Flour ground in a chakki / SAT 12-10-22 / Cricketer's 100-run streaks / Website with adoptable virtual creatures / Rock-forming mineral that makes up over half of the earth's crust / Bhikku's teacher / Geographical heptad
Constructor: Sid Sivakumar
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (Challenging ... then suddenly very easy)
THEME: none
Word of the Day:Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry(44A: Mildred D. ___, author of "Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry," 1977) —
The novel is the first book in the Logan family saga, which includes four sequels (Let the Circle Be Unbroken (1981), The Road to Memphis (1992), The Gold Cadillac (1987), and All the Days Past, All the Days to Come (2020)) and three prequels (The Land (2001), The Well: David's Story (1995), and Song of the Trees (1975)) as well as two novellas (Mississippi Bridge (1990) and The Friendship (1987)). In the book, Taylor explores struggles of African Americans in 1930s Mississippi through the perspective of nine-year-old Cassie Logan. The novel contains several themes, including Jim Crowsegregation, Black landownership, sharecropping, the Great Depression, and lynching. (wikipedia)
• • •
Well this was really all about the NW for me, at least in terms of struggle. I spent as much time there, at the beginning, as I did with the rest of the puzzle. More, probably. When 1-Across is easy the puzzle tends to skew easy and vice versa and today, WOOF (!), I had tons of trouble with 1-Across (1A: Eye exam you need to pass? => IRIS SCAN). Never got where they were going with "pass" and couldn't parse the phrase to save my life. With STAKES and SUPER and CRED nailed down, I kept wanting it to be something that broke between the second "S" and the "C," like CLASS ... something. You have to "pass" tests in school, so CLASS ... felt ... possible. I am always terrible with "word that can follow or precede or that goes with X"-type clues and today was no different. [Word with...] gives you no indication how it is "with," whether the answer comes before or after or what, so AIR shmair for me, for sure. ESCAPE ROOM was transparent (my god crossword people seem to love these things, I do Not understand—virtually any room I'm in with more than two people for any length of time quickly becomes an ESCAPE ROOM, so I do not understand subjecting yourself to forced enclosure with other nerds like you (and me), but hey, enjoy). But even having ESCAPE ROOM didn't help much with parsing ICE STORM and REST AREA (the rare 8-letter crosswordese!). CENTURIES was one of those words that I didn't know until I saw it and then I thought "oh yeah, right" (I know jack about cricket, but my wife is from NZ and they care a whole bunch, so I've picked up terminology by osmosis, mostly based on the handful of trips we've taken there, the next of which begins next week, woo hoo!).
Thank god for NEOPETS (has anyone ever said That before?) (8D: Website with adoptable virtual creatures), because getting out of that corner was also dicey. Took me nearly to the end to see MATCHES (29A: Exact hits). And SOLES, yikes, I had no idea until nearly all the crosses were in place (14D: Flat bottoms). Singular "flat" for "shoe" was rough. I was thinking first that "flat" was an adjective and then that "flat" was an apartment. Anyway, that NW corner was not the hardest corner I've ever done, by a long shot, but it was hard, and way way Way harder than the rest of the puzzle. I went from getting very little traction at all to running a full lap around the SE before I'd even really started trying:
After that, there were a few things I didn't know, like TAYLOR and FELDSPAR, but it seemed like I had toeholds everywhere, so the SE played like the Evil (or Good, or ... Opposite) Twin of the NW, and then the SW, like the NE before it, ended up being very easy, almost incidental—though it did contain my two favorite clue/answer pairings of the day: 30D: Let-them-eat-cake occasion? (CHEAT DAY) crossing 43A: Mug shot subject? (LATTE ART). I hate the idea of diets, so I hate the idea of CHEAT DAYs, but I can't deny the cleverness of that clue. I also hate (or don't love) the whole "take a picture of your food" phenomenon, but again, the clue is masterful in its wordplay and misdirection. I couldn't pull my brain away from the idea of "mug" as "face," so that even when the answer seemed to end in ART, I was thinking, like, face tats, or maybe an injection that you get in your face, like botox, I don't know. LATTE ART (pleasantly) surprised me.
Notes:
18A: Flour ground in a chakki (ATTA) — Didn't know "chakki" but didn't need to because "flour" = ATTA. See also 43D: Bhikkhu's teacher (LAMA)—"teacher" was enough.
20A: The Father of ___, moniker for the inventor Leo Baekeland (PLASTICS) — wow that is an awful clue. Couldn't get more trivia-y and dull if it trued. I guess we're supposed to recognize this dude's name by its resemblance to "bakelite" (which he invented), but yeah no that didn't happen. Father of [absolutely random word] as far as I was concerned.
28A: G, in C (SOL) — do re me fa SOL la ti do ... if you're playing in the key of C, then SOL is the musical note G ... I think I have that right.
38A: Rock-forming mineral that makes up over half of the earth's crust (FELDSPAR) — really sounds like a brand name. Has that nightmarishly dull corporate ring to it: "FELDSPAR: Tomorrow's Agriculture Today!" or "FELDSPAR: Business Growth Solutions!" or some such nonsense. Also, SPAR crossing SPAR (in MAKESPAR) was ... below par (or above par ... whichever one you think is worse).
I had less trouble in the NW than @Rex did. I didn't know 1A -- wanted some kind of ...test and that slowed me down. But I guessed at CENTURIES (13A), TAMER (22A) and ORBS (24A) and that made ICE STORM fall into place and the rest of the NW followed.
Didn't understand the clue for SOL (28A) until OFL explained it, but it didn't matter because I got it from crosses.
My trouble spot (and happy music denier) was in the SW. I thought Bhikkhu's teacher would be rAMA (43D) and I couldn't make sense of rATTEART. Eventually by process of elimination I realized that rAMA had to be wrong, and then the bulb lit up.
I never keep time but this could be a new personal record for me. Longest time, but a PR nonetheless. Sid always manages to kick my ass but he also always teaches me something(s) new. This was a super puzzle by a great constructor.
And here it is. *That* puzzle. The exemplar, the rocket shooting you into space. The square filled with buzz, with moment after moment of “Hah!” and “Whee!”. All squeezed into an elegant non-scattershot grid. Letters in boxes that admit you into a palace of pleasure.
It was the cluing. Truly, it wasn’t about flashy answers (though I did like HEAVE HO’S, CHEAT DAY, and even FELDSPAR). It was about witty make-‘em-guess clues, rife with wordplay. Filled with “Oh, *that* kind of [Head] moments (for LAV). Where, say, in the clue [Spreads out in a bed], “spreads” and “bed” each have several meanings. Riddles to crack, infused with humor. One. After. Another.
A puzzle blazing with life. Sid, I’d like to CLASP your hand, shake it strongly, and throw in a hug. You are, in my view, a Crosslandia STAR. Thank you for a thrilling ride!
Opposite experience. Cruised through the NW, thought I might be headed for a PR, then died in the SW. Shoulda gotten FELDSPAR with fewer crosses: I'm a potter, and it is one of the more common ingredients in many ceramic glazes. Disagree with characterizing REST AREA as crosswordese. Many people drive by such places every day.
Ahh - our puzzle from yesterday shows up. This grid screams Friday - splashy clues and wordplay - minimal trivia. IRIS SCAN starts it with a bang. LATTE ART, HEAVE HOS, CHEAT DAY etc are all fantastic. Fooled around and FELL IN LOVE. Loved seeing FELDSPAR.
Not really sure what NEOPETS are but we’ve seen it before. Toughest cross for me was TAYLOR x HOT PRESS but the adjacent were all fair. Don’t like the tense game with SPOT LIT. Not sure the last time I’ve heard a DIAL TONE.
