Friday, October 2, 2020

De-hyphenation, Repunctuation; Sifting fact from fiction; “Metropolis? Cosmopolis? Acroplis?” “Cryptickle” your crossword fancy! Phrase heard during the first of three frays


PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 3(7!) SERVED



Schpuzzle Of TheWeek:

De-hyphenation, Repunctuation


Replace a hyphen in a five-syllable word with a different punctuation mark. 

Add a space someplace between two letters. 

The result is a factual statement. 

What is this word?

What is the factual statement?


Appetizer Menu


Cryptic Crossword Appetizer:

“Cryptickle” your crossword fancy!


In this edition of Puzzleria!, Patrick J. Berry (screen name, “cranberry”) is about to tickle your crossword fancy, not with a feather but with his seventeenth cryptic crossword puzzle to grace our blog.


Patrick is indeed a fountain of cryptic knowledge. He is no featherweight when it comes to puzzle creation. 

And you can write that down in indelible ink! 


Here are the links to Patrick’s sixteen previous cryptic crosswords on Puzzleria!

ONE TWO THREE FOUR FIVE SIX SEVEN 

EIGHT NINE TEN ELEVEN TWELVE 

THIRTEEN FOURTEEN FIFTEEN SIXTEEN


For those of you who may be new to cryptic crossword puzzles, Patrick has compiled a few basic cryptic crossword puzzle instructions to help you “quill you way through his clues.”

Here are his instructions:


Regarding the Across and Down clues and their format...

The number in parentheses at the end of each clue tells how many letters are in the answer.


 Multiple numbers in parentheses indicate how letters are distributed in multiple-word answers.

For example, (6) simply indicates a six-letter answer like “jalopy,” (5,3) indicates a five-and-three-letter answer like “cargo van,” and (5-5) indicates a five-and-five-letter hyphenated answer like “Rolls-Royce.”


(For further insight about how to decipher these numbered cryptic clues, see Patrick’s “Cryptic Crossword Tutorial” in this link to his November 17, 2017 cryptic crossword. 

The Tutorial appears below the grid that contains the answers in that edition of Puzzleria!)

And now, here are Patrick’s clues:


ACROSS

1. Grub the men prepared specially – a growing concern(5,5)

6. A snake getting around quickly(4)


9. Disaster movie starring Amy Schumer?(10)

10. Angry-sounding fly(4)

11. A recent day’s wasted looking for bunny droppings?(6,5)

15. Study channel guide(7)


16. Country singer I treasure somewhat(7)

17. Chose up sides, changed? (7)

19. Secret police – couple of Germans dance in? Indeed!(7)

20. Fight for change interrupted by Conservative(11)

23. Press on after I run(4)


24. Doctor is tense? Sad – should be calm(10)

25. Fools around with lead singer in band(4)

26. Genius having rigged race let speed up?(10)



DOWN

1. Opening at end of scandal?(4)

2. Might be oral sex(a minor part)(4)

3. Manage to come up with funny question as deception(3,8)

4. Fixed “bad threads”?(4-3)


5. Associate carrying revolutionary weapon(7)

7. Cook so bored with pan to make Southern treat(10)

8. Individual describes “New Army” in courtroom drama(5,5)

12. Discretion, perhaps, getting married in Alabama?(7,4)

13. Awfully chaotic mess, doing away with old diagrams(10)

14. Neurotics, if sick right off, could be contagious(10)


18. Scar – it’d developed into rash(7)

19. Facial expression – sour one(7)

21. Ultimately, Trump had upset animal lovers(4)

22. Man, for one, regularly insulted(4)


MENU


All Decorum Frays Slice:

Phrase heard during the first of three frays


Name a newsmaking two-word phrase that was heard during the first presidential debate this past Tuesday, September 29. 

Think of another two-word phrase for

something not heard at that that debate, even though it was heard at most other recently previous presidential debates. 

