Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, by Matthew Sewell, is a really good one, meaning 1. that I could solve it, and 2. that I could solve it in about twenty-four minutes. Some giveaways, some stumpish clues, some surprises and weirdness and fun. I started with a giveaway: 1-D, three letters, “It had 300+ campus chapters in ’69.” Only one possible answer, really, for that clue, even if the answer was a little before my time.
Some clue-and-answer pairs I especially liked:
5-D, five letters, “Hand-made props.” Stumpish.
8-D, four letters, “Talk follower or preceder.” Surprising.
24-A, seven letters, “Guys set for life.” I was thinking STATUES, though the clock is ticking, or has ticked, for so many of them — and rightly so.
26-A, four letters, “Chica, brevemente.” Maybe a giveaway, but the clue redeems the crosswordese.
27-D, four letters, “Either of two in the Bluetooth logo.” So that’s what they are! So much fun with shorter answers in this puzzle.
33-A, nine letters, “Swing shift?” I was thinking hours.
41-A, five letters, “Upsize, say.” I did not see this one coming.
One clue that made me wince: 45-A, three letters, “Pronoun in Hiroshima.” There’s a place name that should be off-limits for wordplay, I’d say.
And one clue that leaves me baffled: 32-A, four letters, “Suspended course.”
Huh? Wha?
No spoilers: the answers are in the comments.
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Today’s Saturday Stumper
By Michael Leddy at 10:03 AM
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comments: 3
SDS. (Students for a Democratic Society.)
CLAPS. SHOP. MADEMEN. SRTA. RUNE.
TURNATBAT. REPORT.
HIM. (The obligatory cryptic: HirosHIMa.)
SOUP. How is soup a “suspended course”? Because it’s SO UP? I don’t get it.
SOUP: maybe the following
be suspended—(of solid particles) dispersed through the bulk of a fluid. [from Oxford Dictionary in my iPad]
As for CLAP: sometime in the last 20 or so years the convention of using quotes to show that you are, consciously, using a word in a non-standard way (or are making one up) has been lost: props vs “props”...
—Steven
AHA and OHO! That must explain SOUP. Thanks. (Both exclamations are in Evan Birnholz’s puzzle today.)
I most object to the absence of quotation marks when a word in a clue is being used as a word. That’s the English teacher in me. I don’t mind with slang, probably because calling attention to slang with quotation marks can feel stilted. Maybe a question mark is in order with the CLAPS clue?
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