Theme: Away to the window I flew - The first word of the theme entries can follow FLASH.
17. Canasta, e.g. : CARD GAME. Also a game with melds. FLASH CARD - educational aid.
23. Exasperate, metaphorically : DRIVE TO DRINK. Just don't drive from drink; take a cab. FLASH DRIVE - Stick it in your USB port. More
37. '60-'70s Canadian folk-rock icon : GORDON LIGHTFOOT. Famous for a Wreck. FLASH GORDON - Intrepid space traveler who battled Ming the Merciless
48. The same as it was hundreds of years ago, say : FROZEN IN TIME. Unaffected by global warming. FLASH FROZEN - Food is frozen in such a very short period it prevents the forming of large crystals.
60. Spontaneous gathering, and a hint to the starts of 17-, 23-, 37- and 48-Across : FLASH MOB. A YouTube favorite here on the Corner.
Argyle here. Similar to Monday's puzzle. Four theme entries but taking the first word this time, the two corner blocks are in rows instead of the columns and there is a spanner. This has a unifier instead of a reveal if you get my drift. Fifty-five theme entry blocks as opposed to fifty yesterday. Still satisfying and amusing.
Across:
4. Young newts : EFTs
8. Most gentle : TAMEST
14. Brew that may be pale or dark : ALE
15. Baseball family name : ALOU
16. Environmentally friendly auto : ECO-CAR
19. Coke competitor : RC COLA
20. Hot-dish holder : TRIVET. Or hot flat iron holder.
21. Fleischer of the Bush White House : ARI. For President George W. Bush, from January 2001 to July 2003.
22. Train stopping at every sta. : LOCal
27. Barbecue fare : RIBS. Arc-shaped, finger-staining snack food?
30. Roamed without restraint : RAN FREE
31. "The Simpsons" storekeeper : APU. Or Ned, owner of The Leftorium.
32. Agitate : ROIL
33. Most characters on "The Big Bang Theory" : NERDS
41. "That's not in the script!" evoker : AD LIB. What Tim Conway was good at on the Carol Burnett Show. (unedited with extra footage)
42. Competes : VIEs
43. Capote nickname : TRU
44. Not at all deceitful : ARTLESS.
47. Honeyed liquor : MEAD. Liquor made from fermented honey.
52. Stimpy's sidekick : REN
53. Promise to pay, for short : IOU
54. Bottom, to baby : TUSHIE
58. Uphill climb : ASCENT
62. Bald spot coverer : TOUPEE
63. "__ Misbehavin'" : AIN'T
64. Plains tribe : OTO
65. Takes an oath : SWEARS
66. Butterfly catchers : NETs
67. __ Antonio : SAN
Down:
1. Diplomat's goal : PACT
2. Banned apple spray : ALAR
3. Garr of "Tootsie" : TERI
4. More than willing : EAGER
5. Old-style clothes presser : FLAT IRON
6. Alley prowler : TOMcat
7. "Peggy __ Got Married": 1986 film : SUE. IMDb
8. Intense fear : TERROR
9. Traffic backup causes : ACCIDENTs
10. Comfy shoe : MOC
11. Food-poisoning bacteria : E. COLI
12. Manicure spot : SALON
13. Liner notes listing : TRACK
18. Redbox rentals : DVDs
21. DOJ enforcer : ATF. (Department of Justice/Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives)
24. Resort WSW of Boulder : VAIL. Shout out to Montana.
25. Add some pep to : ENLIVEN
26. Coral formation : REEF
27. Ravi Shankar genre : RAGA
28. Apple with tunes : iPOD
29. Folksy Ives : BURL
32. "The Bucket List" director : ROB REINER
34. Repetitive learning : ROTE
35. Toon explorer with a monkey friend named Boots : DORA
36. It may be ear-piercing : STUD
38. Rodrigo __ de Vivar: El Cid : DIAZ. All perps.
39. Basic idea : GIST
40. Reluctant to commit : HESITANT
45. Govt. securities : T-NOTES
46. Sch. with a Brooklyn campus : LIU. (Long Island University)
47. Interlock, as gears : MESH
48. Houses with Greek letters : FRATs
49. Plant anew : RESOW
50. Just as planned : ON CUE
51. Mandatory items : MUSTs
55. Managed care gps. : HMOs
56. Minuscule amount : IOTA
57. Dark, to a poet : EBON
59. Anti-pollution org. : EPA
60. Cooling device : FAN
61. Prevaricate : LIE. FINI, and that's no lie.
Argyle
Humans have fantastical memory,
ReplyDeleteThat's how we today have the Odyssey.