These two two-word phrases rhyme with each other. 

What are they?


Riffing Off Shortz And Austin Slices:

“Metropolis? Cosmopolis? Acroplis?”  


Will Shortz’s September 27th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Ben Austin, of Dobbs Ferry, New York, reads:


Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Take one letter in its name and move it two spots earlier in the alphabet. Reading backward, you now have the name of a major restaurant chain. What is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz and Austin Slices read:

ENTREE #1:

Write a caption for the image pictured here – a four-letter adjective and a five-letter noun.  Also describe – using a one-letter article, three-letter noun and five-letter noun – the smaller image in the lower-right corner of the larger image.


Rearrange the nine letters in either the caption or the description to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.

Who is it?

What are the caption and the description?

ENTREE #2:

Express the name of a major world city with a population in the millions by writing it in all-lowercase letters. Rotate the second letter 90 degrees counterclockwise and attach it near the top of the first letter, forming one uppercase letter. 

The result is a five-letter word that is the first word in a two-word name of a major restaurant chain. 


The second word in the chain appears in the text of the puzzle you are now reading.

What is this city?

What is the restaurant chain?

ENTREE #3:

Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Take one letter in its name and move it ten spots later in the alphabet. 


Rearrange the letters of the result. You now have a common misspelling of the name of a major restaurant chain. 

What is this chain?

What is the world city?

ENTREE #4:

Name a major world city with a population in the millions. 

Spell the first four letters in its name backward to name an entree you might find on a seafood menu. 


Now remove the third and fourth letters of the city and rearrange the remaining letters to name another entree you might find on a seafood menu.

What is this city?

What are the two menu items?

ENTREE #5:

Name a major Middle Eastern city, in seven letters, with a population in the millions. The first, sixth and seventh letters spell an adjective. The seventh, second, third and fourth letters spell a noun. 


Place the adjective in front of the noun to form a phrase meaning “a wild and uncontrolled rush.” 

What is this city?

What is the phrase?

Note: Entrees #6, #7 and #8 are the brainchildren of Greg VanMechelen (ecoarchitect) whose Econfusions feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE #6:

Name a major world city with a population in the millions. 

Take one letter in its name and move it ten spots earlier in the alphabet. 


Reading backward, you now have the name of a major peninsula. 

What are this city and peninsula? 

ENTREE #7: 

Name a major word city with a population in the millions that is associated with sausage. 

Take one letter in its name and move it three spots earlier in the alphabet. 


Switch the order of two other adjacent letters in the city.

Reading backward, you now have the name of a company brand with many items on the grocery shelf, often considered healthy, and a popular pasta item. 

What are this city and company? 

ENTREE #8:

Name a two-word major world city with a population of about a half-million. 

Spell each of the two words backward, keeping them in the same order. 

You now have the first two words in a possible slogan for a brand-name household cleaning product. 


The slogan reads: “___ ____ sponge your spills!” 

What is this city?

What is the possible advertising slogan?


Dessert Menu


Quirky Dessert:

Sifting fact from fiction


The last name of a comedian is shared by American inventors and an American architect. 

Use the word “is” to connect the comedian’s first name to a synonym of “quirky.” The result is a three-word statement of opinion. 

Remove the second letter of this statement to form a statement of fact.

Remove the first letter of this factual statement to form a false statement. 

What are these three statements?


Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)


Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! Thank you.



