Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, by Brad Wilber, was surprisingly easy, aside from the southeast corner. But man oh man that southeast corner. It had arcana: 60-D, three letters, “Onetime North Island herbivore.” It had a tricky spelling: 48-D, six letters, “Trifling.” It had general weirdness: 59-A, eight letters, “Verdict of disapproval”; 64-A, six letters, “Creatively turbulent.” And it had a clue that reminded me of what must be my considerable distance from current trends in entertaining (62-A, eight letters, “Cutlery carrier”). I’m glad that those clues were not the whole puzzle.
Some clue-and-answer pairs I especially liked:
11-D, seven letters, “Boston Public Library muralist.” Because Boston.
16-A, eight letters, “Fashion effect aka ‘manscara.’” Not that I use the stuff.
25-D, seven letters, “108 Odyssey fellows.” I always like seeing Homer in a crossword. The 108 is an extra treat. And that is the number, which a reader can work out by adding numbers as Telemachus gives them in book 16.
36-A, four letters, “‘A nightingale who sits in darkness,’ per Shelley.” I like to think that my late friend Rob Zseleczky is pleased whenever Shelley turns up in a crossword.
46-A, five letters, “Many a paperweight.” Mine are rocks and tile trim.
And another one of the clue-and-answer pairs that baffle me until I begin typing them out: 58-D, three letters, “Fellow from Wheeling.”
No spoilers: the answers are in the comments.
Saturday, March 14, 2020
Today’s Saturday Stumper
By Michael Leddy at 9:22 AM
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comments: 5
For once I’m determined to get every answer into one comment. No misses!
MOA. MEASLY. ITSAMESS. YEASTY. TEATOWEL.
Here’s how to make a cutlery roll from a tea towel.
SARGENT. See here and here.
GUYLINER. SUITORS. POET. PRISM. ELI. Groan: WheELIng.
MEASLY: like the measles?
TEATOWEL: what gets wet as it dries?
Steven
That’s clever. But wouldn’t any towel get wet as it dries? Am I missing something?
Are the tile trim paperweights souvenirs of your father?
Yes, pieces of trim that he removed and saved when tearing down old walls. I just remembered: I have a picture of one on an older post. I also have old porcelain faucet handles that used to be paperweights. Now they’re decor.
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