Along with The Power and the Glory - The Severed Head is one of my favorite early 20th century novels - love Rex’s shout out. But on this beautiful, cold morning I’ll go for IRIS and John.
More Friday-like for me but a highly enjoyable Saturday solve. @pablo and bocamp - blocks and blocks of Saturday longs in Matt Sewell’s Stumper today.
Disagree with Rex on FELDSPAR - I had never heard of it but it just sounds like a cool word - it has a certain ring and balance to it. Much better than something contrived like LATTE ART. I also agree that the plastics dude was kind of a waste of a clue, but we don’t want to the NYT editorial staff to start having withdrawal symptoms if we deny them their daily fix of pettifogging.
I stopped in for a visit at the NEOPETS website - OMG, that seems like a concept that should have a shelf-life of about 12 nanoseconds. I can’t believe it’s even up and running - how it made it to the NYT is beyond my feeble ability to comprehend. Oh well, for taste there is no argument.
Thankfully (as @Lewis pointed out) there is some really stellar stuff that carried the day today.
Skewed easy for me, probably (at least in part) because I bailed on the NW very quickly, skipped over to the (easy) NE instead, and then solved clockwise -- finally working out the NW from the bottom up. Of course that's usually the hard way, but not today.
For q while at first I thought I had opened up the Saturday Stumper by mistake, as a first pass looking for a toehold went pretty much nowhere. Actually started in the SW and my big helper was FELDSPAR, of all things. BIRTHDAY was obvious, but wrong. At least the DAY was right. Trundled around and had several minor aha's and finished much faster than I thought I was going to.
My grandson is just about old enough to start on PEEKABOO, CENTURIES evolved eventually, GOESDEAF is a little too close to home, and I was doing a superdook with RESTARE looking for that last letter. Come on, pablo. Good stuff with FLYLOW and HEAVEHOS and a nice past tense with SPOTLIT.
Great stuff and very rewarding, SS. Please accept the Super Saturdazo prize, and thanks for all the fun.
Found this a lot easier than yesterday’s. Only WoEs were TAO and CHEATDAY.
Didn't fully understand IRIS SCAN until just now. I had a full eye exam yesterday and was trying to think if it was one of the many tests they gave me.
MAKE SPAR crossing GET SEVEN was briefly confusing. ATE ALONE felt eat a sandwich-y.
Kind of annoyed throughout the solve but had to admit that the cluing was ingenious. And I felt like I really had accomplished something when I got the happy music. Agree with @Lewis on this one.
I think that IRIS SCAN refers to a device that electronically scans the eye to match it to a person's identity, and, if approved, opens a door to a secure room or hallway and thus lets the identified person "pass" through.
Challenging clues. A new word I should have known (half the Earth's crust is something I never heard of??). A new modern phrase...wish I drank latte as the art pic by Rex looks cool. What more could I ask for.
I didn't find it that hard, though harder than yesterday. Perhaps something's are easier if you are used to thinking carefully about most answers.
Puzzles are looking up. Glad the strike didn't last!
Hey All ! Little spots of impossibleness scattered about the puz today. Back and forth twixt the Across clue and the Down clue, rereading again and again, hoping a spark will glint in the ole brain. Having wrongness in, further adding to the not knowing. But, prevailed! Got the Happy Music at the end!
I'm thinking 95% of us wrote in birthDAY first for CHEATDAY, but no one's admitting it! Also, looking at RESTARE_, kept thinking how RESTARED meant Pull-off. Nice misdirection in both the clue and answer. MATCHES oddly tough to figure out.
Wanted SPOiL IT for 36D (Focused attention on). Makes sense, no? A figurative D'OH! head slap at having _AMA, and not immediately writing in the L. I mean, there's a poem about it and everything.
Got a diagonal patch of POC producing S's in the center, enabling six of those buggers. Fearing that @Anoa Bob might drive to New York City, knock on @Nancy's door, just to be able to heave it at her wall. Definitely POC-marked puz today, as @Anoa would say.
"You can't do that!" - CAN TO! FELDSPAR/MAKESPAR crossing. If you force a boxer to work out, is it MAKE SPAR? A roll in Craps that would be good? GET SEVEN Wanting me to stop so you can continue on? ESCAPE ROO 😁
@Rex, you protest too much. Please just admit that you like PLASTICS.
DIAL TONES may be evidence of hang ups in an antimatter universe, but here they are evidence of pickups. (Unless the tree really does make a sound when no one is there to hear it.)
FLY LOW. It was an improbable combination of letters while solving, but faith carried the day and there it was. I like it.
Uh, ESCAPE ROOM? CHEAT DAY? Eighty-four years on this planet and I've never, never *ever*, heard of either of these items. Apart from those two stumpers, I was cruising through this just fine and thinking Jeez, for the first time in I can't remember how long, I'm solving Friday *and* Saturday. No such luck.
Friday morning I printed puzzle off nyt website. Finished it and went to get Rex's take on it, and found out I had actually just finished the Saturday puzzle...on Friday morning! I went back to the site Friday afternoon and they had fixed the problem. Very odd experience.
Thx, Sid; I 'became smitten' by your work of ART! :)
Easy-med.
Was determined to not leave the NW until something developed. I was STOKED when REA, TAMER, ORBS & ICE STORM blew it open.
Fair crosses all the way.
Don't know how much of the clueing is Sid's or Will's, but I thot it was overall exceptional, esp for SOLES, FLY LOW, MAKES PAR, CHEAT DAY & PEWS.
Kealoa: Loo/LAV.
First thot on 'Let-them-eat-cake' (as I had the CH in place) was CHopping, ala Marie-Antoinette
Unknowns/learnings: 'object permanence'; Terrence TAO; Mildred D. TAYLOR; CHEAT DAY; 'Leo Baekeland'; HOT PRESS; 'Haggadah.
Hazy: FELDSPAR; CANTO; PETCO.
"Object permanence describes a child's ability to know that objects continue to exist even though they can no longer be seen or heard. If you have ever played a game of "peek-a-boo" with a very young child, then you probably understand how this works."
"When an object is hidden from sight, infants under a certain age often become upset that the item has vanished. This is because they are too young to understand that the object continues to exist even though it cannot be seen." (very well mind)
Mildred DeLois Taylor is an African-American writer known for her works exploring the struggle faced by African-American families in the Deep South.
"Why is the land so important to Cassie's family? It takes the events of one turbulent year—the year of the night riders and the burnings, the year a white girl humiliates Cassie in public simply because she's black—to show Cassie that having a place of their own is the Logan family's lifeblood. It is the land that gives the Logans their courage and pride—no matter how others may degrade them, the Logans possess something no one can take away."
FELL IN LOVE with this delightful adventure; lots of nuggets mixed in with the FELDSPAR along the way! :) ___ Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
Great looking grid today and a fun solve. Mostly this was easy but I got hung up on RESTARE_ at 2D and had to back fill that portion of the NW. Not hard to do but it did bring this up to medium territory time wise.
I had a slight deja vu feeling when PEEKABOO showed up because my first guess for 1A was PEEPHOLE.
SPOLIT . . .books written by dogs?
In spite of my LOO/LAV(low brow kea/loa) write over the SE had early week resistance as in near zero.
In the SW I briefly thought of RAMA before LAMA because the 43A clue made me think of the art on the outside of the mugs. No write over though so no harm.
A bit too easy for a Saturday but still a good puzzle.
Easyish. No real problems with this one. I tried ICE STORM with no crosses and it worked. Pretty smooth sailing after that except for trying obITuary before EPITAPH which wouldn’t fit. TAYLOR as clued was a WOE (Opie________ would have worked). Solid Saturday with some fine clues and a bit of sparkle, liked it and Jeff gave it POW.