46 comments:

  1. Really? No comments yet?
    Happy October to all!
    Who else saw POTUS, FLOTUS, et al getting the virus? Anyone? It was bound to happen. I think I saw that guy wear a mask once, and it was most likely a photo op. Don't criticize me too harshly, but I just think after these past four years, it's hard to feel bad for this guy. There, I said it. Not a fan.
    Now if I may steer the conversation away from politics, it was great walking weather today in AL, so naturally I indulged. Also, we got two boxes of food from those places from whence we order food. They've been a godsend during the pandemic, of course. The hard part is finding room in the fridge to put the stuff!
    Now to this week's puzzles: I hope everyone will enjoy my latest offering, and feel free to ask for hints and/or clarification regarding the clues. I will do my best to help the less initiated. As for the ones I've solved so far, I have Entrees #1, #4, #5, #8, and the Dessert(which I thought was quite clever). I expect there will be good hints, as usual, provided by our friendly neighborhood Lego.
    In closing, as always I wish good luck, good solving to all, and please stay safe and wear those masks. I never thought I'd ever have to utter this sentence in my lifetime, but please DON'T BE LIKE OUR PRESIDENT!
    pjbIsANeverTrumperAndDarnProudOfIt

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice day for a walk here in GA. Went to Amicalola falls up out of of Dawsonville and walked half the 605 stairs to top[ of the stairs. You are in AL? We walked like the first miles of the 8 mile approach trail to Springer Mountain start of the Appalachian trail.

      Delete
  2. Wild guess: Proud Boys and loud noise?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That is a good guess, cranberry, but it is not exactly my intended answer.

      LegoWhoObservesThatThereWereQuiteAFewLoudNoisesThatCameFromTheMouthOfTrumpDuringThe"Debate"(AndTherefore"LoudNoise"IsNotQuiteCorrect)

      Delete
    2. cranberry, the Slice asked for a 2-word news phrase from the Tuesday debate and something not heard at that debate. So even though your two phrases rhyme nicely, the second phrase is the negative of what Lego is looking for.

      Delete
    3. I said it was a wild guess, didn't I?
      pjbAtADisadvantageAnywayByNotWatchingThatDebacleOfADebate

      Delete
    4. Actually, I thought PJB's answer was a pretty darn good one!

      Delete
    5. I almost thought I gave it away at first!

      Delete
    6. pjb - IMHO, your 'wild guess' was very close to what I have as my answer, which I hope is the intended one.

      Delete
  3. Except for the misspelled restaurant chain and the peninsula (something about those ten-spot leaps wreaks havoc with my brain), I have answers (with varying degrees of certainty) for everything, including the cryptic.
    I'm really feeling good about my answer to the debate puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bravo, Paul.

      LegoWhoBelievesThatAnyoneWhoSolvesPatrick'sCrypticCrosswordDeservesKudos

      Delete
    2. All i have now is the Peninsula thing.Oh well. I have actually been to this city.

      Delete
  4. Thought I ought to check in here! I just came up with AN answer for the Schpuzzle, which I kinda snuck up upon (i.e. had the five-syllable 'word' yesterday, but not the right punctuation mark); now that I DO, I hope it is the desired answer.

    Have the Dessert and all the Entrees except #3. Don't know if I picked the correct restaurant misspelling (if it IS correct, I can't find a city to go backwards to). And the two-word phrase I WANT to be correct for the Slice is probably not, since I can't find anything to rhyme with the last portion of the second word. Ho hum....

    ReplyDelete
  5. How can you resist a puzzle with an oral sex clue.? I could say something really dirty but will wait till Wed.

    ReplyDelete
  6. pjb -- I like this a lot better than cranberry.Though I do have a superb recipe for cby sauce. Once again, your cryptic is very well done -- all the essentials -- anagrams, hidden answers,just enough slang and pop culture, all the good stuff. I love to call the Junta together at the palace for solving sessions. Much more pleasant than talking politics! Unfortunately we lost our Court Jester some months ago due to old age and overindulgence in tequila. Sincerely, D.E.

    ReplyDelete
  7. And I must also say thanks to you, DE. I prefer pjb myself. My condolences on your loss.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Have all the Entrées except #7 and the Slice. No luck on the Schpuzzle or the Dessert just yet, but have been concentrating on the Entrées.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Got the dessert - backwards! Never heard of the comedian but the others are familiar personages.

