03.01.10 — Breakfast...







Breakfast, THE PUBLIC ENEMY (1931): After spending a night doing whatever it is small-time gangsters do, Tom Powers (a snarling James Cagney) has heard just about enough from his girlfriend Kitty (Mae Clark). Nothing says ''please be quiet'' like a grapefruit in the face.





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Monday, March 1, 2010





Puzzle by Brendan Emmett Quigley, edited by Will Shortz




Good morning! Have you had breakfast yet? BACONS REBELLION (3D. 1676 Virginia uprising), TOAST MISTRESS (5D. Woman presiding at a banquet), PANCAKE MAKEUP (19D. Cosmetic applied with a damp sponge) and COFFEE TABLE BOOK (11D. Photo-filled reading matter in the living room) are the interrelated group of this Monday back-to-work crossword puzzle.  For a good breakfast puzzle, HERE.





Other -- ASPECT (55A. Facet), PAPER PROFIT (18A. Unrealized gain on an investment), HIGH FALUTIN (36A. Fancy), HINT AT (24A. Merely suggest), RABBIT’S FEET (44A. Good luck charms), SHAMUS (29A. Detective, in slang), TIMBAL (49A. Kettledrum) and WEIGH SCALES (64A. They measure the tonnage of trucks).





Five-letter -- ARENA, BERTH, CANTO, DANES, ENOLA, IHOPE, ITEMS, MCCOY, MOXIE, ONEUP, OPIUM, OTERI, PAWED, SAJAK, SEEPY, SERIN (8D. Small finch), SHAFT, SHARK, SONIA, TACOS, TROTS, YETIS.





Short stuff -- AAH, ALEE, APT, ARLO, BADE, BOB and BOZ, CEDE, CHOP, DUB, EEL, EMIR, ETA, EXPO, FIR and FOR, FREI, HAS, IBM, IDO, IIN, IMP, INA, JANE, KOS, MIEN, MIR, NET and NEZ, NNE, NTH, OGLE, ONEI, ONO, OTT, PAL, PFUI (23A. “Bah, humbug!”), REC, SPY, TBAR, TBS, TRON, TBAR, UGHS (Terse critiques).














Click on image to enlarge.



Puzzle available on the internet at



THE NEW YORK TIMES -- Crossword Puzzles and Games.



If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery.



Remaining clues -- ACROSS: 1. 1996 candidate Dole; 4. “10 ___ or less” (checkout line sign that grates on grammarians), 9. The real ___; 14. When a plane is due in, for short; 15. Nerve; 16. [Crossing my fingers]; 17. ___ center (community facility); 20. Suffix with cyclo- or Jumbo; 22. Braga a k a the Brazilian Bombshell; 26. SSW’s opposite; 28. Letters on an ambulance; 32. Give up, as rights; 34. Evergreen; 40. “That’s ___ haven’t heard!”; 42. “Jaws” menace; 43. Wished; 47. Charles Dickens Pseudonym; 48. Kuwaiti leader; 51. Buddy; 53. Mesh; 58. Guthrie with a guitar; 60. Pat of “Wheel of Fortune”; 63. Mountain lift; 67. Singer Yoko; 68. W.W. II bomber ___ Gay; 69. Outdo; 70. Giant great Mel; 71. Copenhageners, e.g.; 72. Tending to ooze; 73. Flattens in the ring, fort short. DOWN: 1. Train sleeping spot; 2. Former “S.N.L.” comic Cheri; 4. Little devil; 6. Giant fair; 7. Appearance; 9. Former Russian space station; 12. Poppy product; 13. Reported Himalayan sightings; 21. To the ___ degree; 25. What to say to a doctor with a tongue depressor; 27. Snakelike fish; 31. Path down to a mine; 33. Talk over?; 35. Once ___ blue moon; 37. Costing nothing, in Cologne; 38. Wedding vow; ___ Perce tribe; 41. Company called “Big Blue”; 45. “Am ___ your way?”; 46. Atlanta-based sta.; 50. Well-put; 51. Manhandled; 52. Indoor game site; 54. Tex-Mex sandwiches; 56. Poetic chapter for Ezra Pound; 57. Gaits between walks and canters; 59. Look at amorously; 61. Tarzan’s woman; 62. On the sheltered side; 65. Contains; 66. Word repeated in Mad magazine’s “___ vs. ___”.





