Horace's two-horned queen of the stars / FRI 6-16-23 / Mythological name that means awakener of desire / Name symbolizing restoration / Spending excessive time reading negative news online / Saperstein who founded the Harlem Globetrotters / British newspaper with the highest paid circulation / Coastal corrosion cause / Small drinking glass as for liquor

Friday, June 16, 2023

Constructor: Natan Last and the J.A.S.A. Crossword Class

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: ADRIENNE Rich (11D: Award-winning poet ___ Rich) —

Adrienne Cecile Rich (/ˈædriən/ AD-ree-ən; May 16, 1929 – March 27, 2012) was an American poet, essayist and feminist. She was called "one of the most widely read and influential poets of the second half of the 20th century", and was credited with bringing "the oppression of women and lesbians to the forefront of poetic discourse". Rich criticized rigid forms of feminist identities, and valorized what she coined the "lesbian continuum", which is a female continuum of solidarity and creativity that impacts and fills women's lives.

Her first collection of poetry, A Change of World, was selected by icon W. H. Auden for the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. Auden went on to write the introduction to the book. Rich famously declined the National Medal of Arts to protest House Speaker Newt Gingrich's vote to end funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. (wikipedia)

• • •


Well, despite the fact that CANCEL CULTURE is imaginary—nobody ever seems to truly get "canceled," they just go on to win awards, sell lots of records, etc., all while they or their fans complain about how they've been "canceled" (bigots and abusers love to play the victim)—and despite the fact that the DAILY MAIL is a right-wing rag, and despite the fact that all bridge terminology is complete gibberish to me (END PLAY shmend play), despite despite despite, I loved this puzzle. Very rollercoastery, very whoosh-whoosh. It even had that roller coaster thing where the car starts out moving pretty slow and then, suddenly, drops and you go flying every which damn way. I had significant trouble right up front with AT SEA (1D: Making a crossing, say) and SCOLD (3D: Tear into), the latter of which I wanted to be SHRED and then SCALD (!?). I put in EELY, I pulled EELY, I put EELY back (19A: Hard to handle, in a way). It was less than graceful, my progress up there. Cannot believe how long it took me to see STONEWALL (16A: ___ National Monument, landmark in New York City's West Village)—without a specific reference to gayness, I was looking for more typical "monument" fare here, like a ... well, I was gonna say "like a general," but ... wait, there's no connection between STONEWALL Jackson and the STONEWALL Inn, is there? Anyway, what I was trying to say was I was looking for a monument to a historical figure like FDR or Ida B. Wells or someone, I dunno. Without the "O" from SCOLD, I was drawing blanks. With the "A" from SCALD in there, I even said "STANEW-" out loud and shook my head: "that's not anything." But then I worked it out and dropped out of that corner and suddenly ... nothing. I was still kinda stuck. TIOS hurt me at 20A: Some foreign relations (TIAS). Again, one letter off and everything goes to hell. I got PLOTZES and SEMOLINA, but still things weren't exactly Moving ... but then I got DOOMSCROLLING at a glance, and then LAZARUS (ironically) dropped, and ... blast-off:


Going so fast that when I finally stopped I left a SKIDMARK! So fun to come barreling into that corner, hit the brakes, make a screeching 180, and look back at my progress like "woo hoo, yes, that was fun. Alright, let's go back and see what we can do now!" Ah, I just remembered the other teeny tiny answer that was holding me back before DOOMSCROLLING opened the floodgates. I had HERA before LUNA (34D: Horace's "two-horned queen of the stars"). Now, Horace would've called HERA "Juno," and I should've known that, but in my nerdy defense, HERA is frequently referred to as "ox-eyed" or "cow-eyed" and I'm pretty sure she's sometimes depicted with horns or associated with cows in some way. So there was that. But then there was DOOMSCROLLING—most fun I've ever had DOOMSCROLLING. Hurray, DOOMSCROLLING.


Good answers abound in this one—proper marquee stuff in every part of the grid, as it should be on Friday. I especially liked seeing STONEWALL and ADRIENNE Rich during Pride Month, and I especially especially liked seeing ADRIENNE Rich at the BOOKFAIRS! Nice bit of juxtaposition there. In fact, this puzzle had a lot of little answer echoes like that. You've got the SALT AIR from being AT SEA, you've got the symmetrical Yiddish thing going with PLOTZES and SCHMEAR (which also, along with STONEWALL, gives the puzzle a very NYC feel). And you've got me (REX) crossing my late, beloved cat (OLIVE), which I'm sure was not intentional, but I'm accepting this puzzle as a love letter / condolence card all the same. Thanks, everyone.


Clean-up:
  • 48D: One of the Hindu trinity (SIVA) — why do I want this to be SHIVA? Am I confusing it with the Jewish mourning period? No, I am not! SHIVA ("The Destroyer") is one of the principal deities of Hinduism. This is just an alternate spelling.
  • 56A: Tapenade ingredient (OLIVE) — had this as ONION at first. So happy when it turned out to be OLIVE. Tapenades do not typically contain onions, though anything can be a tapenade if you want it to be. Just mush it and put it on a cracker—tapenade!
  • 24D: Way (PROCESS) — I had trouble linking these words in my mind, but I think you can get there by way of "method"...
  • 17D: Name symbolizing restoration (LAZARUS) — just as the STONEWALL clue hid the key gayness, this clue hid the key Resurrected Human Being! I was looking for ... I don't know what, furniture polish? "OK, what are we restoring here today!? ... oh, human life? oh, well, yes, bit above my pay grade, good luck with that." 
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

[❤️OLIVE & REX❤️]

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

95 comments:

Anonymous 6:03 AM  

I agree - awesome puzzle!

