Theme: •*¨*♫♥♫¸¸¸.•*¨*♫♥♫¸¸ - Part and parcel to 'reading' music.
17A. Yellow sticky brand : POST-IT NOTE
26A. Caffeination station : COFFEE BAR
40A. Crisis phone service : HOT LINE
55A. Café serving group : WAIT STAFF
65A. Composer's output, and where to find the last words of 17-, 26-, 40- and 55-Across : SHEET MUSIC
Argyle here. Annemarie Brethauer has gone from a Sunday(Mar 23, 2014) to a Tuesday. I think she is ready to tackle a Monday. Makes my heart go pit-a-pat.
Aross:
1. Wire insulator : TAPE
5. Australian gemstone : OPAL
9. Dressed : CLAD
13. They're found in veins : OREs
14. Zany escapade : CAPER
16. Saintly ring : HALO
19. Eric of "Spamalot" : IDLE
20. Color : HUE. Finally, a straight forward clue for HUE.
21. Manicurist's concern : NAIL
22. "Breaking Bad" award : EMMY. "Breaking Bad" ran on AMC from '08 to '13. 43A. "Breaking Bad" law org. : DEA
24. Out of bed : ASTIR
30. Vessel for the Mad Hatter : TEA CUP. "Why is a raven like a writing desk?"
32. Fast-running bird : OSTRICH
33. Kibbutz country : ISRAEL
36. 18th-century composer Thomas : ARNE. British composer best known for Rule, Britannia!.
37. Kenya neighbor: Abbr. : SOM. (Somalia)
44. Journey : TRIP. Go ask Alice.
46. Shed, with "off" : SLOUGH
48. Solar or lunar phenomenon : ECLIPSE
51. Hiss and hum : NOISES
58. Flawless : IDEAL
59. British "Bye-bye" : "TA-TA"
60. Tees off : IREs
62. Electronic eavesdropping org. : NSA. (National Security Agency)
63. Jalopy : HEAP
68. Sicilian volcano : ETNA
69. Golf targets : HOLEs
70. Quick gander : PEEK
71. Light bulb unit : WATT
72. Circular current : EDDY
73. Respectful titles : SIRs
Down:
1. Part of Uncle Sam's outfit : TOP-HAT. It was what the Mad Hatter wore also.
2. Turn on : AROUSE
3. Pre-euro Spanish coin : PESETA
4. Repair shop fig. : EST. (estimate)
5. Penta- plus three : OCTA
6. Lose one's cool : PANIC
7. 2014 Olympics skating analyst Ohno : APOLO
8. Replayed tennis serve : LET
9. Fire-breathing Greek monster : CHIMERA
10. 1960s White House nickname : LADY BIRD. Claudia Alta "Lady Bird" Taylor Johnson, First Lady.
11. Every one : ALL
12. Anonymous Jane : DOE
15. Snorkeling areas : REEFS
18. Arrival en masse : INRUSH
23. Bumped into : MET
25. Here, to Henri : ICI. In France.
27. Folded manuscript sheet : FOLIO. (from Latin for leaf)
28. Clearasil target : ACNE
29. Actress Perlman : RHEA
31. Expert : PRO
34. On a cruise, say : AT SEA
35. Angled pipe fitting : ELL
37. Meat-and-potatoes dish : STEW
38. Ocean predator : ORCA
39. Combatively supportive : MILITANT
41. Religious sister : NUN
42. Self-absorption : EGOISM
45. Rain-on-the-roof rhythm : PIT-A-PAT
47. Kept secret : HID
49. Hollywood hrs. : PST. (Pacific Standard Time)
50. Money in the mattress, e.g. : STASH
52. Karate instructor : SENSEI. 先生
53. More like child's play : EASIER
54. Men's Wearhouse items : SLACKS
56. Chase flies or grounders : FIELD
57. Let loose : FREED
61. Online crafts marketplace : ETSY. Official Site
63. Chop with an ax : HEW
64. SFO posting : ETA
66. Gardening tool : HOE
67. Portfolio-increasing market moves : UPs. Not DOWNs, portfolio-decreasing market moves.
Argyle
Morning, all!
