Sleep in British slang / FRI 8-19-11 / 1984 film starring Tom Selleck as a jewel thief / Company behind 1960s yo-yo craze / Wild West show headgear
Friday, August 19, 2011
Constructor: Patrick Berry
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: none
Word of the Day: DOSS (22D: Sleep, in British slang) —
Chiefly British Slang.
n.intr.v., dossed, doss·ing, doss·es.
- Sleep; rest.
- A crude or makeshift bed.
To go to bed, especially in a crude or makeshift bed; sleep.
[Perhaps alteration of dorse, back, from Latin dorsum.]
• • •

SW was kind of hard to get into, but I finally used REMET and UNLIT to get FLAMENCO (49A: Foot-stomping music), and then things weren't too bad down there. Not sure why I know MRS. SMITH (36A: Lady famous for piemaking), but I confirmed her with ECHO, and then the SE proved the easiest corner of all (down in about 30 seconds). Toughest section by far was the NE.
Bullets:
- 34A: Ignoring copyrights, say (PIRATIC) — PIRATING ... PIRATING ... fit, damn it!
- 46A: Girl's name meaning "messenger of God" (ANGELINE) — I'm guessing ANGELINA means the same thing? Needed a METEORS strike to fix that one (36D: Falling rocks)
- 53A: Wild West show headgear (STETSONS) — given all those common letters, I should've guessed this would grace the bottom of the grid, but I was looking for something much more elaborate / specialized at first.
- 54A: Place to sit, ironically (STANDS) — one of several great clues. See also 10D: Old-fashioned letter opener (MESSIEURS) and 27D: Like Lincoln before his presidency (BEARDLESS).
- 6D: Newton-meter fractions (ERGS) — you tend to learn ERG very early on in your crossword education. Or you used to. ERG has really dropped off the map in the Shortz Era. Or so it seems.
- 12D: Weird Al Yankovic's first Billboard hit ("EAT IT") — another pop culture gimme. I would've guessed "Like a Surgeon."
- 26D: Outlaw Kelly of Australian legend (NED) — My fourth-favorite NED, right after Flanders, Beatty, and Rorem.
- 29D: 1950s-'70s senator Ervin (SAM) — Before my time, but I learned him from crosswords (probably via ERVIN, actually).
- 38D: Company behind the 1960s yo-yo craze (DUNCAN) — should've known this. Instead, couldn't get DANNON out of my head. "Maybe they made yo-yos as well as yogurt ..."
- 45D: "No good ___ plot can be sensible ...": W. H. Auden ("OPERA") — my favorite OPERA-related clue of all time. Of All Time.