Stool pigeons, in police shorthand / TUE 5-12-26 / Some limb-moving muscles / Sandlot QB's order to a receiver / Listing at an ice cream shop in Ipswich / Al Sharpton's title, for short
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Constructor: John Ruff
Relative difficulty: Medium
Theme answers:
- FLAVOUR OF THE DAY (17A: Listing at an ice cream shop in Ipswich)
- COLOURING BOOKS (27A: Kids' items at a day care in Derby)
- NEIGHBOURHOODS (46A: Areas on a map of Manchester)
An informant (also called an informer or, as a slang term, a "snitch", "rat", "canary", "stool pigeon", "stoolie", "tout" or "grass", among other terms) is a person who provides privileged information, or (usually damaging) information intended to be intimate, concealed, or secret, about a person or organization to an agency, often a government or law enforcement agency. The term is usually used within the law-enforcement world, where informants are officially known as confidential human sources (CHS), or criminal informants (CI). It can also refer pejoratively to someone who supplies information without the consent of the involved parties. The term is commonly used in politics, industry, entertainment, and academia. // In the United States, a confidential informant or "CI" is "any individual who provides useful and credible information to a law enforcement agency regarding felonious criminal activities and from whom the agency expects or intends to obtain additional useful and credible information regarding such activities in the future".(wikipedia)
[I know]
• • •
But then if we say "OH, YOU ARE BRITISH" is in fact a statement, not a question, then why is it clued as a question? The idea here seems to want to be that these are things (the clue and then the answer) that you might say, sequentially, to yourself, as a solver (?). "Hmmm, why would you do this British spelling thing? ... oh, I see, you are doing it because you are British!" But the clue makes an absolute muddle of the linguistic situation—answer and clue have to have equivalency (such that one can be swapped out for the other), and yet imagining "OH, YOU ARE BRITISH?" as a question, as we've established, is ridiculous. So the mild cutesiness of the "OUR" pun is completely undone by the disastrously muddled phrasing of the revealer clue.
The rest of the puzzle was mostly a heap of dull short stuff, though there are a couple of 7s and a couple of 8s and a couple of 9s crammed in there as well, all of them solid. Still, I felt like I was drowning in 3s and 4s. I think the relative dullness of those theme answers really costs the puzzle today. Usually, the theme is where most of the interest lies, but today, those three themers are just a kind of bland set-up for the Big Reveal (which, as I say, was, for me, a bust). Felt like a lot of URDUs and EYREs and ERSTs and ESAUs and OGLEs and OGEEs and OMANIs and IPOS. The roughest bit for me came right near the center, with CIS / ESTE / OGEE. I know OGEE well, but I couldn't accept it because of ESTE, which I only ever remember encountering as Spanish for "East"—when it comes to indicating "this," I feel like it's always ESTO or ESTA (33A: Spanish for "this"). In fact ... 201 appearances of ESTE in the Shortz Era and this is literally the first time it's been clued as Spanish for "this" (!?). It's always the direction, or else a Renaissance family name, or part of some place name—never Spanish "this." Bizarre. And so I balked at OGEE because it gave me ESTE. As for CIS, I didn't balk at that—I simply had no idea. I read a lot of crime fiction—teach it, even—and I guess I don't read enough contemporary police procedurals because that abbr. meant nothing to me. I could infer its meaning once all the letters were in place, but CIS on its own ... that's the counterpart of TRANS in gender terminology. That's the only way I'm used to CIS being clued. So the fill got ugly and bumpy through there. I also had a weird lot of trouble with JAM IN (32: Pack tightly). No good reason, just couldn't parse it—had to get it to -AMIN before I saw it.
Bullets:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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- 1A: Appropriate answer for 1-Across (START) — since this was the first clue I looked at, I cannot argue with its logic
- 23A: Some limb-moving muscles (ABDUCTORS) — I always thought of these as hip muscles, and thus leg-moving muscles exclusively, but I see now that there are ABDUCTORS all over; they move limbs away from the midline of the body, and are involved in spreading your fingers and toes as well. Nice to get an anatomical clue here instead of a kidnapping clue.