Anonymous 6:23 AM  

I believe there are different forms of the letter "s" in Hindi or Sanskrit. Siva starts with the one that is more of an "Sh", hence the alternate spelling.

Elision 6:59 AM  

My one nitpick: I would say that "cancel culture" is the modern *propensity* for ostracizing, etc... not the ostracization itself. Otherwise, liked it!

Joaquin 7:01 AM  

At my age, DOOMSCROLLING means spending a half hour scrolling down the list to finally arrive at your birth year.

Liveprof 7:02 AM  

Adrienne Rich was one of the inaugural fifty American "pioneers, trailblazers, and heroes" inducted on the National LGBTQ Wall of Honor within the Stonewall National Monument.

Wanderlust 7:10 AM  

This was very much on my wavelength, with so many answers that probably caused problems for others just going right in for me, with no or almost no crosses: STONEWALL, ADRIENNE, DOOMSCROLLING, SCHMEAR, CHENILLE. (That last one just feels so grandma-ish to me, very nostalgic.)

I had a similar problem as REX had in the NW, but for me it was in the SE, where my whooshing came (appropriately) to a screeching stop. I had rite for “ceremony,” rILE for “mount (up), PEStY FOR “persistently annoying” (which I glared at). I wasn’t seeing the chicken dish (which probably should be changed to Kyiv now), couldn’t remember MEGS, could not figure out what kind of SCREECH was happening and why it was capitalized…just a total mess down there. Finally guessing on one of the shortest answers - BIN - broke the dam.

Agree with Rex that CANCEL CULTURE is a smokescreen for whiny bigots. Banning any book from school libraries that dares to acknowledge different sexual orientations or gender identities than yours or that accurately explains to children the horrors of our racist past and reality of our racist present - *that* is CANCEL CULTURE.

Some very nice cluing here and there, like “Secret targets” for ODORS. “Long to be in Hollywood” felt off to me for NIA - isn’t she already there?

Never heard of PLOTZES, but a nice word to know. Did not know that SEMOLINA is an ingredient in pudding. Wondering about how we got LIMERICK from the Irish city since I can’t recall a limerick about LIMERICK. If the jokey poem were to be named for a place, you’d think it would be Nantucket.

Nice job, constructors!

Phillyrad1999 7:11 AM  

Clues that i loved

You can buy it by the inch
Shell Stations
They go straight to your head

Easy Friday makes me wonder what’s lurking tomorrow

Tom F 7:11 AM  

Great puzzle! I too enjoyed the rollercoaster ride and the solid fill. Lots of lovely answers. White Russians, yes!
Well done JASA class.

Son Volt 7:13 AM  

Natan is one of my favorite constructors - not sure how these group efforts materialize but his nuance is all over this wonderful grid. The sheer number of short entries is odd for a Friday - but the solve flow is fantastic.

LUNApark is one of the great records

Glen Laker 7:14 AM  

Really liked this one. Exactly what I want to see in a Friday puzzle. Lost a lot of time in the SW with ANN Rice crossing the Daily NEWS, but felt great when I finally figured it out. Never heard PLOTZED before, but sounds like a perfect word for what it means.

Anonymous 7:20 AM  

I agree.

StevyB 7:37 AM  

Surprised at the reactions so far. This struck me as the lamest Friday puzzle in ages. For me it played like a Tuesday.

SouthsideJohnny 7:37 AM  

The highlight of the day for me was Rex actually giving us a knowledge dump on some of the similarities and differences relating to HERA, LUNA and JUNO. The fact that some of y’all know that “ HERA is frequently referred to as "ox-eyed" or "cow-eyed" and I'm pretty sure she's sometimes depicted with horns or associated with cows in some way” just blows my mind. I can remember ZEUS - and I also know EROS and CUPID from their arrows shtick, but that’s about it on the Greek/Roman stuff for me. I don’t even know if ZEUS has a Roman counterpart for example (or maybe ZEUS was the Roman dude and I’m even more clueless than I thought).

I don’t make many desserts - I know SEMOLINA makes a big difference in the texture and “bite” of pasta - am wondering if the difference is similarly pronounced when used in something sweet rather than savory. May have to experiment with some SEMOLINA-based pudding this weekend. - does anyone have any suggestions or recommendations ?

Kent 7:41 AM  

Very enjoyable. Struggled in the NW to start. I’m not proud - if it takes stale crosswordese like EELY to get a foothold I’ll take it. That and ADD right below it cracked the nut in that corner, and the rest of the puzzle flowed pretty easily. I’m not great at names, in puzzles or in real life, so I knew I was in the zone when ADRIENNE went in without hesitation.

Smith 7:51 AM  

Gee, @Rex, STONEWALL was my first complete entry. Chicken soup before KIEV. Not familiar with PONY as clued (had shot in there for a minute). Weirdly it was the long ones in the center that dropped right in; probly spent too much time DOOMSCROLLING in the orange cheeto Era. CANCELCULTURE seems illiberal to me (yikes, sorry). And I haven't had a WHITERUSSIAN in, well, forever, I guess.

But I enjoyed the puzz and it's kinda extra nice that NL made it with his class. And I like the swirly grid art (like @Nancy, not something I normally pick up on).

Lewis 7:52 AM  

Oh my, what a fab collab, what a joy bringer. Fresh and clean, bursting with life.

