Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, is by the puzzle’s editor, Stan Newman, composing as “Anna Stiga,” the alias he uses for easier Stumpers. And this one was easy, certainly the easiest Stumper I’ve done. 1-A, seven letters, “Frame + engine, transmission et al.”: a gimme. 1-D, six letters, “Yogi's power point.” Another gimme. And that “Kept happening” (60-A, eight letters). Again and again.
I liked the elements of dowdy in today’s puzzle:
15-D, seven letters, “‘Brush your breath’ sloganeer (c. 1980).” A forty-year-old advertising slogan. And we’re off!
16-A, eight letters, “Where a pat might be placed.” Feels like New York dowdy to me.
31-D, three letters, “Manufacturer of tiny bricks.” O childhood.
34-A, fifteen letters, “Think.” Yep. That’s what ya gotta do.
42-D, six letters, “Gershwin’s first hit song.” So first that I don’t even think of it as a Gershwin song.
And the cleverness:
6-D, six letters, “On fast food, perhaps.” In every sense.
7-D, fifteen letters, “[NO CLUE NEEDED].” Got it.
53-D, four letters, “Skin source.” I first thought of critters. Must be the Tiger King influence.
And the kind of clue that’s becoming a regular, one per Stumper:
52-D, four letters, “It’s far from Aristotelean.” Got it, even at a distance. (Yes, the clue should read Aristotelian.)
There’s one clue whose answer feels dubious: 50-A, four letters, “It’s seen on Irishman posters.” Given the answer, I wonder if the absence of The from the film’s title is meant to be meaningful.
No spoilers: the answers are in the comments.