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Constructed by: Dan Schoenholz
Edited by: Patti Varol
Today’s Reveal Answer: Flip a Coin
Themed answers are in the down-direction. Each includes a “COIN” as a hidden word, but FLIPPED in the up-direction:
- 35D Decide by calling heads or tails, and an apt title for this puzzle : FLIP A COIN
- 3D Fix for distressed genes? : DNA REPAIR (hiding “RAND” flipped)
- 7D Carrier that makes short hops : REGIONAL AIRLINE (hiding “RIAL” flipped)
- 9D Source of information for vacation planners : TRAVEL BUREAU (hiding “RUBLE” flipped)
- 21D Reaction to a chill or a fright, to Brits : GOOSE PIMPLES (hiding “PESO” flipped)
Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers
Want to discuss the puzzle? Then …
… leave a comment
Bill’s time: 6m 25s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
9 British streetcars : TRAMS
Trams were a common form of transport in London starting with horse-drawn versions in 1860. Trams were gradually replaced by diesel buses after WWII, with the last tram running in 1952. Even though the trams disappeared in the early fifties, many of the rails that carried the trams remained in some streets for many years afterwards (I remember them well as a child). A new generation of tram, a so-called light-rail system, was introduced in London in 2000.
14 Forearm bone : ULNA
The radius and ulna are bones in the forearm. If you hold the palm of your hand up in front of you, the radius is the bone on the “thumb-side” of the arm, and the ulna is the bone on the “pinky-side”.
16 Morocco’s capital : RABAT
Rabat is the capital city of the Kingdom of Morocco. After WWII, the United States maintained a major Air Force Base in Rabat, part of Strategic Air Command (SAC). Responding to pressure from the Moroccan government of King Mohammed V, the USAF pulled out in 1963.
20 Bit of rosemary : SPRIG
The herb known as rosemary is reputed to improve the memory. As such, rosemary has been used as a symbol of remembrance, especially in Europe and Australia. For example, mourners might throw sprigs of rosemary into graves, symbolically remembering the dead. The character Ophelia in William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” utters the line “There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance”. The name of the herb comes from the Latin “ros marinus” which means “dew of the sea”. The idea is that rosemary can in fact grow in some arid locations with only the moisture that is carried by a sea breeze.
25 Nabisco brand : OREO
If you take a close look at the embossed design on the front and back of an Oreo cookie, you’ll spot the main elements of the Nabisco logo. Those elements are an oval with a cross on top, a cross with two bars. Usually the company name “Nabisco” is inside the oval, but for the cookie it’s the brand name “Oreo”. The current embossed design was introduced in 1952.
30 Nabisco brand : NILLA
The National Biscuit Company was formed in 1898 with the merger of three existing bakery businesses. The company name today is “Nabisco”, an abbreviated form of “National Biscuit Company”.
34 Many an Omani : ARAB
Oman lies on the southeast coast of the Arabian Peninsula and is neighbored by the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. Oman is a monarchy, and the official name of the state is the Sultanate of Oman. All of the country’s legislative, executive and judiciary power resides with the hereditary sultan.
35 Vaccine-approving org. : FDA
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has its roots in the Division of Chemistry (later “Bureau of Chemistry”) that was part of the US Department of Agriculture. President Theodore Roosevelt gave responsibility for examination of food and drugs to the Bureau of Chemistry with the signing of the Pure Food and Drug Act. The Bureau’s name was changed to the Food, Drug and Insecticide Organization in 1927, and to the Food and Drug Administration in 1930.
40 Like some monuments at night : UPLIT
The term “monument” can describe a stone or building erected in remembrance. Our word comes directly from the Latin “monumentum”, which describes the same thing. In turn, “monumentum” comes from the Latin “monere” meaning “to remind”. Monuments are built to remind us of some person or event.