Seems like constructors are inclined of late to split HARES, at least vs rabbits.
Did you hear about the trader who ATEALONE WOOF on the Nasdaq? He’s reportedly also keen on NEOPETS.
Mathematician Stephen TAO actually received his Field Medal from the Field Day Theatre Company. Not sure what the Rural Electrification Administration had to do with it all.
I always feel a good wavelength vibe from Sid Sivakumar’s constructions. No exception today.
Wonderful puzzle. My wife and I solved it together and thought that we had it until it was time for bed and we had to look up LATTEART/ CHEATDAY. That didn't spoil our fun.
More evidence that Terrible Threes are the enemy of Luscious Longs. There were only four threes today and 22 eight-or-mores.
Agree with @Rex on the mix of easy, medium, and challenging, with @Lewis on the ingenious cluing, and with others on the many gem entries. A great Saturday puzzle, I thought. For me, solving it was like 1) facing a No Entry sign in the NW, 2) gratefully accepting the SOPS thrown by the constructor in the NE, with EPEE and ATTA, letting me into the grid, 3) cruising down easy street through the intersections of FELDSPAR x GOES DEAF and GETS EVEN x MAKES PAR, and 4) running into dead ends where SPOTLIT and CHEAT DAY x LATTE ART would eventually appear - after quite a bit of brain-racking and repeated alphabet runs.
On that last cross: I suspected a coffee mug and wanted a foam hEART - in vain. Making things worse, I had rAMA instead of LAMA (Hi, @Conrad and @puzzlehoarder), which meant a rAT was involved in the mug shot. For the cross, I wondered about a "CHEAp DAY" - when the queen is too cheap to provide bread, so advises the populace to eat cake? Eventually I committed to CHEAT, though I didn't get the diet connection until reading @Rex. And, like @Conrad, realized I needed a LAMA.
Help from previous puzzles: Getting ESCAPE ROOM from the -OM; ATTA, HARES as not rabbits. Help from yesterday's wintry mix pelting my windows: ICE STORM. Do-overs: rAMA, Loo. No idea: NEOPETS, TAYLOR.
Nice one Sid. Clearly deserving of POW. Having enjoyed a tour of Elephant Rocks Park with my geologist son when visiting Missouri last month, I knew FELDSPAR and that toe hold was enough to work backwards into the SHELVEd northwest and I was STOKED.
Like some of you, this was the puzzle I got yesterday. I kept yelling to my husband that it HAD to be a Saturday. He calmed me down a bit by handing me CENTURIES. I really stared at this thing for a long time and decided it was a very difficult Friday. I put it away and started it early this morning. I still just stared...So, I tried working from the bottom up. FELL IN LOVE had to be right. HEAVE HOS looked like it might fit. A FOOT FETISH here, a SHRED there and up the ladder I climbed. Stared at EPITAPH because I can't spell. The faintly penned in downs and crosses gave me a glimmer of hope and I decided to tackle the attic. My mind was set yesterday on a Friday level puzzle. When I shook that notion off my brain and telling myself THIS IS SATURDAY...I put the right hat on and fired away. I finally got IRIS SCAN and let out a little whoop. Poco a poco, words ere coming; I remember! Only two calls to my know-it-all neighbor. I didn't know Leo was a father to PLASTICS and I didn't know NEO PETS. Not bad for me on a Saturday.
Still no newspapers delivered to my building yet. Wonder if it's a slowdown by the delivery service that's related to the strike? They're subcontractors, but still...
Of course it's the worst possible day -- Sat and half of Sun. Anyway I've requested a replacement paper; I'll probably either get 2 papers or 0 papers. There were hints yesterday of a great Saturday puzzle and I'm dying of curiosity and itching to get at it. You may hear from me much later, tomorrow...or not at all.
Did landline telephones ever immediately go to a DIALTONE when the other party in your conversation hung up their phone? As I recall, when someone would hang up their phone, you'd just get nothing - maybe static if the line was noisy. You had to hang up your phone and then pick up again (or depress the switch hook for a second or so) to get a dial tone. Only in the movies or TV did I ever hear an immediate dial tone when someone hung up.
Also, TVTOWERS don't make waves of any sort, unless there's some sort of structure resonance going on - which wouldn't concern TV viewers at all, but should concern the neighbors of the tower. TV towers simply host a transmitter, which is what is responsible for creating the radio waves TV receivers convert into images and sound.
@barbara yesterday - I was so delighted to see your Catullus quote; when I was in high school someone played me Carl Orff's Catulli Carmina (yes, same guy as Carmina Burana) and I bought the Vox LP for myself and played it and played it till I knew it by heart and was able to write it out when I was bored in Latin class. My Latin teacher should have been thrilled but wasn't; this was a girls' school in Johannesburg in the 1950's and all the teachers were unmarried women. I later signed a contract not to marry while I worked off my three years after receiving the Education Department's free ride through college. I have to admit I broke that contract and my dad had to pay the tuition after all. He was very gracious about it. Oh, and if you want to know how that poem goes on, I can still do it by memory, but only if I sing it. "Quare id faciam fortasse requiris - nescio sed fieri sensio, et excrucior!"
This was a Friday mornin solvequest, at our house, so the details are gettin a bit on the dimmer side. The FriPuz that I worked on this mornin was real good and kinda feisty. Today's SatPuz was about the same level of difficulty as the FriPuz, IM&AHO.
Sooo … The SatPuz, that I worked yesterday, comments...
Well-adorned with the Jaws of Themelessness. Got CRED/ESCAPEROOM/STOKED/STAKES/ICESTORM almost instantly. Then things slowed down a might. I think I finally tried REA, which led to INCOMBAT, then TAMER, then SUPER. Then the NW completely caved to M&A's will. Not sure how many nanoseconds that all took, but I think it was a lot.
Then I had to pretty much reboot, except for maybe gettin SOLES. Reboots were tough, as the clues were often hard to decode. Looks like there were about 6 ?-marker clues, but it sure seemed like a lot more.
staff weeject pick: HES. A nice gimme, for Trekkies such as I. Typical away team quote by Dr. Bones McCoy. (Medicine hadn't progressed much, as far as resuscitation techniques.) Only 6 weejects to choose from, btw.
fave stuff included: IRISSCAN clue [brutal, for a 1-A starter]. ESCAPEROOM [with a non-?-mark clue that still had plenty spunk]. PEEKABOO. Non-TayTay TAYLOR. MAKESAPAR clue. FELDSPAR [PARPAR alert!]. HEAVEHOS.
Took one look at Sid S.'s's name, and thought "uh-oh". Usually I find his tough. But this was SUPER.
I like the FELDSPAR + MAKES PAR pairing. FELDSPAR is far from everyday for me and took a while to come into view, but like @Southside, I like the look of it, and I enjoyed reading up on it (from the German: Feld + Spat means "field flake"), and on why feldspar is ubiquitous in the earth's crust. Rex's jokes about it fell flat. I also disagree that REST AREA is "crosswordese".
For me the difficulty and the ahas! of the NW were about equal to any other area of the grid. CENTURIES was a lucky guess. I know not a SHRED of cricket, but I do know that other British Commonwealth sport Snooker (billiards on steroids) where CENTURIES are unbroken streaks of 100+ points. I don't know why ICE STORM took so long ("ICE Slick crossing lAMER?"). Overall the experience was like being in an ESCAPE ROOM: you have to guess what's in the constructor's imaginative head.
