Obsessor over "the precious" in Tolkien lore / MON 3-2-26 / Wild canid of the Great Lakes region / Sequence of steps to accomplish a goal / Year on the Yucatán / Sci-fi series with a "Time Lord" traveling in a TARDIS
Monday, March 2, 2026
Constructor: Leslie Benson
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- FORESHADOW (shouted by a golfer) (17A: Hint at, as what's to come)
- STRIKE GOLD (... by an umpire) (25A: Hit the jackpot, so to speak)
- ACTION PLAN (... by a director) (48A: Sequence of steps to accomplish a goal)
- TIMBER WOLF (... by a logger) (58A: Wild canid of the Great Lakes region)
The eastern wolf (Canis lycaon or Canis lupus lycaon), also known as the timber wolf, Algonquin wolf and eastern timber wolf, is a canine of debated taxonomy native to the Great Lakes region and southeastern Canada. It is considered either a unique subspecies of gray wolf, or red wolf, or a separate species from both. Many studies have found the eastern wolf to be the product of ancient and recent genetic admixture between the gray wolf and the coyote, while other studies have found some or all populations of the eastern wolf, as well as coyotes, originally separated from a common ancestor with the wolf over 1 million years ago and that these populations of the eastern wolf may be the same species as or a closely related species to the red wolf (Canis lupus rufus or Canis rufus) of the Southeastern United States. Regardless of its status, it is regarded as unique and therefore worthy of conservation with Canada citing the population in eastern Canada (also known as the "Algonquin wolf") as being the eastern wolf population subject to protection. // There are two forms, the larger being referred to as the Great Lakes-boreal wolf, which is generally found in Minnesota, Wisconsin, the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, southeastern Manitoba and northern Ontario, and the smaller being the Algonquin wolf, which inhabits eastern Canada, specifically central and eastern Ontario and southwestern Quebec, with some overlapping and mixing of the two types in the southern portions of northeastern and northwestern Ontario. The eastern wolf's morphology is midway between that of the gray wolf and the coyote. The fur is typically of a grizzled grayish-brown color mixed with cinnamon. The nape, shoulder and tail region are a mix of black and gray, with the flanks and chest being rufous or creamy. It primarily preys on white-tailed deer, but may occasionally hunt moose and beavers.
[buddy!]
• • •
And the fill isn't helping. Audibly groaned at APRS (some things should never be pluralized and this is one of them) (22A: Figs. that include interest), and then again at AREAR (55A: Toward the back), which appears in the NYTXW way way more often than it should, which is never. Hadn't appeared in more than four years before today (good job, everybody!) but there have now been 21 appearances in the Modern Era (bad job, everybody!). ACUTER is a painful comparative adjective. I like this comment from a word reference forum I just found: "The British National Corpus offers ninety-four examples of more acute, and zero of acuter, so it looks like it's unanimous. Don't believe everything you read in dictionaries." AS BAD is AS BAD a partial as you're likely to see (OK, not the worst, but not great) (34A: "There's no such thing ___ publicity"). Then there's the lowest form of fill, the playground retort ("I AM SO!"), and the "anus" passing as "year" (ANO) (8D: Year on the Yucatán). At least they spelled DOCTOR WHO correctly (35D: Sci-fi series with a "Time Lord" traveling in a TARDIS). None of this DR. WHO shenanigans the NYTXW sometimes tries to get away with (nine appearances since '06).
The weirdest answer of the day was definitely SMEAGOL (29D: Obsessor over "the precious" in Tolkien lore). We just had SMEAGOL in the puzzle two days ago (causing no end of spelling trouble for solvers, myself included). And before today, SMEAGOL had only ever been a Friday or Saturday answer. And suddenly it jumps up the easiness scale all the way to Monday? Strange. There have been four SMEAGOL appearances total—two very close to each other in late 2018, then over seven years of silence, and then two more appearances within two days of each other. Congrats to all the solvers who got burned by SMEAGOL on Saturday but then got him today. I think we've had enough, though, now. Back into the volcano with you, Gollum (that's what SMEAGOL is renamed after he becomes corrupted by the One Ring).
