Theme: "Close Encounters" - ET is added to each theme answer.
24A. Pendant impervious to little hands? : CHILD-PROOF LOCKET. Childproof lock.
37A. Demonstrates anti-boxing sentiment? : PICKETS A FIGHT. Picks a fight. We also have 115D. Ref's decision : TKO
57A. iPod holders? : APPLE JACKETS. Apple Jacks.
79A. Pinocchio plug-in? : SOCKET PUPPET. Sock puppet.
98A. Cross between a hound and a zebra? : STRIPED BASSET. Striped bass.
114A. Nod off during cocktail hour? : SLEEP IN THE BUFFET. Sleep in the buff.
3D. Promote "Pudd'nhead Wilson"? : MARKET TWAIN. Mark Twain.
71D. Tussaud's tribute to the Bolshoi? : BALLET OF WAX. Ball of wax.
Another simple and elegant theme from Melanie, who's very fond of letter addition theme.
Her grids are very much like Gail's, super smooth and clean. Nothing splashy, and you won't encounter any unfair crossings.
Across:
1. Utmost reach : ACME. Shout-out to Andrea Carla Michaels.
5. AT&T Pebble Beach National, e.g. : PRO-AM. Started by Bing Crosby.
10. Ship that sailed to Colchis : ARGO
14. It can be baled : STRAW
19. Buyer's aid : LOAN. I was thinking of CART.
20. Icon on many romance novel covers : FABIO
21. Mess (up) : GOOF
22. Pitch with force : HEAVE
23. Clothesline, for one : CORD
27. Doctor with a losing plan : ATKINS. Atkins diet. What's hot now? Paleo?
29. Prominent periods : ERAS
30. Fades : WITHERS
31. Lamentation of Christ work : PIETA
32. Navy captain's insignia : EAGLE
35. Trial versions : BETAS
36. __ scan : PET
41. __-faced : TWO. And 101. Crab leg count : TEN. And 106A. Undivided : AS ONE.
44. Laborious effort : TRAVAIL
46. Pitman user : STENO. Got via crosses. No idea what Pitman is.
47. Bit of deception : TRAP
48. "Lady Jane Grey" playwright : ROWE. Got via crosses also. Nicholas Rowe.
50. Pretentious : ARTSY
52. Onetime : OLD
53. Enterprise helmsman, to Kirk : MR SULU
55. South American slitherer : ANACONDA. Great fill.
60. Descendant : SCION
61. Aching : SORE
63. Currency of Liechtenstein : FRANC
64. Book cover? : PEN NAME. Lovely clue also.
67. Sarah Palin's birthplace : IDAHO
69. It may be full of ash : WOOD BIN
74. Swiss cultural city : BASEL.Roger Federer's hometown.
76. Scoundrels : CURS
78. Dealer's offer : LEASE
84. Didactic stories : PARABLES
87. Gracious : POLITE
88. Wish undone : RUE
89. SeaWorld orca : SHAMU
91. Some are full-bodied : ALES. Been a long time since I had any ale.
92. Weekend Prep brand : IZOD. I already had ?ZOD in place.
93. Florida Aquarium city : TAMPA
95. Error remnant : ERASURE
97. Thing to rally over : NET. Tennis or badminton.
104. Low tide sight, often : SHOAL
105. Significant strides : LOPES
108. Kandahar currency : AFGHANI
111. Water sports equipment : SKIS
113. Beams : SHAFTS
119. Hostage situation acronym : SWAT
120. Guideposts co-founder : PEALE. Not familiar with Guideposts.
121. Made laboriously, with "out" : EKED
122. Buster? : NARCO
123. Chief greeting : HAIL
124. Manorial workers of old : SERFS
125. Shower supports : RODS
126. Put an ear to the door, say : SNOOP. Vivid image.
127. Semi bar : AXLE
Down:
