EEK~!
OR
- where to find a common rodent -
Today's
puzzle consists of three theme fills of two 12- and one 13-letter
spanners, with a 'broken' reveal of 9-letters across the bottom line.
Two 10-letter DOWN answers as well. Not so many names today, but
lots of abbreviations. Some "meh" answers, IMHO, and an unusually
longer than normal Tuesday solve time for me, but we FIR, so....
19. Home of Cinderella Castle: MAGIC KINGDOM - here's the "home" of a certain M. Mouse
36. Unpretentious business: HOLE IN THE WALL - like a local bar, say
54. Pizza/arcade chain founded by Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell: CHUCK E. CHEESE - HuskerG showed us how "Chuck" used to be a RAT; now he's a MOUSE~?
65. With 67-Across, desktop accessories, and a description of 19-, 36-, and 54-Across?: MOUSE
67. See 65-Across: PADS - PADS in the colloquial sense of home, crib, abode, castle, etc. - here's my blogging spot and desktop mouse pad....
And Away We Go~! ( see 39D.)
5. __ shift: DAY
8. Venomous African snake: MAMBA
13. "Just doing my best": "I TRY"
14. Rough cut: DEMO - meh. I suppose a raw recording of one's music~? And a semi-abbr.
15. Is in neutral: IDLES
16. Eye lubricant: TEAR
17. Diamond dynasty: ALOU - baseball diamond....knew this from doing crosswords
18. Earns: MAKES
22. Standard: USUAL
23. Matches, in fashion: GOES - as in "that bag GOES well with that dress"
28. Gambling initials: OTB - Off-Track Betting - abbr. #1
31. Dollhouse dishes: TEA SETS - oh, those doll house dishes....uh, never mind....
35. Top out: PEAK - think hit songs; this one PEAKed at #1 the year I was born
40. Veal __: Italian entree, briefly: PARMesan - abbr. #2
41. "The way things stand ... ": "AS IT IS..."
42. From Moscow: RUSSIAN - I blogged the Nov 1st, 2023 puzzle with Moscow, IDAHO - not Russian
45. Did not get up: SAT - meh. Stayed Seated, maybe
46. Orchestra home: PIT
49. "Can't Get It Out of My Head" gp.: ELO - Electric Light Orchestra - abbr. #3
50. Wharton degs.: MBAs - Master of Business Administration - abbr. #4
52. Computer problem: CRASH - meh - I think a problem could cause a crash...
60. Lie low: HIDE
61. One of 14 in a pro's golf bag: CLUB - oops, I had IRON - can you imagine the pitch on a 14-iron~?
62. __ buddy: BOSOM - TV show with Tom Hanks, way back in 1980
63. Passport fig.: ID No. - meh. - abbr. #5
64. Sheltered at sea: ALEE - crossword staple
66. Ad Council ad: PSA - Public Service Announcement - abbr. #6
DOWN:
1. Acid or base indicator: LITMUS - Dah~! I tried Ph TEST first
2. "Relax, soldier": AT EASE
5. Sandwich shop: DELI
6. "__ Us": multiplayer logic and deduction game: AMONG - 3/5ths perps, 2/5s WAG
7. Encouraging message: YOU GOT THIS
8. Brunch drink: MIMOSA
9. "House of Gucci" actor Driver: ADAM - he played Darth Vader's grandson, Kylo Ren
11. Spelling meet: BEE
12. Braying animal: ASS
14. Terr. that became two states: DAKota - abbr. #8
20. Replicant: CLONE - two blogging puzzles in a row with this word
21. Poor grade: DEE
24. Come off like old paint: PEEL - I had CHIP
25. Listing abbr.: ET. AL. - abbr. #9
26. "Go find out!": ASK
29. Tetra- minus one: TRI - four, less uni = three
30. Dried fruit in trail mix, perhaps: BANANA CHIP
32. Facial spots: SPAS - Dah~! I had ACNE; a clever clue
37. Thereabouts: OR SO
38. Lyft status: ETA -abbr. #11
39. Glinda or Elphaba of "Wicked": WITCH - the cartoon from which I get "And Away We Go"
40. Kin of ante-: PRE-
43. "Just got back from work!": "I'M HOME~!"
