Here is a link to my answers to today's SYNDICATED New York Times crossword.
Completion Time: 39m 03s
Theme: Keep an Eye on It! The themed clues are solved by adding an "I" to the first or last words of a common phrase e.g. THE WIZARD OF ID-I
Answers I missed: 2 SOLON (SOLEN), A TWO (ATWE)
TODAY'S GOOGLIES ...
Across
1 SINATRA: In 1973 Frank Sinatra
22 EMERIL: Emeril Lagasse
23 THE WIZARD OF ID-I: "The Wizard of Id
26 SOLON: Solon
27 MIGS: Tom Cruise's character came up against Soviet-built MiGs while flying his F-14 Tomcat
35 TAIPEI: Taipei 101 in Taipei, Taiwan, is so-called because it has 101 floors.
38 RBI: In a suicide squeeze, the runner at 3rd heads for home before the pitcher releases the ball, assuming that the hitter will make contact with a bunt. If the batter misses the bunt, the runner has committed "suicide".
40 LA-LA: "La-La (Means I Love You)
41 YOU CAN CALL ME AL-I: "You Can Call Me Al
46 LSAT: The Law School Admission Test has been around since 1948.
51 USO: The United Service Organization
52 ARA: Ara Parseghian
63 POE: "The Black Cat
65 HRS: "48 Hrs.
71 ANN: There was no such woman as "Ann Taylor". The name was chosen because "Ann" was considered to be "very New England" back in 1954 when the stores first opened, and "Taylor" suggested that clothes were carefully "tailored".
73 NEZ: In French, le nez (the nose) is just below les yeux (the eyes).
74 ORR: Orr has no other name, just "Orr", in Joseph Heller's "Catch 22
75 ACELA: The Acela Express is the fasted train routinely running in the US, getting up to 150 mph at times. The brand name "Acela" was created to evoke "acceleration" and "excellence".
76 JED-I CLAMPETT: Jed Clampett was played by Buddy Ebsen in "The Beverly Hillbillies
81 CINE: Francois Truffaut was a celebrated French filmmaker, so one might see his movies in le cine, short for le cinema.
89 SKOAL: Skoal is a Swedish toast.
91 MARTIN-I AND LEWIS: The reference is to Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. And Ramsey Lewis
95 LEIA: Princess Leia had those bigs buns on each side of her head in "Star Wars
98 SYD: Syd Hoff wrote "Danny and the Dinosaur
106 GULAG: Aleksandr Solzenhitsyn, having spent many years in a Gulag labor camp, wrote his famous "The Gulag Archipelago
109 GIDEON: Gideon, Judge of Israel, did indeed give the name to Gideons International, the group that deposits bibles in hotel rooms around the world.
116 SYLPHS: A sylph, or a sylphid, is a mythological creature, an invisible and wispy being of the air.
123 AUSTRIA: Both the 1964 and 1976 Winter Olympics were held in Innsbruck.
124 SANCHO: Sancho Panza is Don Quixote
Down
2 IMHO: In My Humble Opinion ... that's what we bloggers say all the time ...
3 NOEL: A noel is another word for a Christmas carol, such as "The Seven Joys of Mary".
4 A TWO: Lawrence Welk
5 THINKPAD: IBM introduced the ThinkPad
6 REZ: Short for the "reservation".
7 ARAMAIC: "The Passion of the Christ
8 BAD GIRLS: "Bad Girls
11 EVITA: "On This Night of a Thousand Stars
13 TRINI: A Trini is from the island of Trinidad off the coast of Venezuela.
14 GENEVA: The Palace of Nations was built as the home of the League of Nations, and is now the home of the United Nations Office at Geneva.
15 AMORAL: "The Stranger
17 BRASI: Luca Brasi was played by Lenny Montana in the 1972 film of "The Godfather
24 RIK: Rik Smits, now retired, is a dutch basketball player who played for the Indiana Pacers.
33 TIM: Tim Conway
41 YAZ: Yaz was the nickname for Carl Yastrzemski
42 AUSSI: The French word for "too, also".
43 EAMON: My favorite film giving insight into Eamon de Valera
48 ACER: I am typing away right now in an Acer laptop
66 ON DIT: An on dit is bit of gossip, derived from the French on dit, meaning "one says".
67 DOPER: A doper is an athlete who subjects himself to blood doping.
72 NERO: In the 1967 film "Camelot
82 IOWA: "The Bridges of Madison County" is a novel
91 MAUD: Maud Adams actually played two Bond girls, in "The Man with the Golden Gun
100 LISPS: Some Spanish dialects do not use certain sounds or sound, and create the impression that the speaker has a slight lisp, this is incorrectly termed a "Castilian Lisp".
102: NOLAN: Francie Nolan is the main character in Betty Smith's novel "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
104 NORAH: Norah Jones
120 RUE: "The Murders in the Rue Morgue



2 comments:
Hate to nitpick (or maybe I don't) but 67 down "DOPER" with red eyes does not refer to blood doping athletes, but to marijuana smokers who get typically red-eyed after lighting up. (I'm guessing you weren't in college in California in the 70's...)
Hi Michael,
Thanks for the enlightenment. Yes, your explanation of DOPER and its clue is better than mine (although, as I had to look it up, I suppose I am technically correct).
Nope, no California college for me. I was at college in the seventies in Ireland, and our drug of choice was black, with a creamy white head, and came in a pint glass :) Thank goodness for Guinness ...
Post a Comment