02.28.10 -- Freeze! -- the Acrostic










Sunday, February 28, 2010





ACROSTIC, Puzzle by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon, edited by Will Shortz








With this winter’s blizzard weather casting itself throughout the United States, the quote of today’s acrostic applies at least in part to the whole nation --- from Dateline America by Charles Kuralt (1979) the quotation appears most notably in The Traveling Curmudgeon, Irreverent Notes, Quotes, and Anecdotes on Dismal Destinations, Excess Baggage, The Full Upright Position, and Other Reasons Not to Go There, compiled and edited by John Winokur.





The quotation: THE MINNESOTA STATE SEAL SHOULD BE CHANGED TO ICE CUBES RAMPANT ON A FIELD OF WHITE A GRINNING BAREFOOT SWEDE IN A T-SHIRT RIDING A SNOWMOBILE AND A SHIVERING VISITOR WHOSE STRICKEN BREATH IS FREEZING INTO CRYSTALS



The author’s name and the title of the work: KURALT DATELINE AMERICA



The defined words:




A. Advise without consent, KIBITZ;

B. Fair minded, evenhanded, UNBIASED;

C. Current-regulating gizmo, RHEOSTAT;

D. Sudden, overwhelming rush, AVALANCHE;

E. Truth, or wide acceptance, LEGITIMACY;

F. Sully, stain, muddy, TARNISH;

G. Prepare for an uphill effort?, DOWNSHIFT;

H. Ben Franklin’s “daughter of ignorance”, ADMIRATION;

I. Subjected to an X factor?, TENFOLD;

J. Gloaming, twilight, EVENTIDE;

K. Bound to advance over others?, LEAPFROG;

L. At fault, guilty, culpable (3 wds.), IN THE WRONG;

M. Roald Amundsen or Fridtjof Nansen, e.g., NORWEGIAN;

N. Heyday of Pac-Man and Cabbage Patch Kids, EIGHTIES;

O. Good at picking things up, ABSORBENT;

P. Cold wind in the south of France, MISTRAL;

Q. Practice of making designer babies, EUGENICS;

R. Replace an old coat with a new one, REFINISH;

S. Figure with 20 faces, ICOSAHEDRON;

T. Viewpoint of Ishmael in “Moby-Dick” (2 wds.), CROW’S NEST;

U. Chrysotile or crocidolite, ASBESTOS






The full quotation: The state seal shows a farmer, a waterfall, a forest, and an Indian riding into the sunset. It should be changed to ice cubes rampant on a field of white, a grinning barefoot Swede in a Grain Belt Beer T-shirt riding a snowmobile, and a shivering visitor whose stricken breath is freezing into ice crystals.















Click on image to enlarge.





Puzzle available on the internet at









If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery.

02.28.10 -- Easy Does It!







The Letter E, Erté





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Sunday, February 28, 2010





EASE-E DOES IT, Puzzle by Yaakov Bendavid, edited by Will Shortz




The title of this crossword seems to mean that E is eased into eight identically pronounced words in the stead of an A, e.g., substituted for A in WEAK, TEA, PEAK, FLEA, HEAL, REAL, DEAR and MEAT, resulting in changed meanings for eight familiar phrases with clues justifying the new phrases.



NOT FOR THE WEEK OF HEART (22. Inappropriate on a honeymoon?);

AROMATIC TEE (36A. Item at a golf boutique?);

PEEK SEASON (55A. Summer next door to the nudist camp?);

FLEE COLLAR (71A. What a pursued perp might do?);

A TIME TO HEEL (90A. The point when Fido’s master starts walking?);

REEL MEN DON’T EAT QUICHE (103A. Bit of advice when packing anglers’ lunches?);

FRANKLY MY DEER (15D. Buck’s candid conversation opener?);

HAMBERGER MEET (54D. Dating service in a northern German city?).




