22A. "... you've repaired planes for civilian pilots, but can you __?" : SERVICE ACES
34A. "... you've made indie films, but can you __?" : DIRECT HITS
40A. "... you've made decorative bowls, but can you __?" : FASHION PLATES
69A. "... you've conned small-time dealers with your forgeries, but can you __?" : SNOW FENCES
74A. "... you've monitored planets with your telescope, but can you __?" : TRACK STARS
100A. "... you've coached gymnasts, but can you __?" : TRAIN SPOTTERS
107A. "... you've run dining rooms, but can you __?" : HANDLE BARS
125A. "... you've written non-theatrical prose, but can you __?" : SUPPLY LINES
Notice that the first nouns all become verbs, the second nouns all change meaning drastically: tennis shots become fighter pilots, bomb hits to movie hits, clotheshorses to dinner plates, etc. Very consistent.
Train spotters is a new word to me. Google shows they're just train buffs.
Across:
1. Join the cast of : ACT IN
6. Apt. listing unit : BDRM (Bedroom)
10. Golden __ : AGER
14. Biblical verb : DOST
18. Bara of the silents : THEDA. Nicknamed "The Vamp".
19. Exonerate : CLEAR
20. Judicious : SAGE
21. Sundance's sweetie __ Place : ETTA
24. One guilty of disorderly conduct? : SLOB. Ha ha.
25. Slightly : A TAD
26. Quasimodo's love : ESMERALDA. Great fill.
27. Trendy greeting : CIAO. Why "trendy"?
29. "The Optimist's Daughter" Pulitzer winner Welty : EUDORA
31. Biblical beast : ASS
32. Some Miles Davis groups : OCTETS
36. Govt. loan agency : SBA
37. Web page standard : HTML. Woo hoo, Misty, you rock!
39. Game show host : EMCEE
46. Lightweight hats : PANAMAS
50. It may be restricted : AREA
51. Artsy Manhattan neighborhood : SOHO
52. Latin clarifier : ID EST
54. Desert trial : N TEST. Some old North Koreans still can't believe that Chinese eat rice any time we want. During the Great Leap Forward when tens of millions of people died of famine, many Chinese escaped to North Korea for food.
55. Derring-do, e.g. : DEEDS
57. Disciplined, in a way : FINED
59. Many a Prado painting : GOYA
61. Windy City rail initials : CTA. Chicago Transit Authority.
62. Longtime Pro Bowl site : OAHU
64. Closer's stat : SAVES
66. B vitamin used to treat high cholesterol : NIACIN
76. Sparkly strands : TINSEL
77. Rhone tributary : SAONE
79. Standstill : HALT
80. Theater chain letters : AMC
81. "__ bigger than a breadbox?" : IS IT
83. Sprain site : ANKLE. My grandma used to rub hot alcohol on sprained ankle.
86. Like some coincidences : EERIE
90. Fairway adjoiner : ROUGH
93. Nike competitor : ASICS. According to Wiki, the name is an acronym for the Latin phrase anima sana in corpore sano: which translates as "a healthy soul in a healthy body".
95. Lang. of Livorno : ITAL
97. Kind : SORT
98. Cilium, to the layperson : EYELASH. Cilium sounds like a drug.
103. Tuckered out : ALL IN
105. Like falling off __ : A LOG
106. Frat letters : NUS
111. Thickets : COPSES
114. Actor Daniel __ Kim : DAE
117. Was crazy about : ADORED
118. Greeted the judge : ROSE
120. Prospector's disappointment : FOOL'S GOLD. Another sparkly fill.
122. Actress Delany : DANA. She made a puzzle for the NYT a long while ago.
123. "Oh, nuts!" : DANG
127. Spellbound : AGOG
128. Early role for Ronny : OPIE
129. Takes the Black Friday plunge : SHOPS. Tried once. Not fun at all. So rushed.
130. Sorbonne enrollee : ELEVE
131. Melanie's "Working Girl" role : TESS
132. Drive, for one : GEAR
133. Catch a glimpse of : ESPY
134. Pittsburgh product : STEEL
Down:
