Saturday, March 12, 2022

Block that metaphor

Bryan Garner noticed this New York Times headline about Nikki Haley: “Haley Threads a Needle Between Trump’s Coattails and His Wrath.”

Block that metaphor!

But on second thought, it might be better to let that metaphor stand. Let Nikki Haley thread that needle, or try to, down between the coattails and wrath. It must be awful there. As the poet said,

Between the coattails
And the wrath
Falls the Needle.

(Hey, watch it!)
Related reading
All OCA metaphor posts (Pinboard)

[That headline appears in print. Online, the headline is more sober: “With Trump in Her State, Haley Finds Some Political Distance (Gently).”]

Today’s Saturday Stumper

Today’s Newsday  Saturday Stumper, by Greg Johnson, made me think of Magic Eye. Remember? You were supposed to stare at a rectangle of swirling colors and see an image therein. The image always remained hidden for me, and that how I felt looking at this puzzle: staring and staring and never seeing what I was supposed to see. But finally I did.

Many clue-and-answer pairs of note:

2-D, five letters, “Stock market purchase.” Elaine will like this one.

4-D, eight letters, “It’s for those who don’t give a darn.” NEWSOCKS?

7-D, three letters, “Keys to quality care.” A nice tip of the hat.

20-A, seven letters, “They hold world records.” Clever.

22-A, seven letters, “Crucians live there.” I think playing Worldle helped me see the answer.

30-D, four letters, “Locale in ‘Homer’s Odyssey’ (1990).” LOL. A nice treat to bring into class.

31-A, eight letters, “Start of a scale model.” The west-central section of the puzzle gave me fits, and this clue was one reason why. I thought it must have something to do with ratios. And then I realized that I needed to spell something differently.

32-D, four letters, “Diagnostician’s denouement.” Say what? It’s the west-central section again, with alliteration coming at the expense of meaning.

42-A, twelve letters, “One in a grade school organization.” PTAPRESIDENT?

43-D, six letters, “Chiller of the ’30s.” DRACUL?

45-D, six letters, “Word from the Greek for ‘ship.’” Yes, of course.

57-A, five letters, “Smashing, in show biz.” I’m glad I know some Variety lingo.

My favorite clues in this puzzle:

26-A, twelve letters, “Purple Crayola color.” Yes, I have the Big Box (ninety-six crayons), and I got this answer right away.

And 37-D, eight letters, “Parenthetical trio.” For dowdy reasons.

No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.

Shining star, or dim bulb?

“She’s one of the shining stars representing Illinois because of her leadership, intelligence and courage”: thus an Illinois congressional candidate touts his endorsement from Mary Miller. The title of the article offers a helpful reminder: “GOP congressional candidate touts endorsement from Hitler-quoting lawmaker” (Daily Herald ).

Related reading
All OCA Mary Miller posts

Friday, March 11, 2022

Emilio Delgado (1940–2022)

Better known as “Luis.” The New York Times has an obituary.

TPM, sheesh

Talking Points Memo this morning: “sharing sources of what I believe are reliable information.”

*

It was corrected after an hour or so. I wouldn’t have made this post if I hadn’t already noticed so many other problems in the writing at TPM.

Related reading
All OCA sheesh posts (Pinboard)

Mississippi John Hurt Memorial

The ruins of the Valley Store, County Road 41, Carrollton, Mississippi, are preserved in Google Maps, with a marker for Mississippi John Hurt close by. Here’s a clearer view. If you have the 2011 Discovery CD, you can see a photograph with Hurt standing outside the Valley Store.

See also the Mississippi John Hurt Museum, Hurt’s house in Avalon, Mississippi. The title of Hurt’s 1928 recording “Avalon Blues” was the clue that led to his renewed musical career in the 1960s.

Related reading
All OCA Mississippi John Hurt posts (Pinboard)

[“Renewed musical career”: I don’t like the usual term “rediscovery.”]

“Music as resistance”

From The Washington Post, “Music as resistance: Kyiv’s orchestra plays on”:

The very site of the outdoor concert by the Kyiv-Classic Symphony Orchestra symbolized the defiance: Kyiv’s central square, Maidan, the focal point of revolutions including one in 2014 that ousted a pro-Moscow president and helped define Ukraine’s Western political path.

And the musicians, bundled up in thick coats and jackets, played outdoors despite the constant threat of missiles or bombs falling.

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Two presidents

In The New York Times, Mikhail Zygar describes Vladimir Putin’s world. As I read, I kept thinking of another president.

Let’s see: hedonism, seclusion, an obsession with the past, an obsession with restoring “greatness,” an attachment to conspiracy theories, a belief that only he can save his country, a retinue of ideologues and sycophants. It all sounds too familiar.

Matthew Snelgrove

Of the firm Snelgrove, Martin and Fitzalan.

Robertson Davies, Leaven of Malice (1954).

Leaven of Malice is the second novel of Davies’s Salterton Trilogy.

Related reading
All OCA Robertson Davies posts (Pinboard)

[Is this passage Dickensian, or what?]

Charles E. Entenmann (1929–2022)

“The two-millionth piece of cake must not only be good — it must be as good as the first”: Charles E. Entenmann, quoted in a New York Times obituary.

Cross my heart: I almost typed Entenmann’s when I typed his name.