FLASH CARDs, we did find
Helped to train the young mind.
A FLASH DRIVE's all we leave to our progeny.
Ming menaced Moon maiden, Mistress Morgan
His freeze ray almost made her FLASH FROZEN.
The space hero saved her,
For his reward he quick laid her.
"That was fast!" "That's why I'm "FLASH" GORDON!"
For Jared yesterday, there are pearls, there's pearls of wisdom, and pearls of humor.
Morning, all!
ReplyDeletePretty straightforward for me today. Got a wee bit bogged down in the SE with ROB REINER, DIAZ and LIU all being in close proximity to one another. I know who ROB REINER is, of course, but had no idea he directed that particular movie. Still, I was able to guess him once I got a few perps going. DIAZ and LIU were complete unknowns, but once again it was the perps to the rescue.
TUSHIE is a quintessential Yiddish word, being a derivative of
tuchis (or tokus), and something I grew up hearing (like TCHOTCHKE, another Yiddish word). I have no idea if it is at all common outside of Jewish households, however.
[urynoom]
Another from SB and like yesterday's from Gareth a really efficient and consistent puzzle. Owen I was waiting for a streaker reference, or maybe a Ashley Cripps from Martha Crimes' books.
ReplyDeleteI do not know Raga but the rest went quickly. Heading to Colorado Friday, but not Vail.
Good Morning, Argyle and friends. This was no FLASH in the Pan puzzle! it gave me a bit of a challenge. I definitely needed the unifier to help me with some of the theme answers. FROZEN IN TIME was my last theme fill.
ReplyDeleteI got hung up with Stir instead of ROIL. That really messed up that section of the puzzle!
My favorite clue was It May Be Ear-Piercing = STUD.
QOD: The right to do something does not mean that doing it is right. ~ William Safire (Dec. 17, 1929 ~ Sept. 27, 2009)
[kpickl]
Howdy All,
ReplyDeleteAgree with Hahtoolah, a bit of a challenge today. Some unknown or not to sure of cluing had me going, but in the end a successful solve.
MEAD was a gimme. Popular spirit in Wales & I just finished re-reading Here Be Dragons, the first of Penman's Welsh Trilogy.
ARTLESS/ Not at all deceitful do not seem to go together to me. Probably why my artist wife claims my only taste is in my mouth.
I knew from early on, I was destined to be minus hair as I aged. Still, never considered a TOUPEE. I've always been a what you see is what you get type.
GORDON..... appeared as soon as I changed 28D from IPAD to IPOD.
Argyle, thanks for the write up and especially the Burnett link. She and Conway were so great together as were she and Skelton.
More snow coming, but what the heck, it's winter.
Good morning!
ReplyDeleteNice Tuesday romp today. I didn't know diddly squat about DORA, but the perps came through. LIU, not NYU, not Lucy but Long Island.
Here's probably the best-known song by 37a 3:50
Time for that quarterly visit to the periodontist. Fun times!
Good morning everybody. Good puzzle today. I did not know RAGA. Never heard of it.
ReplyDeleteMy mother listened to a lot of GORDON LIGHTFOOT when I was growing up.
LIU threw me off. I was thinking the Sch. with a Brooklyn Campus would be NYU, which screwed things up. I had ARTNESS for ARTLESS and I couldn't make sense of it.
Wishing everybody a great day!
Good morning everyone. Good intro, Argyle. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteEverything fell into place easily, today. No erasures or searches needed. I advanced more quickly on the East, so when ……FOOT appeared, GORDON LIGHTFOOT became a gimme. Enjoyed the FLASH theme. Liked TRIVET - probably an underused word.
Have a good day.
Fun puzzle, but ARTLESS was a stretch for that clue.
ReplyDeleteMari and JJM: Take a look at definition #3 for Artless. Works for me.
