The Argonaut Newspaper — November 25, 2021

Page 23

LOS ANGELES TIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE “THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT” By JEFFREY WECHSLER ACROSS 1 Make a face, perhaps 7 Tab on old cash registers 13 Tarkington tween 19 Disagreeable 20 Brunch fare 22 Like zebras and donkeys 23 __ pin: metal fastener 24 They know their stuff 25 Plants with flavorful and irritating varieties 26 Sweaters in King Arthur’s court? 29 “Ciao!” 30 Shiraz’s country 31 PC shortcut key 32 Earth goddess 34 Offshore retreat for comedians? 43 NL West team 47 Thing thrown from a tree? 48 Hotel selection 49 Director Kazan 50 Clog (up) 53 Amsterdam’s Anne Frank House, e.g. 56 Swindle 57 “Best ever” acronym 58 Harsh-smelling 60 Spectrum maker 62 Query to a U.K.focused think tank? 68 Pic, in Peru 69 Buffalo QB Josh 70 Utah ski resort 72 Altered the revealing side of a dress? 80 Work with pupils 81 Mazda two-seater 82 Adverb for Descartes 83 Police force acronym 86 Venue for the

90 91 92 94 96 98 101 103 104 106 111 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127

premiere of Handel’s “Water Music” Genesis casualty Come across Capital of Yemen Allows access Diner counter array Siblings who produce court orders? Tusked beast Like the lower half of the Polish flag Allows access, poetically Major appliances Dieters’ interim report on smallersized clothes? March Out of the loop Prison with a Greek eponym Worshipper Lead off Kitchen gadget Defy Biological quintet Members of the genus Vipera

DOWN 1 Saves, with “away” 2 Pot boiler in “Macbeth” 3 Remove, as a knot 4 Female driver Ortiz of “Fast & Furious” films 5 Augur 6 Rookie 7 Cosa __ 8 Missouri River city 9 Ordinal for Uranus 10 Bygone fruit spray 11 Longtime TV host who gives automotive advice in “Popular Mechanics” 12 Caesar’s

13 14 15 16 17 18 21 27 28 33 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 51 52 54 55 59 61 63 64 65 66 67 71

penultimate words Mortar partner Congo line? More than cold Currency of 30-Across In the distant past __ Arc, Arkansas Common ID Quaint word of revulsion South Asian lentil dish Evaluate Sam-I-Am offering Rutgers URL ending Android alternative Won all the games Official note from the boss What beaux do Texter’s letters for two cents? “That’s unfortunate” Simon who played Scotty in 2009’s “Star Trek” Distant Unicellular alga Onomatopoeic rapping Notebook type Network for film buffs Gold in La Paz Sch. near Providence Term starter Chopped liver purveyor Something taken on a bus Transfer point Sammie with crunch Twenty quires Bay of Bengal’s ocean Sound system Madonna companion, in much art

73 Put away 74 Dresden “Drat!” 75 Word on old tablets 76 Hook partner 77 The VW Amarok, e.g. 78 __ fresca: pico de gallo 79 Little ones 83 Bismarck-toTucson dir. 84 Journalist Hemingway’s assignment 85 Singer DiFranco 87 “No big deal” 88 Summer at the Sorbonne 89 Bygone geopolitical abbr. 93 Wears down 95 Meteorological lines 97 Put on display, with “out” 99 Go back 100 Dedicated verse 101 Engenders 102 Brutus Buckeye is its mascot: Abbr. 105 Intrinsically 107 Made an official choice 108 IRS option 109 More amiable 110 Marquee names 111 Enjoy the kiddie pool 112 Cupid analog 113 Sreenivasan of PBS News 114 Oft-corked container 115 Chicago pizzeria franchise, familiarly 116 Security source 117 Hotel bed request 118 Valley with vintners 119 Course goal for many