Bullets:
- 6D: Bias (SLANT) — in the top half of the puzzle, this clue gave me the most trouble, solving Downs-only. I couldn't think of a synonym for "Bias" besides "prejudice" or maybe "leaning." Just drew a blank. This is not uncommon when solving Downs-only, but what compounded the problem was that I had SEI-E in one of the crosses and the only letter I could think of to go in the blank was "Z." So I put "Z" in and tried to think of synonyms for "Bias" that fit the --AZ- pattern. No luck. Wasn't til later, when I was able to get the final "T" (from STRIKE GOLD) that I realized, with a big "oh, duh," that SEINE was also a viable option there. Nothing else about the Downs-only solve gave me nearly so much trouble. But only because I was dead-certain about SMEAGOL and how to spell it (having seen it just two days ago). If I'd solved this puzzle last Monday, I think SMEAGOL might've held me up at least a little.
- 4D: Knight captures bishop, e.g. (CHESS MOVE) — wasn't sure how I felt about this answer at first but now I think it's probably the most interesting thing in the grid. I suppose at first it seemed a little ... wobbly, somehow. I had this "is that a strong enough standalone phrase? I ... think so?"And now I just think so. No "question mark?" about it.
- 14A: The Potato State (IDAHO) — pfffffft, IDAHO is the Gem State. Their license plates read "Famous Potatoes." My family is from IDAHO so I'm well aware of the state's association with potatoes, and I got this answer easily, but I don't think I've ever heard IDAHO called The Potato State. This is certainly the first time it's been clued this way. It's been clued [Potato state] a few times, with a lowercase "s" on "state," but that's not a title. Wikipedia has The Potato State listed as an unofficial title, so the clue is not wrong. Unofficial, but not wrong. Side note: the state motto of IDAHO is "ESTO Perpetua." This occasionally (seldom, but occasionally) has crossword relevance.
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67 comments:
Nice puzzle, Monday-level easy. Didn't consider the theme.
We're keeping track of Star Wars entries; I might suggest the same for Tolkien.
Nondescript - early week puzzle. Rex highlights pretty much everything - although it teed him up for a discussion about CHESS piece colors - must have had his full yesterday. GIVES is redundant but the revealer may be the shining moment here.
Ian and Sylvia
ACUTER is AS BAD as it gets. The grid is loaded with short glue that gloms up workings. Liked the SLANT - CIDER and LAMBS - ARBOR stacks.
Not a particularly pleasant solving start to the week.
The Misfits
My stretch goal on Mondays is to do it in < 6 minutes. If you hadn't guessed, I'm not a speed solver. Completed this in 6:01..... So I think that still qualifies as easy. Fun theme, I agree with OFL about the lack of necessity for the shading. Thanks, Leslie, you definitely deserve a SHOUT OUT today!!!! : ) Wondering if the shading idea came from the constructor or (more likely) the editors???
Mr. SMEAGOL is having quite a moment. Fortunately I recognized him from a few days ago, otherwise the crossing with GOA may have been iffy. I wonder if we are back in that binary mode, where the grids are either surprisingly easy for their day of the week, or brutally difficult. The shaded squares are kind of a giveaway that they are spoon-feeding us today, even it’s a Monday.
Totally agree on: no need for shading and awfulness of AREAR. I didn’t do the puzzle for the last couple of days (too busy, argh!) so missed the first SMEAGOL. So I had no idea here. I knew Gollum, but I probably wouldn’t have been able to dredge that one up either.
Oh, I greatly enjoyed this theme.
I saw and heard the golfer and other shouters, which brought fun into the solve.
The shouts are not directly related to the answers they are embedded in. FORESHADOW has nothing to do with golf, nor ACTION PLAN with movies, and so on. That's a nice touch.
It may not be hard to come up with words that are often shouted, like “Sold!” or “Bingo!”, but finding bigger words that start with unrelated shout-words – not so easy.
Coming up with four such answers that fit symmetry, well, that’s moving into wow territory.
