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CROSSWORD SETTER: Ellen Leuschner
THEME: Fire in the Hole … we have two HOLES in the grid today, that we fill with the word FIRE. The word FIRE is then used to complete the adjacent answers in the grid:
54A. Warning before a detonation … and a hint to 16 of this puzzle’s answers : FIRE IN THE HOLE
24A. Risks disaster : PLAYS WITH FIRE
26A. Illegal place to park : FIRE LANE
28A. Rat-a-tat-tat : GUNFIRE
29A. Stinging insects : FIRE ANTS
47A. Start shooting : OPEN FIRE
50A. Many a calendar beefcake : FIREMAN
53A. Impossible to fail : SUREFIRE
9D. Metaphor for quick-spreading success : WILDFIRE
10D. British W.W. II plane : SPITFIRE
31D. Failure : MISFIRE
32D. Feature of a big outdoor party : BONFIRE
34D. Like a hearth : FIRELIT
35D. Emergency tool for breaking down doors : FIRE AXE
58D. Chapter 11 event, maybe : FIRE SALE
59D. Building safety feature : FIRE EXIT
BILL BUTLER’S COMPLETION TIME: 16m 56s
ANSWERS I MISSED: 2 … LIFE (lift), NEA (NTA)
Today’s Wiki-est, Amazonian Googlies
Across
1. 1962 Kubrick film : LOLITA
Vladimir Nabokov’s novel “Lolita” has a famously controversial storyline, dealing with a middle-aged man’s obsession and sexual relationship with a 12-year-old girl. Although “Lolita” is considered a classic today, after Nabokov finished it in 1953 the edgy subject matter made it impossible for him to find a publisher in the US (where Nabokov lived). In 1955, he resorted to publishing it in English at a printing house in Paris. Publication was followed by bans and seizures all over Europe. A US printing house finally took on the project in 1958, by which time the title had such a reputation that it sold exceptionally quickly. “Lolita” became the first book since “Gone with the Wind” to sell over 100,000 copies in its first three weeks in stores.
7. Gullets : MAWS
“Maw” is a term used to describe the mouth or stomach of a carnivorous animal. “Maw” is also used as slang for the mouth or stomach of a greedy person.
11. Medical theaters, for short : ORS
Operating room (OR)
14. What juice may come out of? : ANODES
A battery is a device that converts chemical energy into electric energy. A simple battery is made up of three parts: a cathode, an anode and a liquid electrolyte. Ions from the electrolyte react chemically with the material in the anode producing a compound and releasing electrons. At the same time, the electrolyte reacts with the material in the cathode, absorbing electrons and producing a different chemical compound. In this way, there is a buildup of electrons at the anode and a deficit of electrons at the cathode. When a connection (wire, say) is made between the cathode and anode, electrons flow through the resulting circuit from the anode to cathode in an attempt to rectify the electron imbalance.
16. Certain sci-fi fighter : BOT
A “bot” is a robot.
17. Lowly worker : VASSAL
In the feudal system of medieval Europe, a vassal was someone who agreed to provide some sort of service to a lord. A typical example of such a service would be military support. In return, the vassal was usually granted a piece of land.
18. Big African exporter of gold : MALI
The Republic of Mali is a landlocked country in western Africa, south of Algeria. Formerly known as French Sudan, the nation’s most famous city is Timbuktu. Mali is the third-largest producer of gold on the continent, after South Africa and Ghana.
22. Jewel case display unit : CD TOWER
A CD case is also known as a jewel box, and I am not sure why …
29. Stinging insects : FIRE ANTS
Fire ants are stinging ants, many species of which are called red ants. Most stinging ants bite their prey and then spray acid on the wound. The fire ant however, bites to hold on and then injects an alkaloid venom from its abdomen, creating a burning sensation in humans that have been nipped.