1. Yokum family creator : AL CAPP. My very first fill. But the whole upper left corner was the last to fall.
2. Jazz trumpeter Williams : COOTIE. Stranger to me.
4. Break up : END IT. Wish we could live in the first month of courtship forever.
5. U.S. Army E-3s : PFCs
6. Sports crowd shout : RAH
7. Japanese closer : OBI
8. Feel wretched : AIL
9. One of 15 million made from 1908 to 1927 : MODEL T
10. Yamuna River city : AGRA
11. Zoo hoppers : ROOS
12. Gunk : GOO
13. U.S. Air Force Song opening : OFF WE GO. Got via crosses also.
14. Fired on : SHOT AT
15. Data recovery experts : TECHs
16. Leaves clearer : RAKE
17. Confidently say : AVER
18. Dips in water : WETS
25. Bear down : PRESS
26. Belarus neighbor: Abbr. : LITH
28. Valley whose welcome sign contains the words "bottled poetry" : NAPA. Easy guess.
32. Holiday cyber-message : E-CARD
33. Japanese dogs : AKITAS
34. Cream alternatives : GELS. Eye cream. Eye gel. Or other skin care products. I was thinking of butter cream.
35. Paper organizer : BINDER
38. One of the Karamazovs : IVAN
39. At the crest of : ATOP
40. Was taken in by : FELL FOR
41. Factual : TRUE
42. Cartoonist Kelly : WALT. Pogo.
43. Orchestra piece : OPUS
45. Some intel : RECON
47. "You're better than that!" : TSK
48. Hoarse sound : RASP
49. Start of a reminiscence : ONCE. When I met Harmon Killebrew long time ago, he said I looked cute in my Vikings cap. So I wear the cap every summer at the flea market. Harmon is gone. My cap is now 14 year old. Both of us are beaten by long hours of sun & dirt.
51. Place for a sale : YARD
53. Vaquero's hand : MANO
54. Longtime soft drink brand : RC COLA
56. How some risks are taken : ON A BET
58. Treaty subject : PEACE
59. Prattle : JAW
62. Valvoline circulator : OIL PUMP
65. Other half : MATE
66. Psychic's claim : ESP
68. Wickiups : HUTS. Got via crosses. I did not know the meaning of Wickiups.
70. Refuse admission to : DEBAR
72. Dawning words : I SEE
73. Capone nemesis : NESS
75. Pass abroad : EURAIL
77. Few and far between : SPARSE
79. Doctor's specialty? : SPIN. Spin doctor. Great clue.
80. Exude : OOZE
81. Thicken, as cream : CLOT
82. Barnyard youngster : KID
83. Skunk seeking amour : PEPE
85. Sock away : AMASS
86. Sneaky maneuver : RUSE
90. Goodly amount : HEAP
93. Stable VIP : TRAINER. Horse trainer.
94. Ignore the teleprompter : AD LIB
96. Jell-O is its official state snack : UTAH
98. Manipulates : SHAPES. Got via crosses as well. Can you give me an example on how they're equivalent?
99. Singer Braxton : TONI. Her "He Wasn't Man Enough" was blasted everywhere in Hong Kong in 2000.
100. Deck crew leaders : BOSUNS
102. Involve : ENTAIL
103. Settle snugly : NESTLE
104. __ life : SHELF
107. White House daughter : SASHA
108. Deadly reptiles : ASPS
109. Get out of Dodge : FLEE
110. Athlete's stuff : GEAR
111. Lose : SHED
112. Classic canvas shoe brand : KEDS. Endorsed by Taylor Swift.
113. Call it quits : STOP
116. It may oscillate : FAN
117. One way to sway : FRO
118. Prefix with hazard : ECO. Eco-hazard.
C.C.
Greetings!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Melanie and CC!
Cute theme.
No cheats, but took awhile. (OK, I did ask Harv, formerly of Air Force, a quickie early on for the heck of it.)
First theme answer that I filled from partial was SOCKET PUPPET. I helped a lot.
Never heard of COOTIE. Was a struggle.
Bed time!
Cheers!
Not too difficult for me today. I had it half-way filled just on the first pass, and filled in the rest soon after. Not even many missteps. CAT>PET, ENSIGN>MR.SULU, BIO>ECO, SHAW>ROWE. Last fill was BUFFET+FAN/FRO.
ReplyDeleteI'm reminded of an old poem, author unknown, but it wasn't me, I learned it as a child.
Twas in a restaurant that they met —
Romeo and Juliet.
He had no cash to pay the debt,
So Rome-owed what Julie-et.
Here's one from my Muse, who doesn't speak Français any better than I do:
A visitor from out there somewhere
Flew to Earth to tour our sphere.
He gave school a chance,
Learned cooking in France,
Now the ET's known as the Flying Saucier!
Good morning all. I'm early to the party today.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the fun Melanie and C.C.
I got the theme early and that helped the solve. Favourite was SOCKET PUPPET (note the double ET).
BASEL and LIECHTENSTEIN evoked pleasant memories of our trip to Switzerland and Austria. LIECHTENSTEIN is so small but beautiful.
DH had used EURAIL pass on a trip in his younger days but we were on a tour bus.
