LA Times Crossword 11 Feb 19, Monday

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Constructed by: Joe Deeney
Edited by: Rich Norris

Today’s Reveal Answer: Down Payment

Themed answers are all in the DOWN-direction, and each ends with a method of PAYMENT:

  • 25D. Typical mortgage requirement, and what ends each answer to a starred clue : DOWN PAYMENT
  • 3D. *Grade-boosting option : EXTRA CREDIT
  • 8D. *Singer’s spouse who co-wrote “Ring of Fire” : JUNE CARTER CASH
  • 14D. *Chess situation that forces a draw : PERPETUAL CHECK

Bill’s time: 5m 29s

Bill’s errors: 0

Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies

Across

1. Org. whose product is measured in barrels : OPEC

Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

The volume of one oil barrel is equivalent to 42 US gallons. A barrel is correctly abbreviated to “bbl”. Barrels aren’t really used for transporting crude oil anymore. Instead, oil moves in bulk through pipelines and in tankers. “Barrel” is just used as a unit of volume these days.

5. Pillar of Islam involving travel : HAJJ

Followers of the Muslim tradition believe in the Five Pillars of Islam, five obligatory acts that underpin Muslim life. The Five Pillars are:

  1. The Islamic creed
  2. Daily prayer
  3. Almsgiving
  4. Fasting during the month of Ramadan
  5. The pilgrimage to Mecca (haj, hajj, hadj) once during a lifetime

9. School near Windsor Castle : 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 David Cameron who was British prime minister from 2010 to 2016. The list of Old Etonians also includes Princes William and Harry, the Duke of Wellington and George Orwell. Author Ian Fleming was also and Eton alumnus, as was Fleming’s iconic character James Bond, although the 007 was expelled by the school.

Windsor Castle is located on the River Thames in Berkshire, just 20 miles outside London. It was built in the early 11th century by William the Conqueror after the Norman invasion of England. Queen Elizabeth II likes to spend her weekends at Windsor. She has lots of room to move around there, as it’s the largest inhabited castle in the world.

13. Hugs-and-kisses symbols : XOXO

In the sequence letter sequence “XOX”, the X represents a kiss, and the O a hug. “OOO” is a string of hugs, and “XXX” a string of kisses. Hugs and kisses …

14. Pacific island host of two “Survivor” seasons : PALAU

Palau is a tiny island nation lying 500 miles east of the Philippines, and 2,000 miles south of Japan. Palau was once a Spanish possession and was sold by Spain to Germany in the late 19th century. During WWI, Japan invaded the islands (Japan had declared war on Germany) and was awarded the islands as a territory by the League of Nations at the end of hostilities. In WWII the US took Palau from the Japanese in a bloody battle in 1944. Palau emerged from American administration in 1994 and is now a sovereign state.

The reality show “Survivor” is based on a Swedish television series created in 1997 called “Expedition Robinson”.

15. Medical image : X-RAY

X-rays were first studied comprehensively by the German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen (also “Roentgen”), and it was he who gave the name “X-rays” to this particular type of radiation. Paradoxically, in Röntgen’s native language of German, X-rays are routinely referred to as “Röntgen rays”. In 1901, Röntgen’s work on X-rays won him the first Nobel Prize in Physics that was ever awarded.

17. Modern John Hancock : E-SIGNATURE

We use the term “John Hancock” to mean a signature. The reference is to the large and flamboyant signature placed by John Hancock on the Declaration of Independence. Hancock was President of the Continental Congress from 1775 to 1777.

19. Epithet never actually used by Jimmy Cagney : DIRTY RAT!

When Jimmy Cagney accepted the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1974, he addressed one of the most famous movie “non-quotes”. He told the audience “I never said ‘Mmmmmm, you dirty rat!”. The closest he ever came to saying that line, so often used by impressionists, was in the 1932 movie “Taxi!” in which he starred opposite Loretta Young. In that film he had the line “You dirty rat, I’m going to get rid of you, just like you gave it to my brother.”

21. Angsty music genre : EMO

The emo musical genre originated in Washington D.C. in the 80s, and takes its name from “emotional hardcore”. “Emo” is also the name given to the associated subculture. Not my cup of tea …

22. LAX posting : ETA

Los Angeles International Airport is the sixth busiest airport in the world in terms of passenger traffic, and the busiest here on the West Coast of the US. The airport was opened in 1930 as Mines Field and was renamed to Los Angeles Airport in 1941. On the airport property is the iconic white structure that resembles a flying saucer. This is called the Theme Building and I believe it is mainly used as a restaurant and observation deck for the public. The airport used to be identified by the letters “LA”, but when the aviation industry went to a three-letter standard for airport identification, this was changed to “LAX”. Apparently, the “X” has no significant meaning.