      Delete
  9. My question to Lego, and a possible 'hint', is: did the Schpuzzle inspire the Dessert this week?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great question, ViolinTeddy.
      Yes, actually I wrote both puzzles on the same day last spring.
      I wrote the Schpuzzle first. I believed the Schpuzzle might be NPR-worthy (it wasn't!) but knew the Dessert would be a bit too "quirky" for NPR (even though I kind of prefer it to the Schpuzzle).

      LegoWhoDoesn'tKnowTheDifferenceBetweenAQuirkAndAQuark!

      Delete
    2. Speaking of a 'hint', how about some? It's already Tuesday and we haven't had ANY!
      pjbNotWantingToRushLegoButHisClockShowsTheEleventhHourIsRightNow!

      Delete
  10. Early Tuesday Hints:

    Schpuzzle Of TheWeek:
    The five-syllable word has rhyming factors.

    Cryptic Crossword Appetizer:
    (I shall allow Patrick to provide hints for his cryptic crossword as he so desires.)

    The Fabric Of Decorum Frays Slice:
    "So Quiet in Here?"... Sure, but not exactly so peaceful or paradisical.

    Riffing Off Shortz And Austin Slices:
    ENTREE #1:
    Seventy-six trombones led the big parade... but how many bigger brass instruments were there?
    ENTREE #2:
    The major world city is in Africa. The five-letter word that is the first word in a two-word name of a major restaurant chain is a critter associated with China.
    ENTREE #3:
    It looks like Ollie might have patronized this restaurant chain (had it then existed). But Stan? Not so much.
    ENTREE #4:
    Site of the Olympiad where the Dream Team mined gold, and where a distance runner named Fermin (not Rosie) broke the tape.
    ENTREE #5:
    The phrase meaning “a wild and uncontrolled rush” consists of a 3-letter word beginning with M and a 4-letter word beginning with D.
    ENTREE #6:
    The major world city is in Aftica. The major peninsula is in Europe, albeit near Africa.
    ENTREE #7:
    The name of a company brand with many items on the grocery shelf is also the first word in the title of a Rocky Mountain singer's love song to his honey.
    ENTREE #8:
    The two-word major world city with a population of about a half-million until recently was home of a U.S. embassy. Now it maintains a branch office.
    The brand-name household cleaning product competes with Brawny and Bounty.

    Quirky Dessert
    Sifting fact from falsehood
    American inventors, Dayton;
    architect, S&G bid him "So long!"

    LegoNotesThatViolinTeddyCorrectlyAndAstutelyRecognizedTheConnectionBetweenTheDessertAndTheSchpuzzle

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. : O ))

      Now, if I could ONLY figure out the Debate Slice!

      Delete
    2. VT,
      From your October 4, 2020 at 12:50 PM comment, it is obvious that you are very near my intended answer. You already know the second word in the two-word phrase, and you also know what the first word rhymes with. My intended first word contains five letters.
      Additional hint: Neil Finn.

      LegoWhenYouAreAboutToGiveUpOnSolvingAPuzzleDon'tGiveUpOrDreamIt'sOver

      Delete
    3. I see from your additional hint, Lego, that I was closer to the intended answer than I thought. Much closer.
      pjbSmellsSomethingSoStrongInThisHint(AndSoRight)

      Delete
    4. Ok, I got it...many thanks...actually, though, I had thought everyone was indicating that PJB's wild guess was WAY off...so I came up with a bunch of other two-word phrases, none of which lent themselves to very good rhyming phrases about things heard or not.

      Delete
  11. And it is Mickey Dee's not Mickey Does.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Now I have everything but the Schpuzzle and Entree #7! And here in Jasper, the misspelled restaurant chain actually closed recently. Too bad. I wish we had the other restaurant chain, too.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Entree 7 " There may be a popular Broadway play that would also work.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice hint, Plantsmith.
      Also for Entree #7,the name of a company brand with many items on the grocery shelf is also the first word in the title of a Woody Allen movie. The fictional title character in that movie is actually from my hometown (which is in Wisconsin) and is also the hometown of Rose's beau Jack Dawson!
      As for the Schpuzzle, the first two syllables of the 5-syllable word are identical to the last two syllables. The syllable in the middle is the first name of a baseball legend.