DH helped with Pebble Beach and Valvoline clues today. I guessed or used perps for ROWE and COOTIE (there's a name that would prompt a lot of schoolyard teasing!).
I remembered Norman Vincent PEALE's inspirational writings in Guideposts. My aunt was a secretary who knew PITMAN shorthand. A lost art now and unnecessary with modern technology.
She manipulates (SHAPES) the clay to do her artwork.
Have a great day!
Morning, all!
ReplyDeleteFigured out the theme early on and that let me throw down some of the theme answers with little help from the perps, such as SLEEP IN THE BUFFET and STRIPED BASSET. Others took more help, but they were generally easy enough to get.
The one exception was SOCKET PUPPET, which just would not come to me. In fact that whole section ended up being my Waterloo. I had (and just wouldn't relinquish) PEP instead of NET at 97A and just couldn't think of a the "weekend prep" brand. Add to that my inability to think of MATE, and my doom was complete. I finally turned on the red-letter help to discover that PEP was incorrect, and after that I was was able to muddle through with no more assistance.
The second hardest spot was up in the NW, where I just couldn't think of ACME even after getting A_M_. AIMS? ALMS? The fact that COOTIE was completely unknown to me didn't help things. I finally guessed END IT for 4D, and that was enough to turn the light bulb on.
Other minor hiccups included SHINES for SHAFTS and SCARCE for SPARSE, but nothing too bad. Overall, a very fun puzzle.
Good morning!
ReplyDeleteAfter LOCK, PICK, MARK and JACK, I figured the K was part of the theme. That made getting the rest of 'em a bit harder. My Prefix with hazard" started out as HAP. Still, it all came together in good Sunday time. Thanks, Melanie and C.C.
DW always wears KEDS as walking shoes. I prefer New Balance. Her shoes last a few months. Mine last several years.
Stupid question: Why is FABIO on many romance book covers? Do many writers fantasize about him? Does he own a publishing company? I don't get it. Or maybe FABIO isn't a person?
desper-otto- I love your answer for hazard's prefix.
ReplyDeleteNW corner was also the last to fall for me, also.
Favorite was sleeping in the buffet. What an image!
Thanks, C.C. and Melanie.
Should have previewed my comment!
ReplyDeleteGood morning, all!
ReplyDeleteThe theme was OK. Unlike the other theme answers, BALLET OF WAX had a sound change, and SOCKET PUPPET had an extra "ET", which made those feel slightly inelegant to me.
I'm not surprised that you aren't familiar with Guideposts, C.C., because it is an evangelical Christian organization. Norman Vincent PEALE is well-known in the US because of his controversial book "The Power of Positive Thinking."
My favorite clue was "It may be full of ash," for WOOD BIN. Even after I filled it in via perps, I wondered how the fireplace remains would end up in the wood bin? The light finally went on when I reviewed the answers in your write-up. "Oh, ash trees!" Time for another cup of coffee, I think!
Good morning all. 2 visits to finish this puzzle. One around 4 in the morning, and then another assault after a couple more hours of sleep and a cup of coffee.
ReplyDeleteThank you Melanie and thank you CC.
CC, that upper left corner was my last fill as well. It was completely blank for the longest time. AL CAPP was on the tip of my tongue for the longest time. But the second A gave me A-K-NS, which a brother was on for months, so that should have been a no-brainer to fill. ACME and LOAN then fell, and I guessed correctly at COOTIE. Well, maybe not so much guess because the crosses pretty much dictated it.
Mt first theme answer was SLEEP IN THE BAR FLY and of course it was wrong.
Had SCARCE instead of SPARSE, OBOE before OPUS
Leaves clearer... was thinking along the lines of education. RAKE (and my daily DOH!) appeared with CHILD PROOF LOCKET.
Favorite was Doctor's specialty = SPIN. Also like Book cover = PEN NAME. I was thinking for a synonym of review.
I got, but don't understand Semi bar = AXLE. As in a Semi tractor and trailer truck ? If so, how can an axle be described as a bar ? I would think of bar as flat stock, and aren't most axle shafts round ? I guess there are exceptions and some axles could be "bars", but structurally, especially on a semi, wouldn't shafts be stronger ?
The "ET" was easily to guess after I got CHILD PROOF LOCKET, but I multi-bombed all over.
ReplyDeleteFirst bomb was in the NW as I had no idea of who COOTIE Williams, wrote SPLIT for END IT. Wanted A TO Z or ARMS but would have never filled ACME. The next bombout was APPLE DOCKETS instead of APPLE JACKETS. They do sit in a docking station, which holds them. I can't picture a computer or phone being held by a JACK.