28. Songwriter Porter : COLE

Cole Porter was a little unusual amongst his peers in that he was one of the few successful songwriters who wrote both lyrics and musics for his compositions. Porter was seriously injured in a riding accident when in his forties and was left disabled and in pain. Despite this, he continued to work and produced his most successful work after the accident.

31. Red wine choice : MERLOT

Merlot is one of the main grapes used to make Bordeaux wines, along with Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot.

36. WWII naval threat : U-BOAT

The term “U-boat” comes from the German “Unterseeboot” (undersea boat). U-boats were used primarily in WWII to enforce a blockade against enemy commercial shipping, with a main objective being to cut off the supplies being transported to Britain from the British colonies and the US. The epic fight for control of the supply routes became known as the Battle of the Atlantic.

38. Picnic invaders : ANTS

Our term “picnic” comes from the French word that now has the same meaning, namely “pique-nique”. The original “pique-nique” was a fashionable potluck affair, and not necessarily held outdoors.

40. Shopping complex : MALL

Surprisingly (to me!), our word “mall”, meaning “shady walk” or “enclosed shopping space”, comes from the Italian for “mallet”. All of our shopping-style malls are named for “The Mall” in St. James’s Park in London. This tree-lined promenade was so called as it used to a famous spot to play the croquet-like game called “pall-mall”. The game derived its name from the Italian for ball (palla) and mallet “maglio”. The London thoroughfare called the Mall still exists, at one end of which is Buckingham Palace. Indeed, parallel to the Mall is a street called Pall Mall.

45. Civil rights icon Parks : ROSA

Rosa Parks was one of a few 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.

46. Largest living bird : OSTRICH

The ostrich is a flightless bird that is native to Africa. It is extensively farmed, mainly for its feathers but also for its skin/leather and meat. Famously, the ostrich is the fastest moving of any flightless bird, capable of achieving speeds of over 40 mph. It is also the largest living species of bird, and lays the largest eggs.

48. Couture initials : YSL

Yves Saint Laurent (YSL) was an Algerian-born French fashion designer. Saint Laurent started off working as an assistant to Christian Dior at the age of 17. Dior died just four years later, and as a very young man Saint-Laurent was named head of the House of Dior. However, in 1950 Saint Laurent was conscripted into the French Army and ended up in a military hospital after suffering a mental breakdown from the hazing inflicted on him by his fellow soldiers. His treatment included electroshock therapy and administration of sedatives and psychoactive drugs. He was released from hospital, managed to pull his life back together and started his own fashion house. A remarkable story …

54. Cord cutters’ reception aids : TV ANTENNAS

Remember the television antenna called a “rabbit ears”? I don’t recall being told this when I was younger, but to get the best reception the length of the “ears” needs to be set at about one half of the wavelength of the signal of the target channel. If only I had known …

Oh, how I wish I could cut the cord …

58. Air filter acronym : HEPA

Air filters can be specified as “HEPA”, with the acronym standing for “high-efficiency particulate absorption”. To be given the name “HEPA”, the filter must remove 99.7% of particles with a size of 0.3 microns or larger.

59. __ hop: gym dance : SOCK

Sock hops were high school dances typically held in the school gym or cafeteria. The term “sock hop” arose because the dancers were often required to remove their shoes to protect the varnished floor in the gym.

63. Spade of handbags : KATE

Kate Spade fashion design house was founded as a supplier of handbags in 1993. The brand is named for founder Kate Brosnahan Spade. The equivalent male brand is called Jack Spade.

64. Education support gps. : PTAS

Parent-Teacher Association (PTA)

Down

1. Nitrous __ : OXIDE

“Laughing gas” is a common name for nitrous oxide. Nitrous oxide is used as an anesthetic, particularly by dentists. It is also used in motor racing to increase the power output of engines. Laughing gas was first synthesized by the English chemist Joseph Priestley, but it was Humphry Davy who discovered its potential as an anesthetic. Once it was realized that the gas could give the patient a fit of the giggles, “laughing gas parties” became common among those could afford them.