LEAPING SICKNESS

I thought I was happily married. Recently, I found a cherry Chapstick in my husband’s coat pocket – a kind he’d never buy. He claimed he randomly grabbed it at the drugstore checkout. Last week, he said he’d be visiting his mother at the nursing home, but I later learned he never showed. I asked him about it, and he said work ran over. Additionally, our sex life has picked up, and he’s been extra thoughtful lately. Doesn’t all of this, put together, scream that he’s cheating? How do I confront him? — Nightmares You don’t expect marrying the man of your dreams to turn your actual dream content into all-night notifications of impending disaster: dozens of inch-high coal miners in tiny hardhats and goggles scaling you and repeatedly jabbing you with cupcake toothpicks topped with little red flags. Are you right to pile these infobits into the verdict your husband’s cheating? Maybe – but maybe not. Evolutionary psychologist Martie Haselton explains that we evolved to be protectively wrong: to err on the safe side, meaning make the least evolutionarily costly error. Suspecting cheating where none actually exists is less genetically costly than shrug-

ging off signs that seem to point to it – and then possibly losing your man and/or having him funnel his resources away from your kids to those he’d make with some hussypants he’s seeing on the side. Confronting your husband – accusing him of cheating – is a risky tactic. If he is cheating, he’s likely to deny it. If he isn’t, your accusation could destroy your relationship. A possibly less risky tactic is evoking his empathy: telling him that, collectively, these infobits triggered fears of losing him. The subject becomes your seeking reassurance (which, P.S., may or may not be truth-backed). If he has been straying, he might be inspired to reevaluate and stop. Might. Over the next few months, observe your husband’s behavior – including that which suggests he loves you and is faithful. Your observations are likely to be inconclusive (compared with finding him in bed with somebody), but if you amass enough information over time, it should begin to point you to some sort of understanding. I personally make peace with the freakouts of life that way; for example, a new mole that (apologies to Judy Blume) seemed to scream: “Are You There, Alkon? It’s Me, Malignant Melanoma.” One dermatologist visit later: “Hello, drama queen. I’d like to introduce you to your spider bite.”

JUNK MALE

Do men even read online dating profiles? Mine says I’m a “sober divorced writer.” Inevitably, guys message me: “What do you do? Ever been married? Wanna go for a drink?” Um, hello? I’m flattered I apparently get picked on looks alone, but even men who aren’t into hookups do this. — Mystified There’s a case to be made for a guy being a rushed or generally careless reader and sliding right past “sober divorced writer.” However, men are likely to blow past an even more standout description, such as: “I enjoy fine dining, walks on the beach, and dismembering my date and feeding bits of him to the squirrels.” Though men seem more likely to hit on hot women on their pictures alone, they probably do this even when women are, shall we say, lukewarm or even room temperature. Because birth control used to be, “Cross your legs, honey!” Women evolved to be “the choosier sex,” wary about getting it on with a man until they vet him for his willingness and ability to “provide” for any resulting kids. Because men don’t get pregnant, it’s evolutionarily optimal for them – best for passing on Ye Old

Genes – to have vastly lower standards. (Vastly. Like: “So...she has a pulse?”) This sex difference makes a strong showing on dating apps. Computational social scientist Taha Yasseri, with three students, analyzed piles of data from online dating studies. “Men are much less selective in who they communicate with,” they report. In fact, it’s “optimal for men to use the ‘shotgun method’”: blasting out “likes” like buckshot from some backwoods Cletus’ hunting rifle. The strategy is not finding a really great match (true love with a woman much like them – or a man if they’re gay) but messaging “a large number of people, irrespective of their potentially low fit” and hoping some of them bite. Basically, many men on dating apps are like 2-year-olds. They only look at the pictures. Take it super slowly with any guy you meet via app, meaning keep him on secret probation until you see ample evidence you might be well-matched (and that “Conor” is not long for “Con”). If you’re awakened one lazy Saturday morning by the man in your bed, the part of your body he’s most interested in should not be your thumb – which he got a little clumsy with while trying to unlock your banking app.

GOT A PROBLEM? Write to Amy Alkon at 171 Pier Ave, Ste. 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or email her at AdviceAmy@aol.com.

©2021, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Alkon’s latest book is “Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence.” Follow @amyalkon on Twitter or visit blogtalkradio.com/amyalkon.

NOVEMBER 25, 2021 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 23


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