” : SUSIE
90 E’en if : THO’
91 Dating word : ANNO
93 Previously : AGO
94 Mario Andretti’s twin brother : ALDO
97 Coffee server : URN
98 __ fever : HAY
99 Accusations of cheating at the Kennel Club agility competition? : DOG RACE UNDER FIRE
103 Pickleball barriers : NETS
104 Expected : DUE
105 Crib bear : TEDDY
106 Attention-starved : NEEDY
108 Fashion designer Paloma : PICASSO
112 Bernadette of “Mozart in the Jungle” : PETERS
114 Many a song played at a class reunion : OLDIE
118 Actor Elba who DJs as DJ Big Driis : IDRIS
119 Catchphrase for Earth lovers? : WE ADORE THE WORLD
123 Téa of “Spanglish” : LEONI
124 “__ & Stitch” : LILO
125 Appears to be : SEEMS
126 Curiosity org. : NASA
127 Come to an end, in a way : LAPSE
128 Beyoncé’s “Brown __ Girl” : SKIN
129 Genre for BTS and Blackpink : K-POP
130 Went for a dip : SWAM

Down

1 Some whistle blowers : REFS
2 Part of a Latin trio : AMAT
3 Furry scurriers : MICE
4 “Amen!” : PREACH!
5 TCU or UGA : SCH
6 Fútbol cheer : OLE!
7 “Sully” river : HUDSON
8 Bassoon kin : OBOE
9 Adjusted a trumpet slide again, say : RETUNED
10 Out of bed : ARISEN
11 The Carter Center, e.g., briefly : NGO
12 Actress Collette : TONI
13 __ trick : PARLOR
14 2023 Super Bowl halftime performer : RIHANNA
15 “You’ve got my support!” : I’M IN!
16 Patch up : MEND
17 Artistic tributes : ODES
20 Like some Tupperware lids : SNAP-ON
24 Ring decision, briefly : TKO
25 Prized violin : AMATI
30 Deck application : SEALANT
32 Real riot : SCREAM
33 Small hills : MOUNDS
35 Broadcast captioner, for short : STENO
37 Driest U.S. state : NEVADA
38 Shared views : OPINED
39 Teva product : SANDAL
41 “Sold!” : DEAL!
42 Green invaders : WEEDS
43 Give : __ :: take : mile : INCH
44 No, to Nabokov : NYET
45 Miss : GAL
47 Comic Margaret : CHO
53 Eggy drink : NOG
54 Skyrocket : SOAR
55 Some Korean cars : KIAS
58 Simple chord : TRIAD
59 Rental contract : LEASE
60 Native Mexican : AZTEC
61 Oscar winner Garson : GREER
62 Thou : GRAND
68 Like-minded group : BLOC
69 Kermit’s greeting : HI-HO
71 Abhor : LOATHE
72 “Yeah, and?” : SO WHAT?
73 Pesters : ANNOYS
75 Royal digs : PALACES
76 Thespian’s domain : STAGE
78 Hosp. area : ICU
79 “If you say so” : OK, SURE
80 Evening affair : SOIREE
82 “Uh, I doubt that” : UM, NO
83 __-pong : PING
84 Fly-fishing target, perhaps : TROUT
85 Starting on : AS OF
86 Marshy area : FEN
87 Bit : TAD
92 Makes a minister : ORDAINS
94 Constructed a new wing, say : ADDED ON
95 Brought about : LED TO
96 Laundromat array : DRYERS
100 “G’day!” sayer : AUSSIE!
101 Kathmandu native : NEPALI
102 Synchronized, like a marching band : IN STEP
103 Stockings : NYLONS
107 __ Jones : DOW
108 Tablet : PILL
109 Think piece? : IDEA
110 Cut down to size : CROP
111 Birds capable of 270° head turns : OWLS
113 Raise a big stink? : REEK
115 Make faces, say : DRAW
116 To whom Rick says, “We’ll always have Paris” : ILSA
117 Dutch cheese : EDAM
120 Apt. feature, in ads : EIK
121 Med. plan option : HMO
122 Psychic ability : ESP

17 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 11 Jun 23, Sunday”

  1. Pretty straight forward. Just a matter of slogging through.

    Lot of ink smears in NE corner. SEINE to RHINE, ARIANNA to RHIANNA to RIHANNA,..

    I had a GI JOE doll when I was little. Wasn’t cool when I got into the fifth grade. Then when I retired from military, got a GI Joe doll! Go figure.

  2. I know what an eat-in kitchen is, but I’ve never seen it abbreviated as EIK. Maybe because I haven’t rented an apartment since sometime in the 1970s.

    1. EIK looks like something that was left over and the setter needed a clue that would work
      A Sunday puzzle in under an hour with no errors. Yay me👍👍
      Stay safe😀

  3. Very clever and enjoyable on a gloomy Sunday morning with a side of coffee and Miles Davis. We Adore the World for the win.

  4. Clever and enjoyable on a gloomy Sunday morning with a side of coffee and Miles Davis. We Adore the World for the win!

  5. Rats! Almost 100% but stalled on EIK ‘cuz I never heard of it and didn’t know LILO. As usual, too many names but otherwise a good ‘un and a good theme, which I got pretty early on but mistakenly thought all the answers would be somehow tied to shows of one type or another. When I got over that obstacle, everything (well, almost everything) fell into place.

  6. 17 mins, 33 seconds (one second longer than yesterday!) and I needed Check Grid to ferret out 8 “misspellings” brought about by the usual stupid punnery in the theme answers.

    The “cute” really gets tiresome.

  7. Watching the morning news shows and doing a crossword leads to a sleek 1’55” completion time. The epiphany at realizing what the theme was led to getting two of the long answers. Alas, only ‘Check grid’ could save me from myself and get the banner.

  8. I have a question about Saturday’s puzzle. (I’m assuming no one but me looks back at previous puzzle comments.) 13D clue is “Charity concert, perhaps”. Answer is “free show”. Don’t concert-goers PAY and the proceeds go to charity? Silly question, just wondering.

    1. @Gail – could be a show with donations recommended (like in a park or other open venue).

  9. No look ups, no errors. Connect the dots
    puzzle for the most part. Got the clever/
    annoying theme early. I love how they ask
    questions like “Podcaster Klein” like it’s
    common knowledge….

  10. My (now late) mother, who hadn’t flown on a commercial airline since the mid-1970’s, swore that she would fly on any plane, to any destination, as long as the pilot was one Chesley Burnett “Sully” Sullenberger III!

  11. No errors or lookups, but had a hard time with this one anyway. When it
    was completed I still didn’t know what “EIK” meant, but that’s what I
    put down. Pretty clever theme and it helped to know about the inserted
    ‘DO’…

  12. 27:42 – no errors or lookups. False starts: PRIME>PRIMO, MAYHEM>SCREAM, MET>DUE, CLOSE>LAPSE.

    Pretty clever theme where at least some of the themed answers apply to the clue with and without the “do.”

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