CrossEyedDave here, filling in again. My interpretation of a theme for this puzzle would be:
It's For The Birds...
Alan Olschwang is a prolific constructor, and has provided many puzzles for us to enjoy. You can find CC's 2009 interview with him on the right side of the Blog, 3rd from the bottom.
As near as i can comprehend, these birds are cooped up in the circles as follows:
18 Across. Rather often: QUITE A LOT
Teal
23 Across. In large quantities: HAND OVER FIST
Egret
And, the reveal:
60 Across. Handmade backyard nest box, and an apt description of 18-, 23-, 37-, and 50-Across: BIRDHOUSE.
1. Root beer brand owned by Coca-Cola: BARQ'S. This combined with 3 down, Regan, was almost a Natick for me. But the R in Barqs was dredged up from previous Crosswords.
6. Tightly closed: SHUT.
14. Indigenous Alaskan: ALEUT. Indigenous Alaskans are diverse peoples, including Inupiaq, Yup'ik, Aleut (Unangan/Alutiiq), Athabascan, Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian. (And you thought they were just Eskimos...)
15. Work hard for: EARN. (I earned this puzzle review!)
16. Feminine Spanish pronoun: ELLA. (e.g., Ella es mi madre - She is my mother; Los regalos son para ella - The gifts are for her). I have no explanation for "Cinderella..."
17. Roman robes: TOGAS.
Or, a rallying cry...
18. [Theme]
20. Jackie on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: CHAN.
21. Mardi Gras, for one: Abbr.: TUE. I cannot imagine only one person celebrating Marci Gras...
22. Selling point: ASSET.
23. [Theme]
27. Name on a former lake in Central Asia: ARAL. This word is as common as Oreo...
28. "Guys and Dolls" composer Frank: LOESSER.
This Guy
32. "Been __, done that": THERE.
35. Chapel bench: PEW.
36. Med. plan option: HMO. (Health Maintenance Organization)
37. [Theme]
42. Chicken __ king: ALA.
43. Hundred Acre Wood joey: ROO.
This Guy
44. Cropped up: AROSE.
What cropped up, was a rose upon his nose...
45. Antarctic body of water with penguin rookeries: ROSS SEA.
48. "Othello" frenemy: IAGO.
48. "Othello" frenemy: IAGO.
NOT this guy
50. [Theme]
55. Poker buy-ins: ANTES.
58. Final tally: SUM.
59. Prefix with -gram: SONO. (One of too many to mention...)
60. [Theme]
63. Hollowed out: CORED.
64. Crossword hint: CLUE.
65. Finds a purpose for: USES.
66. Blender setting for pumpkin pie filling: PUREE. And baby food.
67. "As __ on TV": SEEN.
68. "Devil Inside" band: INXS. This was another almost Natick, saved by U.S. Navy...
69. Ring-shaped island: ATOLL.
Down:
1. Baker's sheetful: BATCH.
2. "Welcome to Maui!": ALOHA.
3. Middle daughter of King Lear: REGAN. (Half an almost Natick.)
4. Difficult situation: QUANDARY. (What ever should i post here.)
5. MA, ME, MI, and MO, but not MU: STS. (And not Fe, Fi, Fo, Fum...)
6. Follow-up film: SEQUEL.
7. Rutger of "Blade Runner": HAUER.
This guy
8. Ocean State sch.: URI. University of Rhodesia Island.
9. Blasting letters: TNT.
10. __ of burden: plow-pulling animals: BEASTS.
11. Letter-shaped pipe joints: ELLS.
12. __ vera gel: ALOE.
13. "The Simpsons" creator Groening: MATT.
The guy on the left
19. "At __, soldier!": EASE.
21. FDR energy project: TVA. Tennessee Valley Authority
24. Dirt pie cookie: OREO.
25. Escape in a hurry: FLEE.
26. Ames locale: IOWA.
29. "Go on, git!": SHOO. (Scram! Or Skidaddle...)
30. Big birds of Australia: EMUS. Not Rheas,
31. Learning by repetition: ROTE. (The answer is Oreo!)
32. Salty drop: TEAR.
33. Saintly glow: HALO.
34. Airport pickup figs.: ETAS.
35. Vietnamese soup: PHO. (Do i need to post a pic?)
38. Manhattan Project scientist Harold: UREY.
OMG!
Another name!
(This is getting to be a pain...)
39. Multicolored horse: ROAN. I would post a pic, but I really thought they were more colorful...
40. All the __: very popular: RAGE.
41. Brings forward for display: TROTS OUT. (Hmm, see 47 down...)
46. Country between Finland and Norway: SWEDEN.
47. Merit badge holder: SASH.
48. "Well, maybe": I GUESS.
49. Sleeve: ARM. (If you are armed, would you be sleeved?)
51. English county south of Suffolk: ESSEX.
52. Masked vigilante whose name is Spanish for "fox": ZORRO. Learning moment
53. Genuflect: KNEEL. Only know this from The Wizard of Oz... (The Lions Solo song)
54. Alpine song: YODEL.
55. School basics: ABCS.
56. Aswan's river: NILE.
57. Factual: TRUE.
61. French yes: OUI.
62. Top Gun org.: USN.
63. Audit firm pro: CPA.
This would have been a Pangram, but was missing the "J."
