1944 Pacific battle site / FRI 12-5-25 / Home to Kotoka International Airport / Age at which you just learned something you should have realized before, facetiously / Mohamed ___, Egyptian soccer star / Subject of the Bouguereau painting "The Abduction of Pscyhe" / Image that's just over a foot, informally / Where much of "Brokeback Mountain" was filmed /

Friday, December 5, 2025

Constructor: James McCarron

Relative difficulty: Easy

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: LEYTE (53A: 1944 Pacific battle site) —

Leyte (/ˈlti, ˈlt/ LAY-tee, LAY-tayTagalog: [ˈleite]) is an island in the Visayas group of islands in the Philippines. It is eighth-largest and sixth-most populous island in the Philippines, with a total population of 2,626,970 as of the 2020 census. // The Battle of Leyte (FilipinoLabanan sa LeyteWarayGubat ha LeyteJapaneseレイテの戦い) in the Pacific campaign of World War II was the amphibious invasion of the island of Leyte in the Philippines by American forces and Filipino guerrillas under the overall command of General Douglas MacArthur, who fought against the Imperial Japanese Army in the Philippines led by General Tomoyuki Yamashita. The operation, codenamed King Two, launched the Philippines campaign of 1944–45 for the recapture and liberation of the entire Philippine Archipelago and to end almost three years of Japanese occupation. (wikipedia)
• • •

There's "ending on a sour note," and then there's "ending on LEYTE," which makes you yearn for a note that's merely sour. It clearly has some historical / military importance, but its familiarity to a North American audience ... I'm fairly confident that whatever that was, it has dwindled over the years. I'm old(ish) and I've never heard of this place. It smacks of the kind of geographical obscurity that used to be common currency in the crossword puzzle, before construction software came along and made filling the grid somewhat easier, and before the puzzle had an editor who explicitly sought to reduce the appearance of such things (i.e. before Shortz). And sure enough, the heat map on this one is, let's say, telling:

See that teeny tiny little blue segment waaaay over on the right there? That's today. The distance between that little blue segment and the next nearest little blue segment? Nearly twenty-three years. Twenty-Three Years. That is some real delayed back-from-the-dead action. I felt so much better after seeing how long it had been since LEYTE appeared in the grid. "How did I miss this answer?" Answer: I didn't. It hasn't appeared once in the soon-to-be two decades that I've been writing about the puzzle. The thing about LEYTE, the very bad thing, is that it isn't just the most obscure thing in the grid, it's the most obscure thing by light years. Look at the other geographical answers in this puzzle. ALBERTA. GHANA. CALI. Yeah, I've Heard Of Those. The eighth-largest island of the Philippines? Not so much. I don't know how LEYTE doesn't make you want to, need to, tear that part of your grid out and try again. If the grid were sizzling hot, loaded with bright and shiny fill, and needed a single LEYTE to hold it together, it would still be jarring, but it might seem worth it. But despite the fact that the long fill is quite good down there, overall, there just wasn't enough of it to justify LEYTE. I like parts of this grid, but all I see when I look at this grid is LEYTE. There's literally nothing else in this grid that I would insist has to go. Just LEYTE. Twenty-three years! Those were good years.


As I say, the long fill on this one is very nice, particularly below, where TODAY YEARS OLD made me smile (51A: Age at which you just learned something you should have realized before, facetiously), and "HERE GOES NOTHING!" wasn't too shabby either (48A: "Might as well give it a shot..."). Up top, DON'T POKE THE BEAR also gave the grid some much-needed playfulness and color (14A: Words of caution). But between the long answers above and the long answers below was a whole lot of ... fine. OK. Not bad. But nothing memorable, nothing marquee. I like how clean the grid is (mostly!), but there's just not a whole hell of a lot going on between the poles. In fact, some of the other longer fill, I kinda balked at. ANKLE TAT made me grimace. Yes, you can get a tat there, as you can get a tat most anywhere. I've seen FACE TAT and ANKLE TAT now. You can keep changing the body parts, but ___ TAT isn't going to get more interesting. GENE SET didn't excite me much either. Solid enough, but ... I needed more ATTACK AD energy (good answer, good clue) (26A: Spot likely to smear). I needed the puzzle to slap me with more fun stuff: "TAKE THAT!" the puzzle should have been able to say to me, many more times than it did. Instead, it just sort of handed me answers: more "TAKE THAT," without the exclamation point, without the spirit of vengeance. It's a solid grid, but it's not much more than solid.


The puzzle did set me up for some great mistakes today, though. These started early, with my assumption that what "might be on a rack" was a RIB (2D: It might be on a rack = HAT) (I eventually got my RIB meat with RIBEYE!). Later, I figured that shows were being stopped by RAIDS, not RAINS (15D: Show stoppers, sometimes). I like RAIDS way better, both because it creates a more vivid image and because plural RAINS here is ... awkward. "The shows were stopped by RAINS." Meh. Not great. Just clue it as a verb. My favorite mistake, though, was probably the one where I learned ("learned") that Ang Lee had filmed Brokeback Mountain in ALBANIA (45A: Where much of "Brokeback Mountain" was filmed). "Must've been more affordable," I briefly and sincerely thought. I eventually TORE that out when TORE forced the issue (46D: Raced). But I liked "knowing" that bit of movie trivia for a few seconds. ALBERTA is so much more plausible, and thus so much less interesting.  


Bullets:
  • 11A: Can't-miss purchases? (SEASON TICKETS) — good answer, but I'm pretty sure you can miss. I'm pretty sure season ticket holders do, in fact, miss games (or concerts, or other performances sometimes).
  • 21A: Subject of the Bouguereau painting "The Abduction of Psyche" (EROS) — I like how this clue assumes I know who Bouguereau is. "Oh, the Bouguereau painting, yes, of course, what a master... [sips cocktail, nibbles on canapé] ..." Literally first I'm seeing his name today. But EROS was easy. Psyche was the tip-off. Cupid (EROS) & Psyche pair naturally in my brain, not because of my knowledge of classical mythology or art or operas ... but because of the title of a mid-'80s Scritti Politti album. Anyone else? No. That's fine. Just gonna press "Play" now and briefly relive my junior year of high school... 
  • 31D: Mohamed ___, Egyptian soccer star (SALAH) — could not retrieve his name. Sort of kind of vaguely knew the first four letters, but was in no way sure about that "H." SALAH is the only answer that approaches LEYTE in terms of obscurity today, and by "approaches" I mean "is not really anywhere near." The key word in the SALAH clue is "star."
Mohamed "MoSalah Hamed Mahrous Ghaly (born 15 June 1992) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays as a right winger or forward for Premier League club Liverpool and captains the Egypt national team. He is widely regarded as one of the best players of his generation and one of the greatest wingers of all time. He is the all-time top foreign goalscorer in the Premier League and the all-time top African goalscorer in the UEFA Champions League. (wikipedia) (emph. mine)

That's all for today. Keep those 🌲🐈Holiday Pet Pics🐕🌲 coming. I'll be accepting reader pictures of their pets in holiday settings through Wednesday (rexparker at icloud dot com), and then I'll need to stop taking submissions and start posting. My Inbox is already pretty inundated with cuteness, which is exciting. Here's a little taste. 