Making them fresh is even more impressive. The five theme answers include ia NYT debut, two once-befores, and two twice-befores. Brava on that!
Finally, a serendipity in the grid greatly pleased nerdy me. Near IDAHO is ATOP, and if you read ATOP from right to left, then continue in the other direction two more letters, it spells “potato”. Hah!
Your puzzle sparked my day, Leslie. Congratulations on your debut, and thank you!
Administrative note. I will be away until a week from Thursday, on the first non-family-visit vacation my wife and I have had since covid! (We will be lazing away on an island in the Caribbean.) My “favorite clues” list will therefore be late next week. I will miss the gang here greatly, and it will be a joy to return to you. Wishing you well!
Laughed audibly at Sméagol part 2 since i’ve been rereading Two Towers over the past week. I’d argue that Gollum is more the one obsessed with the precious but i suppose that’s splitting hairs
No existe tal cosa como mala publicidad.
Very loud puzzle. Stop hollerin' at me! As 🦖 would (never) say, "Why these yells?"
Summer has arrived early here in the southwest and everything is blooming and my allergies are on fire so I can't rely on my brain at this point, but I think this might the greatest gunk-light puzzle ever or maybe not. My nose was living its own life during the solve so it's definitely the sneeziest puzzle ever.
In our dining room we have a sign that says, "We're Happy as Clams." Plural of convenience.
Here's my HOKEY POKEY story: I had an ukulele student with a physical disability so we could only do the two easiest chords. We worked on Hokey Pokey regularly and it was one of our big hits. She decided to sign up for the elementary talent show without telling anyone and she rocked the whole school solo with her pink Fender ukulele. She sang, the rapt audience in the cafegymatorium sang, the F and C7 chords thundered like Beethoven's Fifth. And, as you'd expect, mom and dad, and the grands were all in tears. Hokey Pokey was way more than a kid's song that day.
❤️ OHMY / UHOH. Ping's partner. SMEAGOL (reprise).
😩 ACUTER.
People: 2
Places: 4
Products: 5
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 17 of 76 (22%)
Funny Factor: 1 🤨
Uniclues:
1 Stop putting bar codes on molluscs.
2 Why the banker is driving your car back to Boise.
3 Lesson 2 in business school.
4 Spray the scent of orc off a noted jewelry aficionado.
5 What happened when Icarus pedaled too close to the sun.
1 DITCH CLAM SCAN (~)
2 IDAHO LINE REPO
3 APRS STRIKE GOLD
4 HOSE SMEAGOL
5 MOPED'S SKY FRY
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Fruit related slip and falls chart at an insurance actuary. BANANA IRONY TOTALS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Acuter should be taken out back and shot.
Sick of this paper trying to add difficulty by making references to things I’m not familiar with. Today’s WOEs:
FORESHADOW, SEINE, GOA, HOBO, CHESSMOVE, ARBOR.
Miss the old days when the puzzle was filled fairly.
A perfectly pleasant little puzzle, but not one I'll remembers.
With the Winter Olympics just ending, USSR/HOKEY gave me a flashback to 1980, watching the Miracle on Ice on the common room TV at our dorm at U of C.
This was a good enough Monday puzzle. It flowed well for me without feeling "too easy". I had to take a Natick at SMEAGOL/GOA. Definitely not a Monday cross but I don't really care.
Hey All !
Let's rename New York State to Rex Parker State!
Revealer could've been "SHOUT IT OUT LOUD", a Kiss song. Maybe try to get the bandmates' names in somewhere.
Liked this puz. SHOUT OUT loud things. ECHO another, if atop a mountain or cliff. OH MY could've come into play as a comedy movie type SHOUT.
Chuckled at SMEAGOL, thanks SatPuz for that.
Enjoyed the skiing stories in YesterComments. Let's see what sparks today's big discussion.
Hope y'all have a great Monday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
From The Gondoliers: Yet he had acted otherwise if he had been acuter.
Had this one pegged for two stars. The write-up supports this generally, but Rex appeared to award the additional 1/2 star for his finding "something kind of fun about shouting these (theme) terms in my head..." which is kind of...kind.