      LegoWhoAlwaysKindaWishedHeMightHaveHadTheNickname"Cy"

      Delete
    2. Wwll, I got #7 finally, but that shifty Schpuzzle is still eluding me! Got anything else for that one, Lego? That hint you just provided still seems pretty vague.

      Delete
    3. I meant Well, not Wwll. Sort of a callback to a previous P! puzzle, isn't it? Sorry.

      Delete
    4. pjb,
      Yeah, for a second there I thought you might have been referring to World War II!
      Schpuzzle Hint:
      Remember, the PRIME FACTORS of the 5-syllable word are 7 and 11. The word contains a dozen letters, plus a hyphen... which must be changed to a punctuation mark that is a Mothers of Invention album title.

      LegoWhoAdvisesAllNotToEatTheYellowSnow!

      Delete
  14. And i now i must figure out the disappearing restaurant in Jasper,Al. I figure it is Golden Coral as unfortunately at this time and place buffets are no longer de riguer.

    ReplyDelete
  15. GREENTHUMB#ASAP
    A#X#O#A#A###P#E
    TRAINWRECK#SOAR
    E#M#S#O#H###O#R
    ####EASTERCANDY
    S#I#Q#E#T#R#B#M
    CONDUCT#ERITREA
    H#F#I#####M#E#S
    ELECTED#GESTAPO
    M#C#O#R#R#O#D#N
    ALTERCATION####
    T#I###S#M#T#P#I
    IRON#STEADINESS
    C#U###I#C#D#T#L
    SASH#ACCELERATE

    Anagram of GRUB THE MEN
    ASP containing A
    Double definition
    Homophone of SORE
    Anagram of A RECENT DAY'S
    Obscure double definition(s)
    singER I TREAsure
    E?E?T?D = "chose"
    GE+S(TAP)O
    ALTER(C)ATION
    I+R+ON
    Anagram of IS TENSE SAD
    HAS backwards containing S
    AC(anagram of RACE LET)E
    ---------------------------
    Double definition
    sEX A Minor
    Anagram of QUESTION contained by ?RON inverted? ?
    Anagram of THREADS
    MA(CHE)TE
    Anagram of SO BORED PAN
    PER(anagram of ARMY)SON
    Anagram of DISCRETION containing M
    Anagram of CHAOTIC MESS - O
    Anagram of NEUROTICS IF - R
    Anagram of SCAR IT'D
    Double definition GRIM+ACE
    P + upsET Animal
    InSuLtEd

    STEVEN IS ODD > SEVEN IS ODD > EVEN IS ODD
    TEL AVIV > LET VIVA
    VIENNA > ANNIE'S ?
    ANTI-SEMITIC > ANTI'S EMITIC ?
    PROUD BOYS > CROWD NOISE
    BEN AUSTIN > NINE TUBAS, A BUN INSET
    luanda > Panda Express
    BARCELONA > CRAB, ABALONE
    MASHHAD > MAD DASH

    HARDEE'S > HARDY'S > RIYADH
    NAIROBI > IBERIAN

    My Schpuzzle answer is wrong in a number of ways, but I can't seem to find the correct one; I think it has to be ?????-SI????? > ?????'S ?????, or maybe SY, but I don't think SCI or SEI or SAI work because of the number of letters, and SIGH just seems too far out.

    I'm proud to say I had the debate answer before pjb "spilled the beans", and dropped a small hint to the part he missed: Feeling Good came from The Roar of the Greasepaint - The Smell of the CROWD by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse. I hadn't known that.

    ReplyDelete
  16. All answers pre-hints except as noted.