42 Listener-supported news source : NPR
National Public Radio (now just called “NPR”) was established in 1970 after President Johnson signed into law the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967. The station’s first broadcast took place in April of 1971, coverage of the US Senate hearings on the Vietnam War. The intent of the act was to provide funding for radio and television broadcasting that wasn’t simply driven by profit. As a longtime fan of the state-funded BBC in the UK, I’d have to agree with that intent …
46 Red Sea peninsula : SINAI
The Sinai Peninsula is in the eastern part of Egypt, and is a triangular landform bounded by the Mediterranean to the north and the Red Sea to the south. It is the only part of Egypt that lies in Asia as opposed to Africa. The eastern land border of the peninsula is shared with Israel, and Israel occupied the Sinai during the 1956 Suez Crisis and the Six-Day War of 1967.
48 “__ and Punishment” : CRIME
“Crime and Punishment” is one of the two most famous novels by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky, the other being “The Brothers Karamazov”.
50 Alabama-born activist Parks : ROSA
Rosa Parks was one of a cadre of brave women in days gone by who refused to give up their seats on a bus to white women. It was the stand taken by Rosa Parks on December 1, 1955 that sparked the Montgomery, Alabama Bus Boycott. President Clinton presented Ms. Parks with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996. When she died in 2005, Rosa Parks became the first ever woman to have her body lie in honor in the US Capitol Rotunda.
57 Open, as toothpaste : UNCAP
The first toothpaste in a tube was introduced by Johnson & Johnson, in 1889. Back then, toothpaste tubes were made from tin, zinc or lead.
59 Gem from an oyster : PEARL
Pearls form in oysters because of a reaction that is similar to an immune system response in higher animals. The pearl is formed as the oysters lay down successive layers of calcium carbonate around some microscopic foreign body that has penetrated the shell.
60 Kristen of “Bridesmaids” : WIIG
Kristen Wiig is a comic actress who appears on “Saturday Night Live”. She also made an appearance on the first season of Spike TV’s quirky “The Joe Schmo Show”, playing “Dr. Pat”. More recently, she co-wrote and starred in the 2011 hit film “Bridesmaids”, and co-starred in the 2016 reboot of “Ghostbusters”.
“Bridesmaids” is a 2011 comedy movie co-written by and starring Kristen Wiig. I wasn’t crazy about this film until Chris O’Dowd turned up as a traffic cop. Wiig and O’Dowd were great together, I thought. Pity about the rest of the movie …
62 Move like sap : OOZE
The sap of a plant can be broadly divided into phloem sap and xylem sap. The phloem is the tissue that transports sugars made by photosynthesis from the leaves to the parts of the plant needing those sugars. The sugary solution flowing through the phloem is the phloem sap. The xylem is the tissue that transports water and other nutrients from the roots to the rest of the plant. The watery solution flowing through the xylem is the xylem sap.
63 Close-knit group : CADRE
A cadre is most commonly a group of experienced personnel at the core of a larger organization that the small group trains or heavily influences. “Cadre” is a French word meaning “frame”. We use it in the sense that a cadre is a group that provides a “framework” for the larger organization.
67 “We __ to be at an impasse” : SEEM
“Impasse” is a French word describing a blind alley or an impassable road, and we use the term to mean “stalemate”.
68 Puts the kibosh on : ENDS
A kibosh is something that constrains or checks. “Kibosh” looks like a Yiddish word but it isn’t, and is more likely English slang from the early 1800s.
Down
3 Fix for distressed genes? : DNA REPAIR (hiding “RAND” flipped)
The DNA in our cells gets damaged thousands of times every day. Damaged DNA is a serious problem, as it is DNA that bears the instructions for making the proteins that are essential to our bodies. Fortunately, there are several processes that a cell uses to repair that DNA. Those processes rely on a cadre of specific enzymes that repair specific kinds of damage. The damage can occur during normal use of DNA, in replication for example. DNA damage also results from environmental factors, such as exposure to UV light or chemicals in cigarettes. Damaged DNA that is not repaired can lead to development of cancerous tumors.
5 Toward the rudder : AFT
A rudder is usually a flat sheet of wood or metal located at the stern of a boat, and under the waterline. The rudder is attached to a rudder post, which rotates to change the orientation of the rudder hence steering the boat. That rotation of the rudder post can be achieved by pulling or pushing a lever called a tiller, which is located at the top of the post.
