Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper is by Stella Zawistowski. I started with 1-D, four letters, “Small row” and 14-A, five letters, “Artistic lamentation.” The puzzle soon grew more difficult, and one clue gave me fits.
Some clue-and-answer pairs of note, including the fit one:
5-D, fourteen letters, “Steamers, for instance.” Wow, or whoa. I was thinking clams.
16-D, fourteen letters, “Expression of lost love lamentation.” Wow again. I loved seeing the answer in a crossword.
19-A, seven letters, “Overemotional oratory.” The form of the answer makes the clue tricky.
22-A, five letters, “Name on the ACC member list.” Perversely trivial. And is the answer even a name? I don’t think so.
33-A, nine letters, “Haydn opera.” The clue that gave me fits. Even if the answer is correct — and Elaine says it’s not — the clue is just ridic. More in the comments.
35-A, fifteen letters, “Symbol of proletarian solidarity.” If you say so. But I don’t think many working people would recognize it as such.
41-D, three letters, “With 42 Down, Palme d’Or winner for 1993.” Random trivia, which I hugely dislike in crosswords. Ah, yes, the ’93 winner, not ’92 or ’94. Who knows this, and who’ll remember it a week from now? And I always dislike common words clued as trivia.
43-A, five letters, “Evidence of encryption.” I am happy to say I knew it.
49-A, seven letters, “Onetime big name in beverages.” Onetime? I have a bottle of their gin (cheap!) in the kitchen. But the clue might have more to do with corporate history than with a name present on store shelves.
My favorite in this puzzle: 45-D, five letters, “What a loud barker might be called.” Just plain clever.
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments, along with more about 33-A.