IRIS SCAN, CHEAT DAY, LATTE ART: brilliant cluing. A few answers were hard to divine (SHELVE, SHRED, SPOTLIT) from the little pixels of information I had, yet perfectly apt. Lots of little missteps along the way. FEte before FEST. Loo before LAV. Instead of PASSOVER I wondered... day SeVEn? (All I got from Haggadah was some Judaic text.) Instead of FLY LOW: sLaLOm?
Terry TAO is an unusually brilliant mathematician. Many consider him the best mathematician working today, with no sign of slowing down. He also has a great talent for collaboration, and has spearheaded a number of "polymath projects" which seek to crush problems through crowd-sourcing. It's not easy to find problems that submit to such an approach (and to skillfully herd a crowd of mathematical cats), but he finds them. A great example came after the breakthrough of Yitang Zhang in 2013 in the area of number theory.
In case you haven't heard of this, I'll explain. Number theory is full of really hard problems, many dating to antiquity. It's been known at least since the days of Euclid that there are infinitely many prime numbers. Those Greek mathematicians were also interested in "twin primes": pairs of primes differing by 2: 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, etc. Are there infinitely many pairs of twin primes? Everyone thinks so, and there are statistical heuristics that suggest so, but we seem to be very far from being able to prove this. The breakthrough result of Zhang (who held a very modest position as a college lecturer), a bolt from the blue, is that there are infinitely many pairs of prime numbers that differ by less than 70 million (to prove the twin prime conjecture, you'd want to replace that 70 million by 3). His proof rocked the mathematics world: although 70 million sounds like a lot, it was a significant toe in the door. And it rocketed Zhang personally, when he was close to 60 years old, from nameless obscurity to a distinguished professorship at UCLA, where Tao himself works. Anyway, Tao and others started a polymath project to refine Zhang's methods, to see how far they could whittle that number down: Zhang knew 70 million was overkill, but getting any number was the significant thing. Polymath 8, with Terry Tao at the helm, sought to extract maximal juice from Zhang's (and related) methods, and succeeded in lowering that number from 70 million to 246.
Zhang's story is about the most dramatic rags-to-riches story I know of. Recently he's submitted a paper which purports to prove something closely related to the Riemann Hypothesis which, if you know about this stuff, reigns supreme among unsolved problems (and also has to do with how prime numbers are distributed among all integers). Tao is now studying this paper himself, urging patience as the vetting continues, and also tact in case it turns out there are gaps in the proof too wide to fill. He (TAO) is not only an insanely powerful mathematician, but a class act.
I thought an escape room was an impervious room inside a dwelling in which the residents could hunker down in the event of a break-in. I recall a movie with Jodie Foster and Forrest Whitaker about it. Sparkling puzzle today. Enjoyed it much more than Friday.
Agree with others who found this to be a excellent Saturday workout. I thought it had the right combination of tough but fair and put up enough resistance to ultimately give me a sense of accomplishment when the task was complete.
I did notice that, as SPOT LIT by Roo @9:18, the grid got a lot of assistance from the plural of convenience (POC), especially from the uber-convenient two for one POC where a Down and an Across both get a letter count, grid filling boost by sharing a single S at their ends.
I counted four overt and two stealth varieties of the two-fers. The overt variety included shared Ss at the ends of 4D STAKE & 24A ORB, 12D SEA & 20A PLASTIC, 23D PEW & 29A MATCH (bonus -ES there), and 31D ETA & 41A HEAVE HO. The camouflaged stealth varieties are where the POCifying Ss occur inside one entry and at the end of another. This happens when the S at the end of 14D SOLE also embiggens 25A GET EVEN and 25D GO DEAF gets an _ES that also boosts 35A HE.
All those along with several simple POCs like SOPS, MAKES PAR, HARES, DIAL TONES and TV TOWERS convinced the POC Committee to add another level of grid fill help to the two-tiered POC Assisted and POC Marked levels---the POC FEST level.
Whew! I did enjoy the solve but with all that POC space, I can't say I FELL IN LOVE with it.
(Plural of convenience is meant to be a crossword puzzle term, not a grammatical one. If you are still reading this, you are a bona fide crossword nerd!)
My NW passage was through an escape room in an ice storm; it seemed to take centuries, but I was really stoked when I finally solved this super puzzle!
I loved this one, mostly for its brilliant cluing, which led to my feeling a thrill of triumph every time I got an answer. The NW wasn't that hard for me: I've read enough PG Wodehouse to know what a century is, and I guess you can pluralize it without too much pain. That gave me ICE STORM, and when I saw that IN COMBAT would work, there were those two Is and-- IRIS SCAN! I'd heard of retina scans, but close enough. I pretty much rolled through the NW downs from there -- but if I hadn't known CENTURIES, it would have been much harder. Unlike Mr. TAO I'm no mathematician, but I like to think that I'd have figured out what you call 100 runs anyway.
I'm very glad to hear that I'm not the only one to put in Loo for head. I was saved from birthDAY, though because I had the C from MATCHES. I needed all the crosses; even after I saw CHEAT DAY I figured it was some high school thing, like skip day. I can see it happening.
Another kealoa: FEte/FEST. Bet you can guess which one I had first.
Well, I have to run along; gotta trim the tree this afternoon.
@Barbara S. - your response to me yesterday inspired me to do a little searching. "Contemporary Latin poems" mainly takes you into Latin America, but there is this site. I'm happy my conjecture was not wildly off!
Never heard of: * ESCAPE ROOM (A B&D role-playing fetish I'm unaware of?) * CHEAT DAY (Is this some kind of equivalent of "Senior Skip Day" in high school? * LATTE ART (?!)
Escape rooms apparently are attractions people pay money to be locked inside of The game is trying to figure how to get out within a set period of time. Latte art is the "art" a barrista makes with cream when preparing a Latte. Cheat is boring. Just a day you cheat on your diet.
The NW was hell so, like OFL, I went south with much better results. I knew Leo B, the artist of PLASTICS, which gave me a foothold. I agree with most here that SS’s puzz was a dazzler, virtually junk-free with a bouquet of cleverly oblique clues. Look forward to SS’s next!
The NW was difficult for me, but so were many other places. I started with 1D blackice, 19A elated, 20A robotics, 35A its, 30D birthday, 32D wentstag, 36D highlit, 40A gala, then fete, 43D Rama, 51A TVtuners.
The great misleading and vague clues made it rewarding to work my way through all those early blunders. Happy camper here.
One of the toughest puzzles I've ever done and well worth the effort I expended to get my hands on it when it was never delivered yesterday.
It was a "keep the faith" puzzle when the NW proved completely undoable and I went elsewhere. Even inking in ICE STORM faintly didn't help me that much. My real entry was ESCAPE ROOM which I only got once I had the M from MAKES PAR. As far as "making a hasty exit" was concerned, I was thinking of a fire drill or an exit ramp.
Two writeovers almost did me in: BIRTHDAY before CHEAT DAY for the cake occasion and rogER instead of SUPER for "All right!". SUPER as the answer to "All right" prevents me from being as enthusiastic as Lewis is about this puzzle: I think it's a completely unfair and loose and inaccurate clue. OTOH, the clues for DIAL TONES and SPOTLIT are fiendish and pretty genius.
First I suffered, then I only "suffered", but I ended up enjoying the challenge of this one a lot.
I won't say I FELLINLOVE with it, but this was a good Saturday workout. Typically daunting at first; looking down the clue list I found HES (___dead, Jim) and SEAS (Geographical heptad). Soon after I found GOESDEAF/FELLINLOVE and a decent start; after that it became more easy-medium than medium-challenging. There were still snaggy moments, chiefly in the SW, where HEAVEHOS sits over LATTEART, both hard to parse. Hey, I drink mine black. Birdie.