I was recently thinking how it seems like there have been more collaborations in the NYT puzzles as of late, and that it is a good thing. Collaborating sparks play, and play brings discovery and serendipity, and these things bring bounce to puzzles.

Look at today’s clue for HEL, for instance, an answer often clued [Daughter of Loki]. Today it’s given its best clue ever, never done before: [Norse goddess of death with an apt-sounding name]. Look at the clue for TIAS – [Some foreign relations] – brand new and smile producing.

Look at the new clue for AD SPACE, a clue that sets the brain whirring: [You can buy it by the inch]. I was immediately thrust into the riddle of Things Sold By The Inch. Submarine sandwiches? Fabric? Pants?

I imagine the JASA class brainstorming these clues, with such winners popping out.

And brainstorming for fresh answers. Look at these answers that have never appeared in the NYT puzzle in its 80 years: CANCEL CULTURE, DOOMSCROLLING, BOOK FAIRS, PLOTZES.

Just a joy. I also liked END PLAY as the end play, that is, the last word of the puzzle. Plus the symmetrical Yiddish PLOTZES and SCHMEAR, and the symmetrical palindromes SIS and AMA.

Natan, this is your 10th JASA class puzzle, and once again, a spirit brightener as well as a paean to collaboration. Please, please keep doing this, and thank you and your class for a scintillating outing today!

Taylor Slow 8:05 AM  

I love it when Rex ranks a puzzle as Medium and I've found it easy, as was the case with this one. Talk about my wheelhouse! DOOMSCROLLING--love the term, love seeing it in the puzzle. PLOTZES and SCHMEAR--I love the sounds of Yiddish words! Loved the clue for ODORS!

The SE was the only area that put up much resistance. Don't play bridge, and "extremist" used as an adjective to get to ULTRA set me back a bit. EGO BOOST: Tired of thinking about TFG, which is where the word EGO takes me these days.

My one quibble: CHENILLE used to be a "common fabric for bedspreads." It hasn't been for 50+ years. But it did enjoy a rebirth moment back in the '80s, when it was popular in women's sweaters for about a year. The crossword staff is notoriously bad on fashion clues.

@Elision: Nice distinction on CANCEL CULTURE
@Joaquin: Funny take on DOOMSCROLLING. I can relate!

Finally, @Rex: No, you cannot make tapenade by just mushing something up. The word "tapenade" comes from the Italian word for "caper," an essential ingredient--along with olive oil, lemon juice, and some herbs.

Great start to the weekend, Natan and students! Thank you!

Anonymous 8:06 AM  

Can END PLAY really be considered a tactic? Seems to me it's more of a phase of a hand wherein one might choose to deploy one tactic or another. I had "finesse" in there at first.

Conrad 8:10 AM  


@SouthsideJohnny: Zeus and Hera were Greek. Jupiter and Juno were their Roman counterparts. For more on Greek mythology, I recommend link Mythos by Stephen Fry.

I didn't have a lot of overwrites but that doesn't mean I just breezed through. There were a lot of "What is that clue getting at?" moments, a lot of which were covered by @Rex.

Not knowing how to spell SABAN (8A) and CHENILLE (35D) hurt me, but I was lucky enough to guess SEMOLINA (21D) from just a couple of crosses. Who knew that it's in pudding?

Rich Glauber 8:15 AM  

Too easy for a Friday, once i got out of the Northwest unscathed, there was no resistance. Whoosh whoosh....

Anonymous 8:16 AM  

I’m really surprised by the extreme positivity here. I found this one unbelievably easy (set my record for fastest Friday time ever) and I could not believe it was a Friday.

Maureen 8:19 AM  

My time was a third of what I usually do on Friday. Although the puzzle itself was fun, it felt more like a Wednesday to me. I like my Fridays to be an easier Saturday, so when I die then, I don’t feel inept. 😉

Anonymous 8:26 AM  

This is a Tuesday puzzle. As soon as I saw JASA I knew it would be a disappointingly easy puzzle not worthy of Friday. Still I wish them all shabbat shalom

Liveprof 8:34 AM  

I'm glad "They go straight to your head" did not turn out to be LICE. But I'm troubled by how close those (WHITE) RUSSIANS are to KIEV.

FYI -- the proper use of PLOTZ is to send someone a picture of your new grandchild with the message "Could you plotz?"

Dr.A 8:36 AM  

I thought it was very easy, other than that, no significant complaints. I got less than half as fast as my average.

Anonymous 8:36 AM  

Semolina pudding common alternative to oatmeal in UK and Germany etc

Liveprof 8:37 AM  

I'm glad "They go straight to your head" did not turn out to be LICE. But I'm troubled to see how close those (WHITE) RUSSIANS are to KIEV.

The proper use of PLOTZ is to send someone a photo of your new grandchild with the message "Could you plotz?"

pabloinnh 8:45 AM  

NW start, nothing going on. SABAN, and the whole NE was done. Down to the SE,and SUP and PESKY gave that away. REX and RELAX and OLIVE and the SW was done. The middle was whooshy thanks to WHITERUSSIANS and CANCELCULTURE, I remembered seeing DOOMSCROLLING somewhere, and thinking "why would you do that?". Midsection done.

And so, back to the mysterious NW, where CLAMBARS and SCALD had the parking brake on for too long. Also took forever to see STONEWALL. Shame on me.

All this to say that this one felt like a four corners with a middle puzzle, which didn't make me like it any less. In this part of the world you never hear people ask for a bagel with a SCHMEAR, and no one PLOTZES, but I've been around long enough to have heard them both.

