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CROSSWORD SETTER: Ron Toth & C.C. Burnikel
THEME: Staff Lines in Front … each of today’s themed answers starts with a musical note, giving us the five notes that make up the LINES on a musical STAFF using a treble clef (going from the bottom to the top):
26D. Sheet music quintet, and with 31-Down, what the first letters of 16-, 22-, 36-, 45- and 56-Across represent STAFF
31D. See 26-Down LINES16A. Symbol of a good try E FOR EFFORT
22A. Movie for all G-RATED FILM
36A. Straight-A student’s bane B-PLUS
45A. “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” author DH LAWRENCE
56A. Noted O.J. Simpson attorney F LEE BAILEY
BILL BUTLER’S COMPLETION TIME: 6m 06s
ANSWERS I MISSED: 0
Today’s Wiki-est, Amazonian Googlies
Across
1.  18th Greek letter  SIGMA
Sigma is the eighteenth letter of the Greek alphabet, and is the one used for an “ess” sound, equivalent to our letter S. Sigma is used in mathematics to represent a summation, the adding together of a sequence of numbers.
6.  Instagram account creator  USER
Instagram is a photo-sharing application, one that is extremely popular I hear. Instagram was started in San Francisco in 2010. Facebook purchased Instagram two years later, paying $1 billion. The billion-dollar Instagram had just 13 employees at the time …
10.  Gunpowder container  KEG
Gunpowder is the earliest known explosive chemical. Also called “black powder”, it is a mixture of sulfur, charcoal and saltpeter (i.e. potassium nitrate). The saltpeter is a powerful oxidizing agent, providing the oxygen to burn the sulfur and charcoal, which acts as the fuel in the mixture. Gunpowder was invented by the chinese in 8th century. 
14.  Campus sports gp.  NCAA
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) dates back to the Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt. When his son broke his nose playing football at Harvard, President Roosevelt turned his attention to the number of serious injuries and even deaths occurring in college sports. He instigated meetings between the major educational institutions leading to the formation of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS) in 1906, which was given the remit of regulating college sports. The IAAUS became the NCAA in 1910.
16.  Symbol of a good try  E FOR EFFORT
Apparently the phrase “E for effort” originated as a WWII campaign in the US to help boost productivity in factories. 
18.  To be, to Cato  ESSE
“Esse” is the Latin for “to be”. “Sum” means “I am” and “erat” means “he, she was”. 
Cato the Elder was a Roman statesman, known historically as “the elder” in order to distinguish him from his great-grandson, Cato the Younger. Cato the Elder’s ultimate position within Roman society was that of Censor, making him responsible for maintaining the census, and for supervising public morality.
Cato the Younger was a politician in the late Roman Republic, noted for his moral integrity. He is also remembered for an extended conflict with Julius Caesar.
20.  Place to apply gloss  LIP
Lipsticks have a remarkably long list of ingredients. Die-hard vegans have to be careful in their choice of lipstick, as most contain beeswax. and the “shimmering” types often contain fish scales. Yuk …
26.  Organ near the stomach  SPLEEN
The spleen has a couple of functions in the human body. It removes old red blood cells, and recycles the iron contained therein. The waste product of this recycling is bile. It also holds a reserve of blood that can be released when necessary (if the body goes into “circulatory shock”). Greek and Roman physicians ascribed to the theory that the body had four basic substances, the so-called four humors. All diseases were caused by these four substances getting out of balance. The four humors were:
– Black bile (melancolia)
– Yellow bile (cholera)
– Phlegm (phlegma)
– Blood (sanguis)
Out terms “splenetic” and “venting one’s spleen” are derived from this concept of have the humors out of balance.
34.  Ornamental pond fish  KOI
Koi are also called Japanese carp. Koi have been bred for decorative purposes and there are now some very brightly colored examples found in Japanese water gardens.
35.  JFK postings  ARRS
The Idlewild Golf Course was taken over by the city of New York in 1943 and construction started on a new airport to serve the metropolis and relieve congestion at La Guardia. The Idlewild name still persists, even though the airport was named after Major General Alexander E. Anderson from the first days of the project. When the facility started operating in 1948 it was known as New York International Airport, Anderson Field. It was renamed to John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in 1963, one month after the President was assassinated.
39.  Christmas tree  FIR
The custom of decorating trees at Christmas seems to have originated in Renaissance Germany. Those first trees were placed in guildhalls and were decorated with sweets and candy for the apprentices and children. After the Protestant Reformation, the Christmas tree became an alternative in Protestant homes for the Roman Catholic Christmas cribs. The Christmas tree tradition was imported into Britain by the royal family because of its German heritage. That tradition spread from Britain into North America.