FYI- @Rex posted the Thursday grid with brief comment at the bottom of his original Thursday "Honor the strike" post.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteI had less trouble in the NW than @Rex did. I didn't know 1A -- wanted some kind of ...test and that slowed me down. But I guessed at CENTURIES (13A), TAMER (22A) and ORBS (24A) and that made ICE STORM fall into place and the rest of the NW followed.
Didn't understand the clue for SOL (28A) until OFL explained it, but it didn't matter because I got it from crosses.
My trouble spot (and happy music denier) was in the SW. I thought Bhikkhu's teacher would be rAMA (43D) and I couldn't make sense of rATTEART. Eventually by process of elimination I realized that rAMA had to be wrong, and then the bulb lit up.
> if you're playing in the key of C, then SOL is the musical note G ... I think I have that right.
ReplyDeleteYou do.
I never want to see “foot FETISH” in a crossword puzzle.
ReplyDeleteI got a kick out of it
DeleteHa ha! 😁
DeleteDon’t kink shame!
DeleteI am totally fond of and energized by Iambs.
ReplyDeleteI never keep time but this could be a new personal record for me. Longest time, but a PR nonetheless. Sid always manages to kick my ass but he also always teaches me something(s) new. This was a super puzzle by a great constructor.
ReplyDeleteAnd here it is. *That* puzzle. The exemplar, the rocket shooting you into space. The square filled with buzz, with moment after moment of “Hah!” and “Whee!”. All squeezed into an elegant non-scattershot grid. Letters in boxes that admit you into a palace of pleasure.
ReplyDeleteIt was the cluing. Truly, it wasn’t about flashy answers (though I did like HEAVE HO’S, CHEAT DAY, and even FELDSPAR). It was about witty make-‘em-guess clues, rife with wordplay. Filled with “Oh, *that* kind of [Head] moments (for LAV). Where, say, in the clue [Spreads out in a bed], “spreads” and “bed” each have several meanings. Riddles to crack, infused with humor. One. After. Another.
A puzzle blazing with life. Sid, I’d like to CLASP your hand, shake it strongly, and throw in a hug. You are, in my view, a Crosslandia STAR. Thank you for a thrilling ride!
Iris scan is used to unlock doors etc, to be allowed to pass.
ReplyDeleteIris scan — needed to pass through a door, if it’s used instead of a key or fingerprint
ReplyDeleteMake that iambs (6:36 post)
ReplyDeleteOpposite experience. Cruised through the NW, thought I might be headed for a PR, then died in the SW. Shoulda gotten FELDSPAR with fewer crosses: I'm a potter, and it is one of the more common ingredients in many ceramic glazes. Disagree with characterizing REST AREA as crosswordese. Many people drive by such places every day.
ReplyDeleteAhh - our puzzle from yesterday shows up. This grid screams Friday - splashy clues and wordplay - minimal trivia. IRIS SCAN starts it with a bang. LATTE ART, HEAVE HOS, CHEAT DAY etc are all fantastic. Fooled around and FELL IN LOVE. Loved seeing FELDSPAR.
ReplyDeleteNot really sure what NEOPETS are but we’ve seen it before. Toughest cross for me was TAYLOR x HOT PRESS but the adjacent were all fair. Don’t like the tense game with SPOT LIT. Not sure the last time I’ve heard a DIAL TONE.
Along with The Power and the Glory - The Severed Head is one of my favorite early 20th century novels - love Rex’s shout out. But on this beautiful, cold morning I’ll go for IRIS and John.
More Friday-like for me but a highly enjoyable Saturday solve. @pablo and bocamp - blocks and blocks of Saturday longs in Matt Sewell’s Stumper today.
Disagree with Rex on FELDSPAR - I had never heard of it but it just sounds like a cool word - it has a certain ring and balance to it. Much better than something contrived like LATTE ART. I also agree that the plastics dude was kind of a waste of a clue, but we don’t want to the NYT editorial staff to start having withdrawal symptoms if we deny them their daily fix of pettifogging.
ReplyDeleteI stopped in for a visit at the NEOPETS website - OMG, that seems like a concept that should have a shelf-life of about 12 nanoseconds. I can’t believe it’s even up and running - how it made it to the NYT is beyond my feeble ability to comprehend. Oh well, for taste there is no argument.
Thankfully (as @Lewis pointed out) there is some really stellar stuff that carried the day today.
Skewed easy for me, probably (at least in part) because I bailed on the NW very quickly, skipped over to the (easy) NE instead, and then solved clockwise -- finally working out the NW from the bottom up. Of course that's usually the hard way, but not today.
ReplyDeleteFor q while at first I thought I had opened up the Saturday Stumper by mistake, as a first pass looking for a toehold went pretty much nowhere. Actually started in the SW and my big helper was FELDSPAR, of all things. BIRTHDAY was obvious, but wrong. At least the DAY was right. Trundled around and had several minor aha's and finished much faster than I thought I was going to.
ReplyDeleteMy grandson is just about old enough to start on PEEKABOO, CENTURIES evolved eventually, GOESDEAF is a little too close to home, and I was doing a superdook with RESTARE looking for that last letter. Come on, pablo. Good stuff with FLYLOW and HEAVEHOS and a nice past tense with SPOTLIT.
Great stuff and very rewarding, SS. Please accept the Super Saturdazo prize, and thanks for all the fun.
Found this a lot easier than yesterday’s. Only WoEs were TAO and CHEATDAY.
ReplyDeleteDidn't fully understand IRIS SCAN until just now. I had a full eye exam yesterday and was trying to think if it was one of the many tests they gave me.
MAKE SPAR crossing GET SEVEN was briefly confusing. ATE ALONE felt eat a sandwich-y.
Kind of annoyed throughout the solve but had to admit that the cluing was ingenious. And I felt like I really had accomplished something when I got the happy music. Agree with @Lewis on this one.
ReplyDeleteI think that IRIS SCAN refers to a device that electronically scans the eye to match it to a person's identity, and, if approved, opens a door to a secure room or hallway and thus lets the identified person "pass" through.
ReplyDeleteIf I learned anything from The Sound of Music, it's that the note is "Sew"--a needle pulling thread--not "sol".
ReplyDeleteYeah I’ve always seen it as So not Sol. That one had me confused until I came here.
DeleteDIALTONES? And they accuse boomers of creating dated fill ...
ReplyDeleteChallenging clues. A new word I should have known (half the Earth's crust is something I never heard of??). A new modern phrase...wish I drank latte as the art pic by Rex looks cool. What more could I ask for.
ReplyDeleteI didn't find it that hard, though harder than yesterday. Perhaps something's are easier if you are used to thinking carefully about most answers.
Puzzles are looking up. Glad the strike didn't last!
Just one word, Ben: plastics
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteLittle spots of impossibleness scattered about the puz today. Back and forth twixt the Across clue and the Down clue, rereading again and again, hoping a spark will glint in the ole brain. Having wrongness in, further adding to the not knowing. But, prevailed! Got the Happy Music at the end!
I'm thinking 95% of us wrote in birthDAY first for CHEATDAY, but no one's admitting it! Also, looking at RESTARE_, kept thinking how RESTARED meant Pull-off. Nice misdirection in both the clue and answer. MATCHES oddly tough to figure out.
Wanted SPOiL IT for 36D (Focused attention on). Makes sense, no? A figurative D'OH! head slap at having _AMA, and not immediately writing in the L. I mean, there's a poem about it and everything.
Got a diagonal patch of POC producing S's in the center, enabling six of those buggers. Fearing that @Anoa Bob might drive to New York City, knock on @Nancy's door, just to be able to heave it at her wall. Definitely POC-marked puz today, as @Anoa would say.