Very nice Saturday indeed, NL and the entire CC. Nothing Like a Charming Challenge to start the day, and thanks for all the fun.

Oye @GILL I-The "Why?" clue had me thinking of our granddaughter. Spent the day with her yesterday and heard that one every twenty seconds or so. Tanto gusto.

bocamp 8:45 AM  

Thx, Natan & J.A.S.A. Crossword Class; nice work! 😊

Easy-med (aside from a careless dnf).

Had SCHMEER and didn't pay attn to SEMOLINe.

Otherwise a smooth and enjoyable journey. :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

mathgent 8:50 AM  

DOOMSCROLLING was a gimme for Rex but unknown to me. Is it widely used on social media? If not, where?

Limerick county in Ireland isn't named for a person. It's named for its capital city. How is it eponymous?

PLOTZ reminds me of another Yiddish word, "putz." My wife picked it up from her brother-in-law a while back and started using it. It's fun to say. She stopped when I told her what it means.

Jeff Chen notes that there are 17 Terrible Threes in the grid, which he considers high. I count them in every non-Sunday puzzle. Seventeen is actually close to average.

Nice puzzle.


Dorkito Supremo 8:52 AM  

Loved seeing WHITE RUSSIANS across the middle of the grid. My favorite breakfast drink by a mile. Make it with 2% milk instead of cream and you can make a meal of it. Much better IMO than the acid and spice bomb that is the bloody mary.

Replace half of the milk with eggnog, add a little nutmeg and cinnamon on top, and you've got a great seasonal drink. I call it the Faberge (think Russian + egg). One could probably survive on nothing else from Christmas through New Years Day!

Pete 8:58 AM  

@Mathgent - LIMERICK gave its name to the poetic form. For better or worse, eponymous goes both ways these days, live with it - it's Pride Month!

andrew 8:59 AM  

Tremendous puzzle!

To stay out of trouble/get comment posted, will ignore all the political folderol expressed by REX and followers - surprised he wasn’t offended by WHITE RUSSIANS SCHMEARing KIEV.

Never heard of PLOTZES but ERATO gave me my ENDPLAY (leaving no SKIDMARKS).

Ok, back to my daily DOOMSCROLLING while listening to Beatles (SEMOLINA Pilchard climbing up the Eiffel Tower…)

Well done, Nathan and class!!

jberg 8:59 AM  

Lots of fun, most from throwing in the long acrosses, and relatively easy except that I got in my own way a couple of times.

STONEWALL was my first entry. I actually had no idea the place was in the West Village, but I couldn't think of anything else in that part of NYC that would be National Monument worthy. (@Rex, notice the capitalization - a National Monument is a park, not a statue. Like Bears Ears National Monument, much in the news over the last few years.) That gave me enough to see past the tricksy cluing in the earlier answers. I don't know of any college football coaches, except that guy at Penn State who harbored a sexual abuser; so I just got that from the crosses.

I read the clue for 31-A as "reviews" rather than "news" so I imagined a term for that and came up with hateSCROLLING. And then, since I know a lot of fabric names without knowing what the fabrics are actually like, I tried Chambray for the bedspreads. Now that I've looked it up, I see that we actually have CHENILLE on our bed right now. Doh!

I think the dish is still chicken KIEV. I saw Peking duck on a menu last week; I think dishes generally keep the names they were given at birth.

The reason HEL reminds us of Hell is that it is named after her; or rather, it was the name of both the place and the goddess who ruled it. So "apt" seems a little weak, though it's good enough for a clue, I guess.

But 1-A is just wrong, unless you are buying one-dimensional space. Otherwise, it goes by the column-inch.

jberg 9:01 AM  

BTW, does anyone know why Rex tagged this one NATAN LAST SUCKS?

Anonymous 9:07 AM  

Natan knows what he did… ~RP

Anonymous 9:09 AM  

It’s a very old tag that Natan or one of my subs used years and years ago as a joke, so now it comes up every time I want to tag him, and sometimes I just throw it in there for old times’ sake ~RP

Anonymous 9:17 AM  

And now I know that “White Russians” has the same number of letters as “Cosmopolitans.”

Nancy 9:24 AM  

What a gorgeous grid! What beautiful stacks! What delicious and colorful long answers! DOOMSCROLLING! CANCEL CULTURE! EGO BOOSTS! What a delightful sprinkling of Yiddish. PLOTZES! SCHMEAR! This puzzle simply bursts with personality.

A few hiccups for me. TACO Bell before TACO BARS. REMS before MEGS. Both straightened out in the blink of an eye, though, by the crosses.

Aha -- constructed by a "crossword class". So impressive! And it's very good news for us solvers. These youngsters will be around for many, many decades -- adding spice and zest to the NYT puzzle for yea--

Uh oh, wait. This is the oldsters' class, right? I think I remember seeing that last time. This is the class comprised of retirees and Senior citizens.

You'd better grab on to them quickly, Will Shortz, and use them soon. Like me, they won't be around forever.

RooMonster 9:28 AM  

Hey All !
The NW corner was brutal! Flew through (for me) the rest of the puz in about 14 minutes (fast!) but just could not get a single thing in the NW. After Checking Puzzle and outright cheating to Goog for ABE, finally finished at 26 minutes. Dang, 12 minutes for a corner, with help!I blame PONY. 😁

Had ichARUS for LAZARUS further mucking things up. Ah, me.

