Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, by Rafael Musa, is relatively easy. Also delightful: clever, tricky, oblique, nearly factoid-free.
Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:
5-D, three letters, “Woman in Arabian Nights.” Somehow this kind of clue seems to sport an ID tag.
23-D, eleven letters, “Satisfies.” I would like to know how far back the answer goes. Now I do.
26-D, eight letters, “‘Steep, strain, serve’ product.” My first thought was LOOSETEA.
27-A, eight letters, “Dressing option.” Yes, please.
35-D, three letters, “Sound from a shaker.” For a moment I thought of the doo-wop syllable SHA.
46-A, six letters, “Introductory explanation.” I know the answer in a different way, and I was never happy about it.
51-A, four letters, “Reporter to take among the earliest flash photos (1880s).” Having read his writing and looked at his photographs, I don’t mind this factoid.
54-A, ten letters, “Child’s catchphrase.” Brilliant. A more typical answer might be AMNOT or ARETOO.
59-A, ten letters, “Having caught bugs.” SICKINBED doesn’t fit. SICKASADOG does but doesn’t.
My favorite in this puzzle: 3-D, seven letters, “Specimen, for example.”
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.
Saturday, July 18, 2026
Today’s Saturday Stumper
By
Michael Leddy
at
8:01 AM
comments: 1
Friday, July 17, 2026
Proustian Zippy
[“Catty Remarks.” Zippy, July 17, 2026.]
In today’s strip, Zippy and Zerbina attempt to refresh their marital memories. Clam juice = madeleine.
Venn reading
All OCA Proust posts : Proust and Zippy posts : Zippy posts (Pinboard)
By
Michael Leddy
at
8:45 AM
comments: 0
A man of common sense
Charles Dickens, David Copperfield (1850).
Cheerful, kindhearted, gloriously eccentric (he carries around an enormous kite on which he is writing, or attempting to write, a “Memorial,” its words going up into the sky): Mr Dick must be a distant relative of Tristam Shandy’s my uncle Toby.
Related reading
All OCA posts (Pinboard)
[As in Laurence Sterne’s novel, it’s “my uncle Toby,” not “uncle Toby.”]
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:05 AM
comments: 0
A sidewalk compliment
“Beautiful couple! Beautiful couple!”
For some reason we hear this kind of thing only when we’re walking in a city. Thank you, fellow pedestrian.
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:03 AM
comments: 0
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Picturing
Charles Dickens, David Copperfield (1850).
I love how David’s development into a novelist is something that he says so little about. “I pictured to myself” is an early sign of an imagination at play. By chapter forty-six, David is, in the words of another character, “beginning to be famous,” yet he’s said hardly anything about his writing. In chapter forty-eight, he tells us that “It is not my purpose, in this record, though in all other essentials it is my written memory, to pursue the history of my own fictions.”
Related reading
All OCA Dickens posts (Pinboard)
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:29 AM
comments: 0
Self-Erasure
From Geo-B: Self-Erasure.
That’s gotta hurt.
Related reading
All OCA eraser posts (Pinboard)
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:22 AM
comments: 0
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
T and X
A sentence from The Guardian :
The US defense secretary unveiled plans for a new screening program for testosterone deficiency among troops that will work to ensure service members have the “right testosterone levels” to perform at their optimal conditions in a video posted to X.I shudder to think what kind of performance will be required of these, uh, service members. Moving the words “in a video posted to X” to the front of the sentence makes for a less startling though still loony-tunes statement. Perhaps someone at The Guardian slipped in a deliberate touch of the loony.
As The Guardian notes, “[Pete} Hegseth’s announcement did not address the more than 231,000 women who serve as active duty service members in the US military.”
Related reading
All OCA How to improve writing posts (Pinboard)
[This post is no. 135 in a series dedicated to improving stray bits of professional public prose. The New York Times reports that women in the military will also be tested.]
By
Michael Leddy
at
3:49 PM
comments: 0
Tin Can calling
It’s a telephone for kids: the Tin Can, a wi-fi-enabled landline (whatever that means) with all appropriate protections.
We have been talking daily with granddaughters, the two of us on one or another iPhone, the two of them on a Tin Can. The device helps foster the skills of person-to-person conversation: listening, responding, asking questions, taking turns, all the stuff that vexes so many young adults both on and off their phones.
And how is your day going?
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:40 AM
comments: 0
A joke in the traditional manner
Where do bakers sleep?
No spoilers; the punchline and a bonus punchline are in the comments.
Related reading
All OCA jokes in the traditional manner
By
Michael Leddy
at
7:37 AM
comments: 3
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
Raising the bar
UC Berkeley Law School: no AI. UT Austin School of Law: engage students so that they’re not distracted by their devices. U Chicago Law School: no phones, laptops, or tablets in the classroom for first-year students. Read more: “To AI-Proof Lawyers, Some Law Schools Restrict Technology” (Inside Higher Ed ).
Note to UT Austin: the simplest way to keep students from being distracted by their devices is to remove the devices: Occam’s Razor with things.
Related reading
All OCA attention posts (Pinboard)
By
Michael Leddy
at
9:49 AM
comments: 0