"You can't do that!" - CAN TO!
FELDSPAR/MAKESPAR crossing. If you force a boxer to work out, is it MAKE SPAR?
A roll in Craps that would be good? GET SEVEN
Wanting me to stop so you can continue on? ESCAPE ROO
😁
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Could someone explain 47D to me. I cannot make sense of how head ==> LAV. TIA!
ReplyDeletetoilets! lav = lavatory, head = military nickname for the toilet
DeleteHead = toilet = lav(atory)
DeleteHead is a bathroom. LAV in England.
DeleteA LAV is a toilet, same as a head.
Delete@Rex, you protest too much. Please just admit that you like PLASTICS.
ReplyDeleteDIAL TONES may be evidence of hang ups in an antimatter universe, but here they are evidence of pickups. (Unless the tree really does make a sound when no one is there to hear it.)
FLY LOW. It was an improbable combination of letters while solving, but faith carried the day and there it was. I like it.
Uh, ESCAPE ROOM? CHEAT DAY? Eighty-four years on this planet and I've never, never *ever*, heard of either of these items. Apart from those two stumpers, I was cruising through this just fine and thinking Jeez, for the first time in I can't remember how long, I'm solving Friday *and* Saturday. No such luck.
ReplyDeleteFriday morning I printed puzzle off nyt website. Finished it and went to get Rex's take on it, and found out I had actually just finished the Saturday puzzle...on Friday morning! I went back to the site Friday afternoon and they had fixed the problem. Very odd experience.
ReplyDeleteThx, Sid; I 'became smitten' by your work of ART! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Was determined to not leave the NW until something developed. I was STOKED when REA, TAMER, ORBS & ICE STORM blew it open.
Fair crosses all the way.
Don't know how much of the clueing is Sid's or Will's, but I thot it was overall exceptional, esp for SOLES, FLY LOW, MAKES PAR, CHEAT DAY & PEWS.
Kealoa: Loo/LAV.
First thot on 'Let-them-eat-cake' (as I had the CH in place) was CHopping, ala Marie-Antoinette
Unknowns/learnings: 'object permanence'; Terrence TAO; Mildred D. TAYLOR; CHEAT DAY; 'Leo Baekeland'; HOT PRESS; 'Haggadah.
Hazy: FELDSPAR; CANTO; PETCO.
"Object permanence describes a child's ability to know that objects continue to exist even though they can no longer be seen or heard. If you have ever played a game of "peek-a-boo" with a very young child, then you probably understand how this works."
"When an object is hidden from sight, infants under a certain age often become upset that the item has vanished. This is because they are too young to understand that the object continues to exist even though it cannot be seen." (very well mind)
Mildred DeLois Taylor is an African-American writer known for her works exploring the struggle faced by African-American families in the Deep South.
Just added her ebook, 'Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry' to my current reading list.
"Why is the land so important to Cassie's family? It takes the events of one turbulent year—the year of the night riders and the burnings, the year a white girl humiliates Cassie in public simply because she's black—to show Cassie that having a place of their own is the Logan family's lifeblood. It is the land that gives the Logans their courage and pride—no matter how others may degrade them, the Logans possess something no one can take away."
FELL IN LOVE with this delightful adventure; lots of nuggets mixed in with the FELDSPAR along the way! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
"virtually any room I'm in with more than two people for any length of time quickly becomes an ESCAPE ROOM"
ReplyDeleteHa! Amen to that.
Great looking grid today and a fun solve. Mostly this was easy but I got hung up on RESTARE_ at 2D and had to back fill that portion of the NW. Not hard to do but it did bring this up to medium territory time wise.
ReplyDeleteI had a slight deja vu feeling when PEEKABOO showed up because my first guess for 1A was PEEPHOLE.
SPOLIT . . .books written by dogs?
In spite of my LOO/LAV(low brow kea/loa) write over the SE had early week resistance as in near zero.
In the SW I briefly thought of RAMA before LAMA because the 43A clue made me think of the art on the outside of the mugs. No write over though so no harm.
A bit too easy for a Saturday but still a good puzzle.
I assume @Taytayslow was as stumped as I was when Mildred D. TAYTAY didn’t work.
ReplyDelete(Come on, Shortz, show some consistency! Taylor now = TAYTAY. Like in that book, Tinker TAYTAY Soldier Spy…)
49A just had to be NAIL HOLES.
ReplyDeleteAnon @9:35, head=bathroom=lavatory=LAV (or loo, which was my first guess)
ReplyDeleteEasyish. No real problems with this one. I tried ICE STORM with no crosses and it worked. Pretty smooth sailing after that except for trying obITuary before EPITAPH which wouldn’t fit. TAYLOR as clued was a WOE (Opie________ would have worked). Solid Saturday with some fine clues and a bit of sparkle, liked it and Jeff gave it POW.
ReplyDeleteNice to see Mildred D. (TAYTAY) Taylor in 44A.
ReplyDeleteSeems like constructors are inclined of late to split HARES, at least vs rabbits.
Did you hear about the trader who ATEALONE WOOF on the Nasdaq? He’s reportedly also keen on NEOPETS.
Mathematician Stephen TAO actually received his Field Medal from the Field Day Theatre Company. Not sure what the Rural Electrification Administration had to do with it all.
I always feel a good wavelength vibe from Sid Sivakumar’s constructions. No exception today.
Wonderful puzzle. My wife and I solved it together and thought that we had it until it was time for bed and we had to look up LATTEART/ CHEATDAY. That didn't spoil our fun.
ReplyDeleteMore evidence that Terrible Threes are the enemy of Luscious Longs. There were only four threes today and 22 eight-or-mores.
Agree with @Rex on the mix of easy, medium, and challenging, with @Lewis on the ingenious cluing, and with others on the many gem entries. A great Saturday puzzle, I thought. For me, solving it was like 1) facing a No Entry sign in the NW, 2) gratefully accepting the SOPS thrown by the constructor in the NE, with EPEE and ATTA, letting me into the grid, 3) cruising down easy street through the intersections of FELDSPAR x GOES DEAF and GETS EVEN x MAKES PAR, and 4) running into dead ends where SPOTLIT and CHEAT DAY x LATTE ART would eventually appear - after quite a bit of brain-racking and repeated alphabet runs.
ReplyDeleteOn that last cross: I suspected a coffee mug and wanted a foam hEART - in vain. Making things worse, I had rAMA instead of LAMA (Hi, @Conrad and @puzzlehoarder), which meant a rAT was involved in the mug shot. For the cross, I wondered about a "CHEAp DAY" - when the queen is too cheap to provide bread, so advises the populace to eat cake? Eventually I committed to CHEAT, though I didn't get the diet connection until reading @Rex. And, like @Conrad, realized I needed a LAMA.
Help from previous puzzles: Getting ESCAPE ROOM from the -OM; ATTA, HARES as not rabbits. Help from yesterday's wintry mix pelting my windows: ICE STORM. Do-overs: rAMA, Loo. No idea: NEOPETS, TAYLOR.
Nice one Sid. Clearly deserving of POW. Having enjoyed a tour of Elephant Rocks Park with my geologist son when visiting Missouri last month, I knew FELDSPAR and that toe hold was enough to work backwards into the SHELVEd northwest and I was STOKED.
ReplyDeleteLike some of you, this was the puzzle I got yesterday. I kept yelling to my husband that it HAD to be a Saturday. He calmed me down a bit by handing me CENTURIES.
ReplyDeleteI really stared at this thing for a long time and decided it was a very difficult Friday. I put it away and started it early this morning.