Other -- ART FORM (99A. Film or sculpture); BASE PAY (66A. Datum on an employment contract); CAMELEERS (87A. Desert drivers), FILED IN (25D. Entered, as a classroom); FORESEE (71D. Divine); FRED ALLEN (40A. “Imitation is the sincerest form of television” quipster); GARRETS (82A. Struggling artists’ places); IVORIES (92A. They may be tickled); LOCKERS (33A. Health club lineup); REELECT (48D. Sent back to the Hill, say); REFRAME (4D. Change the focus of, as an argument); SCALERS (56D. Dental hygienists, at times); SEEDILY (44A. With a run-down look); SO-AND-SO (44D. Scoundrel); STYMIED (62A. Hampered); THE FIRM (86D. John Grisham best seller) USER FEE (26A. Parkgoer’s charge).







Six-letter -- ADESTE, ALBUMS, ASSISI, ATONED, ATTIRE, AVERSE, BLAISE, BLEATS, ROADIE, ZADORA, PROBES, BOGART (78A. Frequent gangster portrayer), DIRECT, EASTON, FEASTS, IMPEND, MORELS, OFF AIR, PROBES, ROADIE, SCORED, SHORT U (80D. Thumb‘s middle?), TERCEL, TORQUE, ZADORA (61A. “Butterfly actress, 1981).





Five -- ALLES, ALGER, ALICE, AMEND, ARRET, BALDS, CENTS, EPEES, ESTOS, HTEST, ITSOK, LOOIE, MYLAR, NAFTA, OBIES, PRESS, REDOS, REPRO, RERUN, SILTS, SLEET, STIES, STINT, STOKE, TOMEI (42A. “Before the Devil Knows You‘re Dead“ actress), WALES, ZAIRE.





Short stuff -- AFC, AHA, ALEE and ALI, ALOP and ATOP and ATOM, ANNE and ANTE and ANTS, APSE, ARE, BREE, CAL, CAME, CIG, DRAG, DRUM, EGOS and ENOS, ETC, GERM, IAGO, INTL, LEO, LON (81A. Chaney of “The Phantom of the Opera“), MANX, MASC, MESS and MOSS, MIEN, MOE, MOOS, MTS, NAH, NANU, NARA and NEAR, NCIS, NOSE, OCTO, ODIE, OMAN, ORE, OVA, PENH, RANI, RATE, RHEO, ROVE, RTES, SAKI, SDAK and SKED, SOUS, SPRY, SSN, TAKE, THOU, TRES, UGH, XRAY, YORE, YSER.



Easy does it!













Click on image to enlarge.



Puzzle available on the internet at



THE NEW YORK TIMES -- Crossword Puzzles and Games.



If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery.