44. __ Dhabi: ABU
46. Rice dish from Valencia: PAELLA
47. Put into circulation: ISSUED
48. Ancient city whose ruins are in Luxor: THEBES
53. Sum up: RECAP
54. Sounds like a dove: COOS
55. Poet __ St. Vincent Millay: EDNA
56. Org chart topper, typically: CEO - the Chief Executive Officer - abbr. #12
57. Watsonx's maker: IBM - technically, an abbr.
58. Sludge: GOO
59. Sch. with a Shreveport campus: LSU - Louisiana State University - abbr. #13
Splynter
For some reason, I didn’t notice the reveal, even after I solved the puzzle, and so the theme remained opaque to me until I came to this Corner. All I can say is “D-oh!” Anyway, other than that I had no real difficulties with this puzzle. FIR, so I’m happy.
ReplyDeleteGood morning!
ReplyDeleteSplynter, you're becoming a regular corner irregular. Well done. This one came together in about the same time as yesterday, and with zero missteps to boot. D-o even managed to get the theme. Thanx for the exercise, Freddie.
MOUSE PAD: Nope. My weapon of choice is a roller-ball mouse.
CRASH: Frequent crashes -- several times per day and often multiple times per hour -- caused me to replace my less-than-two-year-old HP. The itsy 4" x 4" Geekcom is performing well. Fingers crossed.
Actually it's a Geekom -- I was C-ing letters that aren't there.
ReplyDeleteFIR, but erased cobra for MA MBA (not to be confused with Wharton MBAs.)
ReplyDeleteToday is:
NATIONAL LAW ENFORCEMENT APPRECIATION DAY (I back the blue)
NATIONAL STATIC ELECTRICITY DAY (no static at all, FM)
NATIONAL SHOP FOR TRAVEL DAY (how ‘bout them popout-door 737 Max 9 aircraft?)
NATIONAL APRICOT DAY (people like it – they say it has a peel)
NATIONAL BALLOON ASCENSION DAY (ballooning can be fun, but it has its ups and downs)
In my experience, a DEMO is all shined up and polished, the best one can expect. Now gimme a contract.
"Come off like old paint" sounds like a teen boy bragging to his buddies about his prom date.
Maybe the teen boy made a BOSOM buddy?
I learned everything I know about SYRIA from "Aleppo Gary" Johnson.
FLN: If you hadn't have taken Algebra I and II, how could have you understood Trig and Calculus?
Thanks, Freddie, for a fun romp. And thanks to Splynter for another great fill-in. Do folks in your neck of the woods refer to FOILs like we do FOIAs here?
FIR. I agree with Splynter, there were too many abrieviations. That made this Tuesday puzzle a tad crunchy for my liking.
ReplyDeleteThe theme was clever, but I didn't see it until the entire puzzle was done. After staring at it a while, I had my "aha" moment and saw the light.
Cute theme with the split reveal at the bottom- I didn't fully get the HOLE-IN-THE-WALL until Splynter's recycled mouse cartoon as it related to the theme. CHUCK E. CHEESE got a double CSO this week.
ReplyDeleteI thought more of the Wild West gangs' hideout in Wyoming which became the name for Paul Newman's summer camps for kids with illnesses , funded by the proceeds of his salad dressing and other foods
https://www.holeinthewallgang.org/about/Founder-and-History/
Thanks Splynter and Freddie -
I have to head to work- but with more bad weather today it will be a day of cancellations. Always shake my head that my 90 yr old patients will still make it with an hour drive and my millenial patient a mile away won't on a day like this.
Took 4:29 today for me to tear through this like Speedy Gonzalez. Or, I did it in (Stuart) Little time?
ReplyDeleteSeemed like a typical Tuesday puzzle. Not much to say about this one either.
Hola!
ReplyDeleteA few wite-out spots are glaring at me but mostly this was an easy rout. I had MUD before GOO and don't recall what before OMB went in there.
MMM. I love PAELLA! That recalls some nice memories of my visit to Spain.
I haven't been to CHUKE E CHEESE in a long time. All the children who had parties there are now grown.
MAMBA reminds me of the dance teacher we had who misused that word in place of MAMBO.
LITMUS was an answer in last night's JEOPARDY game.
I don't know why OMB are gambling initials. Anyone?
Time for me to return to bed.
Have a great day, everyone!
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteThis was a Tuesday level with no unknowns and no w/os, leading to a smooth and quick solve. The cute theme was hidden until the clever reveal, at least to me. The three letter word count (23) was high and, as Splynter mentioned, had a disproportionate number of abbreviations/initialisms.