1. Between ports : AT SEA
2. Fischer's forte : CHESS
3. Contract conditions : TERMS
4. "If only __ known ... " : I'D'VE
5. African capital on its own river : NAIROBI. Vibrant night lights.
6. Ice skate part : BLADE
7. Summer Olympics event : DECATHLON
8. Actress Charlotte : RAE
9. "Happy Days" mom, to Fonzie : MRS C
10. Very, in music : ASSAI
11. In quantity : GALORE
12. Id controller : EGO
13. The first Mrs. de Winter, in fiction : REBECCA. The second one has no name. That was a scary movie.
14. Tie : DEAD HEAT
15. 10th-century emperor : OTTO I. First of four Holy Roman Emperors. Then the House of Otto decided to move to Roman Forest, Texas!
16. Get cracking : START
17. "Yay me!" shouts : TADAs
19. Breton or Gael : CELT
23. Chocolate trees : CACAOS. I bought a bag of cocoa nibs out of curiosity. Then I ground them into cocoa powder.
28. Was in a jam? : IDLED
30. Sch. in Knoxville : U TENN
33. Penn, e.g.: Abbr. : STA
35. Insincere, as a promise : EMPTY
36. Sunny-day shapes : SHADOWS. Awfully cold the past two weeks, thankfully Sun has been visiting us daily.
38. Crete's highest elev. : MT IDA
40. Hula hoops, say : FAD
41. "__ we good?" : ARE
42. Spot : SEE
43. Party-pooperish : NO FUN
44. Honor society letter : PHI
45. "Turn the Page" rocker : SEGER. Also 60. "Diana" singer : ANKA
47. Hajji's destination : MECCA
48. Up and at 'em : ASTIR
49. Kenton and Getz : STANs
53. Cubs' all-time home run champ : SOSA. Shunned by the Cubs these days.
56. Burglar's challenge : SAFE
58. Exxon, formerly : ESSO
63. Prefix with port : HELI
65. Powerful engine : V TEN
67. Man, but not woman : ISLE. Isle of Man.
68. Swears to : ATTESTS
69. Rubberneck : STARE
70. Spock portrayer : NIMOY
71. Well-timed : ON CUE
72. Forensic detectives, for short : CSIs
73. Take the loss : EAT IT
75. Chintzy : CHEAP
78. Like Willie Nelson vocals : NASAL. Boomer listens to his "On the Road Again" often.
82. Indian title : SAHIB
84. Michael Jackson compilation album : KING OF POP
85. Many OCS grads : LTS
87. Salmon-to-be : ROE. I enjoyed TTP and Yellowrock's continued miso and miso soup discussions. Dashi too.
88. Discount abbr. : IRR
89. Some "X-Files" characters : ETs
91. Fancy threads : GLAD RAGS
92. Oscar winner Berry : HALLE
94. Unrefined : CRASS. My Dashi is very unrefined, just dried anchovies, but good enough to make a simple Ramen noodle broth. No appetite for miso soup these days.
96. Remote : LONELY
99. Iditarod team member : SLED DOG. This race might end soon.
101. Winter Games org. : IOC
102. Grapples : TUSSLES. Next year I'm getting the flu shot.
104. Whence Aslan : NARNIA
107. Went after : HAD AT
108. Saw : ADAGE
109. Taboos : NO-NOs
110. NFL commissioner Goodell : ROGER. Powerful guy.
112. Flanders Fields flower : POPPY
113. Beethoven's fifths? : SOLs. Got via crosses.
114. Beneficiary : DONEE. Spell check does not like this word.
115. Naproxen brand : ALEVE. Heal quickly, Chairman Moe!
116. Ford finned flop : EDSEL. All alliterative.
119. In __: existing : ESSE
121. Snazzy coating : GILT
124. Barbary beast : APE
126. Hesitant speaker's sounds : UHs
Hello Puzzlers -
ReplyDeleteSmooth solve today, just a few unknowns. Caught on to the theme idea early, and as C.C. points out, it’s quite consistent. Nice work!
Seriously cold around here. I want this over with.