Remaining clues -- ACROSS: 1. ___ miss; 5. Oil holder; 9. It’s often vaulted; 13. Pact of ‘94; 18. Mrs. Shakespeare; 19. Shakespearean schemer; 20. Bummer; 21. Stop overseas; 27. Italian home of the Basilica of San Francesco; 28. Mark Harmon action drama; 30. One side in the Pro Bowl: Abbr.; 31. Some bank deposits; 43. Shade of green; 45. Sperm targets; 46. Camera-ready page; 48. Microphone tester, perhaps; 49. Stub-tailed cat; 53. Phnom ___; 57. Solar sails material; 58. Set right; 60. Things often put in twos; 65. Develops an open spot?; 67. Some space missions; 68. Ãœber ___ (above everything: Ger.); 69. “Falstaff” soprano; 70. Late-late-night offering; 73. Eastern noble; 77. River deliberately flooded in W.W. I; 79. Annual awards announced in New York’s East Village; 82. Struggling artists’ places; 84. ___-chef; 85. Explosive event of ’54; 93. Filthy quarters; 94. Mountain treasure; 95. Idea’s start; 96. City near Bethlehem; 108. Possible flight delayer; 109. Proceeds; 110. Grand; 111. Itinerary segments: Abbr.; 112. These, in Madrid; 113. Convention handout, for short; 114. Showed; 115. Lows. DOWN: 1. TV alien’s word; 2. Son of Seth; 3. Kick in, say; 5. Face-to-face; 6. Bank quote; 7. Zero-star restaurant review?; 8. Baseballer and O.S.S. spy Berg; 9. Carol opener; 10. Basketball tactic; 11. Pseudonym of H. H. Munro; 12. Teamwork thwarters; 13. “Uh-uh”; 14. The Who’s “Who ___ You”; 16. Onetime Toyota model; 17. Outfit; 23. Like some TV interviewers’ questions; 24. Land with a red dragon on its flag; 29. W-2 datum: Abbr.; 31. Made it home safely; 32. “There there”; 34. Dog in a cat comic; 35 Nev. Neighbor; 36. On; 37. Go all over; 38. Yemen neighbor; 39. Loom; 40. Dinners likely to have leftovers; 41. Some major changes; 47. Alternatives to foils; 50. Crooked; 51. Former Japanese capital; 52. Airport security measure; 57. Pronoun designation: Abbr.; 59. Bearing; 61. 1990s war locale; 62. Agile, for a senior; 63. Los ___ Reyes Magos; 64. Days of old; 65. Flock sounds; 66. Mathematician Pascal; 68. Rags-to-riches author Horatio; 69. iPod heading; 72. Sarge’s superior; 74. Direction at sea; 75. Narrow margin; 76. Like many conglomerates: Abbr.; 78. One of the housewives on “Desperate Housewives”; 83. 2001 biopic; 84. Be sparing; ; 87. Smoke; 88. Disinclined; 89. Gourmet mushrooms; 90. Made up (for); 91. It’s measured in pound-feet; 93. Feed; 97. Line at a picnic?; 98. Neb. Neighbor; 99. Accelerated bit; 100. Prefix with mom; 101. Current: Prefix; 102. Quagmire; 104. “The West Wing” chief of staff ___ McGarry; 105. McKinley and Washington: Abbr.; 106. And other things: Abbr.; 107. “So that’s it!”.





02.27.10 -- PEEPHOLE











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Saturday, February 27, 2010





Puzzle by Patrick John Duggan, edited by Will Shortz



A quick look...






Across: 1. Big-time kudos, MAD PROPS; 9. Film about the Statue of Liberty?, PATINA; 15. Exasperated cry, I’VE HAD IT; 16. Response to a good dig, OH SNAP; 17. Hidden danger, LAND MINE; 18. Preparatory stage, LEAD-UP; 19. Subject of the biography “King of the World”, ALI; 20. Bright spot in architecture?, SUNROOM; 22. Saison de septembre, mostly, ETE; 23. Deal killers, NOES; 25. Sets right, MENDS; 26. Honoree on the third Friday of Sept., MIA; 27. Like many old series, now, ON DVD; 29. Grammy-winning Gnarls Barkley, e.g., DUO; 30. Bats are smaller than normal in it, T-BALL; 32. Disco or swing follower, ERA; 34. Mascot that’s a shell of a man?, MR PEANUT; 36. Slinky and stealthy, CATLIKE; 40. What’s-his-face, SO-AND-SO; 41. Demi Moore was in it, BRAT PACK; 43 ICK factor; 44. Springtime arrival, ARIES; 45. College football coach LES Miles; 47. Wiesbaden’s state, HESSE; 51. Application datum: Abbr., TEL; 52. It’s under the Host, PATEN; 54. Torpedo, RUIN; 55. Eponymous general, TSO; 56. Be cut down to size, EAT CROW; 58. Mute neighbor, maybe: Abbr., REC; 59. Dot-com with an asterisk in its name, E-TRADE; 61. Words at the outset, HERE WE GO; 63. Picture receiver, RETINA; 64. Moved out?, UNSEATED; 65. Official’s helper, YEOMAN; 66. Opening used before opening a door, PEEPHOLE.