WOOD BIN- don't have one but wouldn't that be where the wood is stored BEFORE it is burned and becomes ashes? For 'scoundrels' I wrote CADS and never got CURS due to the fact that 'Wickiups' could have only been filled by perps, which it wasn't.
SLEEP IN THE BUFF-ET- after my ten mile bike ride and two mile walk around Audubon Park, I could have easily done that. The newscaster said the weather gauge at Audubon was a new record for July 26- 100 degrees.
As for KEDS, that was the 'in' shoe back in the 1950s. My mother wouldn't but them, so we didn't get to walk around with the little blue tag on the back of the heel.
I see Melanie managed to get Lil Abner by AL CAPP and Pogo and WALT KELLY in the same puzzle. Nice write up C.C.
Marti- the WOOD BIN light never turned on for me until I just read your comment.
ReplyDeleteThe Week in Review: M 5:13 T 5:30 W 9:36 T 9:44 F 16:03 S 23:53 S 25:01
ReplyDeleteA rare week where the time-to-solve progressed in the expected order (Sunday taking longer because it's bigger, not necessarily more difficult).
My main snag today was created by pretty confidently putting in COAL BIN. That changed to FOOD BIN (?) before WOOD BIN dawned on me. But it still took longer than it should have to come up with the final fill, the "J" in "JAW".
See y'all next weekend.
iPod jackets
ReplyDeleteDesper-Otto: You don't think FABIO isn't just the handsomest man in the world? What about after I got Goosed?
ReplyDeleteTTP, why in heck is a newly-retired guy up and doing cw's at 4 in the morning?
ReplyDeleteFabio, I'm afraid you're just not my type.
To quote C.C., a smooth, clean puzzle with an elegant theme!
ReplyDeleteMusings
-I learned who Pudd’nhead Jones is
-Surprise (to me) Pebble Beach PRO AM winners
-Do women really ask TRAP questions?
-If I had LEASED my pickup in 2005, I would still be on a LEASE and not have a great pickup with 85,000 miles and no payments
-ERASURE had an, uh, erasure because I had hUnk in for HEAP
-My kids liked being at Cocoa Beach at low tide because they could find HEAPS of these
-I sold my water SKIS when I couldn’t find a body of water with a big enough slope ;-)
-This colorful AFGHANI bill is worth $16.60
-You have to be grateful for SWAT teams who run toward danger
-Daughter had to END IT with 5 other men before she met the right second husband on match.com
-The real reason why Ford paid his MODEL T workers twice the going wage
-Unfortunate NAPA headlines today
-The punitive treaty of Versailles brought anything but peace
-A SPIN-doctor can manipulate/shape anything his candidate says, especially if said candidate AD LIBS and gets off his talking points
Desper-otto,
ReplyDeleteI definitely had no place to go, and nothing to get ready for in the predawn hours, but a cramp in the right leg calf and tarsal bone pain in the left foot weren't going to let me sleep. Took an ibuprofen and waited for it to kick in...
I rethought my definition of bar. Not necessarily flat stock. Thought of chin up bar and weightlifting bar... So I guess an axle can be a bar...
While it is true that most semi axles are hollow tubes, there is one axle that is almost always a bar. The front axle (steering axle) is an I-bar.
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed today's theme. Lots of fun.
ReplyDeleteCHILDPROOFLOCKET went in quickly, and after that, the others weren't hard to figure out. I liked the double ET in SOCKETPUPPET.
The SW was the last to fill because I had SPLIT instead of ENDIT and I did not know COOTIE. Once I figured 1A was ACME, I corrected my error, and it came together.
FABIO was always known for his flowing mane of hair. His physique matched that of the numerous descriptions of the heros/sex symbols in the books. Women went crazy over him. Frankly, not my type.
I remember wearing KEDS sneakers in the 50's and 60's. This was an example of a brand name that actually deserved its accolades. Their sports shoes and slip-ons were well constructed and very comfortable. My mother washed the sneakers in the machine, and they lasted a long time.
The rain has finally stopped, and the skies are clear and blue. It is a beautiful day and my spirits are lifted.
Until tomorrow folks.
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteThis was a fun solve even though I had a few missteps: scarce/sparse, Pvts/PFCs, oboe/opus, and bio/eco. Wickiups is new to me. Speaking of Pepe Le Pew, my neighbor told me that she was walking her dog late at night on Thursday and the dog alerted her to a Mr. Le Pew sitting on my front door Welcome Mat!