[meet French bulldogs Audrey, Louise, and Hugo, seen here wearing the skins of their enemies]
[Thanks, Claudia!]

See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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162 comments:

vtspeedy 6:05 AM  

Easy indeed. Really my only hold up was I had BRA at 2 down, thinking “that’s pretty spicy but I like it.”

Rick 6:13 AM  

the reference is to the Battle of Leyte Gulf, not the island. That battle was the largest naval engagement of WW2, and possibly in all human history. Sooooo.... hardly obscure. And certainly not as obscure as cluing an airport to the country, not the city.

Stuart 6:14 AM  

LEYTE should be familiar to anyone who’s read about the history of WWII. The Battle of Leyte Gulf was a key naval encounter in the South Pacific campaign.

Rick Sacra 6:17 AM  

15 minutes for me this morning, so I would call it medium for a Friday. Very doable. I don't mind learning about a key turning point in WWII, especially when the crosses are fair. Had trouble down there as I was wondering if i was _ATSO somehow.... had to back into that answer from the other side. Got THONG and CANITBE and then PESTO to PATSY to finish my LE_TE. But the puzzle didn't end there for me, because I got stuck in the NW early on. Of course, of course, I should have known SOVIET, but I just couldn't think of it without a few crosses. Wanted INK something for 26A and so I was just stuck there until I came back at the end of my solve. I think it was looking at the top and finally seeing SAUDI and ACHES and then those two longs became clear--first DONTPOKETHEBEAR and then SEASON TICKETS, and those helped me get into that little EVE RISEN MEER ATTACKAD corner. DERMA is not the usual form of that word--it's DERMIS as any anatomist or medical person will know. I can't even find something online that calls DERMA a word--they just call it a "comb. form" or prefix, like in DERMAbrasion. To me, DERMA as clued is way more flagrant/wrong than LEYTE. At least I learned something from LEYTE. And I think having one resurrection per Friday/Saturday grid from >20 years ago is cool. In addition to the long acrosses, I enjoyed MATERNAL and RAYKROC and ITERATE. Thanks, James, for a doable, fun Friday morning solve! Definitely worth it for DONTPOKETHEBEAR!!! : )

Alex 6:20 AM  

I have to disagree with Rex about Leyte being obscure. Maybe its generational: I'm not a World War II buff, but I am a baby boomer, and I had heard before of the Battle of Leyte Gulf as a significant military operation. When I looked it up after finishing the puzzle, it seemed to be as decisive for the outcome of the war in the Pacific as other better-known battles. Otherwise, I generally agreed with his observations, and I particularly liked DON'T POKE THE BEAR.

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

Oh good, here come the boomer military buffs to lecture us about LEYTE 🙁 The closer you are age-wise to WWII, the more likely you are to know this place. It looks like random letters to me. I still liked the puzzle though.

Bob Mills 6:39 AM  

Mostly fairly easy (no cheats), but DONTPOKETHEBEAR and TODAYYEARSOLD were unfamiliar expressions that required the crosses to get. I got LEYTE by thinking about "Leyte Gulf" as a battle site. I don't think it's obscure.
One nit...shouldn't the answer to "repeat" be REITERATE? If ITERATE means "repeat," does REITERATE mean repeat twice? Comments are welcome.

Anonymous 6:47 AM  

Bob : got Leyte just off the "t" in hot (50) d. The Battle of Leyte Gulf was actually 5 major naval engagements over the course of two days on October 24 and 25, 1944. It is definitely not obscure and is right up there with the Battles of Midway and the Philippine Sea.

KateA 7:02 AM  

Albania! I had the filming in Siberia for a while.

puzzlehoarder 7:03 AM  

There's a saying that wars are meant to teach Americans geography. I guess it just doesn't take. Me I prefer the pre computerized world when it took some work to knock off a Friday or Saturday puzzle. How can you fill puzzle after puzzle with dreck like EDU and then get triggered by LEYTE.

The only section that I had what I would call late week resistance was the NE. I don't really see the point of the question mark for SEASONTICKETS. I've always heard it as season's tickets so I was hesitant to put TICKETS in and I'm not that familiar with the BEAR phrase.

I filled counterclockwise and had trouble getting into the NE . This was compounded by my STOP/STEM write over supported by a MADCAP/SITCOM. Since that C was confirmed by ENLACES I had to stop and think for a moment. Otherwise this was mostly an early week themeless

Anonymous 7:03 AM  

The Battle of Leyte Gulf is probably the largest naval battle ever fought and a turning point in WWII. Mohamed Salah is probably one of the 10 most famous soccer players in the world right now. Not obscure at all

David Fabish 7:22 AM  

I was born 24 years after the Battle of Leyte and I got it from just the YT. It was one of the most significant battles of WWII, and the point where the war in the Pacific started to actually look winnable.

I'm not saying everyone should know it, but calling LEYTE "obscure is like saying Gettysburg is obscure because it only has 5000 residents.

Anonymous 7:22 AM  

LOL you war dudes are not disappointing today. Sorry no one has an encyclopedic memory of all the wwii battles anymore. If they did we’d see LEYTE in the puzzle _way_ more often

Anonymous 7:25 AM  

Be serious. Everyone knows Gettysburg. There’s an ADDRESS named after it. Extremely false comp.

RYB57 7:29 AM  

The Battle of Leyte Gulf was a decisive milestone in the titanic struggle against fascism. As that threat again threatens our way of life, I'm reminded of George Santayana's observation: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."
I am a bit surprised that the normally erudite Rex wasn't aware of it!

Benny Z 7:30 AM  

Any grid with the Egyptian King in it (Mo Salah…running down the wing even) is all right by me. I liked the long stuff and hit Leyte in the middle of the solve so didn’t end w as much sourness. For me, an enjoyable Friday.

Tom H. 7:32 AM  

Yeah, I mean Leyte is only the equivalent of the D-Day Normandy landing, but in the Pacific Theater initiating the campaign to liberate the Philippines led by General Douglas MacArthur fulfilling his famous "I shall return" promise and the source of one of the most iconic and well-known photographs from WW-II picturing MacArthur, fresh off his landing craft, walking through the shallow waters of the Leyte beach approaching the dry land with the exiled Philippine president beside him and ready to reclaim the country for the Philippine people (a photo, btw, that was wholly staged).

But I can see how this singular and most crucial moment - a genuinely tide-turning moment (no pun intended) in the most catastrophic and momentous war in human history - would be too tough for NYTimes crossword solvers. Heck, all the people who were involved all are dead anyway.

SouthsideJohnny 7:35 AM  

It’s nice to have a breezy Friday once in a while. I expected today’s review to touch on the difficulty level (perfect for me, I imagine too easy for many). Rex got tied up with something he hadn’t heard of which turns out to be of some historical significance - when was the last time that happened? Not frequently for sure - he has a mind like a steel trap.