Nineteen 3-letter words, including 2-letter word plurals NOS, AHS and PAS, which seems like overkill to support this theme, although the theme answers were all on the long side (four 10's and a 13).
Expected opprobrium for ACUTER and I AM SO. Check. Also expected for the NW (intro) corner consisting of DIF, I DO and TAR. I think Rex gave criticism of that a pass out of indifference. Aside from DOCTOR WHO, the fact that TIMBER WOLF was the most, and sufficiently, interesting entry to be chosen as the WOTD is testimony to lack of interesting fill.
Keeping score re appearances in the last three days:
SMEAGOL- 2
Star Wars references - 0
And also, number of times SMEAGOL elicited from me:
"I have no idea" - 1
"I know this" - 1
Perfectly fine Monday puzzle. I thought the theme clever though it took me a few seconds to figure out what was going on after my solve - Mondays I now solve early so maybe my brain hasn't fully kicked into gear, but it was a nice aha moment when it all clicked. Like some here, shouting those words out in my head was kinda fun.
Agree that the shaded squares took something away from the experience, but I still enjoyed this one.
As mentioned, SMEAGOL so soon?? I would have had to wait for every cross for that one if it wasn't fresh in my mind. As I commented a couple of days ago, most things Tolkien, Star Wars and gaming have escaped my attention for the bulk of my years on Earth. Not a dig, just not my thing. I guess you can add Doctor Who to the list but this clue was so straight forward I would have had to live under a rock to not get it.
The construction/symmetry is impressive and I can imagine the constructor working hard to come up with the theme, that's impressive as well. Thanks Leslie for pleasant romp!
And now for another installment of a Monday HUGH HAIKU:
Some rows, some columns
Stunning, its bare bones exposed
Where might it take us?
The shaded squares meant themers, saw that the revealer was in the middle so skipped that for the time being, did all the themers and then tried to figure out what they had in common, didn't, so a very nice aha!
Otherwise nothing memorable and a plethora of moo-cows. No idea what M&A will pick for a favorite. Totally agree on the awfulness of ACUTER , see also AREAR.
I did see a t-shirt once with the saying "What if the HOKEY Pokey IS what it's all about?".
Good Novice Monday, LB. Low Bar indeed. Thanks for some easy fun.
Gary, nice story of the Hokey Pokey concert. Heartwarming.
My downs-only solve faltered at DOCTOR WHO, but parts of the grid seemed mind-numbingly easy: Ping's partner (PONG); [Blank] and hers (HIS); and Where the stars are (SKY), just to name three.
(I am aware that this note is adding nothing to the conversation. I'm just trying to get on Gary's list with "mind-numbingly.")
Since we talked about precipitation yesterday and have IDAHO potatoes on the menu today, I can share the joke/riddle my granddaughter and I made up a while ago:
What do you call it when French fries fall from the sky?
Answer: Precipitatoes.
A nice typical Monday. (Is Sméagol the new Oreo?) 🎈🎈🎊🎊
This hit as easier than usual for me, and I set a PB Monday time. Misspelled Smeagol initially, but managed to catch it without too much fuss.
I gotta GIVEASHOUTOUT to a DOCTORWHO AERATES AREAR. OHMY!
There's a Mexican/Indian BARON East 39th that serves APOLLO and ROTI that's ASBAD as it gets.
Kinda cool that there are consecutive outs , but no shin in SHOUTOUT.
My jokes are getting so bad that I'm afraid I'm getting SEINE AISLE.
Mighty quick puzzle today. I think I enjoyed it. Thanks, Leslie Benson.
Have fun Lewis!
I see your point since anyone in possession of the ring felt its tug and the only difference is that SMEAGOL actually became transformed into Gollum. Not sure (or don’t remember) if he referred to the ring as “my precious” before he was fully sucked in and was Gollum.
If you’re an NBA fan and know who Charles Barkley is, GIVEASHOUTOUT is a very familiar phrase. Just did a puzzle last week that had SMÉAGOL as a key answer, so an OK Monday clue for regulars here. A puzzle with only (to me) one real clunker—ACUTER—is pretty good, a smooth, easy Monday.