ReplyDeleteI found this puzzle interesting. My only stumbling block was wanting “drive up a wall,” before “”drive to drink.”
ReplyDeleteThe Conway/Burnett link was hilarious. I’m a big fan of Carol and the whole ensemble.
I thought “The Bucket List” was a great movie.
I learned RAGA from x-words. It seems to come up a lot in regard to Shankar.
Around here tush, tushie, and tchotchke are used by the non Jewish people., as well, a melding of cultures in a cosmopolitan population. TUSHIE is baby talk.
ARTLESS is a quite common. legitimate word meaning deceitful.. Its base, ART, is found in artificial, and artful (the Artful Dodger in Dickens). Synonyms for ART are guile, deceit, craft (crafty).
ART and CRAFT are nearly synonyms in the sense of arts and crafts and also synonyms in the sense of deceitful.
Great to see the legendary GORDONLIGHTFOOT make it into a crossword puzzle. He's still goin' strong at 75.
ReplyDeleteAnd not only does FLASH GORDON fit the them, FLASH LIGHT does too.
[5:22]
Of course "them" should be "theme"
ReplyDeleteMusings
ReplyDelete-PHOBIA and HYUNDAI took a back seat to TERROR and ECOCAR
-Test your SAT Vocabulary with these electronic FLASH CARDS (100’s more on this site)
-My first 128 Mbyte FLASH DRIVE cost me $30. Now look at the size and cost of this cute one
-Images of my classmates will be FROZEN IN TIME at our 50th H.S. reunion this summer.
-Do those butter PATS have to be hard as a brick?
-A lovely note to the Alabama placekicker (#43) who missed kicks that cost Alabama the Auburn game and got him death threats from another #43 - George W. Bush (scroll down two screens)
-You might be working for one of those brilliant NERDS
-Did anyone here ever use an IRON for this activity?
-Funny/ironic lines Peggy Sue used when she went back in time to her high school days as an adult
-Yeah, I went from 78’s to 45’s to LP’s to 8-tracks to tapes to CD’s to now MP3’s for my iPod
-Being HESITANT can be worse than going all in or all out
-What butterfly was Bob Lind chasing “across my dreams NETS of wonder”
Husker, I don't know which one, it eludes me.
ReplyDelete@ Husker Gary --
ReplyDeleteThe bright elusive butterfly of love.
Oldies rock!
Good day, Puzzlers!
ReplyDeleteA nice offering from Steve Blais today and a slow sashay.
PAT slid right off my pencil as did EFTS which I learned long ago from crosswords.
TRIVETS are commonly used in my home but not FLAT IRONS. HG, I had friends in high school who resorted to ironing their hair.
APU is now as familiar to me as EFTS. And I have no problem with ARTLESS for the reasons YR mentioned.
STUD had my favorite clue!
I wish you all a tremendous Tuesday!
Argyle: Wonderful write-up & links (esp. the Tim Conway!).
ReplyDeleteFell into the 'stir' before ROIL trap.
FROZEN-IN-TIME almost never happens here in the Tampa Bay area.
The Weather Channel indicates quite a few of you are going to get that FROZEN stuff later today.
Faves today (of course) were ALE & MEAD, plus an RC-COLA for my buddy Husker.
I don't "DRIVE-TO-DRINK" ... my LOCal pub is less than half-a-mile away. (Though the crawl home can be a bitch!)
Cheers!!!
Totally fun puzzle for a Tuesday--many thanks, Steve! And you too, Argyle, for the always fun expo.
ReplyDeleteSTUD was my favorite clue also.
Also liked TUSHIE--cute.
It's only taken a decade or two of doing crossword puzzles to finally get ALOU within seconds.
Growing up in Austria a kazillion years ago, I remember my grandmother heating a FLAT IRON on a wood-burning pot-bellied stove before ironing clothes (that had been hung up on lines in the basement in winter because there were no clothes dryers). Those were the (tough) days for women.
Have a great Tuesday, everybody!
I originally had horror for 8 down. The crosswords set me straight later. Other than that it was an easy one.
ReplyDeleteHi Everyone:
ReplyDeleteA nice, smooth Tuesday offering. Thanks, Steve, and ditto to Argyle for a fine expo.