I had a little difficulty getting started, contemplating ACCRA v.v. GHANA, not knowing what a thawb is, and the wordplay clue for SEASON TICKETS, which required some crosses. Fortunately, the trifecta of HAT, ASPEN and NOON were enough to get me started, and once I made it to the east coast I felt like I was going over Niagara Falls in a barrel (another Friday rarity - what is in the water today?).

The clue of the day for me is the one for ATTACK AD - hopefully the constructor will stop by to claim credit for it (or give credit if Will or one of the editors came up with it).

tht 7:35 AM  

Well said.

tht 7:38 AM  

I am not at all a "war dude", but I recognized it. It's a welcome break from Star Wars.

Bob Mills 7:42 AM  

For Anonymous 7:22: What is a "war dude?" If someone knows military history, that constitutes some kind of arrogance? My own father was wounded in World War 2 (after volunteering), Does that make me a "dude"?

RooMonster 7:58 AM  

Hey All !
Change LEYTE to LEASE. Bam! Problem solved. Gets you PASTA and HOS in the Downs. HOS apropos of this month, too. Clue it as "Santa utterances".
*Oops, just noticed it's PATSY, not PASTY, instead of erasing my ignorance, I just added this footnote!*
OK, how about change ALBERTA to ALBERTO, PATSY to LOTSA, PESTO to LESTO (Quick, in Italian), HOT to HOS, which gets rid of LEYTE to make it LEASE. Maybe?

This is a very well filled puz. Lots of neat answers, DONTPOKETHEBEAR, TAKETHAT, HEREGOESNOTHING, TODAYYEARSOLD, ANKLETST. And hardly a whiff of gunk to hold it all together. I really don't see any dreck. Impressive. Of course, there is one thing missing ...

Quick FriPuz here. I have to agree with the general sentiment here that the puzs are/have gotten easier of late. Which is fine by me, as the ole brain can only handle so much!

Nice way to start of a Friday. Grid layout is kinda cool also. Picture frame Blocker corners, long Diagonal Blocker slash in the middle 35 total Blockers, high on a Themselves, but not obtrusive to the puz.

That's enough PILE outta me.

Have a great Friday!

No F's - I believe that's three times this week?
RooMonster
DarrinV

Snoble 8:00 AM  

I had to chuckle at Rex’s complaining about Leyte. I got it off the Y—not because I’m a WWII buff, but because my parents met there at the end of the war. She was a small town Iowa girl and a Major in the Army Nursing Corps; he was a Lieutenant in the army from Pensacola. We all have our little niche areas of knowledge.

Lewis 8:06 AM  

Puzzle moments today:
• Appreciating the elegant black square design, including the photo album corners.
• Inner-fist-pumping at DON’T POKE THE BEAR and TODAY YEARS OLD, as well as [Spot likely to smear].
• Nodding at the cleverness of [Minimal coverage provider?] for THONG, a clue never used in the Times for *any* skimpy bit of wear.
• Wanting REMOTES for [Show stoppers, sometimes].
• Admiring the junk-free answer set in such a low-word-count (68) grid – SO hard to do.
• Noting TORE and TEARED, past tenses for two meanings of TEAR.
• Smiling at seeing NOON, clued [High time], at the top of the grid.
• Wondering “If iterate means repeat, then is ‘reiterate’ redundant?”

James, you gave me far more than a mere fill-in today. Just a splendid outing. Thank you!

tht 8:07 AM  

Pretty quick work for a Friday, once I got a foothold in the NE. The long acrosses were pretty nice (and reminds me that I first learned TODAY YEARS OLD from Loren Muse Smith -- I wonder how she's doing?). Also enjoyed some of the down fill like CLARET (I need to improve my color vocabulary generally, and this sounds like a good addition -- I was thinking scarlet briefly, but that was too long), and also SOVIET (good to be reminded what it means) and ITERATE. The solve was silky smooth, and I think I would have added at least half a star.

I was thinking Montana at first before ALBERTA. Rex brought a smile to my face with his ALBaniA (hey, we've all been there in the heat of the crossword moment). He did not bring as much of a smile with the diatribe over LEYTE. I was born well past WWII and really don't know my military history at all well (as @jberg can attest -- he taught me the term "ships of the line" the other day), but even I recognized it, so I really can't agree it's that obscure. Anyway, the NYTXW can afford to throw a BONE once in a while to the oldsters, and refer to events in an actual war of actual significance, instead of Star Wars.

I was enjoyably confused for a moment by a hearty steakhouse serving that ends in -YE (RIBEYE). That ending made me think of something pie, like say a shepherd's pie or steak-and-kidney pie, but the actual answer was great, and clued just right.

So thank you, James McCarron. I don't yet recognize your name, but hope to see it again in the future. Happy Friday, all!

Sutsy 8:12 AM  

@Rick Sacra is right. The layer of skin is the Dermis . Derma is a prefix. This clue (14D) is flat out wrong. Otherwise not bad.

tht 8:13 AM  

Been a long time since I've seen your name! Nice to see it again!

mom 8:16 AM  

I'm old, not old-ish, and I was thrilled to see Leyte. Couldn't have told you wear it was but it's definitely part of my trove of WWII memories. Just as valid as the names of singers/tv shows/tech jargon I've never heard of.

Anonymous 8:24 AM  

Here’s to another 23 Leyte-free years! Of course everyone who knows it is going to get on here and brag and scold but every constructor out there knows that Leyte is bad fill. If it were good you’d have seen it more than zero times in the past. 23 years. Not all historical info stays culturally relevant over time. Whine about pop culture, scold about wwii battles. I love you guys! Never change!

Anonymous 8:32 AM  

liBERiA came to mind for Brokeback but I didn't write it in. ALBERTA became apparent soon enough. I watch the Premier League on Peacock so I was familiar with SALAH. He plays for Liverpool. One of the guest hosts (Clare?) on this blog is a big Liverpool/SALAH fan. I found the south easier than the north. I didn't mind LEYTE. It's no more obscure than lots of names that appear. The only sour note for me was GENESET. It sounds like something made up to fit the puzzle. I don't think the phrase is a thing. If it is I still dislike it.

Lawrence P. Katzenstein 8:32 AM  

Totally agree that Leyte is not obscure, and I am not at all at war buff. Not a bit. Got it off the first letter. I did have a different beef: a baton is not in the orchestra. It is in front of the orchestra.

Anonymous 8:34 AM  

Agree on DERMA/dermis. Only slow point of otherwise easy puzzle, as I tried to fit in a rebus with IS. It took forever to get ATTACKAD! Nice puzzle though and otherwise well put together

Duncan MacKenzie 8:36 AM  

I think you got the wrong Leyte there, Rex.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leyte_Gulf

tht 8:37 AM  

I don't think your argument is very strong. If "If it were good you’d have seen it more than zero times in the past" were actually true, then definitionally there could be no good debuts. I also believe that given the length of Rex's protestation, some push-back can be expected. (Is this your first comment today? Your voice seems strangely familiar...)

kitshef 8:41 AM  

I got a smile out of Rex's Albania, where I went from Montana to Liberia before arriving in Alberta.

Some wonderful long answers today, and I really appreciated that only one had a 'conversational' clue.

