A Wall Street Journal article week called “Grooming Secrets of the NBA” coincides with the onset of cold, windy weather here. It had me reaching for my skin lotion even on days I don’t skate. A couple of seasons ago I turned 50, and around that time I started noticing that my skin sometimes felt raw after a game.
Skating a pair of games is like being outside for three hours in freezing weather with a wind of 10 mph gusting to 20. It’s not so bad in spring and summer and fall; in fact it’s pretty pleasant. But in winter, the rinks are as cold as the outside, and when the air is dry, your face gets dryer.
So I started carrying a bottle of moisturizer along with my gear. The variety I use comes in a very thick little bottle, so I can keep it in my hockey briefcase and it won't break and spill all over my rulebook and manuals. It’s worth it to get the good stuff; you only need a drop or two, and it doesn’t make my face feel greasy. I might even use it between games of a doubleheader. A calmer face makes a calmer referee, and a calmer referee makes a calmer game.
Solution and annotation to The Nation puzzle No. 3,288 below the fold.
Skating a pair of games is like being outside for three hours in freezing weather with a wind of 10 mph gusting to 20. It’s not so bad in spring and summer and fall; in fact it’s pretty pleasant. But in winter, the rinks are as cold as the outside, and when the air is dry, your face gets dryer.
So I started carrying a bottle of moisturizer along with my gear. The variety I use comes in a very thick little bottle, so I can keep it in my hockey briefcase and it won't break and spill all over my rulebook and manuals. It’s worth it to get the good stuff; you only need a drop or two, and it doesn’t make my face feel greasy. I might even use it between games of a doubleheader. A calmer face makes a calmer referee, and a calmer referee makes a calmer game.
Solution and annotation to The Nation puzzle No. 3,288 below the fold.
Legend: "*" anagram; "~" sounds like;
"<" letters reversed; "( )" letters inserted;
"_" or lower case: letters deleted; "†" explicit in the
clue, “^” first or last letter or letters, “{“ relocated letter or letters; “§”
heteronym, “¶“ letter bank
Across
1a
|
_CHIDE_
|
broa_CH IDE_as (hidden word indicated by “involving”)
|
4a
|
BARB(ADO)S
|
BARBS (“pointed comments”) containing (“about”) ADO
(“kerfuffle”)
|
9a
|
*LARCENO | US
|
*CLEAR NO (anagram indicated by “astonishingly”) + US
(“American”)
|
10a
|
LATTE_
|
LATTE_r_ (“the second,” omission of last letter
indicated by “most of”)
Good clue: could be interpreted several ways
|
11a
|
_NEIGH_
|
seve_N EIGH_t (“7/8,” hidden word indicated by “in”)
|
12a
|
PERRY COMO
|
PERRY (“Singer with a pop record”) + COMO (“how” in
Spanish (“in Mexico”))
Exclamation point because “singer with a pop record”
is both definition and wordplay
|
13a
|
*LOS ANGELES
|
*GLEE SALONS (anagram indicated by “rocking”)
|
15a
|
SEN | D
|
SEN (“Senate”) + D (“Democrat”)
|
17a
|
U | *NTO
|
U (“university”) + *NOT (anagram indicated by
“surprisingly”)
|
19a
|
PEP | PERM | IN | T
|
PEP (“energize”) + PERM (“hairdo”) + IN (†) + T
(“time”)
I was first looking at “time for tea” as one part of
the wordplay.
|
22a
|
TOP | DOLL | AR_
|
TOP + DOLL (“two traditional toys”) + AR_e_ (†,
omission of last letter indicated by “nearly”)
|
24a
|
_UPPER
|
_s_UPPER (“dinner,” omission of first letter indicated
by “start late”)
|
25a
|
<RAC< | ED
|
<CAR< (“wheels,” indicated by “setting in reverse”)
+ ED ([editor], reference to Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation.)
Clearly Katrina is the most frequently name-checked
individual in these puzzles: Hot and Trazom know flattery will get you
everywhere.
|
26a
|
*CUNEIFORM
|
*OF NUMERIC (anagram indicated by “blend”)
|
27a
|
ALFRE_SCO
|
ALFRE_d_S CO (“[Alfred] Hitchcock’s company,” omission
of D indicated by “lost 500”)
I originally thought this was another enumeration
mistake, but English dictionaries list this as a single word.
|
28a
|
RESIN
|
RE-SIN (pun)
|
Down
1d
|
~COLONEL MUSTARD
|
~KERNEL (“piece of corn”) + ~MUSTERED (“gathered”),
homonym indicated by (“in an ear”)
|
2d
|
IN (_RUI_)NS
|
INNS (“hotels”) containing (“stocking”) _f_RUI_t_ (†,
omission of first and last letters indicated by “peeled”)
|
3d
|
*ELEPHANT
|
*THE PANEL (anagram indicated by “disrupted”)
|
4d
|
*BIOSPH | ERE
|
*BISHOP (anagram indicated by “converted”) + ERE
(“before”)
|
5d
|
R I S E R
|
^R^a^I^l^S^ n^E^a^R^ (alternate letters indicated by
“oddly”)
|
6d
|
ALL + *EYS
|
ALL (“everything there is”) + *YES (anagram indicated
by “unfortunately”)
|
7d
|
OUT COME
|
COME (opposite of “go”) + OUT (opposite of “in”),
literal instructions
|
8d
|
SECOND STORY MAN
|
Pun
|
14d
|
*ESPERANTO
|
*REPEATS NO (anagram indicated by “in a different
way”)
|
16d
|
CROUPIER
|
Double definition
|
18d
|
T_OPICAL
|
T_r_OPICAL (“warm,” omission of R indicated by “drops
red”)
|
20d
|
*IMPIOUS
|
*OPIUM IS (anagram indicated by “treacherous”)
|
21d
|
C | OLDER
|
OLDER (“senior”) following (“under”) C (“100”)
|
23d
|
~LACKS
|
~LAX (“liberal,” homonym indicated by “sounding”)
A few other homonyms come close, but none are quite
right.
|
I still don't get 12a. This explanation is simpler but not the same as the puzzlers' explanation which makes no sense at all.
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