Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper is by Stan Newman, the puzzle’s editor, composing as “Lester Ruff.” As with other LR puzzles, I didn’t find this one especially easy. But it was crunchy, flavorful, and full of fun. Toughest area: the upper left. But not especially tough.
Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:
1-D, seven letters, “Montreal newspaper.” One of the clues that made the upper left difficult, at least for me. Quelle langue?
2-D, seven letters, “Public art.” GRAFITI? Another clue that made the upper left difficult.
13-A, six letters, “Most famous grandson of Josiah Wedgewood.” And one more. I had no idea.
17-A, eight letters, “News of interest.” Rather Stumper-y.
23-D, three letters, “Exclamation coined for Buck Rogers.” See? Full of fun.
30-A, six letters, “Combination plate?” More than more than a bit of a stretch.
36-A, eight letters, “Covered, as mysteries.” Tricky.
43-D, seven letters, “Union tune sung by Baez at Woodstock.” Remember the triple album?
54-D, four letters, “‘For ____’ (Contact dedication).” A vague memory, and it worked.
61-A, eight letters, “Film in which Dean Martin sings ‘My Rifle, My Pony, and Me.’” I don’t think Stan Newman expects anyone outside the Martin family to just know the answer. I take the clue as an amusing way to get the answer into the puzzle. Here’s the song, without a spoiler.
64-A, five letters, “Schopenhauer called him a ‘clumsy charlatan.’” Oof.
My favorite in this puzzle: 6-D, fifteen letters, “Idly.” Yep, just because.
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.
Saturday, October 26, 2024
Today’s Saturday Stumper
By Michael Leddy at 8:19 AM
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GAZETTE. ORATORY. DARWIN. RATEHIKE. ZAP.
KEYPAD. (I’d think of the numbers typed on a keypad as forming a sequence, not a combination.)
JACKETED. JOEHILL. CARL. (Carl Sagan.).
RIOBRAVO. HEGEL. FORNOGOODREASON.
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