The seven-piece group will feature 93-year-old electric mandolinist Scotty Broyles, who frequented the Bostonia in the early 1950s while stationed here in the U.S. They named the area Bostonia.ĭickerson, a longtime performer at the Casbah in San Diego, has put together a special all-star band to headline the event. It is in an El Cajon neighborhood that was settled in the 1800s by former Massachusetts residents. Some nice feature entries - love me some SMACKDOWN! - but not quite enough sparkle or cleanliness to make the puzzle stand out.The venue stands at the corner of Bostonia Street and Broadway. (I think NGAIO Marsh is crossworthy.) Maybe a cheater square at the S of HEADCOUNTS would have solved the problem. That SW corner was particularly problematic for me, with ACRO / ROTOS jammed in. But a 72-word themeless is not much of a challenge (unless you're working in a lot of rare letters, grid-spanning entries, etc.). A bit of NEOS, GRAS, ROTOS, ACRO wouldn't be terrible in a tougher construction. Totally subjective, since the plural HEADCOUNTS is dictionary supported. Why does it matter, if they're all normal words / entries? HEADCOUNTS does feel more sparkly in the singular, though. I see this phrase all the time with Gmail, but there's something about it that makes it seem slightly iffy as a crossword entry.Īnd HEADCOUNTS … occasionally people ask me how many plurals is too many in one puzzle, and I scratch my head. I like it just fine, but is it a standout? NOT SPAM is the same. DONATE TO is fine, but it's not going to win any awards.ĪM I TO BLAME … I'm not sure on this one. And RHINEGOLD is an interesting word.īEACH COMB, yes! CACAO TREE yes! (Have you ever seen cacao fruit? Disgusting, hard to imagine how it transforms into chocolate.)ĬRAWDADDY … mostly yes? Seems like this is a term in use, although it didn't ring true to my ear at first. I'm not an opera fan, but I appreciate Wagner. I used to watch a ton of WWE as a kid (sad, I know), so SMACKDOWN made me smile. SMACKDOWN above RHINEGOLD - talk about something for everyone! Love the variety.Ī 72-word puzzle has to be jazzy, with every single long slot used to its max. I've been to both my place names: WALLA Walla twice - beautiful town, orchard country, with a colorful display of murals OPORTO also (for ten days or so), where you can cruise through samples of vintage Quinta Do Noval, about the finest thing ever to emerge from a grape.įun note: SECRET WORD was originally MADE-UP WORD, which I loved (like nearly anything from "Jabberwocky"), but it was nixed in a previous draft as a, you guessed it, "made-up word." Minds may change about that down the road. I do attempt to mix spoken phrases and sentences (AM I TO BLAME, et al.) into the grid, minimize abbreviations (3 here, I think), and allow one partial max per grid (WALLA). Oh, and 28-Across is a debut for me, either singular or plural, finally breaking my commitment-to-self never to use it. Is OBVS very far behind? I do check with some of my kids now and again for fresh words and phrases they view as legit. Glad to see Will (and Joel and Sam) cluing TOTES as it's now sometimes used. I started with SMACKDOWN, cluing it as a verbal broadside that might elicit an "oh, snap." But the wrestling reference seems more mainstream. Good - it's done, no need to squeeze WHITENED into a future puzzle.
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