I still just stared...So, I tried working from the bottom up. FELL IN LOVE had to be right. HEAVE HOS looked like it might fit. A FOOT FETISH here, a SHRED there and up the ladder I climbed. Stared at EPITAPH because I can't spell. The faintly penned in downs and crosses gave me a glimmer of hope and I decided to tackle the attic.
My mind was set yesterday on a Friday level puzzle. When I shook that notion off my brain and telling myself THIS IS SATURDAY...I put the right hat on and fired away. I finally got IRIS SCAN and let out a little whoop. Poco a poco, words ere coming; I remember!
Only two calls to my know-it-all neighbor. I didn't know Leo was a father to PLASTICS and I didn't know NEO PETS. Not bad for me on a Saturday.
Still no newspapers delivered to my building yet. Wonder if it's a slowdown by the delivery service that's related to the strike? They're subcontractors, but still...
ReplyDeleteOf course it's the worst possible day -- Sat and half of Sun. Anyway I've requested a replacement paper; I'll probably either get 2 papers or 0 papers. There were hints yesterday of a great Saturday puzzle and I'm dying of curiosity and itching to get at it. You may hear from me much later, tomorrow...or not at all.
Did landline telephones ever immediately go to a DIALTONE when the other party in your conversation hung up their phone? As I recall, when someone would hang up their phone, you'd just get nothing - maybe static if the line was noisy. You had to hang up your phone and then pick up again (or depress the switch hook for a second or so) to get a dial tone. Only in the movies or TV did I ever hear an immediate dial tone when someone hung up.
ReplyDeleteAlso, TVTOWERS don't make waves of any sort, unless there's some sort of structure resonance going on - which wouldn't concern TV viewers at all, but should concern the neighbors of the tower. TV towers simply host a transmitter, which is what is responsible for creating the radio waves TV receivers convert into images and sound.
I was super committed to "Touches" (as in touche) for 29 across of "exact hits" so that corner was last to fall, once I finally did the crosses.
ReplyDelete@barbara yesterday - I was so delighted to see your Catullus quote; when I was in high school someone played me Carl Orff's Catulli Carmina (yes, same guy as Carmina Burana) and I bought the Vox LP for myself and played it and played it till I knew it by heart and was able to write it out when I was bored in Latin class. My Latin teacher should have been thrilled but wasn't; this was a girls' school in Johannesburg in the 1950's and all the teachers were unmarried women. I later signed a contract not to marry while I worked off my three years after receiving the Education Department's free ride through college. I have to admit I broke that contract and my dad had to pay the tuition after all. He was very gracious about it. Oh, and if you want to know how that poem goes on, I can still do it by memory, but only if I sing it. "Quare id faciam fortasse requiris - nescio sed fieri sensio, et excrucior!"
ReplyDeleteThis was a Friday mornin solvequest, at our house, so the details are gettin a bit on the dimmer side. The FriPuz that I worked on this mornin was real good and kinda feisty. Today's SatPuz was about the same level of difficulty as the FriPuz, IM&AHO.
ReplyDeleteSooo … The SatPuz, that I worked yesterday, comments...
Well-adorned with the Jaws of Themelessness. Got CRED/ESCAPEROOM/STOKED/STAKES/ICESTORM almost instantly. Then things slowed down a might. I think I finally tried REA, which led to INCOMBAT, then TAMER, then SUPER. Then the NW completely caved to M&A's will. Not sure how many nanoseconds that all took, but I think it was a lot.
Then I had to pretty much reboot, except for maybe gettin SOLES. Reboots were tough, as the clues were often hard to decode. Looks like there were about 6 ?-marker clues, but it sure seemed like a lot more.
staff weeject pick: HES. A nice gimme, for Trekkies such as I. Typical away team quote by Dr. Bones McCoy. (Medicine hadn't progressed much, as far as resuscitation techniques.) Only 6 weejects to choose from, btw.
fave stuff included: IRISSCAN clue [brutal, for a 1-A starter]. ESCAPEROOM [with a non-?-mark clue that still had plenty spunk]. PEEKABOO. Non-TayTay TAYLOR. MAKESAPAR clue. FELDSPAR [PARPAR alert!]. HEAVEHOS.
Someday runtpuz clue: {Poetic, Senate-sponsored indy film production??} = ?* (12 letters long)
Thanx for the fun with puz time travel, Mr. Sivakumar dude. Nice work.
Masked & Anonymo1U
**gruntz**
p.s. * = SINEMACINEMA.
Took one look at Sid S.'s's name, and thought "uh-oh". Usually I find his tough. But this was SUPER.
ReplyDeleteI like the FELDSPAR + MAKES PAR pairing. FELDSPAR is far from everyday for me and took a while to come into view, but like @Southside, I like the look of it, and I enjoyed reading up on it (from the German: Feld + Spat means "field flake"), and on why feldspar is ubiquitous in the earth's crust. Rex's jokes about it fell flat. I also disagree that REST AREA is "crosswordese".
For me the difficulty and the ahas! of the NW were about equal to any other area of the grid. CENTURIES was a lucky guess. I know not a SHRED of cricket, but I do know that other British Commonwealth sport Snooker (billiards on steroids) where CENTURIES are unbroken streaks of 100+ points. I don't know why ICE STORM took so long ("ICE Slick crossing lAMER?"). Overall the experience was like being in an ESCAPE ROOM: you have to guess what's in the constructor's imaginative head.
IRIS SCAN, CHEAT DAY, LATTE ART: brilliant cluing. A few answers were hard to divine (SHELVE, SHRED, SPOTLIT) from the little pixels of information I had, yet perfectly apt. Lots of little missteps along the way. FEte before FEST. Loo before LAV. Instead of PASSOVER I wondered... day SeVEn? (All I got from Haggadah was some Judaic text.) Instead of FLY LOW: sLaLOm?
Terry TAO is an unusually brilliant mathematician. Many consider him the best mathematician working today, with no sign of slowing down. He also has a great talent for collaboration, and has spearheaded a number of "polymath projects" which seek to crush problems through crowd-sourcing. It's not easy to find problems that submit to such an approach (and to skillfully herd a crowd of mathematical cats), but he finds them. A great example came after the breakthrough of Yitang Zhang in 2013 in the area of number theory.
In case you haven't heard of this, I'll explain. Number theory is full of really hard problems, many dating to antiquity. It's been known at least since the days of Euclid that there are infinitely many prime numbers. Those Greek mathematicians were also interested in "twin primes": pairs of primes differing by 2: 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, etc. Are there infinitely many pairs of twin primes? Everyone thinks so, and there are statistical heuristics that suggest so, but we seem to be very far from being able to prove this. The breakthrough result of Zhang (who held a very modest position as a college lecturer), a bolt from the blue, is that there are infinitely many pairs of prime numbers that differ by less than 70 million (to prove the twin prime conjecture, you'd want to replace that 70 million by 3). His proof rocked the mathematics world: although 70 million sounds like a lot, it was a significant toe in the door. And it rocketed Zhang personally, when he was close to 60 years old, from nameless obscurity to a distinguished professorship at UCLA, where Tao himself works. Anyway, Tao and others started a polymath project to refine Zhang's methods, to see how far they could whittle that number down: Zhang knew 70 million was overkill, but getting any number was the significant thing. Polymath 8, with Terry Tao at the helm, sought to extract maximal juice from Zhang's (and related) methods, and succeeded in lowering that number from 70 million to 246.
Zhang's story is about the most dramatic rags-to-riches story I know of. Recently he's submitted a paper which purports to prove something closely related to the Riemann Hypothesis which, if you know about this stuff, reigns supreme among unsolved problems (and also has to do with how prime numbers are distributed among all integers). Tao is now studying this paper himself, urging patience as the vetting continues, and also tact in case it turns out there are gaps in the proof too wide to fill. He (TAO) is not only an insanely powerful mathematician, but a class act.