Neat looking grid, another Complete Rotational Symmetry, ala turn the puz either 90 degrees or 180 degrees (UIE,UEY) and the Blockers stay the same, ala the answers would all be the same lengths. Oh, wait! That's not true. The four Blockers in the center mess that up. Take those out, then the Symmetry... Nevermind. 😁

Fun clue for ODORS (Secret targets) When I saw Faints from emotion clue, I think of Eddie Murphy as the Mother in Nutty Professor. She was always PLOTZing!

Nice puz, even after the NW gave me a WHAT FOR. Class gets an A for this!

Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 9:32 AM  

Kyiv*

Bob Mills 9:46 AM  

Finished it by trial and error because I had never heard of SCHMEAR or DOOMSCROLLING. Otherwise I thought the puzzle was fairly easy by Friday standards. I also was hung up on "some foreign relations," but the crosses gave TIAS to me (aunts in Spain).

Can someone tell me what SCHMEAR is?

Carola 9:57 AM  

Easy and enjoyable, with plenty of FLAIR. PLOTZES + SCHMEAR is great, and I also liked the SALT AIR AT SEA, but I needed @Rex to appreciate the link of STONEWALL with ADRIENNE Rich (@Liveprof 7:02, thank you for the additional information about that connection). Other pleasures: SEMOLINA, LAZARUS, CHENILLE, POMP.

@Taylor Slow 8:05, speaking of CHENILLE's moment in the 80s - I have a CHENILLE bathrobe (pink, with a tufted multi-color floral design) from that era, which in true 80s style has shoulder pads! It's ginormous otherwise, too, really like wearing a bedspread. I treasure it.

pabloinnh 9:58 AM  

Note to self, today is Friday. Come on man.

JAK 10:05 AM  

Actually, the organization, JASA, provides services to seniors, but the class is open to anyone, and on-line. Natan is a wonderful teacher. Learning how to construct crosswords adds a new level of enjoyment to your solving experience.

Anonymous 10:17 AM  

Based on the German word schmieren- to spread something on something. Something else: plotz also from German. In this case platzen- to explode.

Anonymous 10:26 AM  

😂

JD 10:44 AM  

Should've know Schmear, should've gotten Ad Space since I've purchased enough of it, and didn't know Plotzes. The sound of Cancel Culture grates. Cancelling Culture would still annoy me but the sound of it would make sense. So there's that.

Bollean Operators for And, don't know about that. Saban, unknown. And for all these, I was chopped. I mean DNF. I've been streaming old episodes of Chopped and Ted's voice is in my head.

Anonymous 10:46 AM  

The origin of the limerick is unknown, but it has been suggested that the name derives from the chorus of an 18th-century Irish soldiers' song, “Will You Come Up to Limerick?” To this were added impromptu verses crowded with improbable incident and subtle innuendo.

jae 10:54 AM  

Easy-medium. I struggled a bit in the PLOTZES/PROCESS/SEMOLINA/LIMERICK area but filling in the center stack (which went pretty quickly) took care of that.

ADRIENNE was a WOE.

annS before TIMS

Delightful! Liked it a bunch!

Anonymous 10:59 AM  

My best Friday time ever. I honestly felt that the puzzle was created by old people (I am one). Much of it felt dated. White Russians, however tasty, have not been popular since the 1970's. And, while cancel culture is a relatively new term, it is a term used by those afraid to change their often discriminatory, abusive habitual thoughts and actions.

bocamp 10:59 AM  

Speaking of FLAIR, Max Park is an ULTRA Rubik's Cube speed solver (to the max, one could say). He just received a huge EGO BOOST with a new world record for the 3x3 cube with a time of 3.134 secs. It's amazing how poised and RELAXed he looks while solving. (here) Lots of near PLOTZES from spectators. 🤩😱
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Newboy 11:00 AM  

Having weekly (weakly?) struggles with Professor Last’s New Yorker grids, we were expecting a HELish solve for a Friday NYT experience ANDS what’s SUP but today’s cruise. Thanks for a PILE of EGO BOOSTS AND a SCHMEAR of Yiddish all youze J.A.S.A. Folk. Expected to be lost AT SEA, so thanks for a smooth sailing.

beverly c 11:00 AM  

Enjoyable puzzle! The only thing that hung me up for a bit was PLOTZES/SEMOLINA/NIA.
I tackled it from different spots, I don’t go straight through top to bottom like some folks, but writing in ADRIENNE and DOOMSCROLLING on the first pass was a surprise on a Friday.
I liked seeing TACOBARS.

Has Justine Landed ? 11:02 AM  

Guy who wants to cancel every right of center person from crossword puzzles thinks CANCEL CULTURE is imaginary. Gotta love it.

Whatsername 11:04 AM  

Bravo, brava, and hip hip hooray. Let’s hear it for the Class of J.A.S.A. - what an outstanding puzzle! This is how you do Friday, and this is how you include pop CULTURE without losing your senior solvers.

The long stacks were all terrific but that center section may be the best I’ve ever seen. Just picture it: DOOM SCROLLING the latest on CANCEL CULTURE while sipping a WHITE RUSSIAN. And a very timely coincidence considering the headlines in the news this week. As Jeff Chen said, a tale for our time.

So kudos to you, Natan and constructors in training. And thank you Rex, for the OLIVE picture. It made my day.

Gary Jugert 11:10 AM  

This is as good as Friday is likely to ever be, but phew-ee it's a wheelhouse solve. The long answers are marvelous and I wrote them in easily, but some of the short stuff. Eek.