- 5D: Instrument with a Renaissance-era ancestor called a sackbut (TROMBONE) — "76 Sackbuts Led the Big Parade" just doesn't have quite the same ring to it. Or maybe it does and I'm just used to TROMBONE. Trading butt for bone ... seems like a lateral move in terms of mellifluousness. Still, "sackbut" does sound slightly more like a medical condition, so maybe we are better off.
- 42D: Lowe on TV (ROB) — balked at this one too. "TV? When was he on TV?" Mentally, I have him locked in as a big-screen heartthrob of the '80s. This isn't a sex tape clue, is it? Oh, crap, he was on West Wing and Parks and Rec. Of course. Never mind.
That's all. See you next time.
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75 comments:
Mornin' Rex! I see you reset your Star Wars Counter yesterday, but what was it BEFORE you reset it? Did we hit 14?
Why are you spelling things like that? Oh! You're British. No one would say: Oh, you are British. This puzzle lacks rigour.
8:43 for me Monday night… So medium. Had wEEpS before KEENS; I thought Spanish “this” had to be ESTo or ESTa, not ESTE? 50A seemed timely and makes me take a moment to wish speedy recovery to the Hantavirus victims and their families! And I loved the clue on TROMBONE! Hilarious. Pretty straightforward, liked the theme (way more than @REX did), cute the way the words “OH YOU ARE” are used in the revealer, and that OH has an “O”, YOU has a “U”, and ARE has an “R”… very nice tight revealer!!! Thanks, John, for a clever and entertaining Tuesday grid. And no StarWars….
Easy. No overwrites, one WOE: CIS as stool pigeons at 24D. I guessed that the I was Informant and got the S, but needed the cross for the C, which I ultimately guessed was Confidential.
* * _ _ _
That clue for CIS stumped me too. I had no idea. It’s particularly difficult for a Tuesday, much more obscure than [opposite of trans-] or some such. It seems like an odd editorial decision.
When I first noticed the theme clues were doing the whole “in [somewhere British]” thing, I thought, “Oh fun! A Britishisms puzzle!” I was looking forward to seeing which ridiculous-to-American-ears idioms or slang I’d know and which new ones I’d learn.
But then no…it was just spelling. And not only was it just spelling; it was just the same exact spelling difference. So there was the added let-down that I had briefly been genuinely excited for a second.
Oh, and count me as one of the people who was today years old when I learned the Spanish masculine for “this” is ESTE, not ESTO. Apparently ESTO is only neuter/abstract??? So Google tells me, and apparently my high school Spanish failed me more deeply than I thought.
I enjoyed this one well enough until I made the mistake of looking up the origin of stool pigeon. Should have known better. That’s a term I’ll never use again. What a punch in the gut.
Cute enough I guess early-week idea. Limited nuance but I thought well filled. The revealer is clunky no doubt but gets the point across. Liked to see COLOURING BOOKS.
Robyn Hitchcock
No hitches going through the grid. Liked TROMBONE, LOOK LIKE and GO LONG - although I initially thought GO deep was better. Some crosswardese with EYRE, DODO and ESAU but limited. OUTBREAKS felt ominously relevant.
Ballet For A Girl In Buchannon
Pleasant enough Tuesday morning solve.
The Undertones
Agree the revealer wasn’t much of a punch line, but I guess it could have been worse. Was on the way to a near record time for me on a Tuesday when I confidently typed in GOdeep, and had a brain lapse on EYRE, scary for an former English lit major…Anyway, that took a bit to straighten out. And now I’m pretty much forced to look up the origin of stool pigeon…
I got this so easily that I was very surprised to see that Rex graded it as a medium. I liked it well enough. But had no idea on the stool pigeon either.
Yep, back-to-back puzzles with random circles, a phonetic theme, and a sub-Monday level of difficulty.
Rob Lowe was very good in the first TV adaptation of Stephen King's The Stand ... but then everyone was very good in that.
Ipswich MA is home to one of the best beaches in New England and well-known to me -- so it took the FLAV followed by three little circles to make me realize the puzzle was referring to England. We've got a Manchester here, too--they made a movie about it. But you have to go to Connecticut to find a Derby. But I did like the revealer, with its text-speak pun. (I see Rex's point about it; if you took away the quotation marks it would be fine.)
I kept having OG== and expecting "ogre," but was disappointed.