I'm looking out on a pretty winter wonderland. Getting more snow and there is a weather advisory in place. The kind of day to curl up in front of the fireplace with a good book.
Have a great day.
Anon.
ReplyDeleteArtless means guileless, not prone to deceit. Just sayiin.
Fairly easy Tuesday puzzle, nothing much to find funny with though. So I made it a little harder for myself & looked for the 2nd theme...
ReplyDeleteGame Mob
Drink Mob
Foot Mob
& Mob Time
Misty:
ReplyDeleteI also remember my grandmother heating several hot irons on the wood stove and replacing one after another as she ironed. Those were very hard times and that was the 40s but she lived in a rural area.
Hello Puzzlers -
ReplyDeletePiece of cake overall. By coincidence we recently watched Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, the 1964 animated classic narrated by Burl Ives (as Sam the Snowman).
Speaking of which: we just love the two main stop-motion animated movies from Rankin/Bass, Rudolph and Santa Claus is Comin' to Town. Along with Charlie Brown and the Grinch, these are our favorite Christmas specials. How about yours?
Lucina 10:03 - asking from complete ignorance here, does hair-ironing actually work?
I remember when FLASH MOBs were cool. For about 6 months back in 2005. Now, not so much. They are about as spontaneous and entertaining as a presidential debate.
ReplyDeleteJust reread my 8:55 post. I meant artless means NOT deceitful. Did no one catch me or were you just reading what I intended?
ReplyDeleteSorry! (blush, blush)
I thought you had meant ARTFUL, the opposite of ARTLESS.
ReplyDeleteGood afternoon, folks. Thank you, Steve Blais, for a fine puzzle. Thank you, Argyle, for the fine review.
ReplyDeleteWell, this puzzle seemed more like a Wednesday or Thursday. Not a cake walk at all. But, I persevered and got it.
The entire North was pretty easy, except for ALAR, but with four perps it appeared.
No idea who DORE, the toon explorer is. Perps.
ARTLESS was tough.
I tried ROC, but MOC overcame that.
Liked the theme. Made sense.
DIAZ was unheard of. With D and Z I wagged the rest.
Got back from my eye doctor. Pressure looks good so far. Check up next week.
We have 6-8 inches of snow on the ground. It is supposed to rain in a couple days. That will be a mess.
See you tomorrow.
Abejo
(myperat)
Hi Y'all! Fun puzzle, Steve, but I had to work at it. Great expo, Argyle! The Carol Burnett outtake was hilarious, but I had to go back three times to try and see what "Mama" said that broke up the party.
ReplyDeleteWe haven't had EFTS in a while and I tried to put an "N" instead of "F". Not a word I use in polite conversation.
ECOCAR wasn't a Prius or Toyota which my daughter has that "sips" gas. Her words for the economy.
Remembered ALOU, ARI, & APU. Hey, we're on "A" roll. Didn't know LIU but perps took care of it.
I never heard of TUSHIE until after I was an adult. Jewish people didn't live out here in the boonies.
Sun & 50 degrees. Need to fill my tank with gas before freezing weather returns on Friday. Then I'll go through the bank drive-thru to do my Xmas shopping.
Yellowrocks: I figured you are smarter than I am, so I did not want to challenge you.
ReplyDeleteAbejo
Liked the Tim Conway/Carol Burnett skit. They are a riot. Tim Conway is from Parma, OH.
ReplyDeleteAbejo
How do you pronounce "raga"?
ReplyDeleteFairly easy today, No real hangups except Diaz and artless.
ReplyDeleteCold and snowing now, just waiting it out, So....
Flash Card
Flash Drive
Flash Gordon
Flash Frozen
Flash Mob
This blog is so friendly.
ReplyDeleteRex Parker depresses me.
Rāga is pronounced "RAH guh". The first a is a "long" a, which in Hindi is pronounced "ah" like in Italian. An a not marked with an overline is a "short" a, which sounds more like "uh."
ReplyDeleteLoved the Tim Conway/Carol Burnett skit. They are indeed a riot, as Abejo said.
Abejo @12:25.