Thanks, Freddie, and thanks, Splynter, for pinch hitting once again.
FLN
UncleFred, glad to hear from you. So sorry that your cataract surgery was so complicated and painful. Hope you're on the mend!
Have a good day.
Lucina @ 8:11 ~ OTB = Off Track Betting.
ReplyDeleteTuesday puzzles are usually easy so I tried to see how many downs I could fill before looking at any cross clues. I surprised myself, filling over half correctly, only changing ACNE to SPAS for "Facial spots" and FIRS to ELMS for 33D. What a nice puzzle with minimal proper names and NO UNKNOWNS.
ReplyDelete'Matches in fashion'- it depends on the year and 'who' the fashionista in charge says what GOES with what. Me? I don't care.
Nolan Bushnell- Started both ATARI with Pong and CHUCK E CHEESE pizza.
And how many other Cornerites attended 59-D- LSU-Shreveport? I attended the 2nd & 3rd years after it opened and look back and realize how lucky I was. Small class sizes taught by PhDs. No graduate assistant teachers. You couldn't cut class, unlike other campuses with large class sizes. But that was back in the days when the girls wore dresses. I still remember one summer class in organic chemistry when a girl asked the prof if she could wear shorts and he said "I don't care if you come naked". She wore shorts the next day and I think that was the last time I saw a dress on any girl on campus. And it's still that way. The girls wear shorts, slacks, and sometimes pajamas to classes.
Easy FIR. A lot of green paint and meh cluing, IMHO. Loved the Han & Leia 'toon, Splynter!
ReplyDeleteTerrific Tuesday. Thanks for the fun, Freddie and Splynter.
ReplyDeleteI FIRed and saw the rodent theme in good time.
No inkblots, as I waited for perps to confirm my first thoughts.
Cobra is not African; MAMBA perped.
Not BLM today, but the monogram MLK. I think your American holiday is next week.
Perps filled PTS and IBM.
Alternate answer for 3D could have been Bern, but it was too short. Bern is the capital of Switzerland, and als has a medieval astronomical clock, famous for inspiring Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. I must dig out my photos from our Swiss tour.
Wishing you all a great day.
Good Morning! A nice Tuesday puzzle. Thanks, Freddie. Fun theme that came together as I worked my way down the grid. I liked the split reveal at the bottom.
ReplyDeleteI still use a MOUSE with my laptop, but I’ve gotten away from using a designated PAD. I’ll find something with a nubby surface at wherever around the house I’ve taken my laptop. I’ve never liked those square things at the base for fingers. My mouse moves the cursor much quicker and more accurately.
I hit a snag at (TEA) SETS. I had SETS in, then took it out, then put it back in when SPAS appeared. Clever misdirection! My other WO was, like Splynter said, “iron” became CLUB. I know those bags are heavy but 14 irons, plus woods and putter…🤣🤣🤣. What was I thinking!
Thanks, Splynter, for the (53D) RECAP.
Hmm,
ReplyDeleteOvercomes friction = skates, (loses friction=skids...) IMHO
I don't know how I did it, but I managed to screw up which clues went where...
For instance, I came to the Blog to find out why "home of cinderellas castle = hole in the wall?"
I actually had to reload the puzzle and make sure there was no misprint making the clue for 19a apply to 36a
(No, it was just me...)
not the first time today something made me tilt my head...
My son in law was throwing away this oversized mousepad.. I said, I'll take it, I'll find a use for it! Well, I haven't used a mouse pad since mice went from rollerball to laser... a foot wider, and I could have used it as an under pad for jigsaw puzzles you could roll up partially completed. It's been a year now, and I still can't find a dang use for it! Any ideas?
Enjoyed this puzzle, and liked the clues to GOES and ALOU. A nice reminder of Felipe, Jesus and Matty. Thanks Freddie (I like your name, my cat is Freddy).! Splynter - Seeing and hearing TDN evokes a past long gone.
ReplyDeleteFIW by a dumb mistake - momba instead of MAMBA led to Odam instead of ADAM.
One of the abbreviations could have been eliminated by clueing DAK as “Cowboy quarterback” DAK Prescott, even though it is short for Dakota he is called DAK.
Years ago my roommate dated a med student who alleviated stress by applying large canvases with papier mache - colorfully painted strips of paper applied in layers to a canvas. He gave us one and we hung it over a radiator. Sometimes we would come home from work and the heat had cause first layers of the paper to sag down onto the radiator. We would PEEL them off and the new ly exposed strips would give us a whole different painting.