    Schpuzzle: SEVENTY-SEVEN change - to ' and add space => SEVENTY'S EVEN
    [post- Tues-hint and VT comments]

    Slice: PROUD BOYS / CROWD NOISE [post-Fri pjb discussion]
    alternate: STAND BACK => HAND SMACK (generally more seen than heard, unlike children)

    Entrées
    #1: A BUN INSET, NINE TUBAS => BEN AUSTIN
    #2: LUANDA => PANDA EXPRESS
    #3: HARDY'S(Hardee's), change S to I => RIYADH
    #4: BARCELONA => CRAB; – R,C = BAELONA => ABALONE
    #5: MASHHAD => MAD DASH
    #6: NAIROBI, change O to E => IBERIAN
    #7: VIENNA, exchange E,I; V to S => SEINNA => ANNIE'S
    #8: TEL AVIV => LET VIVA

    Dessert: STEVEN IS ODD – SEVEN IS ODD – EVEN IS ODD.
    (Steven Wright/Wright brothers/Frank Lloyd Wright – never heard of the comedian.)

    ReplyDelete
  17. SCHPUZZLE: SEVENTY-SEVEN SEVENTY'S EVEN

    FRAYS SLICE: PROUD BOYS => CROWD NOISE!! But I tried: "WHEN? INSHALLAH" => MEN IN ?; "STAND BACK" => HAND CLAP?; "KEEP YAPPING?" => DEEP NAPPING?;

    ENTREES:

    1. NINE TUBAS; A BUN INSET => BEN AUSTIN

    2. LUANDA => PANDA [Express]

    3. RIYADH => HARDYS [HARDEE'S] [Needed the hint for this one only, as I'd tried CHICK FILET, IN N OUT, etc]

    4. BARCELONA => CRAB; BAELONA => ABALONE

    5. MASHHAD => MAD DASH

    6. NAIROBI => IBERIAN

    7. VIENNA => ANNIES

    8. TEL AVIV => LET VIVA

    DESSERT: STEVEN (WRIGHT) IS ODD. SEVEN IS ODD.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Entrées
    #1: A BUN INSET, NINE TUBAS , BEN AUSTIN
    #2: LUANDA, PANDA EXPRESS
    #3: Golden Coral?
    #4: BARCELONA , CRAB; – R,C = BAELONA => ABALONE
    #5: MASHHAD , MAD DASH
    #6: NAIROBI, change O to E , IBERIAN. I have actually been here.
    #7: VIENNA, exchange E,I; V to S ,SEINNA , ANNIE'S
    #8: TEL AVIV => LET VIVA

    Dessert: STEVEN IS ODD – SEVEN IS ODD – EVEN IS not not.
    (Steven Wright/Wright brothers/Frank Lloyd Wright – I had forgotten about him ,but used to enjoy his quirky humor.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Schpuzzle
    SEVENTY-SEVEN, SEVENTY'S EVEN
    Appetizer Menu
    For the full cryptic crossword, see Lego's official answers.
    All Decorum Frays Slice
    PROUD BOYS, CROWD NOISE
    Menu
    Entrees
    1. BEN AUSTIN, NINE TUBAS, A BUN INSET
    2. LUANDA, PANDA EXPRESS
    3. RIYADH, HARDY'S(Hardee's)
    4. BARCELONA, CRAB, ABALONE
    5. MASHHAD, MAD DASH
    6. NAIROBI, IBERIAN
    7. VIENNA, ANNIE'S
    8. TEL AVIV, LET VIVA
    Dessert
    STEVEN IS ODD, SEVEN IS ODD, EVEN IS(not)ODD
    (Steven Wright, the Wright Brothers, Orville and Wilbur, Frank Lloyd Wright)
    Long live the Thickburger!-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  20. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle Of TheWeek:
    De-hyphenation, Repunctuation

    Replace a hyphen in a five-syllable word with a different punctuation mark.
    Add a space someplace between two letters.
    The result is a factual statement.
    What is this word?
    What is the factual statement?
    Answer:
    Seventy-seven; Seventy's even.