6 “Jerry Maguire” director Cameron : CROWE
Cameron Crowe was a contributing editor for “Rolling Stone” magazine before he moved into the world of film, becoming an actor, producer, director and screenwriter. Crowe wrote “Fast Times at Ridgemont High”, and wrote and directed “Say Anything…” and the huge hit “Jerry Maguire”. He also wrote and directed the semi-autobiographical movie “Almost Famous”, which was released in 2000.
“Jerry Maguire” is a 1996 film starring Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding, Jr. and Renée Zellweger. The title character is played by Cruise, and is a sports agent. There are several lines oft quoted from “Jerry Maguire” including:
- “Show me the money!”
- “You complete me”
- “You had me at ‘hello’”
7 Carrier that makes short hops : REGIONAL AIRLINE (hiding “RIAL” flipped)
The rial is the currency of Iran (as well as Yemen, Oman and Tunisia). Generally, there are 1,000 baisa in one rial.
8 Elite British boarding school : ETON
The world-famous Eton College is just a brisk walk from Windsor Castle, which itself is just outside London. Eton is noted for producing many British leaders, including prime ministers David Cameron and Boris Johnson. The list of Old Etonians also includes Princes William and Harry, the Duke of Wellington and George Orwell. Author Ian Fleming was also an Eton alumnus, as was Fleming’s iconic character James Bond, although 007 was expelled by the school.
9 Source of information for vacation planners : TRAVEL BUREAU (hiding “RUBLE” flipped)
The ruble (also “rouble”) is the unit of currency in Russia, as well as in several other countries in the former Soviet Union. One ruble is divided into one hundred kopecks (also “kopeks”).
10 Best Western rival : RAMADA
The Ramada Inn hotel chain takes its name from the Spanish word for a shady resting place. A ramada is a shelter with a roof and no walls, mainly found in the American southwest. Nowadays a ramada can be temporary or permanent, but originally ramadas were makeshift shelters constructed by aboriginal Indians from branches or bushes.
12 “The Wire” drug lord Stanfield : MARLO
Actor Jamie Hector is best known for playing gangster Marlo Stanfield on “The Wire”, and Detective Jerry Edgar on “Bosch”.
13 Editor’s “Actually, don’t cut that” : STET
“Stet” is a Latin word meaning “let it stand”. In editorial work, the typesetter is instructed to disregard any change previously marked by writing the word “stet” and then underscoring that change with a line of dots or dashes.
21 Reaction to a chill or a fright, to Brits : GOOSE PIMPLES (hiding “PESO” flipped)
The terms “goose bumps” and “goose flesh” come from the fact that skin which is cold can look like the flesh of a plucked goose. On the other side of the Atlantic, the term “goose pimples” was used to describe the same phenomenon. The influence of North American TV and movies is showing though, as “goose bumps” is more common these days.
23 Fitzgerald of jazz : ELLA
Ella Fitzgerald, the “First Lady of Song”, made her real stage debut at the Apollo Theater in Harlem on Amatuer Night when she was just 17 years old. She had intended to perform a dance routine, but decided to sing instead after seeing a superior dance act. She won the Amatuer Night competition.
26 Pastrami on __ : RYE
In the US, pastrami was originally called “pastrama”, and was a dish brought to America by Jewish immigrants from Romania in the second half of the nineteenth century. The original name may have evolved from the Turkish word “pastirma” meaning “pressed”. “Pastrama” likely morphed into “pastrami” influenced by the name of the Italian sausage called salami.
32 “Erin Burnett OutFront” channel : CNN
Erin Burnett is a television journalist and the host of her own show on CNN called “Erin Burnett OutFront”. Apparently Burnett also used to show up occasionally as advisor to Donald Trump on “The Celebrity Apprentice”.
35 Decide by calling heads or tails, and an apt title for this puzzle : FLIP A COIN
The two sides of a coin are known as the “obverse” and the “reverse”. The obverse is commonly referred to as “heads”, as it often depicts someone’s head. The reverse is commonly called “tails”, as it is the opposite of “heads”.