33. Inter ___ (European soccer powerhouse) : MILAN
Inter Milan is the commonly-used name for the Italian professional soccer team more completely known as F.C. Internazionale Milano. Within Italy, the team is known simply as “Inter”.
37. Island in the Aegean : IOS
The Cyclades are a group of islands in the Aegean Sea lying southeast of the Greek mainland. There are about 200 islands in the group, almost all of which are the peaks of a submerged mountain range. Ios is one of the larger islands, 11 miles long and 6 miles wide.
39. New Jersey’s Fort ___ : DIX
Fort Dix is the name commonly used for what is now more correctly called Joint Base McGuire -Dix-Lakehurst, a US Army base located near Trenton, New Jersey. Fort Dix was established in 1917 by the Army, and was consolidated with nearby Air Force and Navy facilities in 2009.
40. Great ___ : APE
The hominids are the great apes, and belong to the family of primates called Hominidae. Extant genera that make up the family Hominidae are:
– chimpanzees
– gorillas
– humans
– orangutans
43. Actor Ed : ASNER
Ed Asner is most famous for playing the irascible but lovable Lou Grant on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and on the spin-off drama “Lou Grant”. Off-screen, Asner is noted for his political activism. He served two terms as president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and was very involved in the 1980 SAG strike. When “Lou Grant” was cancelled in 1982, despite decent ratings, there was a lot of talk that the cancellation was a move by the network against Asner personally. In fact one of Asner’s activist colleagues, Howard Hesseman (who played Johnny Fever), found that his show “WKRP in Cincinnati” was also cancelled … on the very same day.
50. Many a calendar beefcake : FIREMAN
It’s not really clear how the “cheesecake” came to be used for a provocative picture of a woman. It is known that the term arose in the 1930s, and originally applied to to the covers of “pulp” magazines that used the images of the attractive young females to attract a largely male audience. One theory is that during the depression years, the luscious cheesecake dessert was unattainable, as were the “luscious” models depicted on the magazine covers. The male equivalent of cheesecake is “beefcake”.
52. “Heaven’s ___ vault, / Studded with stars unutterably bright”: Shelley : EBON
The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley had some lofty words to describe the night sky:
Heaven’s ebon vault,
Studded with stars unutterably bright,
Through which the moon’s unclouded grandeur rolls,
Seems like a canopy which love has spread
To curtain her sleeping world.
57. Goes on Safari, say : BROWSES
Safari is Apples’s flagship Internet browser, mainly used on its Mac line of computers. Personally, I use Google Chrome …
61. Ripley-esque : ODD
“Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” is a huge franchise on television, affiliated to a worldwide chain of museums. The franchise started out as cartoon feature appearing in newspapers in 1918.
62. Impulse transmitter : AXON
A nerve cell is more correctly called a neuron, and the long nerve fiber that is part of a neuron is called the axon.
64. One working for Kansas or Alabama : ROADIE
A “roadie” is someone who loads, unloads and sets up equipment for musicians on tour, on the road.
Kansas is a progressive rock band from Topeka. Kansas had some hits in the seventies.
Alabama is a band from Fort Payne, Alabama who perform a blend of country music and southern rock.
68. Valuable violins, for short : STRADS
Generations of the Stradivari family produced violins, the most famous of which were constructed by Antonio Stradivari.
69. Ludd from whom Luddites got their name : NED
In contemporary usage, a “Luddite” is someone who is slow to adopt new technology. This usage has even been extended to “Neo-Luddism”, meaning the active opposition to some technologies. It has been suggested that the term “Luddism” commemorates a youth called Ned Ludd, who smashed two mechanical knitting machines in 1779, in the belief that they represented automation that took away jobs. In the following decades, Luddism became an active movement, with Luddites going on rampages, smashing equipment that was deemed to create unemployment.
Down
1. Head : LAV
Our word “lavatory” originally referred to a washbasin, and comes from the Latin “lavatorium”, a place for washing. In the 1600s a “lavatory” came to mean a washroom, and in the 1920s a toilet.