I thought an escape room was an impervious room inside a dwelling in which the residents could hunker down in the event of a break-in. I recall a movie with Jodie Foster and Forrest Whitaker about it.
ReplyDeleteSparkling puzzle today. Enjoyed it much more than Friday.
Just look up the movie, then. Panic Room.
Delete@Spn Volt-Success and relief, finished the Stumper. What an ordeal.
ReplyDeleteFittingly,@thejoker has the funniest comments of the day.
ReplyDelete6:26 am
“I am totally fond of and energized by Iambs.”
7:20 am
“Make that iambs (6:36 post)”
Thanks for the clarification. Visions of Gene Wilder in a Woody Allen movie came to mind.
Just shows the importance of some coffee before commenting! Baa-bye!
This, and your Tinker TAY TAY comment. I feel like I’m scrolling through an absurdist comedy. And I’m here for it.
DeleteAgree with others who found this to be a excellent Saturday workout. I thought it had the right combination of tough but fair and put up enough resistance to ultimately give me a sense of accomplishment when the task was complete.
ReplyDeleteI did notice that, as SPOT LIT by Roo @9:18, the grid got a lot of assistance from the plural of convenience (POC), especially from the uber-convenient two for one POC where a Down and an Across both get a letter count, grid filling boost by sharing a single S at their ends.
I counted four overt and two stealth varieties of the two-fers. The overt variety included shared Ss at the ends of 4D STAKE & 24A ORB, 12D SEA & 20A PLASTIC, 23D PEW & 29A MATCH (bonus -ES there), and 31D ETA & 41A HEAVE HO. The camouflaged stealth varieties are where the POCifying Ss occur inside one entry and at the end of another. This happens when the S at the end of 14D SOLE also embiggens 25A GET EVEN and 25D GO DEAF gets an _ES that also boosts 35A HE.
All those along with several simple POCs like SOPS, MAKES PAR, HARES, DIAL TONES and TV TOWERS convinced the POC Committee to add another level of grid fill help to the two-tiered POC Assisted and POC Marked levels---the POC FEST level.
Whew! I did enjoy the solve but with all that POC space, I can't say I FELL IN LOVE with it.
(Plural of convenience is meant to be a crossword puzzle term, not a grammatical one. If you are still reading this, you are a bona fide crossword nerd!)
anonymous 1:18: I think they're called "Safe Rooms".
ReplyDeleteMy NW passage was through an escape room in an ice storm; it seemed to take centuries, but I was really stoked when I finally solved this super puzzle!
ReplyDeleteI loved this one, mostly for its brilliant cluing, which led to my feeling a thrill of triumph every time I got an answer. The NW wasn't that hard for me: I've read enough PG Wodehouse to know what a century is, and I guess you can pluralize it without too much pain. That gave me ICE STORM, and when I saw that IN COMBAT would work, there were those two Is and-- IRIS SCAN! I'd heard of retina scans, but close enough. I pretty much rolled through the NW downs from there -- but if I hadn't known CENTURIES, it would have been much harder. Unlike Mr. TAO I'm no mathematician, but I like to think that I'd have figured out what you call 100 runs anyway.
ReplyDeleteI'm very glad to hear that I'm not the only one to put in Loo for head. I was saved from birthDAY, though because I had the C from MATCHES. I needed all the crosses; even after I saw CHEAT DAY I figured it was some high school thing, like skip day. I can see it happening.
Another kealoa: FEte/FEST. Bet you can guess which one I had first.
Well, I have to run along; gotta trim the tree this afternoon.
@Barbara S. - your response to me yesterday inspired me to do a little searching. "Contemporary Latin poems" mainly takes you into Latin America, but there is this site. I'm happy my conjecture was not wildly off!
ReplyDeleteHuh. Read it in the digest and in a comment. I thought the answer for 17 down was “makes par” not “make spar”. What does the latter even mean?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous @ 9:05 AM
ReplyDeleteEffing BRILLIANT!!!
Never heard of:
ReplyDelete* ESCAPE ROOM (A B&D role-playing fetish I'm unaware of?)
* CHEAT DAY (Is this some kind of equivalent of "Senior Skip Day" in
high school?
* LATTE ART (?!)
Escape rooms apparently are attractions people pay money to be locked inside of
DeleteThe game is trying to figure how to get out within a set period of time.
Latte art is the "art" a barrista makes with cream when preparing a Latte.
Cheat is boring. Just a day you cheat on your diet.
The NW was hell so, like OFL, I went south with much better results. I knew Leo B, the artist of PLASTICS, which gave me a foothold. I agree with most here that SS’s puzz was a dazzler, virtually junk-free with a bouquet of cleverly oblique clues.
ReplyDeleteLook forward to SS’s next!
Surprised I’m not seeing anyone else complaining about the grid having both NEOPETS and PETCO. Maybe I’m just cranky, but it annoyed me no end.
ReplyDeleteAm I the only one that put ESCALATORS instead of ESCAPE ROOM? Stalled me for a while
ReplyDeleteThe NW was difficult for me, but so were many other places. I started with 1D blackice, 19A elated, 20A robotics, 35A its, 30D birthday, 32D wentstag, 36D highlit, 40A gala, then fete, 43D Rama, 51A TVtuners.
ReplyDeleteThe great misleading and vague clues made it rewarding to work my way through all those early blunders. Happy camper here.
One of the toughest puzzles I've ever done and well worth the effort I expended to get my hands on it when it was never delivered yesterday.
ReplyDeleteIt was a "keep the faith" puzzle when the NW proved completely undoable and I went elsewhere. Even inking in ICE STORM faintly didn't help me that much. My real entry was ESCAPE ROOM which I only got once I had the M from MAKES PAR. As far as "making a hasty exit" was concerned, I was thinking of a fire drill or an exit ramp.
Two writeovers almost did me in: BIRTHDAY before CHEAT DAY for the cake occasion and rogER instead of SUPER for "All right!". SUPER as the answer to "All right" prevents me from being as enthusiastic as Lewis is about this puzzle: I think it's a completely unfair and loose and inaccurate clue. OTOH, the clues for DIAL TONES and SPOTLIT are fiendish and pretty genius.
First I suffered, then I only "suffered", but I ended up enjoying the challenge of this one a lot.
Coffee mug/Mug shot my take on
ReplyDelete43Across
A solid Saturday themless. SUPER!
ReplyDeleteEDIT - Themeless
ReplyDeleteI found it medium, then easy, then challenging, then done. Fought with me to the last letter. Feelings of triumph abide.
ReplyDeleteDiana, Lady-in-Waiting and Abider
I won't say I FELLINLOVE with it, but this was a good Saturday workout. Typically daunting at first; looking down the clue list I found HES (___dead, Jim) and SEAS (Geographical heptad). Soon after I found GOESDEAF/FELLINLOVE and a decent start; after that it became more easy-medium than medium-challenging. There were still snaggy moments, chiefly in the SW, where HEAVEHOS sits over LATTEART, both hard to parse. Hey, I drink mine black. Birdie.
ReplyDeleteYBBBG BGBBG YGBBG GGGGG MAKESPAR.
CRED SHRED
ReplyDeleteSOL played some FETISH PEEKABOO,
so GOES his EPITAPH, they say,
HE GETS the HEAVEHO OPTION, too,
'cuz HE FELLINLOVE on CHEATDAY.
--- TAYLOR REA
Yeah, tougher in some places than others. Another inkFEST right there where I had todo/FEte/FEST crossing tiptOe/FLYLOW.
ReplyDeleteWordle MAKESPAR.