39 Hoppy brew, briefly : IPA
The foodstuff that we call “hops” are actually the female flowers of the hop plant. The main use of hops is to add flavor to beer. The town in which I used to live here in California was once home to the largest hop farm in the world. Most of the harvested hops were exported all the way to the breweries of London, where they could fetch the best price.
41 Cooking spray brand : PAM
PAM cooking spray was introduced in 1961 by Leon Rubin and Arthur Meyerhoff. The name “PAM” is an acronym … standing for “Product of Arthur Meyerhoff”. Who’d a thunk it …?
45 “__ Always Sunny in Philadelphia” : IT’S
“It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” is a long-running sitcom that premiered in 2005 and that is set in an Irish bar in South Philly. The show has a talented lineup of actors, but the big name in the cast is Danny DeVito.
46 Word before Leone or Madre : SIERRA …
The Republic of Sierra Leone is a country in West Africa that lies on the Atlantic Coast. The capital city of Freetown was originally set up as a colony to house the “Black Poor” of London, England. These people were mainly freed British slaves of Caribbean descent who were living a miserable life in the run-down parts of London. Perhaps to help the impoverished souls, perhaps to rid the streets of “a problem”, three ships were chartered in 1787 to transport a group of Blacks, with some Whites, to a piece of land purchased in Sierra Leone. Those who made the voyage were granted British citizenship and protection. The descendants of these immigrants, and others who made the journey over the next 60 years, make up the ethnic group that’s today called the Sierra Leone Creole.
“Sierra Madre” is Spanish for “Mother Mountain Range”, and is a name given to several mountain ranges around the world.
49 Duane __: New York drugstore chain : READE
The chain of drug and convenience stores in New York City known as Duane Reade was founded in 1960 by three brothers. The first three stores were serviced by a warehouse in lower Manhattan located on Broadway between Duane and Reade streets, streets that gave the chain its name.
51 Mediterranean oil source : OLIVE
The olive tree developed in and around the Mediterranean Basin, but has been cultivated in many locations around the world for thousands of years. The fruit of the olive tree is prized as a foodstuff, as well as a source of olive oil. Our word “oil” ultimately derives from the Greek “elaia” meaning “olive”.
54 Newspaper pundit pieces : OP-EDS
A pundit is a learned person to whom one might turn for an opinion. “Pundit” is derived from the Hindi word “payndit” meaning “learned man”.
58 Post-it jotting : NOTE
The Post-it note was invented at 3M following the accidental discovery of a low-tack, reusable adhesive. The actual intent of the development program was to produce a super-strong adhesive.
Read on, or …
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 Spots for pillow talk : BEDS
5 43,560 square feet : ACRE
9 British streetcars : TRAMS
14 Forearm bone : ULNA
15 Agonize (over) : FRET
16 Morocco’s capital : RABAT
17 Din : ROAR
18 Like takeout food : TO-GO
19 Love, in Italian : AMORE
20 Bit of rosemary : SPRIG
22 Temperature-controlled storage for bottles : WINE VAULT
24 Shirt that may have a V-neck : TEE
25 Nabisco brand : OREO
27 Caused : LED TO
28 Cunning scheme : PLOY
30 Nabisco brand : NILLA
32 Sentence part with a subject and a predicate : CLAUSE
34 Many an Omani : ARAB
35 Vaccine-approving org. : FDA
38 Trusting to a fault : NAIVE
39 Sort : ILK
40 Like some monuments at night : UPLIT
42 Listener-supported news source : NPR
43 Dad : PAPA
45 Confident poker declaration : I RAISE
46 Red Sea peninsula : SINAI
47 Fill-in worker : TEMP
48 “__ and Punishment” : CRIME
50 Alabama-born activist Parks : ROSA
52 Kerfuffle : ADO
55 “Sweet dreams!” : SLEEP WELL!