Perfectly serviceable Monday puzzle that went by pretty fast. I have to believe the editors shaded the squares since it was slotted into Monday, but think the theme is pretty clever. My only observation (not really a nit) is that I DO think of FORE and TIMBER as being shouted (as loud as possible), STRIKE as being…yelled (?), and ACTION…not so much. Hey, you can’t have everything.
Easy puzzle, even if there'd been no shaded squares. My only difficulty was putting in STRIKE, seeing there wasn't room to add "it rich" and so making it STRIKE rich. Easily fixed, though.
Unlike Rex, I generally like those old a- words (see ATOP), But AREAR sounds like you're so broke you not only can't pay your bills, but can't even come up with an extra R and S to spell the word properly. Much better to commit to archaism and make it "Abaft," a lovely word.
Somehow in my warped brain, the clue "Ping's partner" made me think of the opera "Turandot," which has three characters named Ping, Pang, and PONG. I quickly realized the puzzle wanted table tennis, but it resonated nicely with SNAP, crackle, and pop a few answers later.
I don't mind the POC--I can imagine a banker telling me "we offer mortgages with APRS ranging from 5 to 7%, depending on the repayment period," but what does "include interest" mean? The APR IS an interest rate.
I really wanted "Recital of 'In Flander's Field'" as my Veterans' Day event. But I guess that was much more common in the time of Armistice Day, which I still miss.
Re shading: The increased inclusion of these sorts of gratuitous things in the puzzle design makes me wonder if the puzzle editors have adopted the Beatles' first number one single in the US (Feb. 1, 1064) as their theme song, guiding principle and (ugh) North Star.
The only nit I would pick with this puzzle is that three of the shout-outs are warnings (or at least negative, as in STRIKE) but ACTION is merely a directive.
I grew up in a house that was across the street from a golf course. One day, we had just come home from church and parked in front of the house. As my mom was walking up the sidewalk to the front door, a golf ball hit the sidewalk right in front of her and bounced over the roof of our rambler house. My mom turned around just as the golfer weakly uttered "FORE". She gave him a blistering ream-out, shocking my dad who had missed the whole thing. But that's the memory that FORE brings to mind.
Leslie Benson, thanks for a fun (for me) Monday puzzle!
Not to mention Barons. What am I English?
Thanks so much for "Four Strong Winds", it's an all-time favorite. I'll probably sing it this afternoon when I play at a nursing home gig with my partner.
Either way, his given name was always Sméagol, no matter what people later called him. (I love it! My iPhone defaults to the name with the accent!)
Easy-medium. No real problems with this one.
A couple of fun theme answers and fairly smooth (except for maybe ACUTER) , liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1092 was easy-medium except for guessing a square in the NE. Good luck!
Thanks to the second appearance of SMEAGOL in as many days, I think I set a new PB at under 8 minutes.
Oh yes - enough of Star Wars, enough of LOTR.
That’s a proctologist, Egs.
As always, thanks for the entertainment.
Our nit is similar yet a bit different. :)
Agree on adding a Tolkien counter to the Star Wars and Star Trek counters.
Although it *is* curious to ponder on what specific genre of *anything* the puzzle creators and editors choose to weigh heavy. Perhaps they're also reading this blog and are open to suggestions?
I'll start...
How about actual historical figures and events? This subject area is vast and (hopefully) aligns with the creators, editors, and solvers across our common human reality.
I got to 55a having only the final R and said 'Oh God No!'. Then I was so happy because I was sure 56d, part of a foot, had to be inCH so I thought I was about to learn a new word for 'Toward the back'. Alas, moving on, I did not think there was an animal called a TIMBEnWOLF. Then I saw ARCH. Oh well. AREAR it was. Sad note to end on.
Gary, is that really AN ukulele you teach? I always say A uke.... If your student can learn a G7 chord, she can add the Coke song to her repertoire (I'd like to teach the world to sing...), that would also be a hit at assemblies.