Rex Parker 8:43 AM  

I’m seeing increasingly ill-mannered comments on either side of the Leyte issue so if you’re here to level charges of “historical illiteracy” (lol, ok) or to remark on how Leyte lovers are just a bunch of oldsters, just know that these things have been said and don’t need to be said again. Thanks!

Whatsername 8:45 AM  

Iterate: “To say or do again.”

Barbara S. 8:45 AM  

A faith-solve for me, as reading through the first half of the acrosses netted me only RIA, EROS, CALI, BATON, SLIT and MINI.

I’m sorry to say that Jan van der MEER didn’t immediately leap to mind (tsk-tsk, and I call myself an art historian!). There were two of them, in fact, a father and son, and their shared name often gets shortened to Jan Vermeer, although NOT the famous Jan Vermeer of Delft, who painted interior domestic scenes. These two were Jan Vermeer the Elder and the Younger of Haarlem, and they both painted landscapes. You don’t have to thank me for this engaging bit of Friday trivia, considerably more trivial I would say, than the Battle of LEYTE Gulf, which I also didn’t know. I have a historical bent but I’m not a WWII buff. However my husband knows a lot about both world wars and often watches documentaries about them, so I’m surprised I don’t have at least a nodding acquaintance with the LEYTE Gulf. I filled it in entirely from crosses and when I saw the name, I was pretty sure something must be wrong.

Well, I never. I knew about Noah’s ARK and the ARK of the Covenant and ARKs in synagogues, but I didn’t know that ARK could mean a refuge in more general terms – I guess it’s derived from old Noah’s boat. So my last square was the K in ARK and RAY KROC. I knew nothing about Mr. KROC either, and that he was the one who transformed McDonald’s into a global empire. And, not being a fan of the Golden Arches or the deterioration of the North American diet and the rise of obesity, I’d say he has a lot to answer for.

Overall, a fun puzzle which I enjoyed more than @Rex did. Got a good time, too, after my sluggish start – once I broke through the log jam, the answers starting coming thick and fast. Maybe too fast for a Friday? However, always glad to learn stuff. Thanks, James McCarron!

Rex Parker 8:47 AM  

The gulf is (perhaps not surprisingly) adjacent to the island. Also, I cite the battle in “Word of the Day.”

Iris 8:56 AM  

Confidently entered “trim” for “take a little off the top” which messed up the grid for quite a while, as the “im” was correct.

Anonymous 8:58 AM  

Anybody else start with BRA on 2 down?

Liveprof 8:59 AM  

Seems like most of us are taking the position better LEYTE than never. (Although, it's pronounced LAY-tee or LAY-tay, says Wikipedia.)

Another issue that arose for me, after stepping carefully around that unpoked bear. is:

How many bears does it take to change a light bulb?

Well, if it's unbearable then no amount of bears would be enough.

But it may be a bear bulb.

In that case, three bears would be ideal: one bear to bear the ladder, one bear to bear the bulb, and one bear to bear witness.

And I would urge us all to bear that in mind.

Rick Sacra 8:59 AM  

Sometime you need to explain to us why you are focused on the Fs! I do enjoy noticing that. Wow, no Fs???? Agree with your comments about the grid shape.... nice to look at !

burtonkd 9:00 AM  

Hands up for learning TODAYYEARSOLD from LMS:)

Alexscott68 9:04 AM  

I didn’t know LEYTE, but the crosses were fair and it looked familiar once I had it. Glad to have (re)learned about it and hope we see it again sooner than 23 years from now.

tht 9:07 AM  

I mishit the Reply button. This was a reply to @Anon 8:24AM.

Conrad 9:07 AM  


Easy * * * _ _
Two gripes: The clue for 8D, UKES, should have indicated "for short" and as OFL noted, 15D RAINS is an awkward fit for its clue.

Overwrites:
Stop before STEM at 24A
ATTain before ATTEND at 36D
baLE before PILE for the bundle at 42A

WOEs:
Soccer star Mohamed SALAH at 31D
I'm old enough that I've heard of LEYTE (53A) but it took a few crosses to get it spelled correctly

Bob Mills 9:08 AM  

The ORIGINAL comment ("...LOL you war dudes...") was the most ill-mannered of all the comments, Rex. It gave rise to justifiable responses. LOL? About war?

tht 9:09 AM  

Thanks for the pronunciation note. I was thinking of a quip "Leyten up, Francis", but it would have been misplaced.

Anonymous 9:13 AM  

Unfortunately, I'm fairly ignorant about a lot of history but it's good to learn about significant events that have continued to make life better for humanity. I was glad to read about Leyte.

burtonkd 9:13 AM  

I had nothing in the NW to start, but bottom was easy and it is very satisfying to watch a big swath of white fill in cross by cross.

Funny how different people’s reactions can be - me: “LEYTE, I should probably know that” - move on. Of course, what’s the fun in blogging that? Looking back, it couldn’t be more fairly crossed. I sometimes wonder if RP puts in takes like this to drive engagement - if so, mission accomplished:)

I thought the Brokeback Mountain clue was going to do a double cross and make it Wyoming, where I believe it is fictionally set. Western Canada is a major area for tax credit filming. (I drove a rental car from Washington state into a small town north of Vancouver and a film crew thought I was part of their team).

My 3 letter rack was a TIE (way over a foot…)

I love it when I think “how am I supposed to know any Russian vocabulary other than “nyet”? My spidey senses now tell me it’ll something I’m familiar with - SOVIET to the rescue.

Anonymous 9:14 AM  

Mr. Hanks?

Whatsername 9:14 AM  

At first, I felt a bit intimidated by this beautiful grid with the wide open spaces on every side of that center staircase, but I figured HERE GOES NOTHING. And wow, TODAY I LEARNED Brokeback Mountain (good movie) was filmed in Canada (beautiful province) and that an answer like LEYTE can cause crossword solvers to become a bit HOSTILE.

As for me, I didn’t give it a thought. No doubt I learned it at some point, but these days I’m lucky to remember where I went to school. The puzzle itself I enjoyed a great deal. Not too easy, not too hard, not too many names and a lot to like overall. Even though I’m an experienced solver, I never expect to finish a Friday or Saturday without help, and it’s a nice feeling when I do. Thank you for this, Mr. McCarron. Great job on your second outing.

burtonkd 9:16 AM  

Thanks Barbara, no wonder I can’t keep all the Dutch masters straight. I had the double vowel RIIS for a bit. (Looks him up. Park in NYC named for him (Jacob), a Danish immigrant and advocate of the poor).

RooMonster 9:27 AM  

Have shared before, but ...
After doing the puzs in the NYT for a while, I began to notice the not often use of the F, which I consider to be a "normal" letter, not a "Scrabbly" or "exotic" letter, like J, X, Q, Z. In the sense of common letters, it seemed to be getting the shaft quite a bit.

I had noticed also that @M&A, a particular favorite of mine, had a campaign about the U being the least used of the vowels in the crossword. So I took up my crusade for notifying y'all about the oft overlooked F. Kind of an imitation/adoration of @M&A's U cause.