FLN: Many years ago I toyed with learning calligraphy, but the information at the time was that it wasn't something left-handers could do. Since your conversation LN, I looked into it again and saw there are many resources available. Hmmmm, maybe I might try it again. My handwriting has morphed into half cursive, half print. Very readable; revenge to my 1st grade teacher who slapped my hand with a ruler!!
ReplyDeleteEasy Monday and Tuesday puzzles. No problems.
ReplyDeleteThe uncertainty about the path, time table and amount of snow made Sunday and Monday difficult, requiring rearranging schedules on the fly. I was responsible for getting Alan home, rescheduling our monthly floor party here, taking in account that another activity took our time slot. Deciding not to cancel our square dance class which is followed by a dance involved consulting other officers and notifying members and potential guests. The snow was not as quite as bad as expected and it all worked out smoothly. We had one of the biggest turnout of dancers that we have had in some time. Those gate receipts were much needed.
I hope you all stayed safe. This afternoon we are due for a flood with heavy rain and melting snow.
The rebel did not GET UP for the national anthem; he just SAT there.
Overcome friction, reduce friction, lose friction "macht nichts", in my opinion.
If I had one nit it would be Demo.
Gotta run, catching up on yesterday's missed tasks. I am hosting the rescheduled floor party at 3:00.
What a fun theme. I FIR in no time. I wasn’t bothered by the abbreviations.
ReplyDeleteI think MIMOSAs are a terrible thing to do to Champagne.
I enjoyed Splynter’s nice recap.
This one came together much faster than yesterday, which was my first attempt at a CW in almost two months, and which I had to cheat to fill. Today: so much better, some of the mental cobwebs cleared out I guess, so I managed to FIR in much better than usual Tuesday time (for me), although, as usual, I didn't take the time to figure out the theme; Splynter had to enlighten me. The "MOUSE PADS" clues reminded me of a long ago "Dilbert" cartoon: the pointy-haired-boss calls Ratbert's tech support: "My mouse is at the very edge of my mousepad, and I need to move the cursor further. What do I do?" Ratbert, wagging his tail, says: "You need to buy my jumbo sized mousepad!" Anyway, even though I didn't take the time to see the theme, this was a fun CW, thanx FC. And thanx too to Splynter for 'splainin' it, and for the terrific write-up.
ReplyDeletePuzzling thoughts:
ReplyDeleteFIR but with a couple of W/O's
Very creative puzzle with a clever reveal
Thanks Splynter for your pinch-hitting
I'd like to say this was an easy solve for me, but I would be lying
Fun Tuesday puzzle, not too hard, not too easy, many thanks, Freddie. And I liked your commentary, Splynter--especially the chance to hear the guy sing "Joy to the World."
ReplyDeleteCute to see TEA SETS as the Dollhouse dishes. No small children in the family anymore (grandson is 19) so haven't seen a dollhouse in decades.
Hard to imagine how a banana (I had one for breakfast) could be turned into a "chip".
My desktop is too old-fashioned to have a MOUSE.
Have a great day, everybody.
Musings
ReplyDelete-What a fun puzzle after scooping 7” of ice and snow!
-Some home flippers on HGTV said they are not allowed to use the commercial name for colors of paint they use.
-My friend uses no irons. His CLUBS go up to a 15 wood.
-50% of Canadians live south of North Dakota
-PEELING (removing) wallpaper is a job I would only do for my wife or my daughters!
-A Michigan kicker hit the goal post upright last night and it bounced through
-I remember how ENRAPT I was when I first saw characters on a screen after entering them on a keyboard and seeing an arrow move when I moved this thing they called a MOUSE!
A fun theme and some clever clues.
ReplyDeleteA few too many abbreviated clues IMHO
I had one W-O Acne/Spas
Thanks for a fun Tuesday Freddie
An excellent recap Splynter
…kkFlorida
ReplyDeleteA bit of a HAUL to finish for a Tuesday.
Inkovers: ere/PRE
I’ve finally learnt to stop knee jerk filling cobra. Seems MAMBA is the CW “poisonous snake” du jour. Canada eh, some CWs use asp as a type of cobra found in Egypt (ask Cleopatra) which is in Africa which is…oh never mind 😀
Got to experience the PRAGUE clock on our Danube River tour pre-COVID
Many of my 3 rd generation Syrian American friends discovered that they are actually ethnically Armenian: descendants of massive 18th immigration to ALEPPO.