Days without a LOTR clue: 0
I guess there's nothing really new under the crossword sun, but "original!" was what came to my mind with this theme. I enjoyed the array of SHOUTs from different realms, especially TIMBER! combined with WOLF! (as in "The boy who cried....") In a more sinister bit of FORESHADOWING: TIMBERWOLF x LAMBS.
I briefly wondered if GIVE A SHOUT OUT was in EAT A SANDWICH territory, but I relented by the time I read the blog, since of course GIVE is the only verb you ever do with a SHOUT OUT. Fair play. But Rex is right about the needlessness of shading the squares.
Thanks for the bit of research to allow my hatred of ACUTER to feel more justified!
I just checked Billboard and the number one song on Feb. 1 1064 was Victimae Paschali Laudes by Ruotger of Cologne and the Benedictines.
Across Lite doesn't do shaded squares, so we had circles... yet AGAINNN! I am really getting sick of circles. Way too often.
Solving down clues only, this went super smooth at just under 7 minutes... gotta be a downs-only record. After my first pass, I only had 6 or 8 blank downs, and many of the acrosses were easy to guess without the clue. And the only typeover I can remember from last night was NAAN before ROTI. And yes ACUTER is godawful.
The theme was (too) obvious because of the circles; as Rex said it's the first part of every long across, except for the central revealer. I did actually like the theme, it's cute and Monday appropriate.
Same year as the Battle of Hastings?
@Egs, Your comments about the silliest I 've seen from you. Thanks for the laughs.
But did not "get" the third .
Sorry. I guess I meant two years before the Battle of Hastings.
SMEAGOL. First encountered this weird word a few days ago. So today I misspelled it as SMEeGuL, which made me picture Captain Hook’s bos’n losing his fries to a crafty bird. No? Not funny? OK, I’ll leave this sort of thing to @egs and his henchmen.
I’m an habitual Monday downs-only solver so I didn’t find this as easy as some of you, but really not that rough. I wondered if ARCH (Part of a foot) was a deliberate landmine for DO solvers. Of course my first thought was inCH.
I agree that AREAR was bad and I keep a notebook beside me as I solve and I have scrawled in ACUTER Die! Die! Die!
Liked seeing DOCTOR WHO because, though I am not a sci-fi or fantasy fan, I like that show. It’s hilariously goofy.
When I was in France in the late 70s I saw lots of MOPEDS - basically ordinary bikes with small gasoline engines attached, often piloted by young women going to and from the market. Now I am more likely to see heavy-duty beasts with massive tires and electric motors. Very aggressive looking. I think I prefer the quaint rural French version over today’s e-bikes.
Other things I liked in this puzzle: DITCH, ENTOMB, and Tres LECHES Cake.
To an “ie” Leslie from an “ey” Lesley, thanks for a fun Monday. (But, as Rex and others noted, you didn’t need the shaded squares.)
Sadly, Old Yeller was ACUTER dog that suffered the same fate.
Goa was the only thorny spot, and I wanted to yell OUCH!
I felt the same way about the originality of the theme; it felt fresh.
Agree -- the shading would have been helpful and indicated if the theme part blended into the second word of the answer. In this puzzle, the theme answers were separate words, so really no need for shading , as you and OFL pointed out
Agree -- the shading would have been helpful and indicated if the theme part blended into the second word of the answer. In this puzzle, the theme answers were separate words, so really no need for shading , as you and OFL pointed out
Well for cryin out loud MonPuz! [And 53-Across/38-Down, too boot!]
Now ... why gray squares, instead of The Circles? Or, as @RP wonders, why either of em?
staff weeject picks: ANO & NOS. Covers yer singular and plural cases nicely.
Primo weeject stacks, NW & SE, btw.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {"___, crackle, pop"} = SNAP.
other faves: SMEAGOL [still a spellin challenge, tho]. CHESSMOVE & its clue. Learnin about "Tres LECHES cake" [relieved to report that no leeches were harmed].