So there ya go. The reason for my infatuation of including the F count. Strange? Possibly, but if you don't know by now I'm strange, that's on you. 😁

RooMonster
Also a novelist ! Changing Times by Darrin Vail, get it wherever you get your books online.

Michael 9:30 AM  

Only an American would spend so much time complaining that there are places outside the US he has never heard of. I feel sorry for you, really :-)

egsforbreakfast 9:49 AM  

Double tee hee for that!

Jnlzbth 9:49 AM  

I agree with Rex that the clues for SEASON TICKETS and RAINS were both off and that LEYTE fell with a big thud. Also, I wonder if kids really carry pencils and ERASERS in their backpacks anymore. Maybe kindergartners do!

This was easy for a Friday. Hoping for more of a challenge tomorrow.

Dr Random 9:50 AM  

Enjoyed it, and since I found it approachable, I knew seasoned solvers would find it easy on a Friday. I knew neither LEYTE nor that use of PATSY, so the Y was a guess, but a plausible guess at that point. And yes, for the most part, wonderful long answers.

Follow-up from Rex’s comments about sore thumbs on Monday: I just smashed my index finger in a folding ladder last night (changing a smoke alarm battery on a 10-foot ceiling), and today I can confirm that, even without it being particularly swollen, I am instinctively sticking it out all the time when I use my hand, making sure it is nowhere near the action of my other fingers. Would my instincts do the same if it were my thumb? Perhaps.

OK (I'm a) BOOMER 9:54 AM  

Dear anon 0628...are you at all familiar The battles at Bunker Hill and Yorktown? How about the Alamo or Gettysburg? Iwo Jima? The real question is what does being a boomer have to do with being familiar with one of THE most important WWII naval operations. PS: I'm also aware of the skirmish at Thermopylae (430 BC)....not sure how that fits into your 'age-wise' logic. End of lecture

Jnlzbth 9:58 AM  

From what I read, it seems ITERATE is used to refer to a single instance of repeating an action, while REITERATE is preferred for emphasizing a point that was already made.

Wanderlust 10:04 AM  

The thing that’s missing in the Great Leyte Debate is the crosses. There’s always something in a late-week puzzle that I don’t know. As long as there arent a lot of no-knows, the only question is whether the crosses are fair. Today they definitely are.

Anonymous 10:05 AM  

Yep same

Adrienne 10:08 AM  

Is "They stay mainly on Spain's plains" a great clue for RAINS, or have I not gotten enough sleep?

L E Case 10:09 AM  

I REALLY hate "Today year's old." I cringe just thinking about that expression.

Liveprof 10:17 AM  

Reiterate is redundant, and iterate is dundant.

Dr Random 10:18 AM  

The NW was also where the puzzle made its final stand for me, for many of the reasons you describe. Caused me way more trouble than LEYTE!

Sam 10:19 AM  

I liked the vague cluing and misdirection. Makes things fun. Nice puzzle. Would solve again.

Anonymous 10:23 AM  

At risk of being redundant and repetitive I thought and believed and supposed "iterate" was to state.

Anonymous 10:25 AM  

ArizonA b4 Alberta

Dr Random 10:25 AM  

I will say that reading all the comments about LEYTE from older solvers and World War II buffs has been fascinating for me. My grandfather was a Grim Reaper in the Pacific Theater and later a founding Blue Angel (fun piece of trivia: my grandfather named the Blue Angels after a nightclub), but since he died as a test pilot soon afterwards we never got to hear his stories. So while I join Rex and other Gen-Xers in not experiencing LEYTE as a household name, I appreciated having the puzzle connect me to significant pieces of history that I definitely should have known.

pabloinnh 10:27 AM  

I have my own thoughts about LEYTE, but will honor OFL's request on keeping them to myself. Suffice it to say that I knew the answer to the clue very well but it took me at least three missing letters to think of it, which resulted in a major Doh!

DON'TPOKETHEBEAR is very familiar to those of us who watch Boston Bruins hockey games. Often said when some opponent takes a cheap shot at a Bruin and reprisals ensue. Had OFL's RAIDS first, which I too prefer. Also did the TRIM /SKIM thing but otherwise no real problems. Today is the day I knew all the propers, even DEB and MO SALAH, who is way fun to watch.

Hey, RIA, there you are. Been a while, I think. Nice to see you.

I liked your Friday a lot, JMC. Lots of fun long answers and trivia I knew ,a Jolly Merry Christmas gift of a puzz. Thanks for all the fun.




Anonymous 10:28 AM  

I had a major hold up in the NE with SweDe instead of SAUDI. “Confirmed” with SITCOM and DEB, and then also with WANTS (instead of the correct ACHES) for “yearns”. Turned this into a very hard puzzle for me.

Anonymous 10:31 AM  

As a dermatologist I agree that “dermis” is currently the most common medical term. As a classicist, I may point out that “derma” is the original Greek word and has been used historically in a medical context.

Teedmn 10:33 AM  

LEYTE: Why did I get that off the Y_E? Because the city I live in has named many of the streets after battles or war zones. LEYTE is one I just recently looked up, to see if it was battle related because there's a Ham Lake, MN street named that. Sure enough, it was. It joins Alamo, Coral Sea, Bataan, Guadalcanal, Dunkirk and many other streets. Lovely.

This was not an easy Friday for me. About double my recent Friday times, and that's fine with me. My trouble was in the NW, where 24D was trIM; ATTACK AD was never going to fill in with that R blocking it and ANKLE __T wasn't helping. I finally settled on GENE SET after GENomes and GENders failed the crosses tests. That was the key!

James McCarron, nice job!

jberg 10:33 AM  

I've read Rex, but not the rest of you -- I'll come back and do that later. Meanwhile...

I'd never heard of the Battle of LEYTE either, but I had certainly heard of the Battle of LEYTE Gulf--the largest naval battle in history, and one of the turning points of the Pacific war, in which what was left of the Japanese Navy was destroyed. The Battle of LEYTE was the subsequent invasion of that island, it turns out.

I liked the whole thing more than Rex did, because of all the tricky and/or obscure clues. E.g., while I certainly know about GHANA, I was TODAY YEARS OLD when I heard of Kotoka International Airport. And I came at the movie locale from the B in RIBEYE, and almost put in siBERIA-- it was so wildly improbably that I waited for mor crosses, fortunately.

I'm pretty arumentative, but never consider myself HOSTILE. My wife thinks otherwise, however, so maybe the puzzle has got a point.

Now I'll go see what others thought.

Dan P 10:37 AM  

I'm with Alex. Sure I'm a boomer but by no means a WWII expert. LEYTE was almost a gimmie. SALAH was much less familiar, but easily inferable.

Anonymous 10:42 AM  

Memory's funny, but I feel like I know L***e from Cryptonomicon. One of the reasons I enjoy crosswords stems from fascination with our brains. How do they find--or at least fill in after a head start--seemingly random inputs from decades ago? Knowing the name of an island/battle really only means I've heard or seen it in context at least once, and somehow it's been hiding out up there ever since.