ReplyDeleteYou are too kind, and modest, besides. I have learned so much from you. I am fascinated by your background and travels. You always leave me hungry for more.
I love this blog because we have posters who are knowledgeable in so many disparate fields. It is interesting and enriching to learn things about which I know little.
Anon @ 2:17, my sentiments exactly, about both blogs. That's why I follow this one. I hope you soon choose to "go blue" so we can follow your thoughts and comments.
Flash mobs, ... are pre- planned, and exhaustively and meticulously arranged. Are they really .... Spontaneous ?
ReplyDeleteSpontaneous is supposed to mean .... As a result of a sudden, inner impulse ... And without premeditation.
Like spontaneous applause or spontaneous combustion. But, flash mobs ?
Rex Parker's blog is about a bunch of know-it-alls,... And they try to out do each other and pretend how blasé the rest of the solvers world is.
This blog is about people who barely know it ... No, no, no, .... Who know enough, but not all of it .... And not afraid to expose their foibles. Come to think of it, with made up names and avatars , there is no reason to impress anyone else, anyway.
CED , you continue to amaze me. Maybe that's not your intention, but you do it anyway.
Manac,
ReplyDelete"Flash card" won't open for me on Google Chrome because it is from TheMetaPicture, (its a protected image), can you go back to Google Images & find it, click on the image, then click "search by image" to find a different source so I can see it?
Thanks,
In the meantime, Here's a some Flash Cards worth remembering.
Dave,
ReplyDeleteDoes this one work for you?
Flash Card
The other link still works for me
But thanks for the heads up about Meta Pictures. I'll look at the source from now on.
Any other protected sources that you know of? You can just email them
to me if you want.
Manac, Thanks, Yes it works!
ReplyDeleteVery funny stuff :)
Usually the source tells you if it is protected, but TheMetaPicture is freaky. It looks fine when I post them too, & yet some browsers cannot open them. It's the only source I have found that does this, & it drove me nuts until I just started avoiding them altogether.
The mention of Gordon Lightfoot sent me back to Google to read up on the Edmund Fitzgerald. Apparently, it is not obvious even after great exploration what triggered the chain of events leading to the ship's sinking.
ReplyDeleteThere have been lots of excursions to the site of the wreck. In one trip, the ship's bell was retrieved for posterity, and another put in its place out of respect. The replacement had been engraved with the names of the lost crew. Touching!
Manac:
ReplyDeleteThe flash card wouldn't open for me either.
Dudley:
I can't tell you first hand if ironing works on hair, but I do know it was a fad in the 50s so I suppose so. Now, of course, there are actual hair irons for people with curly hair who want to straighten it. (Makes me want to cry) My daughter and granddaughter both used them. Sigh. They have gorgeous curly hair which I would love to have.
Dudley @11:44
ReplyDeleteI probably also watch Charlie Brown and the Grinch every Christmas Season.
I'm more curious about what Christmas movies everyone prefer.
One of my favorites was on late (or is that early?) last night at 2:15 am on TCM.
"It Happened on Fifth Avenue"
I actually set my alarm and got up to watch it.
WOW ... what a beautiful Sunset!
Cheers!!!
Thank you Steve Blais and thank you Argyle.
ReplyDeleteTrain stopping at every station ? We called them milk runs.
FLAT IRON. AKA, Sad Irons, but some would argue they are different. Generally, you had to have two flat irons. You would be heating one while using the other. You could fill some irons with hot embers as they cooled. Good catch on the TRIVET association Argyle. Mom and dad sold plenty of each in their antique shop. When I was young, flat irons, sad irons and their trivets always seemed like an odd thing for people to collect.
I so hope PK doesn't have to RESOW her yard !
The AD LIB line that may have saved a network ? What you talkin' about Willis ?
YR @12:13, I read what you intended, just as I read that Abejo intended DORA at 12:23.
Abejo, good to hear that it is going well.
CED and Manac, fun stuff again.
Very much enjoyed this puzzle.
ReplyDeleteTrain stopping at every station? We called it the 'doodlebug'. You'll have to go to Wiki yourself and search for Doodlebug (rail car) as I still don't know how to add a link. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Tin - my favorite xmas movies are 'Miracle on 34th St'; A Christmas Story'; and, 'It's a Wonderful Life'. (and if I happen to catch it, I still find myself watching A Charlie Brown Christmas'. Still a kid at heart I guess.