Thanx for the gray outbursts of fun, Ms. Benson darlin. And congratz on yer clever debut. Come back and holler some more, any old time.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
p.s.
runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
and seconds:
**gruntz**
M&A
@Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice: I am nowhere close to being an expert in the Hawaiian language, but I believe that although the English pronunciation is something like "yoo-kuhl-layl-ee," in Hawaiian it's closer to "ooh-kooh-lay-lay." If using the Hawaiian pronunciation, "an" would be correct due to starting with a 'vowel' sound (ooh) rather than a 'consonant' sound (yoo).
@Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 11:00 AM
So here's where things get messy. The official correct pronunciation is OOK-uh-leh-lay, hence I normally write AN ukulele, but in the real world where normal people live, everyone pronounces it, YOO-kah-lay-lee (as do I), hence it's often written A ukulele. And you're right, my kingdom for a G7.
Digging your Hugh Haikus, Hugh!
Roo
@kitshef
Great song to tap your foot to!
Roo
I'm going to atart keeping track of days without someone keeping track of days without something.
And let's not forget that NYTimes Crossword abandoned Across Lite because it was so, so very important for it to be able to make puzzles with shaded squares.
Since no one else will, ima GIVEASHOUTOUT to my fave TIMBERWOLF, NAZ REID.
@Gary’s HOKEY Pokey story reminded me of a success story from my daughter’s first year here teaching special needs students grades 4-6. She had 12 of them, each with needs as special, varied and challenging as they could be. And yet, when teachers deliver challenging educational programs with care, tenacity, attainable goals, high expectations and love amazing things can happen.
My daughter Kate grew up with a mother insistent at an early age that she embrace her obligations as a citizen of the US. The Oklahoma schools in the ‘80s were already cutting citizenship education from their K-12 curriculums. Here in California in 2019, it was beginning to happen as well. She saw the massive black hole in the state standards for her students and wasn’t having it.
She created her own ”Words We Live By” program designed to combine famous words from history and their speakers with her students’ daily studies. By the end of the year, all 12 knew a little about people from the 1770s through the Obama Administration, some important “words” they contributed and why the words demonstrated dedication to and love of country.
The kids’ interest and effort grew exponentially as they met each new character. By the end of the year, each had a favorite or two and had memorized their words. Kate had them write a play using the quotes. All 12 participated and had roles. It was about a 20 minute reader’s theatre work with student-created props and sound effects. The play created a quick peek into history in which, for example, John Wilkes Booth would meet Michelle Obama and accordingly presented some humorous brief “what if” scenarios and also some exceptional food for thought.
By the end of the year, everyone had heard that “Mrs. Mazer’s class is doing a real play that they wrote!” The school’s principal, some teachers, and even the Superintendent dropped in on the morning of the performance along with at least 10 parent/guardian representatives.
The readings represented educational, emotional, and behavioral success well beyond IEP predictions, and obvious personal pride among the students. From my spot back behind all of the truly important audience members, I saw more than one of the folks there for their kids openly crying.
After the standing O and bows and lengthy cheering from the audience and cast, the crowd dispersed. One red-eyed woman holding a ball of obviously used tissues came up to my daughter, gave her a hug and said “Ethan ( not his real name) has never, ever read out loud until today. Not even at home. Thank you.”
Thank you teachers. You nurture and guide our nation’s most precious natural resources. Please, please persist. Our children and our nation desperately need you. You often function as the catalyst that sets the table for youngsters with pink ukuleles and paralyzing fears to savor their first taste of soaring personal achievement.
Beezer
About ACTION on a movie set
I would think movie sets could be on the loud side before filming started Not having ever been on one, it is a total guess of course.
Les S More
MOPED
I was in Caen (Normandy) for my Junior year in college in the early 70’s. and I remember an older women, probably on an errand) going up a steep hill near the Université de Caen. I was fascinated. So they were used in cities too. Before France I had never seen one. Thanks for the memory.
FWII I was surprised to see it on a Monday but it was in the Times puzzle for a tougher day not long ago. (Clue Smallest Indian State) It has very convenient letters and it may be having a resurgence.
M & A.
In would have lost a bet
I thought you would pick SKY.!
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