FGs 3?… Which WITCH is which,“Glinda or Elphaba”? Almost tried “computer” glitch for CRASH but too long….what is a “Watsonx”? And why does IBM make one. (Is Holmes sidekick now a robot?)
IDNO? c’mon…(“Alexa gimme a clue for a nonsense answer”). Using a game I ASSume many of us have never heard of for the answer AMONG seems out there for so early in the week.
Ecdysiast performance…. ATEASE
Ecdysiast performance…..TEASETS
Robbers with rhinitis….THEBES
Not an “encouraging message” from a flu test….YOU GOT THIS
“Don’t dry out your pen”….RECAP
Late to the party.. cuz
Been having daily headaches since the ablation. 🤕 I figured due to adjustment of meds and self limiting . Found out this AM my BP is off the wall. Never been hypertensive.
FLN 👀
S’pose to have cataract surgery. (they are what the eye docs euphemistically call “ripe”) but after reading last nites horror stories think I’ll let them “rot” and fall off by themselves.
If you are playing to the rules of golf, 14 clubs is the limit including woods, irons, and putter.
ReplyDeleteMouse pad. Haha. Funny :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Freddy! MOUSE PADS was cute. Good thing Patti gave us the heads up on CHUCK E CHEESE no longer being a rat.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Splynter for your fun review! Who knows what nefarious things you might get up to with that paint info. Facial spots threw me, too. Thanks for explaining OTB.
Have you heard Taylor Negron's story on The Moth about Three Dog Night? You might like it. It's a classic. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z12ISVpdh60
I've never played golf. 14 clubs sounds like a lot. How many clubs do our Corner golfers carry around?
Hi All!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the fun puzzle, Freddie. Took me a second to think of PAD but the theme was fun.
Thanks, Splynter, for the wonderful recap. Is that Eddie Van Halen's guitar pattern on your MOUSE PAD?
WO: CHUCie CHEESE [oops]
ESPs: EDNA, THEBES
Fav: I'll go with IBM 'cuz I had to lookup WatsonX post solve. #Learning!
Ray-O: Remember IBM's Watson from Jeopardy? Watsonx is the AI off-spring.
FLN - I use basic algebra all the time. E.g., if I have $80 but need $110 how much more money do I need (80+x=110)?
Here's my MOUSE PAD.
//I too hate the trackpads on laptops - moves the dang mouse on my when I'm typing which changes the focused window. I disable it unless I'm flying.
BigE - DW took a few classes at LSU-S prior to us moving to Ruston.
Misty - how old is your computer that is doesn't have a mouse?
Sumdaze - My golf game sucks (I only play once every few years when BIL asks me) so I only carry 3 clubs: a driver, 6 iron, and a putter.
Y'all have a great day.
Cheers, -T
CEDave
ReplyDeleteDo you do jigsaw puzzles? That pad could be a backdrop for one to hold it together albeit a small one.
Golf clubs:
ReplyDeleteWoods - 1 (driver), 3, 5, rescue
Irons - 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, pitching wedge, sand wedge, lob wedge
Putter
==========
total 14
I don't really use my 3 wood, but don't own anything I would rather carry.
My current bag has 13 clubs: Driver, 3 wood, 5 wood, 3-6 hybrids; 7-SW, putter
DeleteAnon T,
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing I've had my computer for twenty or more years. I have absolutely no memory of when and where and how I got it.
It's a Dell and has a little silver square on the surface that says Intel CORE i7 vPRO, but I have no idea what that means. And I had to look up to see what a computer MOUSE is--I gather a device that lets you move a thing on your desk with a symbol to move around your screen to identify specific items or places.
I'm clearly part of an older generation, but I love my computer and use it all day long to look up things, and write and read messages, and learn about all sort of stuff--an absolutely wonderful gift. Can't imagine how I could do without it.
And, hey, I get to communicate and learn about all of you, when I have time to read all your interesting messages! Now that's a gift too!
ReplyDeleteAnon Tony @4:09
Again speaking of AI (Rarely watch either Jeopardy or W of F) just left one of our Zoom group meetings (as if I don’t already have enough headaches.) A new AI algorithm introduced to supplement CT chest cases. “Computer Assisted Diagnosis” (CAD). One day I’m gonna walk in my office and find a robot sitting at my work station..