Might comment more later. No time now as a late Basketball practice for granddaughter is calling me.
Dave,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the advice.
Now to try it.
Flash Frozen ;~)
Has there ever been a prettier ballad written than "Danny Boy"?
ReplyDeleteROFLMAO
ReplyDeleteNOW THAT'S OUT OF ORDER.
ReplyDeleteI worked the puzzle late last night while Cruciverb was still down. I miss my home in Montana where I can print the puzzle each morning from my online state newspaper. I still read the paper, but I don't have a printer.
ReplyDeleteI was surprised to see VAIL in the puzzle. Lemon, are you going to be anywhere near Denver?
I know we tease me about saying I am a 'snowbird' when I only moved from near the Canadian border to Denver, but it was 65 degrees today and forecast to perhaps reach 70 tomorrow. That is good enough for me! Took my granddaughter out in the stroller.
Misty and Lucina, my 3 married sons all have MILs who don't have clothes dryers. (Lithuania, Australia and Philippines.) My DILs all grew up without them so sure appreciate them here in the USA.
Have a good evening,
Montana
Montana:
ReplyDeleteI have a clothes dryer but use it only for towels and sheets. All other clothes are hung outside as solar power is abundant here.
Bill G. @7:21
ReplyDeleteYes
(but it is a subjective choice).
Lucina, out of curiosity I looked up a tamale recipe. Where do you get corn husks for 25 dozen tamales?
ReplyDeleteBut then, you don't have a real winter. We have had 4 snow and ice events in the past ten days, with temps frequently in the 20s.
Hi all - late to the party again...
ReplyDeleteSteve's puzzle was a fun little exercise with write-overs here and there, but Argyle's ADLIB link was a riot - I laughed so hard I cried. Thanks!
Everyone elses input (I didn't know TUSHIE was Yiddish) and links made for a fun evening.
River Doc - still out there? I'll be in Cairo in a few weeks and need pointers - I've never been to that part of the world. Tell me what not to do.
Between the new job (w/o vacation days) and Christmas fast approaching (does Amazon deliver next Wed?!?)... It's enough to DRIVE me TO DRINK. I think I'll have a beer (no MEAD) now and plan tomorrow.
Cheers, -T
Tin,
ReplyDeleteI liked all the classics but this is a great modern Christmas movie and even better in IMAX with your grandchildren along side.
Gary, we saw the Polar Express a few years back and really enjoyed it; especially fun was the dancing scene in the dining car. I remember thinking that I wouldn't have thought it was anything special except for seeing it in IMAX and 3D (if I remember correctly).
ReplyDeleteAnonT, did you give us any details about your new job? If so, I forgot. If not, I'd be interested.
Speaking of AD LIBS, do you remember Tim Conway playing a dentist working on Harvey Korman? The mishaps with the Novocaine had me with tears running out of my eyes.
HG - Did you hear the story about the 1225 yesterday on NPR?
ReplyDeleteCheers, -T
These are spectacular microphotographs; the winning images from an Olympus contest. Slide show
ReplyDeleteMontana I will be in Denver
ReplyDeleteYR:
ReplyDeleteActually, 25 dz is a small number for us; 40-60 dz is more normal but the younger generation have been on a weight loss spree all year so we downsized.
Corn husks are a common item in these parts. All the grocery stores sell them and in fact often display all the necessary ingredients for tamales in a central place in the store.
Tamales are so popular that contests and festivals are held featuring them. I suspect the same is true of all the border states in the southwest.
My last post today, so have a good night all.
Thank you, Jayce; is it hard G or soft G?
ReplyDeleteI'm back and wanted to see if I can do a link to my earlier post in re 'a train stopping at every sta., so here goes:
ReplyDeletedoodlebug
I just realized I didn't clarify - the 1225 is the engine that provided all the sounds for the Polar Express. If you have a few minutes, give the story a listen. The train was headed to scrap and saved... the engine number has significance. -T
ReplyDeleteI had passed over the story about the 1225 but I went back to it just now. I love old trains. Thanks!
ReplyDelete