What I didn't know:

STONEWALL: I know it's in NYC. I have no idea what the West Village means. Maybe on the west side of Manhatten island?

PLOTZES: I don't think I've ever seen it in a fainting context.

AMA: I read the first six links Google offered about the war on smoking and no mention of the AMA, unless I overlooked it. I wish people would just stop letting corporations kill them.

END PLAY: All I know about Bridge is that it's cards, and old people like it.

CHENILLE: That's a random collection of letters to me. Bedspreads come from my wife's occasional redecorating manias. I would probably have the same one I had in college.

PONY GLASS: Never heard of this and I once owned a pony. Still can't believe that happened to me.

SIVA: I guess you spell it any way you want?

ABE: I read the entire Globetrotters Wikipedia page. Amazing history.

SEMOLINA: Seriously, it is time to talk crossword constructors into turning off the Food Channel.

ALL THE MYTHOLOGICAL BEASTS: I took plenty of Greek and Roman history, but we mostly studied real things. I'm going off high school level mythology knowledge and we didn't get to this fake cast of characters.

Things that delighted:

SISAL: I looked it up last week and remembered it this week. Yay, for useless trivia!

TACO BARS: Nice. And yum.

DOOM SCROLLING: I stopped doing social media due to La Petite Orànge, because I was doom scrolling.

CANCEL CULTURE: Ah, the media. You find a few nutbags and elevate their importance by pointing a camera at them. It's not a culture, but it's a fun phrase since both words start with C. Jingoism at its finest.

SKID MARK: Totally wrote it in straight off the clue. Nice.

Congrats to 🦖 for living in the NYTXW's head rent free.

Tee-Hee: HEL

Uniclues:

1 STONE WALL ODORS
2 "S'UP. ANY SCHMEAR?" (~)
3 OLIVE SKID MARK
4 SCOLD DAILY MAIL
5 CAW LIMERICK
6 ERATO SLUSHIE
7 PESKY NEST EGG

1 My stinking suspicions you're hiding something.
2 How the bearded kid with the beanie greets me at Moe's Bagels on Grant Street.
3 Proof the former homeowner once owned a green refrigerator.
4 Hobby for the red-headed kid in the British royalty.
5 there once was a man from Nantucket / whose raven was prone to cluck it / it chattered each day / 'til the man shot and sautéed / then devoured the bird from a bucket (try that KFC... fried spicy raven)
6 Iced drink flavored with Grecian lust.
7 One reminding you of the hole burning in your pocket.

Gary Jugert 11:16 AM  

@Joaquin 7:01 AM
+1

jb129 11:21 AM  

First of all, loved seeing you & Olive. Thinking of you, Rex.

I also loved this puzzle, especially secret targets (odors), schmear (you don't have to be from NYC, which I am, to know schmear) & plotzes.

All in all, a very enjoyable Friday puzzle. Thanks to all!

Kate Esq 11:23 AM  

Great puzzle, and a quick fill for me. (Not my best Friday, but a good 5 minutes faster than my average). I got STONEWALL right away but got stuck in the corner with both AT SEA and TACO BARS (I had Ace Saperstein holding me up), so that was the last to fall.

Smith 11:39 AM  

@ Taylor Slow

My thoughts exactly on CHENILLE!! But I forgot to include it in my comment. And, yes, in the 80s I *did* have a CHENILLE sweater 😃

Anonymous 11:49 AM  

For me there were two standout clues, for ODORS and TACOBAR.I gather that JASA class is an academic class , so I have an academic observation/ question . This puzzle seemed strange to me. I think it had something to do with that it was constructed by a group of people. .Usually there is only one. Sometimes, two or rarely three. But this one seems to be the input of a large number and results in a hodgepodge the likes of which I have ever seen . The clueing is mainly simple definitional and the answers seemed to be the result of the teacher assigning the students to find some obscure words or people. This is not a bad thing; it is just different from the ordinary from my (limited) perspective. You get here an ultimate difference from a theme. Very interesting, methinks.

Joseph Michael 11:54 AM  

Natan Last and the class get an A+ for reminding us how terrific a crossword puzzle can be. It did not come easily, but I enjoyed every minute of the solve despite the fact that I ended up getting one letter wrong. But at least now I know what a Boolean operator is.

Anonymous 11:55 AM  

Nice. Did not know this.

Beezer 12:01 PM  

I found this puzzle delightful and entertaining from start to finish! Oh…except I didn’t ACTUALLY finish honestly…Yep, while most of the puzzle WHOOSHED for me, I got hopelessly fubarred in the NW corner. I would NOT give up sandBARS as “shell stations,” had bah and gah instead of CAW, and, while I’ve heard of a PONY keg, I’ve never heard of a PONY glass. Since I was not familiar with STONEWALL, I thought it might be hiLL or a hALL. So I shamelessly googled to get STONEWALL and it fell into place! I still say that SOME sandbars might be stations for seashells (at low tide!)

@Joaquin…you outdid yourself with DOOMSCROLLING! It’s a bit depressing, isn’t it? I now flick DOB like its the big wheel on The Price is Right, just to save some seconds.

Glad to know the CHENILLE bedspread came from senior citizens. My bedspread as a kid was chenille until I begged my mother to get a “modern” bedspread. You can still buy them! I’d say they will eventually make a comeback but not sure it will with the platform bed revolution.

As a side note, I think it will be a while before the NYT xword incorporates Kyiv and Turkiye in lieu of the other cuz old habits die hard.

floatingboy 12:07 PM  

Saying that CANCEL CULTURE is imaginary is some primo gaslighting!

