Head light?

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Possible Answers: IDEA, HALO.

Last seen on: –Universal Crossword – Jun 27 2022 s
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Apr 22 2021
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Aug 15 2019
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 31 2019
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Dec 26 2018
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Oct 18 2018
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jul 3 2018

Random information on the term “IDEA”:

Idea Vilariño (Montevideo, 18 August 1920 – 28 April 2009) was a Uruguayan poet, essayist and literary critic.

She belonged to the group of intellectuals known as “Generación del 45” In this generation, there are several writers such as Juan Carlos Onetti, Mario Benedetti, Sarandy Cabrera, Carlos Martínez Moreno, Ángel Rama, Carlos Real de Azúa, Carlos Maggi, Alfredo Gravina, Mario Arregui, Amanda Berenguer, Humberto Megget, Emir Rodríguez Monegal, Gladys Castelvecchi and José Pedro Díaz among others.

She also worked as a translator, composer and lecturer.

She was born in an educated, middle class family; in that time, music and literature were always present. Her father, Leandro Vilariño (1892-1944), was a poet whose works were not edited in his lifetime. Just like her siblings, Numen, Poema, Azul, and Alma, she studied music. Her mother was very well educated in European literature[citation needed].

As an educator in exercise, she was a professor of literature and secondary education since 1952 until The Coup of 1973. After the restoration of the democratic system, she was a professor in the department of Uruguayan and Latin-American literature in the College of Education of Humanities and Sciences of The University of the Republic.

IDEA on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “HALO”:

A halo (from Greek ἅλως, halōs; also known as a nimbus, aureole, glory, or gloriole) is a crown of light rays, circle or disk of light that surrounds a person in art. They have been used in the iconography of many religions to indicate holy or sacred figures, and have at various periods also been used in images of rulers or heroes. In the sacred art of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity, among other religions, sacred persons may be depicted with a halo in the form of a circular glow, or flames in Asian art, around the head or around the whole body—this last one is often called a mandorla. Halos may be shown as almost any colour or combination of colours, but are most often depicted as golden, yellow or white when representing light or red when representing flames.

Homer describes a more-than-natural light around the heads of heroes in battle. Depictions of Perseus in the act of slaying Medusa, with lines radiating from his head, appear on a white-ground toiletry box in the Louvre and on a slightly later red-figured vase in the style of Polygnotos, ca. 450-30 BC, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. On painted wares from south Italy radiant lines or simple haloes appear on a range of mythic figures: Lyssa, a personification of madness; a sphinx; a sea demon; and Thetis, the sea-nymph who was mother to Achilles. The Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of the sun-god Helios and had his usual radiate crown (copied for the Statue of Liberty). Hellenistic rulers are often shown wearing radiate crowns that seem clearly to imitate this effect.[citation needed]

HALO on Wikipedia