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Merl Harry Reagle (January 5, 1950 – August 22, 2015) was an American crossword constructor. [2] [3] For 30 years, he constructed a puzzle every Sunday for the San Francisco Chronicle (originally the San Francisco Examiner), which he syndicated to more than 50 Sunday newspapers, [4] including the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Seattle Times, The Plain ...
The episode was written by Tim Long, and directed by Nancy Kruse, and guest starred crossword puzzle creators Merl Reagle and Will Shortz as themselves. Creadon and his wife, producer Christine O'Malley , borrowed $100,000 from family and friends to make Wordplay over the course of 2005–06.
Merl_Reagle,_crossword_constructor.jpg (343 × 419 pixels, file size: 34 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
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Merl Condit (1917–1992), American National Football League player; Merl LaVoy (1885–1953), American photographer and documentary cinematographer; Merl Lindsay (1916–1965), American Western swing musician; Merl Reagle (1950–2015), American crossword constructor; Merl Saunders (1934–2008), American keyboardist
The cause of this record was the Discord client playing the announcement video on loop in the app itself. [50] However, more than 1.3 billion views were removed 2 days later after YouTube fixed the views count, and no records were broken by the Discord Loot Boxes video. [8]
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"You Can Call Me Al" is a song by American singer-songwriter Paul Simon. It was the lead single from his seventh studio album, Graceland (1986), released on Warner Bros. Records . Written by Simon, its lyrics follow an individual seemingly experiencing a midlife crisis .