Joe Dipinto 12:16 PM  

@Pete 8:58 – so would you call Boston an "eponymous city in Massachusetts" without elaboration, just because there's a rock band called Boston or a dessert called Boston cream pie?

You have to refer to the thing the name is being used for, which the LIMERICK clue does not do. Without that context the term "eponymous" is meaningless.

egsforbreakfast 12:17 PM  

What @Joaquin cleverly noted about DOOMSCROLLING brought to mind one of my pet peeves. Why do you have to go down to your state alphabetically on 90% of websites that ask for an address? If you live in Washington, as I do, it takes around 5 seconds extra vs an Alabamian. If you figure you’re doing this a couple of times a week for 60 years or so, you end up being penalized around one day of your life for living in Washington. So I’m hereby demanding that web developers incorporate a random order generator so that all states average the same (25th) place in the list. Maybe it’s 27th or 28th if you include Puerto Rico, DC and the territories. You get the idea. I have incorporated a 501(c)3 to pursue this goal. It is known by the backronym WAR BS, for Washingtonians Advocating Randomness Between the States.

We’ve been treated to a course on Boolean logic with a puzzle full of Nots and today’s AND. Can’t wait to see OR have its day.

Whooshy fun today. Thanks, Natan Last and the J.A.S.A. Crossword Class

GILL I. 12:19 PM  

I PLOTZEd hither and yon. Everyone is claiming this to be easy? Define easy.
The PLOTZES came early. Who are you SABAN and ADRIENNE? Are you two Boolean operators?
I had a hard time adjusting my Medulla Oblongata until I saw and exclaimed oy vey when I reached for a WHITE RUSSIAN! I'm not such a klutz after all. Or maybe I am.
I wanted to misspell County Tipperary. Are you eponymous? You kinda fit if you drop a P. Nah..it was LIMERICK...And so:
An amoeba named Max and his brother,
Were sharing a drink with each other,
In the midst of their quaffing,
They split themselves laughing,
And each of them now is a Mother....
I did stare at CANCEL CULTURE. I always thought it should be "Consequence Culture." Nah...
Ah...look a SCHMEAR. See what happens when LIMERICK is the Mother....al her across children begin to take shape.
I finished but I didn't. I won't bore you with my Google account...I'll just say that I love SKID MARK. I'll end my POMP with this:
What do you call skid marks on Spider-Man underwear?
The Dark Web.
Compliments of Google

bocamp 12:20 PM  

Speaking of ENDPLAY, here are some of the 'tactics' and strategies Max Park brings into PLAY wrt the 15 sec. prelim time he has to view the scrambled cube before the timer starts and he quickly achieves his END:

From ChatGPT:

"During the preliminary inspection time of 15 seconds, Max Park and other top speedcubers utilize several techniques to gather information about the scrambled cube. Here are some aspects they typically focus on:

Cross: They examine the colors and positions of the pieces on one face to plan the most efficient way to solve the cross during the solving process. This includes identifying potential shortcuts or moves that can be made to complete the cross quickly.

F2L Pairs: They look for F2L (First Two Layers) pairs, which consist of a corner piece and an edge piece that need to be paired and inserted together. By identifying these pairs and mentally planning their insertion, they can save time during the solving process.

Key Pieces: They identify important or "key" pieces that will play a crucial role in later steps of the solve. This can include pieces that need to be oriented or positioned in specific ways to facilitate faster solving.

Patterns and Algorithms: Speedcubers with extensive knowledge of various solving algorithms may recognize certain patterns or cases during the inspection time. This enables them to anticipate moves and execute specific algorithms quickly during the solve.

Look-ahead Planning: Skilled solvers utilize the inspection time to plan ahead and mentally anticipate moves for subsequent steps of the solve. This involves visualizing the cube's potential transformations and planning efficient sequences of moves.

Overall, the main objective during the preliminary inspection is to gather as much information as possible about the current state of the cube and to formulate an optimized solving strategy. By analyzing key pieces, planning moves, and anticipating future steps, speedcubers like Max Park can set themselves up for a fast and efficient solve once the timer starts."
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Robin 12:21 PM  

Fun fact: Since STONEWALL is a national monument, I regularly see a couple of vehicles with USGOV license plates parked close by when I skate past. And the crosswalk at that corner is painted with rainbow stripes.

Regarding CANCELCULTURE: Anyone remember Liz Cheney? She sure got canceled.

Anonymous 12:27 PM  

An endplay in bridge is much like a brilliant move in chess. Certainly it requires more talent intelligence and the like that is required in making snippy comments about an endplay on this blog. Check it out at DumbSCROLL

JD 12:42 PM  

@Carola, A pink chenille bathrobe, with a tufted multi-color floral design and shoulder pads! I can imagine anything more fabulous.

@Gill, An amoeba named Max and his brother? May day is made :D

Anonymous 12:46 PM  

Joe Dipinto

Hear, hear.

Anonymous 1:20 PM  

this was my main problem as well

okanaganer 1:56 PM  

This was fun and very fast. However I finished with an error at ERATA crossing PLATZES, since PLOTZES is completely new to me. Not many typeovers; FILS before TIAS is the only one I recall.

[Spelling Bee: yd 0; my last word this 8er which I really wanted to spell with an i. QB streak 4 days.]

Penna Resident 2:18 PM  

this was by far my favorite puzzle all year. especially the cluing. halfway through i was thinking that i would be disappointed when its done. and the second half was just as good as the first.