ReplyDeleteVery smooth Tusday puzzle. I think my only do-over was putting in TREK instead of TRIP to start. And the only surprise was discovering that TA-TA was "British", since I've been hearing and using it all my life. Go figure...
Melodic Malady
ReplyDeleteDo sang with the wrong inflection,
Re and Mi likewise lacked perfection.
The cause was a virus
Made their NOTES less desirous;
The diagnosis was a STAFF infection!
Symphonic Symptoms
The pool shark was taken quite flu sick;
No way he could play with his cue-stick.
His friend, the composer
Also suffered exposure,
But in bed he could still write "SHEET" MUSIC.
Mental Instrumental
The song writer couldn't get very far,
Writer's block held him firmly as tar.
To remedy this flaw
He took to the law;
Music flowed once he past the first BAR!
ReplyDeleteHello Argyle, and friends,
Nice and Easy puzzle, thanks Annemarie. And thanks Argyle for your charming blog.
Rhea and Ostrich in the same puzzle - only Kangaroo and Koala were missing.
Amendment to Owen's law ...
If a puzzle ever solved does not have a nit in it, then most bloggers will devote a 100% of their energies in trying to find some sort of nit - or else make one up.
Otherwise, once you've solved a nice and easy puzzle - there is nothing left to comment on. Plus there are only so many ways to skin a four alarm chili recipe.
Enjoy, the coming of spring.
Good Morning, Argyle and friends. Fun Musical puzzle.
ReplyDeleteHand up for trying Trek in lieu of TRIP.
How appropriate to have the ECLIPSE since there was a BLOOD MOON Eclipse last night. Unfortunately, severe storms in my area prevented a viewing.
QOD: The first step on the way to victory is to recognize the enemy. ~ Corrie Ten Boom (Apr. 15, 1892 ~ 1983)
Good morning!
ReplyDeleteI did not find this one easy or fast. I immediately went wrong with Uncle Sam's outift -- I wrote FLAG at 1a when it should have been TOP HAT at 1d. My POST-IT-NOTE started out as SKOTCH PADS and ASTIR was RISEN. Washington and Oregon are awash in black ink.
Hand up for TREK/TRIP. Another hand up for noticing that OSTRICH crossed RHEA. My third hand is up for thinking ECLIPSE was a timely entry. Never heard of ETSY before. Nice CSO to Splynter at 67d -- UPS.
Today's my final taxing day. Got your return filed? If you're required to do quarterly estimates, your first one for next year is due today.
And just why is a raven like a writing desk? Argyle?
Good morning, folks. Thank you, Annemarie Brethauer, for a fine puzzle. Thank you, Argyle, for a fine review.
ReplyDeleteDid this in the newspaper today, but tried my IPad after I was done and, wallah, it worked. Not sure what changed between yesterday and today, but I am happy. I like doing it in the paper when I am home, but traveling it is the IPad.
Did not get wire insulator at first for 1A, came later. I should have gotten it, I used TAPE all my life, on wires and cables.
POST IT NOTE, the greatest invention of the last century. I really like those handy devices.
I used to like COFFEE BARS, but I quit coffee several years ago. Now I am a Tea Person.
Like ARNE. Great song he composed.
PIT A PAT reminds me of the golf ball sized hail we had on Saturday. Hit the roof much louder than that.
Our friend ORCA again.
I always thought LADY BIRD was the real name. Learning moment.
Everything is white here from yesterday's snow. I expect it will melt today. Hope my 225 onions will be OK.
See you tomorrow.
Abejo
(5339646 93)
Good Morning Everybody!
ReplyDeleteWBS on TREK vs. TRIP. Other than that, this was smooth sailing. Everything fell into place nicely.
We had snow showers in Chicago last night (yes you read that correctly). As a result, we missed seeing the Blood Moon. Saturday we were in shorts, today we're back to longjohns!
Have a great day.
Desper-Otto
ReplyDeleteWhy is the raven like a writing desk ? asked Lewis Carroll, nonsensically.
He didn't expect an answer ...
But he did write in the foreword,"Because it can produce a few notes, though they are very flat, and it is nevar put with the wrong end in front". ( sic, ad verbatim -).