We are in for a heat wave this week with a high Wednesday of 94. I fear the 3 H's are coming back with a vengeance!
DO @ 9:38 - Fabio is not my type, either. Now, Cary Grant and Gregory Peck......well, that's another story. 😈
Thank you Melinda and CC for a Sunday treat.
Have a great day.
Good afternoon everyone.
ReplyDeleteA well-crafted puzzle from Melanie today. Liked the ET ad in. Favorite was BALLET OF WAX.
35d, 46a - BINDER. I've been wearing one since June 9, the date of my ventral hernia repair. Hopefully Doc will allow me to stop using it after tomorrow's visit.
When I was a KID, my dad used a Reaper-and-BINDER to harvest grain. The reciprocating sickle was driven by a PITMAN rod. After cutting the grain stalks, it would bundle them into sheaves which would be then placed in shocks for further drying before they could be threshed.
EAGLE - A Navy captain's rank is shown by an EAGLE collar device when wearing khakis. When in Blues, rank is denoted by 4 half-inch stripes on his/her sleeves, or in whites(men) by similar shoulder board stripes.
Fun puzzle and fun theme. I guess I like letter add-ons and letter substitutions. Didn't expect two added ETs in SOCKET PUPPET so I had a hard time solving that one. First gimme was AL CAPP. One big GOOF was to enter SPLIT instead of END IT. Another goof was to enter SMILES instead of SHAFTS. Finally had to turn on red letters to discover that PEP, AIMS, and the aforementioned SMILES and SPLIT were wrong.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, tried the Atkins diet about 15 years ago and loved it. My wife, however, hated it, even though she was not on it. Her reasons for hating it included (1) that she didn't like the doctor's personality, (2) that I got the idea for it from my sister (which is factually incorrect), and (3) that she didn't like preparing different meals for herself and me.
I posted about two hours ago but never realized until now that it didn't go through. Anyway, it was an apology to Melanie for thanking, not her, but Melinda, whomever she may be. Mea Culpa, Melanie. 😇
ReplyDeleteThis was an enjoyable exercise. Took some time and a number of wags, but no major hangups other than the oft mentioned scarce for sparse. Didn't care for the stray ET on puppet, but it's only a minor nit. 'twas the Bassett that straightened that out.
ReplyDeleteOur menu this evening includes new potatoes. I just dug a single plant that yielded 5 1/2 lbs and of 9 taters, the largest tipped the scales at 1 1/2 lbs. We have over 40 plants yet to dig. I think we're gonna need a bigger boat.
Thank you Melanie and CC.
ReplyDeleteWith the exception of a couple of obscurities left blank, I view this one as a victory. Nailed the North from the get-go, then danced around the board the rest of the day until I could deem it as good.
I too anguished over SOCKET PUPPET. My first reaction upon reveal was a bit on the frustrating side. When I calmed down I viewed it more as a clever misdirection.
Loved socket puppet.
ReplyDeleteI looked for KET words for a while until basset showed up. Fun theme.
/lurk mode off...
ReplyDeleteAve Joe - Jaws reference re: potaToEs in land-locked NE - LOL priceless. You made my day. Thanks.
/resume lurk
Pitman shorthand is a system used by stenographers (46 across)
ReplyDeleteGood Monday afternoon, folks. Thank you, Melanie Miller, for a fine puzzle. Thank you, C.C., for a fine review.
ReplyDeleteStarted this Sunday morning. Ran out of time and went to a Cubs game, where they lost 11-5 against the Phillies.
Then went to Drill practice and came home and looked at the puzzle again, but could not finish. Went to bed.
Got up today and went to church to help count the offering. Came home and hit the puzzle. Finally finished it. It was an excellent puzzle. Really enjoyed it. However, not too easy.
Got CHILD PROOF LOCKET early on, but that did not give me the theme. Later on SLEEP IN THE BUFFET gave me the theme. Then I saw the rest of them as I got them.
Tried SPLIT for 4D. Fixed that to END IT later on.
Tried WEAKENS for 30A. Fixed that to WITHERS after a bit.
Tried CADS for 76A. Fixed that to CURS after a while.
Tried WHIP for 81D. Fixed that to CLOT after some perps. Needless to say I have a bunch of inkblots.
Liked SCION. A word seldom used.
Anyhow, since it is Monday and nobody will probably read this, I am signing off. See you on Tuesday.
Abejo