2. Theorize : POSIT

To posit is to assume as fact, to lay down as a “position”.

4. Crotchety oldster : COOT

“Geezer”, “codger” and “coot” are all not-so-nice terms meaning “old man”.

7. XKE, for short : JAG

Auto manufacturer Jaguar started out as a manufacturer of sidecars for motorcycles back in 1922, when the company was known as the Swallow Sidecar Company (SS for short). The company changed its name to Jaguar after WWII, because of the unfortunate connotations of the letters “SS” in that era (i.e. the Nazi paramilitary organization).

We knew them as E-type Jags in my part of the world growing up, but they were marketed over in the US as the Jaguar XK-E line. The XK-E was manufactured from 1961 to 1974.

8. *Singer’s spouse who co-wrote “Ring of Fire” : JUNE CARTER CASH

June Carter is best-remembered as a singer-songwriter, and was the second wife of Johnny Cash. June performed with Cash for many years as a member of the Carter Family. Cash proposed to June on stage in London, Ontario in 1968. Both Cash and Carter maintained a friendship with President Jimmy Carter, who was a distant cousin of June.

The country classic “Ring of Fire” was written by Merle Kilgore and June Carter. The first recording of the song was made by June Carter’s sister Anita, in 1963. The second recording was a little more successful. It was a recording made by June Carter’s husband … Johnny Cash.

9. Raves about : EXTOLS

To extol something is to praise it loudly. The term comes from the Latin “extollere” meaning “to raise up, elevate”.

10. Play about Capote : TRU

“Tru” was written by Jay Presson Allen and is a one-man play about Truman Capote that premiered in 1989. There is a classic anachronism in the piece. It is set in Capote’s New York City apartment at Christmas 1975. At one point the Capote character talks about suicide, saying that he has enough pills to stage his own Jonestown Massacre. The Jonestown Massacre didn’t happen until three years later, in 1978.

12. TV scientist whose show has won with 19 Emmys : NYE

That would be “Bill Nye the Science Guy”. Bill’s show ran on PBS for four years, from 1993-97.

14. *Chess situation that forces a draw : PERPETUAL CHECK

In chess, a player who is unable to achieve a game-winning checkmate, might be able to force a draw by repeatedly and continuously placing his or her opponent in check. Such a maneuver is known as “perpetual check”. The game ends in a draw if the same position occurs three times (the threefold repetition rule), or if no capture or pawn move is made in fifty moves (the fifty-move rule).

20. “Carpe diem” initials : YOLO

You only live once (YOLO)

“Carpe diem” is a quotation from Horace, one of Ancient Rome’s leading lyric poets. “Carpe diem” translates from Latin as “seize the day” or “enjoy the day”. The satirical motto of a procrastinator is “carpe mañana”, “translating” as “seize tomorrow”.

24. Game Gear creator : SEGA

Game Gear is a handheld gaming console that was produced by Sega from 1990 to 1997.

25. Typical mortgage requirement, and what ends each answer to a starred clue : DOWN PAYMENT

Our word “mortgage” comes from the Old French “mort gaige” which translated as “dead pledge”. Such an arrangement was so called because the “pledge” to repay “dies” when the debt is cleared.

31. Meno __: not as fast, in music : MOSSO

Meno Mosso is a musical term, one meaning that the music should be played at a reduced speed. “Meno mosso” is Italian for “less agitated”.

32. Furry C-3PO worshipers : EWOKS

The Ewoks are creatures that live on the moon of Endor in the “Star Wars” universe. First appearing in “Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi”, they’re the cute and cuddly little guys that look like teddy bears.

C-3PO, or “Threepio”, is the protocol droid that appears in the “Star Wars” movie franchise.

49. Vintage photo tone : SEPIA

Sepia is that rich, brown-grey color so common in old photographs. “Sepia” is the Latinized version of the Greek word for cuttlefish, as sepia pigment is derived from the ink sac of the cuttlefish. Sepia ink was commonly used for writing and drawing as far back as Ancient Rome and Ancient Greece. The “sepia tone” of old photographs is not the result of deterioration over time. Rather, it is the result of a deliberate preservation process which converts the metallic silver in the photographic image to a more stable silver sulfide. Prints that have been sepia-toned can last in excess of 150 years.