Like @Dr. Random, I didn't get that much fun out of filling in the circles four times, but I did enjoy imagining a "dark fiction" section in my favorite bookstore.
Rex took his surgeon’s scalpel to the theme and sliced and diced it to pieces. That seems like much ado about very little to me, but I keep my expectations for the theme at a much lower level than many solvers.
Rex nailed my problem area as well - that troika consisting of CIS / ESTE / OGEE wouldn’t feel out of place on a Friday, but this week we welcome them on a Tuesday. Fortunately, I vaguely recalled seeing OGEE in a couple of past puzzles and just trusted the crosses for the rest.
KEENS is also new to me. One definition I found read “To make a loud, wailing sound, particularly in mourning for the dead”, so I guess it’s at least a close cousin to wailing.
I see what you did there.
Hey All !
Don't think the Circles are needed today, however, they might be circled to point out the OUR in the Revealer. I still think we could've done without, and just had the Circles in the Revealer alone. Would've been a neater "Oh, I see!" moment.
Liked puz. Different. Funky to have 9 letter words abutting your Themers. Fill came out decent. Every puz has dreck ... You know the rest.
Just the Q and Z from the Pangram. OH, YOU ARE noticing? 😁
Obscure ©Uniclue:
Alpert doppelganger?
HERB LOOK LIKE
Hope y'all have a great Tuesday!
Five F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
What do you do when the trombone players are late for rehearsal? You Sack their Butts!
Completed yesterday’s and today’s puzzles. At least I understood today’s theme.🎈🎈🎊🎊
Dull
Rob Lowe starred in the sadly underrated “The Grinder” a few years ago. I cannot pass up an opportunity to mention “The Grinder”
What is KEENS???
U are British
The King's Speech was one of the first movies to be ORATED.
If you're doing a theme based on the letters O -U-R it might be just as well to have no other answers that contain O, U and R, such as ABDUCTOR ( or ABDUCTOuR to the British).
Who'd have thought that my blood type (ONEG) was the force holding us onto Earth?
Well, judging by the reaction of @Rex and others, I'd conclude that now is the winter of OHYOUARE discontent. But it's spring here and I liked that the constructor figured out how to build a decent puzzle on the OH YOU ARE = OUR homophones. Thanks, John Ruff.
Sackbutter here! I liked seeing it referred to. There is a single notation in Queen Elizabeth I's household account about buying a greate sacke butte for the queen's use. Some think it was some giant keg of Spanish fortified wine. So far no records have been unearthed of the queen playing bass TROMBONE in a marching band. But I like imagining it!
I mainly thought this was way too easy, but I also balked at the way the revealer didn’t quite fit, despite the clever use of O U R. Also raised my eyebrows at CIS — and considering I’ve been flying all night, it’s remarkable I can raise my eyebrows about anything.
I had the same feeling. I don't think I had a single significant hesitation through the whole grid.
It became pretty obvious right away that we were going to find OUR spellings in all the themers but the OUR =OH YOU ARE was pretty "cute", a word I refuse to use except for situations like this, as in "You think you're pretty cute, don't you?".
Could have been RAMIN or JAMIN and GODEEP or GOLONG but easily solved by crosses.
Today's Spanish lesson--"This". ESTE ( which is also "east)--Masc. sing. ESTA-Fem. sing. ESTO-Neut., something unidentified. Que es esto? What is this? Sorry for the missing initial interrogative and lack of an accent on "Que". So if the clue is "This" start with EST and wait for crosses. De nada.
Today's golden oldie is OGEE. Seasoned veterans like me say welcome home.
Nice enough Tuesdecito, JR. Jogged Right through it with nary a pause, and thanks for a fair amount of fun.
When you strain your ABDUCTORS, wrap them in ABDUCTAPE.
On FIFI: I filled this in backwards at first, but it seemed a little iffy so I fixed it.
What's connected to the TROMBONE?
If Laura played the trumpet, she'd be DERN tootin'
Someone who still worships the woman who divorced him is an EXIST.
Ha, opened with FIRST.
I LOVED The Grinder! Still mourning that one. His recent show, "Unstable," had a decent few episodes in its first season but then it fell off. His real life son plays his son, which is fun, though.