Hi Y'all! Difficult but fun puzzle, thanks, Pancho. Clever and amusing theme which I caught onto with the first theme entry I was able to fill: FASHION PLATES. Favorite was HANDLE BARS. The title at the Mensa site was obscured and no help. Sure didn't look like Resume'.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable expo, C.C., thanks. Interesting about Chinese going to N. Korea for food. I don't like the sanctions that help starve people today.
Last to fill was the AGER/ASSAI/DIRECT crosses. Had SAGE & CIAO but not GALORE or REBECCA. Finally got SLOB then remembered REBECCA (I read that book several times years ago.). Had trouble with HTML & IDLED -- the clues didn't translate to those for me.
NAIROBI: had to wait on perps. Didn't know SAONE or ASICS -- never remember that brand. Interesting translation, C.C.
I haD before I'D'VE. Have isn't necessary in that and just made it harder. Oh well, Sunday isn't EASY even if the Commodores said it was the other day.
Good morning everyone.
ReplyDeleteLucina - FLN - WAS - So what white elephant did you come home with?
I know Pancho is a skilled puzzle producer, so this was interesting to work on. Agree with Dudley and PK about solving ease. Didn't know ASICS. The NW seemed more difficult than the rest of it.
AT SEA - We would simply say "underway". Destroyers' unofficial motto is "Haze Gray and Underway".
ROUGH's kin are German - Rau; L. German - Ruuc
-18º F. here this morning.
A nubile Nubian from NAIROBI
ReplyDeleteOn her left was as flat as young OPIE!
What was EERIE and odd,
And left one AGOG,
Was her right ROSE once won a trophy!
{B+.}
ReplyDeleteGood morning!
ReplyDeleteI liked Pancho's puzzle, even though I labored to produce a double DNF. Is CIAO really a "greeting?" -- is it like "aloha," used for hello and goodbye? Tried ISERE before SAONE perped in. What did me in was the "closer's stat." I had SALES. LTEN did look weird. And I misread "Greeted" as "Greet," so I had RISE where ROSE needed to be. Heck, it could just as easily be Goodell Riger as Goodell Roger.
Feeling better, C.C.? I agree that "cilium" sounds like a drug, probably on the same shelf as "See Alice." BTW, thanx for the shoutout. When I go incognito I tell people I live in Foster Manor instead of Roman Forest.
Good morning. Thank you Pancho Harrison and thank you CC.
ReplyDeletePrior to six or seven years ago, I would very occasionally try to solve a Sunday puzzle in the Chicago Tribune. It's always been the only day we get a newspaper. One day I got really really close. That's the day I went online to look for the answer and found CC's wonderful blog. I'm pretty sure it was one of Pancho's Sunday puzzles that led me here. Thank you both !
CTA - I think I woke up at 25 or 6 to 4. Waiting for the break of day.
GLAD RAGS and handbags - Rod Stewart
Bonnie and DELANeY - Never Ending Song of Love
SEGER - Turn the Page - "On a dark and LONELY highway, east of Omaha..." He was somewhere in Iowa.
Chintzy - CHEAP Trick - Aint That a Shame
Paul ANKA - Eso Beso
Michael Jackson - KING OF POP - Beat It
Willie Nelson - NASAL - You Were Always On My Mind
Miles Davis groups - OCTETS - I'll go with Spencer. I'm a Man.
Beethoven's fifths - SOLs - Cute.
Very, in music - ASSAI
Man but not woman had to be corrected from maLE to ISLE. Also, awake to ASTIR. Thank you NIACIN.
Disorderly conduct - SLOB - Loved it !
Couldn't recall Cunningham for MRS-, and the second A in ASSAI, so my trendy greeting was wagged as HI HO. One wrong cell yesterday. Two today. I'm regressing.
First morning in the teens since Christmas Eve. Warmer weather ahead.
Hello fellow X-word LONELY solvers with nothing better to do on a warming (finally) Sunday morning. Pancho's Puzzle had a neat theme but after SERVICE ACES the rest of the theme fills were NO FUN because they were too easy. IMHO. I didn't like the ID'VE fill but it was necessary. Since the saying is "if only I HAD known", not I HAVE known it would'VE made more sense. The only other changes were RAPT to AGOG and EAGER to ASTIR- those 'A' words
ReplyDeleteDoesn't snow down here but SNOW FENCES was easily guessable. REBECCA de Winter, DANA Delany and Melanie's TESS were my only unknowns. I only know of GLAD RAGS through an old Rod Stewart song, "Glad rags and Handbags".