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  21. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:

    Appetizer Menu

    Cryptic Crossword Slice:
    “Cryptickle” your crossword fancy!
    Note: The filled-in grid appears just above this week's comment section.)
    ACROSS
    1. Grub the men prepared specially – a growing concern(5,5)
    GREEN THUMB
    GRUBTHEMEN anagram
    6. A snake getting around quickly(4)
    ASAP
    ASP containing A
    9. Disaster movie starring Amy Schumer?(10)
    TRAINWRECK
    double definition
    10. Angry-sounding fly(4)
    SOAR
    sounds like SORE
    11. A recent day's wasted looking for bunny droppings?(6,5)
    EASTER CANDY
    ARECENTDAYS anagram
    15. Study channel guide(7)
    CONDUCT
    CON+DUCT
    16. Country singer I treasure somewhat(7)
    ERITREA
    hidden inside singERITREAsure
    17. Chose up sides, changed? (7)
    ELECTED
    Right changed to Left in ERECTED
    19. Secret police – couple of Germans dance in? Indeed!(7)
    GESTAPO
    GE+TAP inside SO
    20. Fight for change interrupted by Conservative(11)
    ALTERCATION
    C inside ALTERATION
    23. Press on after I run(4)
    IRON
    I R+ON
    24. Doctor is tense? Sad – should be calm(10)
    STEADINESS
    ISTENSESAD anagram
    25. Fools around with lead singer in band(4)
    SASH
    HAS reversed containing S
    26. Genius having rigged race let speed up?(10)
    ACCELERATE
    ACE containing RACELET anagram

    DOWN
    1. Opening at end of scandal?(4)
    GATE
    double definition(-GATE as in Watergate, Monicagate, et al.)
    2. Might be oral sex(a minor part)(4)
    EXAM
    hidden inside sEXAMinor
    3. Manage to come up with funny question as deception(3,8)
    NON SEQUITUR
    RUN reversed containing QUESTION anagram
    4. Fixed "bad threads"?(4-3)
    HARD-SET
    THREADS anagram
    5. Associate carrying revolutionary weapon(7)
    MACHETE
    MATE containing CHE(Guevara)
    7. Cook so bored with pan to make Southern treat(10)
    SPOONBREAD
    SOBOREDPAN anagram
    8. Individual describes "New Army" in courtroom drama(5,5)
    PERRY MASON
    PERSON containing ARMY anagram
    12. Discretion, perhaps, getting married in Alabama?(7,4)
    CRIMSON TIDE
    DISCRETION anagram containing M
    13. Awfully chaotic mess, doing away with old diagrams(10)
    SCHEMATICS
    CHAOTICMESS anagram minus O
    14. Neurotics, if sick right off, could be contagious(10)
    INFECTIOUS
    NEUROTICSIF anagram minus R
    18. Scar – it'd developed into rash(7)
    DRASTIC
    SCARITD anagram
    19. Facial expression – sour one(7)
    GRIMACE
    GRIM+ACE
    21. Ultimately, Trump had upset animal lovers(4)
    PETA
    P+ATE reversed
    22. Man, for one, regularly insulted(4)
    ISLE
    InSuLtEd(the Isle of Man)

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  22. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    MENU

    The Fabric Of Decorum Frays Slice:
    Phrase heard at the first of three frays
    Name a newsmaking two-word phrase that was heard during the first presidential debate this past Tuesday, September 29.
    Another phrase that rhymes with that newsmaking phrase was not heard, however, even though it was heard during most previous presidential debates.
    What are these two two-word phrases?
    Answer:
    Proud Boys, crowd noise