44.  Persian Gulf ships  OILERS
An “oiler” is an oil tanker, an ocean-going vessel used to transport crude oil.
The Persian Gulf is in effect an inland sea although it technically is an offshoot of the Indian Ocean. The outlet from the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean is one of the most famous maritime “choke points” in the world: the Strait of Hormuz. About 20% of the world’s supply of petroleum passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
45.  “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” author  DH LAWRENCE
“Lady Chatterley’s Lover” is perhaps the most famous novel by the English author D. H. Lawrence. The novel is renowned for its explicit description of sexual encounters and its use of strong language. “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” was first published in 1928, but so “edgy” was the content that the first unexpurgated edition wasn’t published in the UK until 1960. 
50.  Before, to Frost  ERE
The wonderful poet Robert Frost was a native of San Francisco, but lived most of life in New England. He also spent a few years in England, just before WWI. Frost was well recognized for his work during his lifetime, and received four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry.
55.  Bee flat?  HIVE
“Flat” is a word more commonly used in the British Isles than here. A flat is basically an apartment or condominium. The word “flat” is Scottish in origin, in which language it meant a “floor in a house”. 
56.  Noted O.J. Simpson attorney  F LEE BAILEY
F. Lee Bailey is a former criminal attorney whose name has name has been associated with many high-profile cases. Bailey was one of the attorneys who defended O. J. Simpson, and so a member of the so called “Dream Team”. 
After having been acquitted of the murder of his wife and Ronald Goldman, O.J. Simpson wrote a book called “If I Did It”, a “hypothetical” description of the murders. Publication of the book was cancelled due to public outrage at the prospect of Simpson making money from the crime for which he was widely perceived as having committed. After Simpson was held financially liable for the murders in a civil trial, the rights to the book were transferred to the Goldman family. The Goldmans changed the book’s title to “If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer”, and then published. The Goldman version had a cover with the word “If” in very small letters, so the title seems to read “I Did It”.
60.  Bartlett cousin  BOSC
Bosc is a cultivar of the European Pear grown in the northwest of the United States. The Bosc is that pear with a skin the color of a potato, with a long neck. I always seem to use the potato as my point of reference. How Irish am I …?
The Bartlett is the most commonly grown pear outside of Asia, a cultivar of the European pear. Back in the UK, where the Bartlett originated, it is called a Williams Pear, or more completely a Williams’ Bon Chretien (Williams’ good Christian). Several Williams trees were imported to the US in 1799 and planted in Massachusetts. The land on which the trees were planted was eventually bought by one Enoch Bartlett, and he started to distribute the pears and basically introduced the variety to the US. He didn’t know that the pears were called Williams, so he named them after himself!
64.  Tractor maker  DEERE
John Deere invented the first commercially successful steel plow in 1837. Prior to Deere’s invention, farmers used an iron or wooden plow that constantly had to be cleaned as rich soil stuck to its surfaces. The cast-steel plow was revolutionary as its smooth sides solved the problem of “stickiness”.
Down
2.  Data  INFO
Our word “data” (singular “datum”) comes from the Latin “datum” meaning “given”. The idea is that data are “things given”. 
3.  Classic Pontiacs  GTOS
The Pontiac GTO was was produced by GM from 1964 to 1974, and again by a GM subsidiary in Australia from 2004 to 2006. The original GTO’s design is credited to Pontiac chief engineer at the time John DeLorean, who later was found the DeLorean Motor Company.
4.  “Won’t you be my neighbor?” TV host  MR ROGERS
The “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” TV show starred Fred Rogers. It was the second longest running series on PBS television after that other iconic children’s show “Sesame Street”.
10.  Musical inspired by “The Taming of the Shrew”  KISS ME, KATE
“Kiss Me, Kate” is a musical written by Cole Porter first produced on Broadway in 1948. Cole Porter had a string of successes in the twenties and thirties including “Gay Divorce” and “Anything Goes”, but he found his career in decline in the forties. “Kiss Me, Kate” proved to be a dramatic come back, and was the only one of his shows that ran for more than 1,000 performances on Broadway. 
William Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew” is about a courting couple. The male is Petruchio, a gentleman of Verona, and the female is Katharina, the so-called “shrew”. As the play progresses, the “shrew” is “tamed” and becomes an “obedient” bride … a controversial storyline in the contemporary world, to say the least. Regardless, modern adaptations have been made, including 1948’s Broadway musical “Kiss Me Kate” and the 1999 romantic comedy “10 Things I Hate About You”.