57 Open, as toothpaste : UNCAP
59 Gem from an oyster : PEARL
60 Kristen of “Bridesmaids” : WIIG
62 Move like sap : OOZE
63 Close-knit group : CADRE
64 Jealous feeling : ENVY
65 Neck and neck : TIED
66 Districts : AREAS
67 “We __ to be at an impasse” : SEEM
68 Puts the kibosh on : ENDS
Down
1 Fly into pieces : BURST
2 Get hitched in a hurry : ELOPE
3 Fix for distressed genes? : DNA REPAIR (hiding “RAND” flipped)
4 Draped garment in Hindi films : SARI
5 Toward the rudder : AFT
6 “Jerry Maguire” director Cameron : CROWE
7 Carrier that makes short hops : REGIONAL AIRLINE (hiding “RIAL” flipped)
8 Elite British boarding school : ETON
9 Source of information for vacation planners : TRAVEL BUREAU (hiding “RUBLE” flipped)
10 Best Western rival : RAMADA
11 Approximately : ABOUT
12 “The Wire” drug lord Stanfield : MARLO
13 Editor’s “Actually, don’t cut that” : STET
21 Reaction to a chill or a fright, to Brits : GOOSE PIMPLES (hiding “PESO” flipped)
23 Fitzgerald of jazz : ELLA
26 Pastrami on __ : RYE
29 Hon : LUV
31 Nettle : IRK
32 “Erin Burnett OutFront” channel : CNN
33 Friendly cat’s spot : LAP
35 Decide by calling heads or tails, and an apt title for this puzzle : FLIP A COIN
36 Bad-mouth : DIS
37 Devoured : ATE
39 Hoppy brew, briefly : IPA
41 Cooking spray brand : PAM
44 Again : ANEW
45 “__ Always Sunny in Philadelphia” : IT’S
46 Word before Leone or Madre : SIERRA …
48 “Understood?” : CLEAR?
49 Duane __: New York drugstore chain : READE
51 Mediterranean oil source : OLIVE
53 In a mental fog : DAZED
54 Newspaper pundit pieces : OP-EDS
55 Pet adoption org. : SPCA
56 Female sheep : EWES
58 Post-it jotting : NOTE
61 Fitness class : GYM
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14 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 12 Mar 24, Tuesday”
Comments are closed.
No erors.
GOOSE PIMPLE and GOOSE BUMPS.
yesterday’s WSJ used GOOSE FLESH?
Well, that was easy enough. I’ve never heard of Kristen Wiig, but then I’ve never heard of “Bridesmaids” either.
No errors…theme was an after thought
Stay safe😀
Play ball⚾️
8:20, no errors
7:85, false start with travel bureau
8:01 – clean. Was way easy, still trying to figure out why it took so long …
Ya know, that theme was a mastery of a crooked mind. What the heck did it take to think of it?
But you know what – it was totally useless to me for solving the puzzle.
Be Well.
That was me, lou lu.
Browser trubs again.
Be Well.
@Glenn – did you get the theme before completion or did you just plow through it?
Be Well.
I saw the theme before completion of the puzzle, but it really didn’t matter in course of solving the puzzle that I knew it.
16:34. No issues. I’m just slow.
Bill, ever try out for jeopardy?
7:27 – no errors, lookups, or false starts. About 45 seconds faster than yesterday.
New or forgotten: MARLO Stanfield, Duane READE. Everything else just “flowed.”
An international flavor with the theme today. I imagine it took a little bit of hunting and organizing to get the theme answers figured out in order to construct the puzzle.
Funny thing: two days ago, my wife and I had something come up about “Crime and Punishment” or Dostoevsky, then “Crime and Punishment” was part of an answer/clue on Jeopardy! yesterday, and then it’s in today’s LAT crossword puzzle.
Nice and easy Tuesday for me; took 11:47 with no peeks or errors. I was snacking at the same time so that probably slowed me down a bit.
Didn’t know the same two things that Ray C. didn’t. Didn’t really pay attention to the them until I finished, but pretty straight-forward.
Day late getting it done. Didn’t use theme. Only stuck on Travelbureau (who calls it that?) Abd WIIG