Notice the purposely mis-spelt word Nevar, which when reversed spells ... A proof reader's red pencil correction, put an end to that pun, in the final book version, published - so the readers never benefited from it.
Other readers comments:
1. Poe wrote on both of them.
2. They both come with inky quills.
3. They both stand on sticks.
4, Finally, a wit writes: Because there is a B in both and an N in neither.
Answer 4 should be spoken aloud, to comprehend the meaning - it is meant to highlight the absurdity of the original question.
Maybe, Argyle's intention to get us bloggers to come up with even more interesting comments.
Fire away.
Thanks for the puzzle and write-up Annemarie and Argyle. The Ohnos always seem such grounded and nice people.
ReplyDeleteLoved the ECLIPSE last night - unlike hahtoolah I had a fluke grandstand view from my hotel room in Dallas. I couldn't have planned it any better!
Abejo, presumably it was an onion snow and your onions will survive.. Have you or others heard this PA Dutch expression?
ReplyDeleteLink onion snow
ReplyDeleteYellowRocks, have you seen the Japanese movie "Departures" ? It won the 2008 Oscar for best foreign film. You can borrow it at the local library.
I thought of you.
The movie is about a corpse make-up man ( the task before before the undertaker 'takes over' - ) shows the Japanese culture of extreme politeness, inevitable tact and diplomacy, profound empathy and correctness and respect and humility - at its best.
Enjoy.
Musings
ReplyDelete-I haven’t bought SHEET MUSIC for years. It’s all on the web somewhere
-3M turned “low tack” glue they accidentally produced into a success as POST IT NOTEs
-Can you find COFFEE on on this menu?
-Haven’t we all used electrical TAPE where a PRO would not have done so?
-The Cwd Shop must have a sale on HALO recently
-Recent movie about desperate people in SOMollia
-I did not stay up until 2 a.m. to see the blood red ECLIPSE
-My MIL’s radio hisses and hums but it was a gift from her deceased son and so on it goes
-VB eliminated the LET serve years ago. Now you just play it.
-Not everyone liked LADY BIRD’s highway beautification initiative
-I’m passionate, you’re MILITANT!
-My daughter loves the NUNs at her school but could not live that cloistered life
-Robert Redford had a long segment in Jeremiah Johnson on how to HEW wood for a cabin
-What TV show had a bit called “The Copper Clapper CAPER?”
Good morning everyone.
ReplyDeleteWow, two ratites in the same puzzle (RHEA and OSTRICH) Perhaps a sub-theme?
Seriously, Good intro, Argyle, Nice theme discussion.
Mostly easy, but had to WAG ETSY. Also had Anton before APOLO. Hand up for wanting trek before TRIP but knew Spanish money didn't start with a 'k'.
I usually give 'Annemarie' a German pronunciation, so I hope that's ok with our constructor. Fun romp today.
ReplyDeleteGood morning all !
Thank you Annemarie Brethauer, and thank you Argyle Barbateblogger.
A quick and enjoyable solve after sleeping in. I saw NOTE, BAR, and LINE and thought the theme would have something to do with MUSIC. I think Pas de Chat would have enjoyed this puzzle. Perhaps she did.
My learning moment was ETSY, INC. Never heard of it. Spent about an hour poking around looking at items.
I'm with Mari and Abejo. Odd weather of late.
Speaking of late, I'd better get to work.
Like yesterday, a delightful romp with fresh fill galore.
ReplyDeleteRemember, TATA is pronounced TATT-AAH, not TAH-TAH, as most Americans assume.
Argyle,
I loved the Eric Idle interview, thanks!
Spitz,
Only the usually omnipresent EMU was missing in action. Nice to see OSTRICH for a change.
What an enjoyable puzzle! Thanks for the link for Eric IDLE, Argyle.
ReplyDeleteHand up for looking for emu to go with the other two birds.
I don't think I knew that Lady Bird Johnson's name was Claudia. Lady BIrd just seemed to suit her.
Do any of you know why trousers are called SLACKS?
Hi Everyone ~~
ReplyDeleteA very quick solve for me today, where most of my first thoughts were correct. I did have two write-overs: Trek / TRIP and Octo / OCTA. I picked up on the theme after ...NOTE and ...BAR. A fun musical romp - thanks, Annemarie and thanks for the write-up, Argyle.