STEEL- there's not much (if any) steel produced in Pittsburgh these days.
C.C., it's hard to believe anybody would flee to N. Korea for anything but politically induced starvation will force your hand. Great Leap Forward translation- let's see how many of our own citizens we can kill, those two lovable guys Mao & Stalin.
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteThis was a very enjoyable solve with some chewiness but lots of good fill, as CC pointed out. Imagine my surprise at seeing Theda after just mentioning her at yesterday's Vamps entry. Had Rule/Ager, Hast/Dost, and Sledder/Sled Dog. Narnia was slow in emerging as I saw Whence Asian instead of Aslan. Noticed Roe-Rae and VTen and UTenn. I'm not familiar with Asics and Decathlon always wants a second A before "thon." I don't get the connection of Spotters to Gymnastics. My favorite themer was Fashion Plates because it is such a familiar expression and conjures up a precise image. (One of my sisters is a fashion plate, personified. I refer to her house as Macy*s East; no matter what accessory or jewelry or type of clothing or shoes you might need to borrow, she has it!)
Thanks, Pancho, for a smooth, satisfying Sunday diversion and thanks, CC, for the always-appreciated commentary. Hope you are feeling better.
Thanks, also, to Anon T and Big Easy for answering my question about the Spectre and Meltdown issue.
We're supposed to start a warming trend tomorrow, I think, and reach the 40's by Thursday. How long that relief will last remains to be seen.
Have a great day.
Musings
ReplyDelete-What a hoot with merely two bad cells I should have caught
-These two took turns ACTing IN Roseanne
-CSI’S have CLEARED SOME people on death row
-“And now, the great seer, soothsayer, and SAGE, Carnac the Magnificent”
-TINSEL is fine, but this is no longer legal
-EERIE coincidence - Mark Twain was born during the 1835 Halley’s Comet and died when it returned in 1909
-A very funny story about SORT of a person
-My uncle said when a carrier that had been AT SEA for months came into port, it put a lot of, uh, lonely sailors on the streets of San Diego
-If you watch The Crown, you know Queen Elizabeth II was in a primitive part of Kenya when she heard her father had died and she was now Queen
-Unquestionably the most famous DECATHON winner of all time
-On Big Bang TheorySheldon was proud he had a restraining order from NIMOY
-Commissioner Goodell is dealing with many attendance & viewership issues
HELI, MRSC, and GOYA(s) are all in today's NY Times puzzle as well
ReplyDeleteRon Howard connects OPIE to MRSC
HG, Twain died in 1910, but the coincidence is correct
Katharine Ross' ETTA Place was Sundance's sweetie, but Paul Newman played Butch, Robert Redford played Sundance
ASSAI in a musical score means "enough." "Very" is MOLTO.
ReplyDeleteIM, I recall that when we used the trampoline in gym class, classmates were always posted around the perimeter as "spotters." Not sure that's what's meant in this puzzle, but that's what I took it to mean.
ReplyDeleteC.C., I hope you feel better and have fully recovered. Thank you for today's illumination. Much of the theme's nuances eluded me though some made me laugh.
ReplyDeleteParts of this grid were difficult for me and others swimmingly easy. We read EUDORA Welty's works in lit class. THEDA, ETTA, ANKA and STANS are well known in CW lingo, but I couldn't recall the spelling of SEGER, went with SEGAR, no VTEN, and closer's stat is meaningless to me so FIW there.
I liked ALEVE crossing ELEVE which I barely managed to recall. And like d-o, SALES seemed safe. I also read Aslan as Asian so NARNIA came as a surprise.
Those Barbary APES in Gibraltar are frisky and like to pester tourists. Luckily there are FENCES which keep them at a distance.
Thanks to Pancho Harrison for this Sunday morning workout.
Sptiz:
My white elephant gift (the second one as the first was stolen) is a pretty set of four glasses trimmed with gold stripes. Believe me it could have been worse! The funniest and most sought gifts were twin toilet plungers (each brought by two different people) decorated with a face on one side. Also popular were a deep fryer, automatic wine opener and assorted games. So much fun.