I can't see OU as a collective noun but pretending it is: OU are British (and O is American). I'm trying to make the revealer work.
O, U R A Fun-E revealer.
Number of days without The Circles [0].
staff weeject pick: CIS. An anonymous source tells m&e this means Confidential InformantS. O ... I C.
Nice weeject stacks, N & S polar areas, btw.
some fave stuff: TILL's only stab at a ?-marker clue today. ABDUCTORS [debut]. LOOKLIKE. The JAMIN/TROMBONE riff.
Thanx to U, Mr. Ruff dude. And congratz on yer NYTPuz debut.
Masked & Anonym007Us
p.s.
runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Pleasant Tuesday, but not much of a challenge.
I don't know what a sackbut looks like, so I filled it in with Crumhorn anyway. I agree with Rex about the revealer, but I am always just so chuffed that I completed the puzzle. I'm not looking for artistry or perfection.
Like @Georgia, opened with first. Didn't take long to overwrite correctly.
Don't get what made this medium for Rex. The theme was obvious (the circles being irrelevant) and the plethora of mostly easy 3-4 letter fill made this one not last long. We filled in OH YOU ARE BRITISH from sight, after almost all the crosses had been placed.
So not much of a challenge, but it's Tuesday. Rex's (count 'em) two-paragraph, somewhat over-the-top rant was only topped as the "price of admission" by the one-minute clip from Parks and Recreation, literally the best part of today's experience.
With all the puzzles that are submitted and, I'm sure, sitting in the 'queue' this one really made me surprised at the NYT.
Congrats on your debut, John.
Yeah, this puzzle was super lame.
Same here. Easy from the START.
RIO is the name of a city in Brazil - in brief, for short, informally. He qualified 20A, 4D and 39D as such. Editor? Oh - you're just so happy to have all those little circles that you overlook minour things like this.
Will we have to endure these circles for the whole week?
Greetings from Canada just finished the puzzle and somehow disgruntled to find that Mr Rudd ignored your northern neighbour in the design. It could be Oh! You are Canadian as well !
Easy-medium.
No costly erasures and TROMBONE (as clued) was it for WOEs.
It’s been a while since I’ve seen OGEE.
Reasonably smooth grid, cute theme, liked it more than @Rex did.
I didn't think Monday's puzzle was as good as Rex did, and don't think today's is as bad as he does. It seems like a pretty typical Tuesday to me.
It's always fun to see the alternate spellings that add a U to the mix. But the revealer, as a non-common phrase, just didn't tie it together enough for me.
Are OUTBREAKS too soon after Covid? At least I don't think hanta virus is going to take us all down.
I did know ESTE as clued - I see it all the time in my online Spanish apps (I'm never going to be fluent but I could at least read a menu.)
Thanks, John Ruff.
Not my fave. Crazy easy, even downs-only. I probably should have liked it more because, as a Canadian, I actually use those British spellings. Though he over-explained it, @Rex got it right: the reveal was awkward.
As a junior high student I experimented with Americanizing my written work. I thought being American was cool. First thing to go were all those superfluous Us. Later I even tried inserting adspeak into my essays; lite for light, nite for night, e-z for easy, stuff like that. Nobody failed me for this but I did get a lot of red ink underlinings with accompanying tsk-tsky remarks in the margins. The teachers were patient, bless their hearts, and I lost interest and reverted to a reasonable facsimile of the Queen’s English. (Yes, I’m aware that it’s the King’s English now, but some things are hard to let go of. She was crowned the year I was born and reigned for 70 years.)
The experiment wasn’t a complete failure. About 4 decades later I started doing the NYTXW and had no trouble with entries that might even harbor a bit of colorful humor.
Us Canadians see a lot of these "British" spellings, after all King Charlie is our head of state. There's also "-ise" instead of "-ize", and kinda perversely, "defence" instead of "defense", etc.
I solved this down clues only, and for once it went pretty smooth at exactly 16 minutes! However I did finish with an error at square 32, with GAMIN crossing GO IN, which seemed perfectly fine for "Sign up for".
@Rex could have just said the revealer was Bollocks and let it go at that. I guess the CIS entry divides the commentariat into 2 groups, those who watch police shows and those who don't. I much prefer Star Wars clues to text initialisms, rapper names, playground taunts, and several other types.