~ APOLO Anton Ohno was my favorite on his season of "Dancing with the Stars."
~ I visit the ETSY shops now and then. It's a wonderful place to pick up unique gifts.
Rainy today, but in the 60s ~ so much better than snow - sorry, Chicago folks!
Fairly easy puzzle, although some bumps on the first pass-through.
ReplyDeleteThanks to Annemarie and Argyle!
Hello Puzzlers -
ReplyDeleteEasy enough, but hand up for Trek before Trip.
A few of my craft-making friends have Etsy shops. There are some beautiful, lovingly made things to be found on Etsy, but of course there is also some shameful rubbish just waiting to be bought. The latter category sometimes shows up on the alter-ego site called Regretsy, where people expose the purchases they wish they hadn't made.
Husker - Clyde Cooper, the Copper Clapper Klepper, showed us that even Jack Webb could have a sense of humor with help from Johnny Carson.
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteA nice, easy Tuesday romp with lots of fresh fill: ostrich, slough, eclipse, militant, etc. Didn't catch the theme until the unifier filled in. Only write-over was octo/octa.
Nice job, Annemarie, and great expo, Argyle.
Yesterday, it was 76; today, we're expecting heavy rain, strong winds, and a temperature drop by tomorrow morning to 26 AND possible snow showers. Mother Nature is certainly in a foul mood!
Have a terrific Tuesday.
Hello, puzzlers. Good job, Argyle. I, also, liked the Eric IDLE interview.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Annemarie Brethauer, for today's quick and easy sashay with a descending musical scale.
WEES on TREK/TRIP corrected by PITAPAT.
Not only do OSTRICH and RHEA cross but there's REEF to take us down under.
Seem to be a lot of golf references, too. I wonder who's the fan, Ms Brethauer or Rich?
TATA for now!
Everyone have a lovely Tuesday!
Thank you for the puzzle, Annemarie. Thank you for the review, Argyle.
ReplyDeleteEasy peasy puzzle, just right for a Tuesday.
Hand up for TREK before TRIP. Also had EBAY before ETSY.
Argyle: Nice write-up. Excellent IDLE interview.
ReplyDeleteOnly needed 4 perps (and a WTF?) to get ETSY.
Never heard of IN-RUSH before.
Enjoyed the ECLIPSE last night. Not much "blood" here.
I'm listening to the PIT-A-PAT of rain.
Sunset will probably be a wash-out.
"Toasts" will be made anyway.
Cheers!!!
PS Tin's Law ... a Crossword puzzle should have a booze clue/answer served NEAT!
Good morning! I solved this one on paper and apparently am in the minority. There was nothing really wrong with this puzzle but it didn't appeal to me very much. I didn't know ETSY and IRES seemed odd for 'tees off' so that corner was hard for me and I was left with a bland reaction to the whole endeavor.
ReplyDeleteI saw the eclipse last night late.
Did you see this video of a little boy arguing with his mother about cupcakes? Listen Linda!
I'm late to the forum today, but at least now I can run water in the kitchen without soaking the basement. The plumbers came to fix my Friday night disaster today. He was nice enough to compliment my temporary patch job: a roll of "Stretch and Seal" tape around the pipe, then a piece of rubber gasket over where the hole was for extra support, then another roll of "Stretch and Seal" tape to hold the gasket, then two globs of plumbers putty on either end of the patch to stop the last drips.
ReplyDeleteHe may have been being sarcastic, but hey - at least it held until they could get here!
Abejo, I used to use POST-IT NOTEs all the time. Now on the Mac they have a program called "Stickies" where you can make notes. They look just like post-its stuck to the computer screen. (Only much more legible!!)
ReplyDeleteKazie, "Save the TA-TAs" is one of my pet charities.
ReplyDeletehttp://savethetatas.info
Oh, and there was a puzzle today, wasn't there? Thanks for the fun write-up, Argyle! I really enjoyed the simplicity of the theme. My only pause was when I saw INRUSH and had to check my POST-IT NOTE to be sure I was correct. I wanted ONRUSH, but POST oT NOTE just didn't seem right!!