23.  Legal matter  RES
“Res” is the Latin for “thing”. “Res” is used in a lot of phrases in the law.
24.  God, in Grenoble  DIEU
Grenoble is a city at the edge of the French Alps. Grenoble hosted the 1968 Winter Olympic Games. 
28.  “Seinfeld” co-creator  LARRY DAVID
Larry David was one of the creators of the sitcom “Seinfeld”, and was a co-writer of many of the episodes. David also stars in the HBO comedy “Curb Your Enthusiasm”. 
33.  Progressive Insurance spokeswoman  FLO
Flo is a perky character featured in ads for Progressive Insurance. Flo is played by comedienne and actress Stephanie Courtney.
36.  “Dracula” star Lugosi  BELA
Bela Lugosi was a Hungarian stage and screen actor, best known for playing the title role in the 1931 film “Dracula” and for playing the same role on Broadway. Lugosi found himself typecast for the rest of his career and almost always played the role of the villain, often in horror movies. When he passed away in 1956, his wife had him buried in the costume he wore playing Count Dracula on Broadway.
38.  Christmas season  YULETIDE
“Yule” celebrations coincide with Christmas, and the words “Christmas” and “Yule” have become synonymous in much of the world. However, Yule was originally a pagan festival celebrated by Germanic peoples. The name “Yule” comes from the Old Norse word “jol” that was used to describe the festival.
46.  Pee Wee in Brooklyn  REESE
Pee Wee Reese was a shortstop who played his professional career with the Brooklyn and LA Dodgers. Reese is remembered not only for his skill on the field, but for his very visible support for teammate Jackie Robinson, who famously struggled to be accepted as the first African American player in the majors.
48.  “Pygmalion” playwright  SHAW
George Bernard Shaw’s play “Pygmalion” was adapted by Lerner and Loewe to become the Broadway musical “My Fair Lady”. The musical spun off the wonderful 1964 film of the same name, starring Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison.
49.  Radial __  TIRE
Radial tires (actually “radial-ply tires) are so called because the cord plies embedded in the rubber are arranged radially from the centre of the tire. This means that the plies are at right angles to the direction of travel. In older tires the plies were criss-crossed over each other, at angles of 60 and -60 degrees from the direction of travel. Such tires are called “cross-ply” or “bias” tires. 
52.  Out of the wind  ALEE
“Alee” is the direction away from the wind. If a sailor points into the wind, he or she is pointing “aweather”.
53.  Goneril’s father  LEAR
“King Lear” is one of William Shakespeare’s tragedies. Lear’s three daughters figure prominently in the storyline. The three are, in order of age:
– Goneril
– Regan
– Cordelia
54.  Country singer Lovett  LYLE
As well as being famous in his own right as a successful country singer, Lyle Lovett is known for his marriage to the actress Julia Roberts in 1993. The pair had a whirlwind romance lasting just three weeks before they eloped and were wed. The marriage was also relatively whirlwind, lasting less than two years.
56.  Source of DVD warnings  FBI
“The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of a copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by fines and federal imprisonment.”
For the sake of completion, here is a full listing of all the answers:
Across
1.  18th Greek letter  SIGMA
6.  Instagram account creator  USER
10.  Gunpowder container  KEG
13.  Contest submission  ENTRY
14.  Campus sports gp.  NCAA
15.  Call, retro-style  DIAL
16.  Symbol of a good try  E FOR EFFORT
18.  To be, to Cato  ESSE
19.  Just okay  SO-SO
20.  Place to apply gloss  LIP
21.  Use unwisely, as time  WASTE
22.  Movie for all  G-RATED FILM
26.  Organ near the stomach  SPLEEN
29.  Playground threat  I’LL TELL!
32.  Rips  TEARS
33.  Clash of clans  FEUD
34.  Ornamental pond fish  KOI
35.  JFK postings  ARRS
36.  Straight-A student’s bane  B-PLUS
38.  Show sleepiness  YAWN
39.  Christmas tree  FIR
40.  Follow one’s new job, in Realtor-speak  RELO
41.  Private student  TUTEE
42.  Go up alone  FLY SOLO
44.  Persian Gulf ships  OILERS
45.  “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” author  DH LAWRENCE
48.  Gaze intently  STARE
50.  Before, to Frost  ERE
51.  Like skyscrapers  TALL
55.  Bee flat?  HIVE
56.  Noted O.J. Simpson attorney  F LEE BAILEY
59.  Bone-dry  ARID
60.  Bartlett cousin  BOSC
61.  Like the man of one’s dreams  IDEAL
62.  Marry  WED
63.  ”Yeah, sure!”  I BET!