Anonymous 3:17 PM  

Oh lord, you too?

Anoa Bob 3:53 PM  

I agree that this one has some nice touches but it isn't without some downsides if yous ask me. Don't mean to be a SCOLD but the first thing I noticed when I opened this was the 40 black squares. That is a lot for any weekday puzzle and is especially high for a Friday where, per xwordinfo.com, the average is 31.6.

This gives the grid a more sectioned off look than is typical for a Friday themeless and results in 31 three and four letter entries. It's hard to breathe much life or interest to those shorties and it detracted from the overall solve experience in my book.

The grid fill also gets some assistance from the plural of convenience (POC), including a couple of the relatively longer entries when TACO BAR and EGO BOOST both needed a boost to fill their slots. There's also an uber grid filling helpful two for one POC where a Down and an Across both get a letter count boost by sharing a final S as happens when neither BOOK FAIR nor WHITE RUSSIAN could get the job done by themselves.

To tie in with the clue for LIMERICK, KIEV also could have been clued as an eponymous Ukraine city, right?

In the Navy, a SKIDMARK was what sometimes showed up in one's skivvies.

Anonymous 4:15 PM  

I was just talking about that yesterday! I can totally relate!

Anonymous 5:12 PM  

Does anyone know what is going on with Loren Muse Smith? Just concerned because I haven’t seen any comments from her in quite some time and she’s one of my very favorites.

Nolaist 6:13 PM  

😂😂😂

dgd 6:37 PM  

I thought about our switch to using Ukrainian versions of city names in Ukraine but then Peking Duck is still Peking Duck. Likewise, the odds are the dish in question will still continue to be be called chicken Kiev. Things like that are very hard to change.
Liked the puzzle. Saved by skid mark because I confidently put in PESty. Though PESKY is much better.
Had a drink at the bar Stonewall and still had problems coming up with the exact name , STONEWALL. Easy puzzle overall though.

TAB2TAB 7:15 PM  

Great puzzle with the perfect amount of Friday crunchiness. Was pleased (proud?) to be able to drop STONEWALL in without actually knowing that it was correct other than intuition between pride month and NYC West Village. I was even more pleased to drop SABAN in knowing even less about football than Stonewall, but I guess something get deposited in the brain by osmosis. Despite a lot of things I didn't know as clued, HEL, ADRIENNE, SISAL, LUNA, CHENILLE, and PLOTZES (???) nothing felt too unfair or Naticky. Great start to the weekend!

dgd 7:27 PM  

The two words are of Yiddish origin. German & Yiddish are related languages ( like Spanish and Italian) so German does have cognates, which you cited, ,of those words. But the words come from the Yiddish speaking immigrants from Eastern Europe who came to the US , many to NYC. I don’t know the stats exactly but it wouldn’t surprise me if Yiddish was once the most widely spoken foreign language in NYC.
By way of example, school is English and Schul is German, both meaning the same. But neither came from the other. They both came from the same source which arose thousands of years ago.

Anonymous 9:26 PM  

I think the NYT (both XW and spelling bee) thinks people know a lot more Yiddish than I think most people do. Schmear was easy, I’d expect most people know that. Plotz? Never heard it in my life, and when combined with Erato which I also didn’t know, had to go through A E I and finally O to finish the puzzle

Anonymous 12:10 AM  

Sending condolences about your cat

Anonymous 12:54 AM  

It’s Kyiv NOT Kiev unless you’re Russian. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/KyivNotKiev

Anonymous 1:52 AM  

Loved this one, a lot loved!

kitshef 7:33 AM  

I normally like the Crossword Class puzzles, but this was a) too segmented b) overestimates the popularity of WHITE RUSSIANS c) buys into the idea of cancel culture d) 'Kiev'.

kitshef 7:34 AM  

I normally like the Crossword Class puzzles, but this was a) too segmented b) overestimates the popularity of WHITE RUSSIANS c) buys into the idea of cancel culture d) Kiev.

spacecraft 11:08 AM  

Getting a bit tired of comments about bridge being for "old people." Bridge is enjoyed--AND played competitively--by ALL ages, including preteens. Some of these kids are frighteningly expert at the game. It's an even bet that one of the JASA classmates came up with that clue.

Easy-medium for a FRI here. Hand up for ShreD before SCOLD (it didn't stay long after seeing three E's in a row across). Also had SAn instead of SAO at 8d. These road bumps notwithstanding, I finished it off fairly quickly.

DOD is NIA Long; honorable mention to Barbara LUNA, and to ADRIENNE Barbeau.

The puzzle does have a NYC FLAIR, with the twin Yiddish entries and the STONEWALL thing. The "PROCESS" in was gimme Nick SABAN, whose B gave me BOOKFAIRS. Four-way Jaws would please @M&A...hey, where is he? Birdie.

Wordle six (phew!); three wrong guesses for BGGBG.

Anonymous 12:11 PM  

When I saw Natan Last’s name I knew this was going to be tough but good. I often see his name on the New Yorker Magazine crossword. They can be devilishly challenging, but usually fair. This one did not disappoint.

Burma Shave 1:12 PM  

DATE BOOK

MEG'S one who's ULTRA FAIR,
AND NIA's FOR ANY way,
but FOR PROCESS AND some FLAIR
ADRIENNE likes DAILY PLAY.

--- ABE SABAN

rondo 1:23 PM  

A bit of an inkfest at 50a and d (clued mount and ceremony) having rIdE and rite before PILE and POMP. Otherwise clean. NARY a word in the corners.
Wordle par.

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