ReplyDeleteOwenKL, brilliant poems today! I especially like the "Melodic Malady"!!
ReplyDelete...and I just used up my last post!
Good morning Argyle and all,
ReplyDeleteDelightful puzzle, Annemarie. Had very few write overs, but didn't get the theme until the end. I suppose I should really start looking for it.Most of the time I am trying to remember words that I know.Definitely slows me down.
Enjoyed both interviews, Argyle. Apolo was also one of my favs on DWTS. Isn't Amy Purdy amazing? She lost her legs at 19 and she is a top contender this season on DWTS.
Hand up for not knowing that Lady Bird's name was Claudia.Never thought about Lady Bird being a nickname...how silly, of course it was.
Loved seeing the blood moon last night..it was stunning, but my camera did not do it justice.
Bill, Linda is going to have big problems later on with her little cupcake.
Hello all,
ReplyDeleteDitto on TREK/TRIP
On a more mischievous note, I really wanted wanted to fill Yoko Ohno for 7D. Even though I knew it was an utterly wrong answer, the image of her analyzing the Olympics brought a well needed smirk to my morning.
Ta Ta
Delightful Tuesday puzzle, many thanks, Annemarie! And you too, Argyle for a fun expo and cute Alice in Wonderland tea party pic. Also enjoyed your poems this morning, Owen.
ReplyDeleteWe too enjoyed seeing Apolo Ohno on "Dancing with the Stars" a few seasons ago. But since I forgot the spelling of his name, had to wait for the perps to fill it in.
Was the CHIMERA really a fire-breathing critter? I thought it just changed shapes or something.
Our Internet has been going out intermittently for almost a week now. Cox put in a new modem a couple days ago but this morning it was till out until 10. Glad it's working now or I wouldn't be able to blog. Amazing how totally dependent we are on our connections.
Have a great Tuesday, everybody!
Hello everybody. Cool puzzle today. I didn't pick up on the theme until the reveal. I left the third letter of IRKS/IRES blank because not knowing ETSY (could it be KTSY?) there is no way I could know which letter it was. Excellent puzzle, though, with some very fun fill.
ReplyDeleteWe watched the moon get eaten away for about 20 minutes and then went in and went to bed lest we fall asleep outside.
Excellent verses, OwenKL.
Cool discussion about ravens and writing desks.
From shorts to longjohns in three days. Woo!
Best wishes to you all.
Next time you are in France...looks like fun.
ReplyDeleteHi Y'all! Great puzzle, Annemarie! Great expo, Argyle! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteWire insulator, I was thinking of the rubbery skin around the wire for which I knew no name or those glass or white ceramic antique things used to hold the wire away from flammable materials. TAPE? Sure!
Never watched "Breaking Bad". Never heard of ETSY but tried "E" because it was online stuff.
I checked all my windows trying to see the ECLIPSE to no avail. Decided I really didn't want to wander out to the street in 29* weather at 2 a.m. in my jammies to see it. I just imagined it and was satisfied.
I don't know how much Texas roadsides benefitted from LADY BIRD's beautification projects, but seeing bluebonnets and other flowers in the ditches there in May was a memorable sight in the '60's.
Do you suppose trousers were called "SLACKS" because before that men wore those tight pants that just came past the knee? Long loose trousers
would sure seem SLACKer.
JD, your video: American obesity problem would be lessened if televisions were all pedal powered. I wish mine were. Then if they'd take all the yummy food ads off the tube...
ReplyDeleteLL Linda, yep, I agree. That little boy might need somebody to say, "Hey, wait a minute. It's not OK to talk to your mother like that." I first saw that video on Ellen. I guess it's her job to entertain but neither she nor anyone else seemed to think the little kid was cute but a bit of a handful too. Ellen even invited the boy and his mother on the show. I think people are more permissive and less likely to chastise their kids or pets these days. It's hard to hit that happy medium...
ReplyDeleteI didn't mean to be especially critical of today's puzzle. I think I have gotten a little spoiled with the collection of really good puzzles from the LAT. This theme seemed OK but bland and the fill didn't have much sparkle or wit. It seemed more like a USA Today puzzle, not that there is anything wrong with those. Anyway, since everybody else seemed to like it just fine, maybe I'm being too picky. Thanks Annemarie and Argyle.