In old sailing ships the toilet area for the regular sailors was located in the forward part (the head) of the ship, hence the term “head” that has been used since then for any toilet on board a boat.
7. Big inits. in Las Vegas : MGM
MGM Grand is the name given to a chain of hotel resorts and casinos, most famously the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The MGM Grand Las Vegas was the largest hotel in the world when it opened in 1993, and is now the second-largest (behind the Venetian, also in Las Vegas).
8. Scorpion or tick : ARACHNID
Arachnids are creatures with eight jointed legs. The name of the class Arachnida comes from the Greek “aráchnē” meaning “spider”.
10. British W.W. II plane : SPITFIRE
The magnificent Supermarine Spitfire fighter aircraft is considered by most to have been key to the defeat of Germany’s Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain. The plane was in production from the thirties through the fifties, and there were more Spitfires produced that any other British aircraft.
11. “Star Wars” name : OBI-WAN
Obi-Wan Kenobi is one of the more beloved of the “Star Wars” characters. Kenobi was portrayed by two fabulous actors in the series of films. As a young man he is played by Scottish actor Ewan McGregor, and as an older man he is played by Alec Guinness.
12. Woodchuck or chinchilla : RODENT
The woodchuck is also known as the groundhog, and is one a group of large ground squirrels called marmots.
A chinchilla is a rodent found in the Andes in South America. The chinchilla is a little larger than a squirrel, and has velvet-like fur. It takes its name from the local Chincha people who made clothing out of the fur. Chinchillas are quite rare in the wild now as they been hunted almost out of existence, but there are plenty of farm-raised chinchillas around supporting the fur industry, sad to say …
23. Pearl S. Buck heroine : O-LAN
Pearl S. Buck’s novel “The Good Earth” won a Pulitzer in 1932, and helped Buck win the Nobel Prize for literature a few years later. The novel tells of life in a Chinese village and follows the fortunes of Wang Lung and his wife O-Lan. Although “The Good Earth” has been around for decades, it hit the bestseller list again in 2004 when it was a pick for Oprah’s Book Club.
32. Feature of a big outdoor party : BONFIRE
Back in the mid-1500s, a “bonfire” was a fire used for burning bones, a “bone fire”.
38. Like Havarti cheese : SEMISOFT
Havarti cheese was invented in the mid-1800s by Danish farmer Hanne Nielsen. He chose “Havarti” from the name of his farm, Havarthigaard, located in the neighborhood of Øverød, north of Copenhagen.
40. Annual April celebration : ARBOR DAY
Arbor Day is a holiday each year in which people traditionally plant and care for trees. The first Arbor Day was held way back in 1872.
42. Seashore flier : ERNE
The ern (also erne) is also called the white-tailed eagle, and the sea-eagle.
47. Marvel supervillain Norman ___ a.k.a. the Green Goblin : OSBORN
The Green Goblin is a supervillain from Marvel Comics who generally is pitted against Spider-Man. The Green Goblin is the antagonist in the 2002 movie “Spider-Man”, and is played by Willem Dafoe.
48. Indiana rival : PURDUE
The Purdue Boilermakers are the athletic teams of Purdue University. The school picked up the nickname in 1891 after a football game with fellow Indiana school, Wabash College. A subsequent newspaper headline referred to Purdue as the “boiler makers”, a reference to the engineering education prevalent in Purdue at the time. And the name stuck …
58. Chapter 11 event, maybe : FIRE SALE
In the US Bankruptcy Code, Chapter 11 allows for a company or individual to reorganize affairs in the event that debts become so cumbersome that they cannot be cleared. Should the reorganization be unsuccessful, then Chapter 7 of the code might apply, which covers the sale of assets and distribution of proceeds to creditors.
63. Org. supporting Common Core : NEA
The National Education Association (NEA) is the largest labor union in the country, and mainly represents public school teachers.