    Riffing Off Shortz And Austin Slices:
    “Metropolis? Cosmopolis? Acroplis?”
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz and Austin Slices read:
    ENTREE #1:
    Write a caption for the image pictured here – a four-letter adjective and a five-letter noun. Also describe – using a one-letter article, three-letter noun and five-letter noun – the smaller image in the lower-right corner of the larger image. Rearrange the nine letters in either the caption or the description to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
    Who is it?
    What are the caption and the description?
    Answer:
    Ben Austin; Nine tubas, a bun inset
    ENTREE #2:
    Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Write it in all-lowercase letters. Rotate the second letter 90 degrees counterclockwise and attach it near the top of the first letter, forming one uppercase letter. Express the result, a five-letter word that is the first word in a two-word name of a major restaurant chain. The second word in the chain appears in the text of the puzzle you are now reading.
    What is this city?
    What is the restaurant chain?
    Answer:
    Luanda (Angola); Panda Express
    luanda-->P+anda-->Panda (Express)
    ENTREE #3:
    Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Take one letter in its name and move it ten spots later in the alphabet. Rearraging the letters of the result, you now have a common misspelling of the name of a major restaurant chain.
    What is this chain?
    What is the world city?
    Answer:
    Hardee's; Riyadh (Saudi Arabia);
    Riyadh-->R+s+yadh-->Hardy's-->Hardee's
    ENTREE #4:
    Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Spell the first four letters in its name backward to name an entree you might find on a seafood menu.
    Now remove the third and fourth letters of the city and rearrange the remaining letters to name another entree you might find on a seafood menu.
    What is this city?
    What are the two menu items?
    Answer:
    Barcelona (Spain); Crab, Abalone
    ENTREE #5:
    Name a major Middle Eastern city, in seven letters, with a population in the millions. The first, sixth and seventh letters spell an adjective. The seventh, second, third and fourth letters spell a noun.
    Place the adjective in front of the noun to form a phrase meaning “a wild and uncontrolled rush.”
    What is this city?
    What is the phrase?
    Answer:
    Mashhad; Mad dash
    MASHHAD-->DASHMAD-->DASH MAD-->MAD DASH
    Note: Entrees #6, #7 and #8 are the brainchildren of Greg VanMechhelen (ecoarchitect) whose Econfusions feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!

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  23. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
    (Riffing Off Shortz And Austin Slices, continued)

    ENTREE #6:
    Name a major world city with a population in the millions. Take one letter in its name and move it ten spots earlier in the alphabet. Reading backward, you now have the name of a major peninsula.
    What are this city and peninsula?
    Answer:
    Nairobi (Kenya), Iberian (Peninsula)
    ENTREE #7:
    Name a major world city with a population in the millions that is associated with sausage. Take one letter in its name and move it three spots earlier in the alphabet. Switch the order of two other adjacent letters in the city.
    Reading backward, you now have the name of a company brand with many items on the grocery shelf, often considered healthy, and a popular pasta item.
    What are this city and this company?
    Answer:
    Vienna (Austria), Annie's
    ENTREE #8:
    Name a two-word major world city with a population of about a half-million. Spell each of the two words backward, keeping them in the same order. You now have the first two words in a possible slogan for a brand-name household cleaning product. The slogan reads: “___ ____ sponge your spills!”
    What is this city?
    What is the possible advertising slogan?
    Answer:
    Tel Aviv (Israel); "Let Viva sponge your spills!"


    Dessert Menu

    Quirky Dessert
    Sifting fact from falsehood
    The last name of a comedian is shared by American inventors and architect. Use the word “is” to connect the comedian’s first name to a synonym of “quirky.” The result is a statement of opinion.
    Remove one letter to form a statement of fact.
    Remove another letter to form a falsehood.
    What are these statements?
    Answer:
    Steven is odd. Seven is odd. Even is odd.
    (Comedian Steven Wright has been described by many as endearingly "quirky," but the connotations of "odd" are less complimentary.)

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