64.  Tractor maker  DEERE
Down
1.  Goes out with  SEES
2.  Data  INFO
3.  Classic Pontiacs  GTOS
4.  “Won’t you be my neighbor?” TV host  MR ROGERS
5.  Nautical consent  AYE
6.  Not up to the job  UNFIT
7.  Check (out)  SCOPE
8.  Musical skill  EAR
9.  Singer in an interrogation room?  RAT
10.  Musical inspired by “The Taming of the Shrew”  KISS ME, KATE
11.  Fort Worth-to-Dallas direction  EAST
12.  Merriment  GLEE
15.  Passed out cards  DEALT
17.  Caramel-topped custard dessert  FLAN
21.  Like some very bad pitches  WILD
23.  Legal matter  RES
24.  God, in Grenoble  DIEU
25.  Reasons for school absences  FLUS
26.  Sheet music quintet, and with 31-Down, what the first letters of 16-, 22-,  36-, 45- and 56-Across represent  STAFF
27.  Danger  PERIL
28.  “Seinfeld” co-creator  LARRY DAVID
30.  Farther down  LOWER
31.  See 26-Down  LINES
33.  Progressive Insurance spokeswoman  FLO
36.  “Dracula” star Lugosi  BELA
37.  Furrow the fields  PLOW
38.  Christmas season  YULETIDE
40.  Part on stage  ROLE
41.  Muscle spasm  TIC
43.  Destroy, as files  SHRED
44.  Premium plane seat, usually  ONE-B
46.  Pee Wee in Brooklyn  REESE
47.  Upright  ERECT
48.  “Pygmalion” playwright  SHAW
49.  Radial __  TIRE
52.  Out of the wind  ALEE
53.  Goneril’s father  LEAR
54.  Country singer Lovett  LYLE
56.  Source of DVD warnings  FBI
57.  Easy throw  LOB
58.  Help out  AID




I had WIde before WILD, but don't ask me about sports, except the Triple Crown, and I'd prefer it was run bu My Little Ponies.
I decided to drop buying USA Today because I've little more to learn from the various puzzles. I'll always admire Tim Parker and recommend the puzzles to new crossworders and others. We decided to get the NYT on-line. I do their puzzle 3-4 days a week. This will all be cheaper and save us from tossing out so many trees.
To satisfy my OCD, I still have Klondike on-line.
I had to laugh a little at the juxtaposition of the answers to 22A (G Rated Film) and 45A (DH Lawrence). And then there was the F Lee Bailey answer to 56A – "Noted OJ Simpson attorney" when I realized that when you run the letters of Mr. Bailey's name together (such as in a crossword puzzle) you get "Flee Bailey" – which brought to mind the white Bronco "chase" – yes, yes I realize there is something wrong with the way my mind works. (g)
Hello all –
Another easy beginning of the week puzzle. I always think they're ganging up on us when more than one setter is involved.
I've always known the phrase as "A" for effort. Perhaps it's morphed into that over the years and/or in this part of the country. Both ways make sense in their own ways.
Interesting info about radial tires, of all things. I never realized that's how they are designed, but now it makes sense how they can design tires that don't deflate right away after a blow out. I guess they can survive on their own structure for a time after the air stops supporting them. Good stuf.
Best –
At $9 a year, the online NYT version is very nice. I agree.
To tie the puzzle together even more, I'd recall the Seinfeld references to the OJ trials. Keamer's attorney Jackie Chiles; the episode where Kramer's friend Gendison kills his dry cleaner ("Pook little Pinkus"), and of course The Masseuse, where Elaine wants her boyfriend Joel Rifkin to change his name. The episode aired literally weeks before the actual killings and she mentions him by name.
The bottom of this grid had some rhyming going on; FLEE, LEAR, ALEE, LYLE, ERECT, ONEB…anyone else notice.
Hello all,
Quite easy puzzle today – despite the fact I know nothing about classical music, or of clefs and staffs and lines or of notes and their progressions. Whatever. Too late, at my age, to start learning anew.
I always thought it was 'A for effort'. "E for effort" seems to be rather mindless. Which student wants to receive an E grade after he/she has worked so hard and put in so much effort? Apparently the slogan was effective during the war. Learnt something.
Regarding Lady Chatterley's Lover, the grave problem with the story – and this, according to certain critical analyses, by others – was not the erotic words or scenes – but the fact that this signified a sexual interaction between two different classes – the nobility and the 'serfs' – something unheard of in a highly stratified post-Victorian order of society. The book had no problem in being published in Italy and the US.
have a nice day, all.