EasyEd 10:46 AM  

Enjoyed the discussion of Leyte. I recognized it after getting it from the crosses but to me the much more familiar battle in the Pacific was Midway, the turning point at sea, versus Leyte, the end point. Recognition may also have to do with the fact that Midway is more in the English language. Thought this was a fun puzzle beginning with DONTPOKETHEBEAR. Also enjoyed Rex’s creative commentary.

Dr Random 10:49 AM  

CLARET took me a few crosses, but then I got it because of Alfred Noyes’s poem “The Highwayman,” which I first encountered from a Loreena McKennitt rendition of it back in the 90s. Can’t recall running into it anywhere else, so it was nice for a random color word to take me back to the Celtic folk of my teenage years. :)

Anonymous 10:49 AM  

Your so right about the importance I wonder how our lives would be today if we lost that battle

Dr Random 10:51 AM  

Agree about GENE SET. I wondered if it qualifies as green paint.

DAVinHOP 10:54 AM  

I'm late to the game today, so my biggest pushback to RP (Leyte) has been bludgeoned here already...TAKE THAT! In general, I thought it might get a fourth star and had plenty of, as Nancy used to say, crunch for a Friday.

But I'll happily second tht about it being a welcome break from Star Wars, LOTR, etc. fill that can make me SCREAM.

jberg 10:57 AM  

As Rex says, let's all calm down. There are many areas of knowledge, and nobody is familiar with all of them. In my earlier comment I was discussing how I happened to get LEYTE, but I may have gone overboard (seldom a good idea in regard to a naval battle). I think it was included in high school history courses at the time, but probably not any longer.

But that got me thinking-- how about the Battle of Trafalgar? Also pretty significant, though smaller, but probably much more familiar, or at least so I would guess. Is that just because they named a square after it, complete with a statue of Nelson on top? Or because there a lot more American tourists who go to Europe than who go to the Philippines? Or am I wrong about Trafalgar?

My first thought for the red was garNET. Fortunately I waited for more crosses. I find that I know a lot of color names, but am frequently wrong about the particular shades they refer to.

OK, enough from me!

mathgent 10:58 AM  

I was ten when the Battle of Leyte took place. That was before we had a tv. I know how to pronounce it, so I must have heard it on the radio.

Do we like Rex hanging around and influencing our comments?

Anonymous 11:02 AM  

I was going to comment that the reluctance to study our history is what has gotten us to the mess we're in now, but on reflection I wonder if the strategy or drama of any particular battle is the lesson we most need to learn from WWII…

Anonymous 11:10 AM  

Not getting into the Leyte discussion. Just came here to thank Rex for the Scritti Politti. I needed that Green fix this morning.

Anonymous 11:25 AM  

Ugh, GENE SET is that context is terribly wrong. I hope we never see GENE SET again.

Beezer 11:26 AM  

Wow. I don’t know much about the military and battles but I DO know of the Blue Angels. That is something to be proud of!

jb129 11:30 AM  

I enjoyed Rex's rant about LEYTE. But what a response it got! I also like this puzzle but had to wonder "Is today Friday?" Thank you, James :)

Carola 11:39 AM  

A solid "medium" for me, a Friday I had to work at - meaning a Friday I really enjoyed solving. Unable to get a grip on the upper triangle, I started at BATON x BONE, took care of the lower triangle and then worked my way up along the left side to GHANA. Lots to LIKE along the way!

Do-overs: tie before HAT, trIM before SKIM, STop before STay before STEM, montanA before ALBERTA. No idea: SALAH. Vague notion: LEYTE - I appreciate the history lesson in the comments.

Beezer 11:42 AM  

I thought this was a dandy Friday puzzle and I hope I remember that Kotoka airport is in GHANA and also that Leyte (Gulf) was a notable WWII Pacific battle.

Rex is not only the blog creator but a moderator, so I don’t mind when he weighs in, and especially if it cools people’s jets back to civility. As an official “old” , I was still born ten years after the end of WWII. I’m a little embarrassed to admit that about the only thing I can draw up on the Pacific side is the attack on Pearl Harbor, Midway, the sinking of the USS Indianapolis (we have a monument to that…in Indianapolis), and watching McHale’s Navy (the Pacific counterpart to Hogan’s Heroes).

In conclusion, if a CLAM is a silent sort, why are they so happy? A point to ponder.

Whatsername 11:43 AM  

In answer to your question, I have always assumed that Rex was hanging around and at least had a hand in filtering comments. The fact that he’s making his presence known doesn’t change anything for me.

Carola 11:43 AM  

So interesting about those street names! My neighborhood is peppered with the names of Ivy League colleges, which seems strange for a Midwestern location - no Carleton, Macalester, Grinnell, Coe to be seen.

Jnlzbth 12:01 PM  

It's his blog! I certainly don't mind him chiming in.

Jnlzbth 12:10 PM  

I have to confess that I was TODAY YEARS OLD when I learned the phrase TODAY YEARS OLD. Wherever did it come from? I don't like it much. I hope that on this blog people will stick with WOE instead of using such an unmelodious phrase.

A 12:10 PM  

My solving experience was similar. Liked the puzzle but got off to a slow start, was slow to get the ARK/KROC cross, and my "Dutch artist" was initially Mies (van der Rohe), the architect. At least he gave me two correct letters!

impjb 12:10 PM  

I was going to add that LEYTE should in no way be obscure, but since many others have already said so, I won't!

Anonymous 12:16 PM  

Yes I watched lots of Victory at Sea with my dad a WWII Vet from the Pacific Theater

Gene 12:39 PM  

The Battle of Leyte Gulf was a *very* famous WWII event. You do a disservice to people of a certain age [raises hand] whose life experience included the war and/or its aftermath. And its aftermath lasted fir a long time.

jae 12:43 PM  

Easy.

GHANA, SAUDI, SALAH, and ALBERTA were WOEs.

trIM before SKIM was it for costly erasures.

The long across answers were easy (and delightful) which led to a very whooshy solve.

I too knew LEYTE.

Smooth with a modicum of sparke, liked it.

jrstocker 12:46 PM  

Yeah, I get not everybody has WWII history down pat seeing as how it's been almost a century ago, but it was a pretty significant military engagement. Not out of place on a Friday IMO.

Anonymous 1:04 PM  

I'll never understand the people who pose questions here instead of going to the dictionary or Google

Les S. More 1:06 PM  

Beezer. I've always assumed the "happy as a clam" thing referred to their lack of cognition. If you can't think, you can't be unhappy.

Anonymous 1:07 PM  

Wasn't it filmed in ARMENIA? Other mistake: END for EVE ("threshold") delayed NW corner, and DONTPOKEATABEAR messed up the NE. Glad I didn't jump for a thawb-wearing SUNNI, RABBI, or HAJJI, so SAUDI went down last.

egsforbreakfast 1:11 PM  

I am a big fan of @Rex commenting during the back-and-forth. I tried to make this point once before but it was contained in the 40% portion of my comments that are rejected.

okanaganer 1:18 PM  

I didn't know LEYTE but after all the discussion today, maybe it will stick in my brain. Hope so. I also didn't know Mr. SALAH but that's just cuz I haven't watched soccer in ages. And there were sure a lot of names again today! Only a few Unknowns like DEB. (Boy do I hate clues like "Nebraska senator -----"... totally useless to me and also very boring.)