Down: 1. Lombardia’s capital, MILANO; 2. “Operation Bikini” co-star, 1963, AVALON; 3. Robbed of, DENIED; 4. Goal of some candidates, PHD; 5. Means of forced entry, RAMS; 6. Bad blood, ODIUM; 7. Immobilized, in a way, PINNED; 8. What sticks to your ribs?, STERNUM; 9. Tops of golf courses?, POLOS; 10. Subtle warning sound, AHEM; 11. It goes through lots of luggage: Abbr., TSA; 12. Hot, IN DEMAND; 13. Captain Nemo’s final resting place, NAUTILUS; 14. Beseech, APPEAL TO; 21. Things that disappear in the shower?, ODORS; 24. Modelesque, SVELTE; 28. Namby-pambies, DRIPS; 30. Do school work, TEACH; 31. One concerned with checks and balances, BANKER; 33. Street name lead-in, AKA; 35. One side of Hawaii, POI; 36. Common toy go-with, C BATTERY; 37. One being printed at a station, ARRESTEE; 38. Customize for, TAILOR TO; 39. Kudos, ECLAT; 42. Dog’s coat?, KETCHUP; 46. Still, SERENE; 48. Definitely gonna, SURE TO; 49. Film critic Joel, SIEGEL; 50. Protect, in a way, ENCODE; 52. Triumphant song, PAEAN; 53. Like some mythology, NORSE; 56. “Laverne & Shirley” landlady, EDNA; 57. Emulate Niobe, WEEP; 60. “Ready” follower, AIM; 62. Crib note?, WAH.



See anything you like?






























Click on image to enlarge.



Puzzle available on the internet at



THE NEW YORK TIMES -- Crossword Puzzles and Games.



If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery.


za_gekljoihwwg_b.exe *

za_gekljoihwwg_b.exe
File size: 1040384 bytes
MD5 : b0c6e50405e3aaa49295c41c6ca146e6
SHA1 : 36ab947debc03ce0436945aaa17653d7952d9c5
=======================================================
AntivirusVersionLast UpdateResult
a-squared4.5.0.502010.02.26-
AhnLab-V35.0.0.22010.02.26-
AntiVir8.2.1.1762010.02.26-
Antiy-AVL2.0.3.72010.02.26-
Authentium5.2.0.52010.02.25-
Avast4.8.1351.02010.02.26-
AVG9.0.0.7302010.02.25-
BitDefender7.22010.02.26Gen:Heur.Krypt.4
CAT-QuickHeal10.002010.02.26(Suspicious) - DNAScan
ClamAV0.96.0.0-git2010.02.26-
Comodo40702010.02.26ApplicUnsaf.Win32.FraudTool.ST.~CRSA
DrWeb5.0.1.122222010.02.26-
eSafe7.0.17.02010.02.25-
eTrust-Vet35.2.73302010.02.26-
F-Prot4.5.1.852010.02.25-
F-Secure9.0.15370.02010.02.26Trojan:W32/FraudPack.BS
Fortinet4.0.14.02010.02.26-
GData192010.02.26Gen:Heur.Krypt.4
IkarusT3.1.1.80.02010.02.26-
Jiangmin13.0.9002010.02.25-
K7AntiVirus7.10.9832010.02.25-
Kaspersky7.0.0.1252010.02.26-
McAfee59032010.02.25-
McAfee+Artemis59032010.02.25-
McAfee-GW-Edition6.8.52010.02.26-
Microsoft1.55022010.02.26Trojan:Win32/Winwebsec
NOD3248972010.02.26-
Norman6.04.082010.02.25-
nProtect2009.1.8.02010.02.26-
Panda10.0.2.22010.02.25Suspicious file
PCTools7.0.3.52010.02.26-
Prevx3.02010.02.26-
Rising22.36.04.042010.02.26-
Sophos4.50.02010.02.26Mal/FakeVirPk-A
Sunbelt57002010.02.26-
Symantec20091.2.0.412010.02.26Trojan.FakeAV!gen13
TheHacker6.5.1.6.2112010.02.26Trojan/Krap.ai
TrendMicro9.120.0.10042010.02.26Mal_Krap-9
VBA323.12.12.22010.02.26-
ViRobot2010.2.26.22042010.02.26-
VirusBuster5.0.27.02010.02.25-
...