Have a lovely day, everyone! We're going to the movies to see The Post.
Lots of musical stuff today. The DW of the owner of Tiffin, the brand of motor home that will take me south later this week, is a musician. In tribute he named a line of RVs "Allegro". I have an Allegro Phateon, and there is also an Allegro Breeze and the beautifully named Allegro Bus. The only other music terms I know are "rest" and "clef". My RV doesn't have a V10; it has a six-banger Caterpillar diesel. Not as much horsepower but a lot more torque.
ReplyDeleteBut like TTP I thought of the group renamed "Chicago" under pressure from the "real" CTA. But GLADRAGS made me think of The Four Seasons, not Rod Stewart. And I'm not convinced that Nebraska and Iowa are two distinct states (kind of like Delaware / Maryland and Kentucky / Tennessee: when the gas station attendant gives you a road map it has both so-called states on one handout).
But I did know U TENN was in Knoxville. They are the only team to have beaten U KY three consecutive times in their home arena in the Coach Calipari era, including last night's drubbing (sniff).
I had one bad cell and should have known better for both crossing words. I had TeNSEL x NeMOY.
I confess that I didn't recognize Pancho Harrison, a memorable name. I saw "Norris" as an anagram in the last six letters and thought it was one of Rich's tricks. I apologize to Pancho; you created a fine Sunday puzzle. And thanks to CC for all you do, including today's coverage.
Woohoo, great to have you back, C.C., and hopefully feeling all well again. And how sweet to get a shout-out from you. I loved this puzzle and got the entire west and much else before I had to start cheating a bit. But found it a lot of fun, even with some unknowns like SAONE and ASICS.
ReplyDeleteCharming how often OPIE appears in puzzles these days. But like Billocohoes, I found it especially cool to see another Ron Howard reference with MRS. C. I hope Ron Howard does the puzzles, but he may be too busy film directing. What a talented fellow from young boy to adulthood.
Great to see a TADA for Ol'Man Keith.
Many thanks for this fun puzzle, Pancho, and your delightful write-up, C.C.
Have a great Sunday, everybody!
So much punny fun, PANCHO. Interesting review,CC.
ReplyDeleteLIU
SPOTTER:
a person who observes or assists a gymnast or weightlifter during a performance or practice in order to minimize the chance of injury to the gymnast or weightlifter.
ASSAI:
(especially as a direction after a tempo marking) very:
"allegro assai"
I haven't seen tinsel in years. Remember when some tree trimmers put it on strand by strand and others just tossed it by the handful. I never liked it and used silver garlands instead.
"If I knew you were comin' I'd 've baked a cake,
baked a cake, baked a cake.
If I knew you were comin' I'd 've baked a cake.
How-ja do. How-ja do, How-ja do."
Notes of the scale are do re mi fa SO (or sol) la ti do. SOL is the fifth one.
FIR, not very difficult today. NTEST took a while. ASICS was ESP.
It seems to me, GLAD RAGS belongs to my parents' generation.
Sounds like fun, Lucina. Did you have a Three Kings Cake, too? Our priest was Mexican American and used to bring one to church on Epiphany. There was a baby Jesus doll hidden in it.
I thought king cakes were a Mardi Gras tradition. I've only seen them in NOLA.
ReplyDeleteDO and YR ~ Thanks for clearing up the "Spotters" question. I deduced the meaning but had never heard it in those contexts, probably because I'm neither a weightlifting nor gymnastics fan. Baseball and football are my favorite spectator sports. Never got interested in watching tennis, basketball, or, least of all, hockey.
ReplyDeleteLucina, I'd be most interested in your review of "The Post".
DO, In this area the Latinos celebrate Three Kings Day on January 6 and typically use this cake. I read that this is true in many areas where other Latinos gather. Just last night I was surprised to discover for the first time the NOLA Mardi Gras tradition.
ReplyDeletethree kings cake
YR, thanks for the three kings link. I had never heard of the pastry or the tradition. In my ute I thought there was a country called "Orientare", as in "We Three Kings of Orientare...". (I had a friend who thought God's name was "Howard", as in "Our father, who art in Heaven, Howard be thy name.")