Thank you Annemarie and Argyle. Enjoyed your poems OwenKL.
ReplyDeleteAnother easy Tuesday. Had irks before ires. Etsy seemed like an odd name, but Ktsy was even odder.
Like PK, I looked out all my windows and couldn't see the blood moon. I was reluctant to wander around outside in the dark since we live in rattlesnake country. I'm not sure if they're out yet but since we had an unusually warm winter and are now enjoying even warmer weather, I didn't want to take the chance.
Nancy
Bill,
ReplyDeleteI think you need to look at the puzzle a little differently :)
Handy Post it Note
Coffee Bar ( I know it was posted before, but I liked it )
Hotline
Waitstaff
Sheet Music ( OK, there is nothing funny about sheet music so that is all I had )
Hearti,
ReplyDeletethat does look like a good cause! I had to add .com to the website to get it to open up though.
Kazie - Lea looks so "Pretty In Pink". Very sweet photo.
ReplyDeleteSLACKS…. now there's a word that I never hear anyone use too often. My wife will say "Put on a nice pair of pants, we're going out tonight". But she'll never use the slacks. My mother used it all the time (even in the same example). Interesting how times change
ReplyDeleteAnon @8:05, thanks for thinking of me. I enjoyed the movie, Departures. I'm glad you did, too.
ReplyDeleteBill, in re Listen Linda, not cute at all. Very poorly trained. Can you imagine him at age 15?
Hi all:
ReplyDeleteA delightful puzzle on a dreary day here in Boston. This one took longer than a normal Tuesday. Tape? Really? Please don't put it back in the box like that :-)
Only write-overs: 30a: TEApot before TEACUP (PRO fixed that finally) and 54d: SUITS_ (oops) before SLACKS.
Favs - Eric IDLE and ECLIPSE today. Nope, I didn't see it this morning. WATT-aya want?, it's raining here.
Re: ETSY, SIL sells her crochet hats there. Though I thought it was etc.com.
Argyle - loved re: 44a post... "When she's 10' tall."
OwenKL - nice law... Anon - nice corollary; my nit - 1d TOPHAT and 30a has Hatter in the clue. Yes, small and inconsequential.
I finally caught up on the weekend posts. Monday's puzzle was neat and a puzzle class is awesome.
So, DW joined me over the weekend and we went Harvard's Natural Science museum (why, yes, I went to Harvard and MIT.... this weekend :-)), played a bit in China Town, and had the 'chowda (at the Oyster House). But, for some reason we gravitated to the North End every night for food...
DW left yesterday, so no more SHEETMUSIC 'till I get home.
Cheers, -T
Good old Manac, taking up the slack while i am on the road!
ReplyDelete$&@! iPad...
CED - Does the hotel have internet connected to a printer? The Mensa site has been IDEAL for printing the puzzle daily. C, -T
ReplyDeleteI looked up the suggested counter-site to Etsy, REGRETSY, but found out it had shut down. BUT there is a link to an interview with the founder you might find interesting. The perils of a blog site, if you will.
ReplyDeleteRegretsy
Unfortunately, I also found ETSY only takes PayPal and I refuse to use PayPal, so all that neat stuff is off limits to me.
ReplyDeleteA little tough at first, but got through it with just a few errors. Never heard of ETSY, and had AROSE instead of ASTIR. Fine puzzle.
ReplyDeleteSaw the eclipse/blood moon last night, but I faded to black just about the time it did.
My first guess on today's theme was from POST and BAR, so I expected rod-like shapes, LINE wasn't totally out of line with that concept, and STAFF was dead on. Otherwise, WEES.
ReplyDeleteArgyle: I didn't visit it often, so wasn't aware regretsy had shut down. Thanks for that interview link!
I got my PC version of stickies from Zhorn and think it's one of the most useful, even essential programs on my machine.
GooGoo (& Argyle): Why Is A Raven Like A Writing Desk? (I knew Carroll's answer, and Poe, but the rest were new, and I really liked #4, which will answer any riddle of this sort in a Carrollish way.) I'll take a shot at it:
A writing desk, known as a secretary
Is a place for papers, quite sedentary.