Yikes for sure
our lips are sealed and our arse will be grawss if you dare enquire why those OURs are circled. Though the fine for revealing the ahnser is just a hawf crown and only old timers like me know what a florin used to be
ONEG is not a force!!! Force = mass x acceleration, ONEG is a measurement of acceleration, 9.8 m/s2. The NYT puzzles continue to treat science as an afterthought, and arts as the force that makes the world go 'round.
😀
Andy Freude
I found CIS difficult. But once I got it , I said duh Confidence informant! To me the abbreviation of a well known term is not inappropriate for Tuesday. It may have been better to add abbreviation.
MissScarlett
Like the show, like your blog name. Agree this was easy.
I just have to brag to someone... I got to Queen Bee in today's Spelling Bee without getting any "not in word list" messages. First time ever!
Boring puzzle today. The clue for ESTE pissed me off a bit, but I suppose it was just (in a British accent) another Tuesday.
This was a reasonable Tuesday that grew on me as I contemplated it. I expected a revealer along the lines of a plural possessive, but actually OUR as in Oh You Are is nice. TIL ABDUCTORS and CI - thank you Rex for the explanations.
Your comment probably requires some further elaboration. In Newtonian Mechanics (F=ma): In this framework, gravity is absolutely a force. When calculating weight (F) as mass (m) times gravity (g), the equation F=mg is perfectly valid for calculating the force required to counteract gravity, such as the force of a table holding up an object.
It gets a little murkier under the theory of General Relativity, as Einstein considered it an "illusion" of spacetime curvature in higher-level physics.
Doing it without any incorrect guesses or even a typo is truly an achievement. Bravo !
@George, cmon now. "G-force" is a very common expression. So is "force of gravity". As a physics grad myself, I don't worry about the technicality of average people using the word contrary to its strict definition in the science of physics.
Wikipedia says:
"g-force or gravitational force equivalent is a mass-specific force (force per unit mass), expressed in units of standard gravity...",
and:
"a force of 1 g on an object sitting on the Earth's surface...",
both sound fine to me.
So easy. Created for DODOS.
Yes! The Grinder! So good!
I knew this review would read exactly as it does. Good job, Rex.
Sabor del día.
Kind of cute overall, but yeah I agree with 🦖 the reveal is a little wonky even though it kinda sorta maybe makes some sense.
I'm a bit of an early music fan and there are so many crazy instruments like sackbuts involved and they all sound so otherworldly compared to our relatively limited modern orchestral lineup.
The only time I've ever seen the word KEENS is as a hiking sandal. I have a pair. They're great. As a wailing synonym, well, I suppose if I wore those shoes to the opera there'd be howls of execration.
😩 CIS.
People: 7
Places: 3
Products: 4
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 21 of 76 (28%)
Funny Factor: 0 😫
Tee-Hee: Sackbut.
Uniclues:
1 Fat cats meowed.
2 The sound of another miniseries canceled without a satisfying conclusion.
3 A weed.
1 ELITES ORATED (~)
2 HULU TROMBONE (~)
3 HERB LOOKALIKE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Result of a stabbing in the Gumdrop Mountains. CANDYLAND GOUGE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Indeed! My sentiments exactly.
Not exactly my cuppa today but nothing too much to complain about. Some themes by their nature just won't sparkle as much as others, but you can pretty much COLOUR me impressed any time a theme works at all, so this one did it's thing well enough today. I don't consider this having a low bar, it just takes more smarts than I have to make these things work so it's nice to always walk around being wowed :o)
Had similar difficulties as @Rex and others, JAMIN wouldn't click for way too long and CIS is totally knew to me. Other than that, not much else to gum up the works.
I may not have been at the edge of my seat throughout the solve, but this was a totally acceptable Tuesday. Thanks John.
I've just been waiting for someone to use kinda sorta maybe in a comment.Thanks, Gary.
I’ve noticed it rarely goes past 3 or 4 before disappearing. Come on Rex! Commit to the bit instead of using it as a sort of Star Wars strawman (starman?) counter.