Every time I see TALESE, I remember reading an article about his article "Frank Sinatra Has a Cold"... memorable title. And the story of the article itself is interesting.

Anonymous 1:20 PM  

Only 68 clues in a 15x15 grid, those had to be generally long answers. To get an idea of how many 3-letter answers there’s going to be, I just look at the biggest number in the squares, the smaller the number, the fewer the cheat squares, the less little stuff. Today the number was 50, that’s damn low for any day of the week. I thought the fill was clean, and the cluing was pretty easy for a person of my generation. Very pleasant Friday solve.

Anonymous 1:22 PM  

I was pretty sure it was Alabama for a little while

Sailor 1:41 PM  

I would say that the land and sea battles were both significant engagements; the land invasion led to the naval battle. The amphibious landing on Leyte beginning on 17 October 1944 was the occasion of the world-famous photo of Gen. MacArthur's return to the Philippines at Red Beach on 20 October. The naval battle began on 23 October. So, as you say, hardly obscure. I knew both army and navy veterans (now deceased) of these battles.

Anonymous 1:58 PM  

@Rick I agree on both counts. I’ve even been to said airport and was momentarily flummoxed by Accra not fitting with the crosses. Leyte (Gulf) was a gimme.

Anonymous 1:59 PM  

Second! Oof!

Liveprof 2:01 PM  

The full expression is happy as a clam at high tide. That's when they are safe from predators.

Anonymous 2:03 PM  

SATIRE before SITCOM, GENETIC before GENE SET (wtf?), TRIM before SKIM, and had DERM_ until the end. Rating: 👎

kitshef 2:24 PM  

Yes. At one point I had TRIM for both 24A and 24D, and knew one of them had to be wrong. Turned out they were both wrong.

jb129 2:33 PM  

"Only an American????"

burtonkd 2:33 PM  

Nice!

Anonymous 2:34 PM  

Maybe you'd like it better without the apostrophe?

Anoa Bob 2:37 PM  

A CLAM is only happy at high tide. That's when it knows that it is safe from CLAM diggers wearing CLAM digger pants.

Anonymous 2:41 PM  

Until today I had never realized that Wyoming, Montana, and Alberta all have the same number of letters.

jb129 2:43 PM  

I don't see my earlier comment in response to "Rex's hanging around" & it's too cold out & I'm still reading the comments so forgive me if I'm repeating .... this is Rex's Blog, after all & most of the time I think he restrains himself from commenting.

Anonymous 3:12 PM  

Same concept of flammable and inflammable. Two ways to say the same thing.

Masked and Anonymous 3:12 PM  

Lotsa cool longball [8/13/15-long] stuff, except maybe for the har-larious inventive ANKLETAT. A debut entry, not surprisinly.

staff weeject pick: TEN. With a "perfect" clue.

Nice album mountin brackets, in all 4 puzgrid corners, btw.
And yep, TODAYYEAROLD made m&e miss dear @Muse darlin, all the more.

Thanx for the bear pokin fun, Mr. McCarron dude. Nice job.

Masked & Anonymo2Us

... and, in conclusion:

"Leaping To Conclusions" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:

**gruntz**

M&A

Fish 3:21 PM  

I guess I’m getting pretty old. I wrote in “Leyte” immediately. One of the most famous battles in the Pacific during WWII.

Anonymous 3:31 PM  

Loved the long acrosses! Never heard of SALAH or RAY KROC or LEYTE but got them from the crosses after SALAH
TIL that PESTO is derived from the Italian “crush”, and thwab! Nice Friday!
Those of us who are vegetarian or vegan do not enjoy meat clues, just saying

Anonymous 3:31 PM  

I was alive in WWII. Can’t say I remember much about it since I was five plus months old when Japan surrendered. Plus my father was too sick to serve, two of my uncles were too young, my other one commuted to a Coast Guard base and otherwise would have been exempt with three young boys at home, and my stepfather worked in a defense plant.

I certainly knew about LEYTE though snd loved most of the anwers. ALBERTA was newa to me

Anonymous 3:48 PM  

Horrific. I knew Leyte as a Navy veteran, but simply could not parse "ATTACK AD" with "ANKLETAT" and "GENESET" and "DERMA" and "MEER" all jumbled up in there. It didn't help that I had the _ _IM for "take a little off the top" and couldn't come up with anything but TRIM. I don't know if finding SKIM would have helped me anyway. Just way too much gunk in this underwhelming slog of a Friday disaster. Hated it (obviously).

CDilly52 4:14 PM  

Had a real LOL moment just now when @Rex briefly thought Broke ack Mountain” might have been cheaper to film the locations in Albania because when all I had was BER, my brain harkened back to the recent appearance of siBERia! I didn’t actually put it in but I did spend some serious time trying to remember whether the film had lots of winter scenes in it. Sheesh.

Loved the long answers, especially HERE GOES NOTHING. It’s a favorite line I said frequently to my second chair when during voir dire I was down to my very last peremptory challenge and had more than one person I still wanted to excuse from a jury panel.

As for LEYTE, I think many of us older than 70 who grew up when WWII was about as far as we ever got in history classes will have studied more of the battles near the Philippines, especially the Battle of LEYTE Gulf in 1944. As a Michener fan, I also recalled that he mentions LEYTE in the book “Tales of the South Pacific” (later made into the musical “South Pacific.” And count me among those who will have had that little island appear in the now ancient red zone on OFL’s chart this morning. Just reminds me how long I’ve been at this.

This was one of the better Fridays in a while. Liked it.

tht 4:19 PM  

Thanks for these associations, @Dr Random! I really like Loreena McKennitt, so I should check them out.

Beezer 4:25 PM  

Wow. You know a TON about crosswords! I have never really understood construction, and probably couldn’t identify a cheater square if my life depended on it.

SouthsideJohnny 4:27 PM  

M&A - I wanted to mention. I’ve been having trouble accessing your link/puzzle. I tried to email you, but it was returned undeliverable. Yesterday I could see the grid and clues, but no keyboard. Today I received a “site is not available” error (using an IPad and I tried with multiple browsers).

ac 4:29 PM  

ny times puzzles go from grand to bland so fast I get whiplash! bland Friday no question - l.a. times puzzles (free if you watch ad) last 3 days wed/thurs/fri are exceptional worth a visit! not a paid rep just a xword player since the 90's happy holidays here's my 2x grammy ballot music website no ads just music and art enjoy share support via bandcamp its bandcamp day! https://linktr.ee/glassjonespiano

Beezer 4:30 PM  

Okanaganer…you are in good company today and I think both of us will now remember Leyte…

Beezer 4:36 PM  

Just another phrase to keep up with I guess. Just when I think I’m keeping up with TIL, I find there is another iteration of the same idea.

Beezer 4:36 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Beezer 4:42 PM  

Well. I hadn’t heard the “high tide” part before so with that “add-on” I totally get it now! Is my lack of knowledge of the “high tide” part because I’m from Midwest? Who knows but I’m willing to wager there are others who have only heard “happy as a clam.” Sans high tide. Thanks!