ReplyDeleteJinx, LOL. I hand an uncle named Harold. When I was really little I thought they sang, hark the Harold angels sing.
ReplyDeleteHello Family!
ReplyDeleteLong time, no comment - and I apologize! The holiday season was crazy between work and family visits but life is calming down a little now. I hope you all fared well through the season and I wish you all a belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
I muddled through the puzzle today but overall enjoyed it. Lot's of fun songs to link. D-Otto came up with more than I did!
Pretty sure I've shared Metallica's version of Turn the Page before
My favorite Bob Seger song today
Willie Nelson always brings tears to my eyes with You Were Always on My Mind
And we can kill two birds with one link letting the KING OF POP sing (Dirty) DIANA
That's all for the day...hoping all is well with you all.
Happy Sunday!
t.
Think this is a bad winter?
ReplyDeleteWhile most people think the 1777-1778 Valley Forge encampment had a bad winter, in reality it was just an average winter. Weather historians agree that the Morristown winter of 1779-1780 was the worst winter of the 18th century. Much worse than this present 21st century winter.
Valley Forge vs. Morristown, NJ
How bad was the winter of 1779-1780?
How bad was it?
Tawnya, you're giving me credit where none is due. It was TTP who came up with that extensive song list.
ReplyDeleteYou know you're getting old and are no longer "with it" when the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo releases its list of performers for this year's rodeo and you only recognize one name. And that one name is a guy who just recently came out of retirement.
I liked this puzzle. As Spitzboov said, Pancho is a skilled puzzle producer. ETTA didn't fool me, and I knew ESMERALDA, but I did not know EUDORA at all. Not sure why CIAO was clued as "trendy." SAJAK had to be changed to EMCEE. Last to fill was the T in NTEST because I had HAST (instead of DOST) so I thought "tie" was going to be HEAD something: maybe headwear? Changing HAST to DOST also cleared up who the 10th-century emperor was. Good puzzle.
ReplyDeleteMissed a lot in this CW. Sundays seem to be getting harder, to me at least.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite was13 D. Rebecca is my most favorite movie of all time. Just don't make them like that anymore.
Hope you all had a good holiday and the best for 2018.
Fun puzzle. Again, I had trouble with the theme. I finished everything OK but if I were responsible for the writeup, I would have had a hard time explaining the theme.
ReplyDeleteTawnya: My favorite Bob Seger song was featured in "Risky Business." It was "Old Time Rock and Roll" if I remember correctly.
Jinx and YR: My father remembered that as a kid, he thought a hymn in church was about somebody named 'Andy.' It was "In the Garden." The chorus goes, "And He walks with me and He talks with me and He tells me I am His own... "
PK FLN -- Ok, it was from yesterday morning 609A.
ReplyDeleteShe wrote "D4: Thumper here usually means 'If you can't say something nice don't say nothing at all.' A quote from Thumper the rabbit in the old Classic "Bambi" movie. What were you trying to say? Not being judgmental just wondering."
PK, At 536A I was doing the best I could to be nice. Now I can add that I had the pleasure of revealing many letters that I needed to complete the CW. Your question prompted me to say this in a nice way. Thank you, and thank others for describing their experiences with the creation.
I have yet to work today's CW, and read the review, and comments, and I have other work that I must do.
Dave 2 busy
Hand up I found this quite challenging! Very clever theme, so it was worth the effort. Thanks for the write-up, CC. Hope you are feeling better.
ReplyDeleteDIRECT HITS was last to fall for me. As noted by Anonymous 11:03AM this musician also was thinking MOLTO for "very". Learning moment ASSAI indeed can mean "very" as well.
That whole region was a challenge: AGER, SAGE, REBECCA, CIAO, DIRECT HITS.
I led a rather long and beautiful hike all day today and when I got home just now I filled that last bit.
Hand up with PK I had I HAD before the weird IDVE. Other unknowns: ESMERALDA, GLAD RAGS, MT IDA, DOST, OTTO I, ETTA, MRS C, THEDA, SAHIB, ROGER, AMC, ASLAN, TESS, DANA. Wow, that is a lot!