@SouthsideJohnny, thanks! One of my SB game-within-a-game habits is to try to get to pg (pangrams + genius) without a reject; today it happened so quickly that I became hyper-aware, thinking: what if I can get all the way? So I was verrrry carrrreful after that! I even googled to check a potential spelling a couple of times, but I don't count that as a cheat because I know the word, I'm just unsure of the spelling.
Clean up from yesterday.
Brondignanian is not German. It’s Irish——Swift invented it for Book Two of Gulliver’s Travels.
I cannot stop laughing at "76 sackbuts led the big parade."
Brag away! I was two very gettable words away from QB today but gave up after a few minutes of blank staring. (Apologies for the HOOPOE spoiler last time, heh.) OGEE (in today's xword) is both crosswordese and SB-accepted.
I admire your tenacity, @okanager! Do you play Squardle? Basically an online Boggle game. Lots of fun, highly recommend. :)
@Les S. More 7:59 PM
Kinda gives one the ICK, eh?! 😉
Gary, Gary ...
I'm shocked, shocked! I say, at you misreading an answer. It's LOOKLIKE, not LOOKALIKE. How can you miss that? It'd be like someone shoving a Hershey's chocolate bar in your face, smashing it to cover your mouth and chin, whilst waving the wrapper at your eyes, and you spelling it choclate. I mean, c'mon.
Or not ...
🤪😂😋
RooMonster Poor Attempt To Mimic Your Epic Posts Guy
Hearty congratulations to John Ruff on his debut puzzle. Mr. Ruff, my good wishes are sincere. So is my heartfelt apology that the editors failed you. You have been welcomed into an elite group - at least to those of us who solve crosswords regularly. Daily solvers recognize the architectural proclivities of their favorite constructors and look forward to being introduced to new bylines and new personalities. As a solver, I was cheated today. I saw a really clever idea with no sparkle and a theme with no surprise to help me forget all the crosswordese used to make the theme idea work. I blame the editors.
The NYTXW editors are well known folks with decades of experience creating, solving and most importantly collaborating with constructors to improve submissions so they are “ready for prime time.” Helping teach newer constructors’ ways to polish a puzzle to a high gloss is their job. John, I’m so very sorry they phoned it in today. You deserve better.
Lately, I have expressed my disappointment with the editors’ seeming laziness (or something). They dropped the ball again today. I could hear the disappointing splat all the way across the country. It seems to me that if Shortz et al want to welcome a new constructor into the fold, they owe their best efforts to help improve the submission before acceptance or maybe with conditional acceptance and thereby offer opportunities for new all submissions shine, but particularly a new constructor’s debut oeuvre. Failing to use their editorial best efforts seems cruel to me. It potentially sets up a mew constructor for avoidable negative impressions left with solvers. In this day and age of incessant social media, why would anyone want to set someone up for guaranteed opportunities for ridicule? Moreover, why should anyone be paid potentially to set someone up for failure?
@Rex kindly pointed out some of the weak spots in Mr. Ruff’s puzzle. I agree wholeheartedly with his analysis. The reveal was a disappointment both in its failure to reveal anything surprising to the solver, but also the awkward parsing of the clue made the reveal’s failure to stick the landing just a little bit wincier, at least to me.
I never fault an early week puzzle for being very easy because I remember when I completed a Monday puzzle all by myself without resorting to any reference books - back waaaay before the internet, when a stumped solver might have to make a trip to the library to fill in an unknown foreign currency, or the name of an elected official or popular musician. It was a celebratory event for sure. So too easy on Monday or Tuesday doesn’t bother me. But a puzzle that begged for editorial assistance as did today’s did and receive no assistance is inexcusable.
I liked the theme idea a lot. But the execution completely lacked an ”aha moment.” Not only was there no slam bang finish, the theme was devoid of any surprise at all. Thud.
I was expecting a clever play on the word “OUR.” Something like OUR WAY TO ROLL. Yes, that doesn’t work with this grid. But you get the idea. And the grid could have been adjusted. @Rex comments on ways constructors for a grid to conform to their clever ideas all the time. This could have been a fully formed theme with some humor. But the editors just phoned it in. Again. What a shame.
Crossworld is dull of clever people who enjoy collaborations and give freely of their time to other constructors. I hope you continue to construct and submit, John, and look forward to your next one. But maybe don’t trust the editors to help.
Pp
So no one noted my minour comment.
Canadien
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