The Common Core State Standards Initiative lays out what K-12 students should know in English and mathematics. The standard is intended to standardize requirements across all states.
65. Slaloming shape : ESS
“Slalom” is an anglicized version of the Norwegian word “slalam” that translates as “skiing race”.
For the sake of completion, here is a full listing of all the answers:
Across
1. 1962 Kubrick film : LOLITA
7. Gullets : MAWS
11. Medical theaters, for short : ORS
14. What juice may come out of? : ANODES
15. Traction control : GRIP
16. Certain sci-fi fighter : BOT
17. Lowly worker : VASSAL
18. Big African exporter of gold : MALI
19. Response that has a nice ring to it? : I DO
20. Couldn’t turn away, say : STARED
22. Jewel case display unit : CD TOWER
24. Risks disaster : PLAYS WITH FIRE
26. Illegal place to park : FIRE LANE
27. Things with rings … that may be ringing : EARS
28. Rat-a-tat-tat : GUNFIRE
29. Stinging insects : FIRE ANTS
30. Inter : ENTOMB
33. Inter ___ (European soccer powerhouse) : MILAN
36. Things you don’t want on your license: Abbr. : PTS
37. Island in the Aegean : IOS
39. New Jersey’s Fort ___ : DIX
40. Great ___ : APE
43. Actor Ed : ASNER
45. Real imp : TERROR
47. Start shooting : OPEN FIRE
50. Many a calendar beefcake : FIREMAN
52. “Heaven’s ___ vault, / Studded with stars unutterably bright”: Shelley : EBON
53. Impossible to fail : SUREFIRE
54. Warning before a detonation … and a hint to 16 of this puzzle’s answers : FIRE IN THE HOLE
57. Goes on Safari, say : BROWSES
60. Double doubles? : HOMERS
61. Ripley-esque : ODD
62. Impulse transmitter : AXON
64. One working for Kansas or Alabama : ROADIE
66. Paris’s ___ de Rome : RUE
67. Excitement : LIFE
68. Valuable violins, for short : STRADS
69. Ludd from whom Luddites got their name : NED
70. Grammy-winning James : ETTA
71. “Most definitely!” : YES YES!
Down
1. Head : LAV
2. Diagonally : ON A SLANT
3. Letter writing and sentence diagramming, it’s said : LOST ARTS
4. “Yep, sounds about right!” : I’D SAY SO!
5. Races : TEARS
6. Loads : A SLEW
7. Big inits. in Las Vegas : MGM
8. Scorpion or tick : ARACHNID
9. Metaphor for quick-spreading success : WILDFIRE
10. British W.W. II plane : SPITFIRE
11. “Star Wars” name : OBI-WAN
12. Woodchuck or chinchilla : RODENT
13. Caches : STORES
21. Jab or jibe : DIG
23. Pearl S. Buck heroine : O-LAN
24. Tiniest complaint : PEEP
25. Belly : TUM
31. Failure : MISFIRE
32. Feature of a big outdoor party : BONFIRE
34. Like a hearth : FIRELIT
35. Emergency tool for breaking down doors : FIRE AXE
38. Like Havarti cheese : SEMISOFT
40. Annual April celebration : ARBOR DAY
41. Relaxing in a cabana chair, maybe : POOLSIDE
42. Seashore flier : ERNE
43. With a clean slate : ANEW
44. Hotfooted it : RAN
46. Considers further, in a way : REHEARS
47. Marvel supervillain Norman ___ a.k.a. the Green Goblin : OSBORN
48. Indiana rival : PURDUE
49. Lost some ground : ERODED
51. Kind of power : NTH
55. Tot’s rocker : HORSY
56. Act like an amateur? : EMOTE
58. Chapter 11 event, maybe : FIRE SALE
59. Building safety feature : FIRE EXIT
63. Org. supporting Common Core : NEA
65. Slaloming shape : ESS
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