I appreciate that "Whence Aslan" is written correctly. Whence means "from where" and it is grating to hear someone say "from whence" to sound high class.
Only know EUDORA because it is the name of the best email program ever written. I still use it. The dominant ones like Outlook are utterly inferior. Frustrating when the mediocre drives out the superior by brute force marketing.
I love this Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) poster that I got the last time I was in Chicago.
"Avoid Street Congestion" it graphically shows as the CTA train whizzes above a traffic jam of cars.
Can someone please explain "SAVES" as clued? I thought it was SALES and a "closer" was someone who closes the sales deal?
From yesterday: Thank you very much AnonymousT and Lucina for the kind words!
49D: Also Stan Freeburg
ReplyDelete<a href="https://youtu.be/jjgxmlw43pw”> Presents the USA. </a>
Love Pancho Harrison puzzles; he was our first.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Pancho and C.C.
In baseball, a closer is a pitcher who is brought into the game late (usually in the 9th inning) to SAVE the game.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy a Pancho Puzzle, and today was no exception.
What Picard said; I only learned of Eudora Welty from using the email program Eudora.
Freezing rain here tonight. Coming home from a party at our son's home in the south suburbs we saw at least 15 accidents on the Veterans Tollway between 159th St and the Stevenson Expressway. And there were still idiots driving 15-20 MPH over the 70 MPH speed limit!
Warmup coming!
Have a good week, all.
Irish Miss:
ReplyDeleteThe Post is splendid!!!! But what else can you expect with Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks in the cast? And actually, the entire cast was really good. Of course, since I lived in that era it was particularly interesting. Meryl and Tom can so artfully BECOME the characters they portray, it's easy to see them as such and watch Katherine Graham (Streep) gradually grow from timid woman who inherited a newspaper, to owner and running it! Tom Hanks of course IS Ben Bradlee.
Thank you WikWak for explaining CLOSER and SAVES.
ReplyDeleteGlad there is another Crossword Corner person who knows how wonderful the EUDORA email program was!
Late to the party. I started to post this afternoon and then life interrupted!
ReplyDeleteStraight-forward solve today. Thanks for the fun Ponch and C.C.
I got the theme. We need SNOW FENCES here with the blowing snow tonight.
NE corner was the last to fall. I had Rita before ETTA.
I wanted WooHoo before TADA but it was too long. CSO to a Cornerite either way!
I smiled at the misdirection for IDLED and ISLE.
Hand up for I Had before IDVE.
I wanted Spy before SEE at 42D but then needed ESPY at 133A.
Toyed with Golden Rule, Gate, Calf, even the too long Globes (which I was watching tonight) before AGER filled the spot. How old is a Golden AGER anyway?
NAIROBI brought back great memories as starting point of safari. I don't see the terrible traffic jams (where we IDLED) or the potholes or the crazy driving in your night-time photo C.C.
Is it a Clecho or a NoNo that slipped through to have Summer Olympic event as a clue at 7D and then IOC as an answer at 101 D.
Welcome back tawnya. I had missed you and thought you must be working extra shifts.
YR, Jinx and Bill G - I remember hearing a joke about "Gladly the cross-eyed bear" from a child-interpreted hymn.
An unusual problem today: the barbarians that run the local paper printed the answer to today's cwd right NEXT to the cwd. All it took was one semi-voluntary look, and all was spoiled.
ReplyDeleteGood Monday morning, folks. Thank you, Pancho Harrison, for a fine puzzle. Thank you, C.C., for a fine review.
ReplyDeleteI finished this late last night in Johnsonburg, PA, with the IPad via cruciverb. Worked out well except it took me a long time to finish. The NE corner took me a long time. Finally figured OTTO was a good guess for the emperor. Had NECK WEAR for 14D. Deleted that. Looked at TIE a different way and DEAD HEAT appeared in my head. Then the rest fell into place. Phew.
Had to change ELEVE to ALEVE. Then the bell rang. TADA!
Theme was very clever. Pancho did a lot of work on that.
Since I am a day late, I will not go on and on. See you Tuesday.
Abejo
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