Anonymous 4:53 PM  

Why is patsy the snswer to tricks? Cant figure it out!

Beezer 4:53 PM  

I LOVE your comment on sore thumbs. Who knows? Maybe because the other fingers can still be used fairly well (with thumb action) even when we try to separate it? It makes me try to conjure up doing things without a thumb. Praise the thumb!

dgd 5:27 PM  

About rack vtspeedy
I am old and boring so I came up with a rack for the not quite extinct tie

Anonymous 5:40 PM  

I wonder if we live in the same midwestern tiwn with a state university.

dgd 5:45 PM  

Rick, tht jrstocker
Thanks for your comments! My Dad was a veteran of WWII and fought on Luzon ( the “main island” of the Philippines) where he was severely wounded ( he lower right arm was amputated). the day before he was due to go home. Despite that he was able to get on with his life and lived to almost 102. . I think his experience led me to read extensively about WWII. So LEYTE was a gimme for me. But I wasn’t sure how well known the land and sea battles are known now. Good point that the clue said battle not island. So Rex misread the clue.

Pondie 5:54 PM  

I can't connect either today. On a Mac laptop I get "Safari can't connect to the server 'puzzlecrowd.com'".

dgd 6:23 PM  

Carola
Developers are often trying to think of something different for street names. Like your example of Ivy League names in the Midwest I have a niece who lives in a Boston suburb in a development where all the streets are named after US generals and admirals Including MacArthur.

dgd 6:28 PM  

Easy Ed
I think you made a good point. About LEYTE I would guess that a lot of solvers wouldn’t know the name right off but the crosses were fair and many like you recognized the name.

Anonymous 6:31 PM  

Appreciate your comment as well as your fascinating Blue Angel story. Thanks.

I just have one nit: your assumption that those who know of Leyte are old. Not necessarily. It’s a critical event in 20th American history, the knowledge of which has nothing to do with one’s age, but how much one pays attention to critical events in American history.

Joe 6:41 PM  

My dad was a captain of a landing craft tank during WWII, and I remember him saying that after the war he was stationed in the Phillipines. They had a saying, “ See ya Leyte (later)…yeah, Samar (tomorrow)”. He had a chance to go to mainland China, but had just turned 21 and was eager to get home. He later regretted not seeing China.

Anonymous 6:44 PM  

One of the BEST magazine articles ever written. Right up there with john updike’s “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu”

dgd 6:52 PM  

Liked the puzzle.
Am interested in WW II history as I said earlier because of my Dad. So LEYTE was a gimme FOR ME. Most people not at all . But the crosses and name recognition would help no?
Interesting to me trivia about Leyte
The landing went well but due to a humongous US Navy brass screw up the Navy lost a lot of sailors unnecessarily The screw up was a combination of a ridiculous command structure ( required by MacArthur’s ego) and Admiral Halsey’s lack of caution

Anonymous 6:58 PM  

At RYB57, 7.29am. I have never understood George Santayana’s observation. How can you repeat history if you haven’t read it.

Johnny Mic 7:31 PM  

Third! Is this a real genetics term?

Gary Jugert 7:37 PM  

¿Es esto posible?

One... one... ONE partial. ONE. That is how you do it peeps.

A couple sticking points but overall solid puzzle. Thankfully LEYTE filled itself in, but I purposefully looked up the soccer dude because I will never care about that sport and there's no reason to belabor a puzzle with something like that.

The very reason I do not buy SEASON TICKETS is that I always miss half of the shows. They're fer-shure-miss purchases. The other long answers are delightful.

That Bougeureau can sure paint, eh? I'm surprised I've never heard of him.

I would have swooned with delirium if the non-party people were POOPERS instead of LONERS.

Of all the possible sauces in the world, it still mystifies me people elect to ruin pasta with PESTO. I hate it so much. My wife the Italian makes it pretty regularly and I've never said anything, but I am leaving her a sealed note to be opened upon my death saying, "You were the light of my life, but all that pesto... yeeshk."

As a ukulele crazed person, I've owned one of the finest banjoleles ever made for many years and the only time I've played it is to show it to beginning ukulele players. They're brutal instruments because they sound like banjos and nobody should be listening to racket like that.

I am always argumentative, but never HOSTILE.

People: 6
Places: 5
Products: 2
Partials: 1
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 15 of 68 (22%)

Funny Factor: 5 😄

Tee-Hee: ["High" time.] THONG.

Uniclues:

1 Emulate 🦖.
2 Filet of foot photo.
3 Front row precipitation at the pole.

1 CURSE LEYTE
2 RIBEYE ANKLE TAT (~)
3 RAINS THONG

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Holiday location for Jamaican tots who rock. SKA KIDS TABLE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Rex Parker 7:40 PM  

@Egs I cannot recall rejecting your comments (I see familiar trustworthy names and just put them through reflexively). There are other moderators but they are very lenient. Can’t imagine where 40% of your comments could be going.

Rex Parker 7:40 PM  

👍🏼

Les S. More 7:49 PM  

I have tried to post at least 5 times today. Only one of my posts has been published (the one about being happy as a clam, which i definitely am not at this point). I have edited my original post a couple of times to no avail. Could some moderator with a few moments to spare please tell me what I've done to offend the commentariat,

Beezer 8:18 PM  

CDilly, you made me feel good when you said “older than 70” since at this moment I’m NOT. Anyway…I really tried to be a good student but seems like we BARELY got to WWII in history class, and even so, the concentration was the European theater. Fuhgeddabout Rommel and Africa.

konnofromtokyo 8:48 PM  

How is "get to" ATTEND? I can see "go to" as ATTEND. "Get to" means "arrive at." You get to something in order to attend it.

kitshef 9:22 PM  

@SouthsideJohnny, @Pondie. It is actually Ralph Bunker's site. I just shot him an email. I know it is housed on an old and cranky server and he's always feared some day it will just quit, but so far he has always gotten it running again. Fingers crossed.

M and A 10:51 PM  

Looks like the runtpuz server is down currently. Hopefully the support folks will fix it soon.
M&A

Anonymous 12:07 AM  

Brilliant. 22%. It is all I want, we can get on with solving cross WORDS , not trivia. Thank you Gary for keeping count..

Ukulele Ike 10:51 PM  

Bouguereau is a 19th century French Academy artist, and his work is well worth seeking out. We have a framed reproduction of “The Broken Pitcher” hanging in our dining room, because the subject resembles my wife when she was about fifteen.

Anonymous 11:04 PM  

Yeah "gene set" is not a thing. "Genome" is the only correct way to say it. Or "genes".

Anonymous 8:23 PM  

Yes, but in the clued context it is nonsensical / incorrect. A GENESET is just… a set of genes, such as a functionally related group (e.g. see “gene set enrichment analysis”).

Clones share a genetic *sequence* (my guess was GENOMES). For the most part (e.g. minus bacteria), organisms of the same species share all of the same genes – they differ primarily in the sequence of those genes and other, noncoding content.

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