50. Exams for aspiring judges, briefly : LSATS

Law School Admission Test (LSAT)

53. Blue-roofed eatery : IHOP

The International House of Pancakes (IHOP) was founded back in 1958. IHOP was originally intended to be called IHOE, the International House of Eggs, but that name didn’t do too well in marketing tests!

54. Airport safety org. : TSA

Transportation Security Administration (TSA)

55. __ populi: popular opinion : VOX

The Latin phrase “vox populi” translates as “voice of the people”. The expression is used in the world of broadcasting to describe interviews with members of the public.

56. Blackjack half : ACE

The card game known as “twenty-one” was first referred to in a book by Cervantes, the author famous for writing “Don Quixote”. He called the game “ventiuna” (Spanish for “twenty-one”). Cervantes wrote his story just after the year 1600, so the game has been around at least since then. Twenty-one came to the US but it wasn’t all that popular so bonus payments were introduced to create more interest. One of the more attractive bonuses was a ten-to-one payout to a player who was dealt an ace of spades and a black jack. This bonus led to the game adopting the moniker “Blackjack”.

57. Gun lobby org. : NRA

National Rifle Association (NRA)

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Complete List of Clues/Answers

Across

1. Org. whose product is measured in barrels : OPEC
5. Pillar of Islam involving travel : HAJJ
9. School near Windsor Castle : ETON
13. Hugs-and-kisses symbols : XOXO
14. Pacific island host of two “Survivor” seasons : PALAU
15. Medical image : X-RAY
16. Analogy words : IS TO
17. Modern John Hancock : E-SIGNATURE
19. Epithet never actually used by Jimmy Cagney : DIRTY RAT!
21. Angsty music genre : EMO
22. LAX posting : ETA
23. Elect (to) : OPT
24. Dressed down : SCOLDED
28. Songwriter Porter : COLE
30. Frightening : FEARSOME
31. Red wine choice : MERLOT
33. Fairy tale baddie : OGRE
34. Be victorious : WIN
35. Was in debt to : OWED
36. WWII naval threat : U-BOAT
38. Picnic invaders : ANTS
39. Grass roll : SOD
40. Shopping complex : MALL
41. Go by, as time : ELAPSE
43. They’re planted in snow while skiing : SKI POLES
45. Civil rights icon Parks : ROSA
46. Largest living bird : OSTRICH
47. Emails a dupe to : CCS
48. Couture initials : YSL
51. Tapped-off cigar remnant : ASH
52. Hours for cuppas : TEATIMES
54. Cord cutters’ reception aids : TV ANTENNAS
58. Air filter acronym : HEPA
59. __ hop: gym dance : SOCK
60. Infatuation : CRUSH
61. “I’ll take care of that” : ON IT
62. Log splitters : AXES
63. Spade of handbags : KATE
64. Education support gps. : PTAS

Down

1. Nitrous __ : OXIDE
2. Theorize : POSIT
3. *Grade-boosting option : EXTRA CREDIT
4. Crotchety oldster : COOT
5. Attacks : HAS AT
6. Got off a horse : ALIT
7. XKE, for short : JAG
8. *Singer’s spouse who co-wrote “Ring of Fire” : JUNE CARTER CASH
9. Raves about : EXTOLS
10. Play about Capote : TRU
11. Rowing tool : OAR
12. TV scientist whose show has won with 19 Emmys : NYE
14. *Chess situation that forces a draw : PERPETUAL CHECK
18. Love, to Luigi : AMORE
20. “Carpe diem” initials : YOLO
24. Game Gear creator : SEGA
25. Typical mortgage requirement, and what ends each answer to a starred clue : DOWN PAYMENT
26. Gives off : EMITS
27. Closely packed : DENSE
29. Out-of-date : OLD
30. Deceives : FOOLS
31. Meno __: not as fast, in music : MOSSO
32. Furry C-3PO worshipers : EWOKS
37. “Eww!” : BLEH!
38. Small batteries : AAS
40. Somewhat wet : MOIST
42. Nowhere to be found : LOST
44. Practical jokes : PRANKS
47. __ and desist : CEASE
49. Vintage photo tone : SEPIA
50. Exams for aspiring judges, briefly : LSATS
52. Item listed above “u-bolt” in a hardware glossary? : T-NUT
53. Blue-roofed eatery : IHOP
54. Airport safety org. : TSA
55. __ populi: popular opinion : VOX
56. Blackjack half : ACE
57. Gun lobby org. : NRA

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