The raven, a flyer
Will roost a bit higher;
In treetops he keeps his station airy.
Here is a gardening tip. To check whether the soil is warm enough to plant, sit your naked bum in the dirt and if you can handle it then it's warm enough to plant.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteArgyle, why don't you go through the whole exercise for all of us ... and we'll just take your word for it ? ;;<-)) ... after all, we trust you with our sanity, every two days a week ....
No need for all of us to go through the torture, one at a time. Also let me know if its warm enough for my garden grass snake to come out of hibernation. Thanx. ;-)
Well Argyle, it is certainly NOT warm enough to plant anything here because we have snow AGAIN! I don't even need to test - LOL. And we could not see the ECLIPSE last night here.
ReplyDeleteDid the puzzle on paper after work today and it was a lovely speed-run. Did we all have TREK before TRIP? I tried INFLUX before INRUSH but soon realized that there are few words starting with X for 40A.
I had heard of ETSY and daughter has purchased some cute and novel crafts on it.
It's snowing...Goo Goo, what do you think?
ReplyDeleteanonymousT,
ReplyDeleteCan you get to the Mensa site on an ipad?I always go to Cruciverb when I travel.
Manac, excellent link to sheet music....
ReplyDeleteJD:
ReplyDeleteI don't bother on the iPad - I still like ink and paper. In the morning, right after I hit the COFFEEBAR, while IDLE* waiting for DW or the car, I go to the hotel "business"** computers, Google: LA Times Crossword Mensa, click, click, print. Then I'm on my way.
Argyle - the image of you with your ass in the dirt cannot be un-imagined!
Cheers, -T
*I know wrong context/ANS.
**For the love of all secure, don't do business there...
CAPTCHA - John & u-both-wi. Ha! C, -T
Ok, luckily I have been able to do the puzzle everyday due to this newspaper vending machine about a mile away from where I Am staying. But it killed me that I could not post funny stuff, (&/or kind words) about your puzzle Sunday CC.
ReplyDeleteA friend who I am staying with was kind enough to show me a few tips about working with an iPad, so this is a test to see if I learned anything. (but it is still a pain in the butt to work with...).
Sheet Music,,, Timing is everything...
Aw nuts, that took me bout an hour.... $&@!iPad!
Argyle, years ago a local radio station did a parody of the song Aquarius, except they used the words A Hairy Ass. The song is now ruined for me, because whenever it plays, I hear "a hairy ass."
ReplyDeleteI cannot find the link on this stupid IPad, & if I did I would not know how to link it.
But I am hoping, that after your post, whenever I think of spring, it does not remind me of your...
Greetings!
ReplyDeleteReally liked the puzzle, Annemarie! Swell expo, Santa!
Theme right up my alley, as everyone assumed that music would be my field from ages 4 to 17.
I actually put TRIP first, but in the back of my mind, supposed that I would have to change it!
Cheers!
AnonT@9:26
ReplyDeleteI really wish you hadn't mentioned that about Argyle . . .
Argyle - I had no idea Regretsy had shut down. Thanks for that interview, though!
ReplyDeleteBillG - Just so you know, I forwarded a photo of our dogwoods to your email. Not sure if you auto delete emails with attachments from unknowns.
ReplyDeleteFun speed run today. Loved Ohno on DWTS. Wish he was still able to compete in speed skating. Seems like a really neat young man.
Argyle - Enjoyed the Idle interview. Reminded me that Clay Aiken was cast in NY version of Spamalot.
CED - The iThingy can be a PITA (pain in the arse - what I meant to type the 3rd post - sorry for the image Lucina!) but, I found with a Bluetooth keyboard, blogging is do-able. Also, once you find your link-nugget, press down in the "bar" and wait-for-it... copy and then paste when ready. If I had anything cute to link, I would.
ReplyDeleteTTFN (TA-TA for now) BTW, Marti - I support the org too, I like DW's too much not to.
Cheers, -T
kjinkc, nope, I got the dogwood photo just fine. It's nice to see those lovely trees in bloom again.
ReplyDelete