Well, you didn't need to be an Ornithologist to solve this one. Hope it was right up your roost, aviary, dovecote, aerie or henhouse, and didn't ruffle any feathers.
CE:D out.
Note from C.C:















40 comments:
Not too difficult a
puzzle. I saw all the “birds” quickly, had a good idea what the reveal would be, and I was right.
FIR, so I’m happy.
Good morning!
Entering TWA instead of TVA made HAND OVER FIST slow to arrive. Got there eventually. D-o managed finally managed to see the four birds, even if he failed to read the full reveal clue. [Sigh] Excellent Tuesday offering, Alan. Thanx for pinch-hitting, CED. (KNEEL, clued as "Genuflect," just cries for this Tom Lehrer song.)
Now how did I manage that?
FIR, but ural->ARAL, remake->SEQUEL (known in data warehousing as SQL,) and gretski->GRETZKY.
GRETZKY just wasn't the goal scoring machine that "The Great 8," Alex Ovechkin, is. A great sport, GRETZKY was in attendance last year to congratulate Ovechkin when Ovechkin broke GRETZKY's record.
If we're getting a French lesson, why "gras?" Making it easier because it's Tuesday? Would it be "Mardi in New York" in a Thursday puzzle?
The start of a saying: "Been THERE, done that." The rest: "Bought the tee shirt, sold it for a profit on Ebay."
HBDTY, Misty. I know you'll be missing your beloved Rowland this holiday season.
Thanks to Alan for another fun puzzle. The couple of unknowns were gentled by the perps, which was nice. And thanks to CED for pinch hitting.
Jinx has reminded me
that I forgot to wish Misty a Happy Birthday! I always enjoy your little “stories,”
Misty!
FIR. As usual I ignored the circles and only looked at them after the puzzle was filled. I'm sorry, but for me the theme was lame. Just try to imagine a bird house large enough to house an egret or a rhea. That would be quite a structure.
The puzzle itself had a couple of proper names that only perps allowed for solving. Hauer and Loesser for example.
Overall this was not an enjoyable puzzle.
Good Morning:
This was a perfect Tuesday offering: a cute and discernible theme, strong themers, a very clean and solver-friendly grid and, most importantly, an enjoyable and satisfactory solve. Urey was the only unknown but perps took care of that hiccup.
Nice job, Alan, and very nice review, CED. You settled right into the blogging business smoothly and successfully. Congrats. Your impish humor is right at home, too!
Happy Birthday, dear Misty. Enjoy your special day. 🎂🎁🎉🎊🎈
Have a great day.
Initially, I had the same thought about a birdhouse. Another way of looking at it: the bird is boxed inside the clue fill: a "nest box".
Musings
-By doing crosswords, I learned QUANDARY has three, not two, syllables.
-Learning by repetition: I recently took the job of emptying the dishwasher and eventually learned where items go. Do we really need eight different types of Tupperware containers?
-ABC’s: Some kindergartners come to school reading at a third-grade level and some do not know how to write any letter
-HBD Misty!
First, looked over CW and discovered 21 names! Oy. But then as I filled the CW, I came to realize that of those 21 I only DNK 5, so not so bad. I hesitated to fill GRETSKY/GRETZKY; O.K., ZORRO solved that. Other than the namefest, a nice CW, thanx AO. Thanx too to CED for the fine write-up. I was gonna comment that the bird pictured is a pigeon, not a dove, but looked it up and learned something: pigeons and doves are actually the same bird. People tend to call white or tan colored ones doves, other colors they tend to call pigeons. But it's the same bird. Learning moment, so thanx for that, CED.
1A-BARQ's- QUITE a story on that drink that did not claim to be a root beer. There were TWO Barq's brands, one in NOLA and the other in Biloxi, MS. One of the NOLA co. ads was "Drink Barq's, it's good" and another was "Barq's has bite". The two local brands were sold in LA and MS markets and the real fireworks started when the NOLA brand and its registered trademark sold to the Coca-Cola company, leaving the Biloxi company out of the big money. I'm sure they eventually settled because it's now called Barq's Root Beer.
As for the puzzle, the circled BIRD HOUSE species were easy to spot but not the unknown composer, band & song (as clued), actor, or scientist. LOESSER, INXS, HAUER, UREY. Monday level puzzle with Saturday level proper names.
I saw the Blade Runner movie over 40 years ago, and I only remember them hiding from the 'hunter, killer drones'. Kinda predicted the current battles
between Ukraine and Russia.
Happy birthday Misty.
QUANDARY? Do Americans learn their ABCs (55D)by ROTE (31D) or Mozart's melody for "Twinkle, twinkle little star"?
We still have some real Tupperware bowls that we use daily. But Diane tries to save plastic containers until we have too many. I never put them in the dishwasher.
Interesting about DOVEs and pigeons.
Terrific Tuesday. Thanks for the fun, Alan and CED.
I saw the BIRD HOUSE theme early in the solve.
Officially a DNF since I had a Natick-to-me cross at USN and INXS. I’ll blame Canadian disadvantage. (Although I did have no problem with WAYNE GRETZY.). TVA held me up, but I have learned HMO (but don’t have that here).
QUITE A bit changed to LOT.
After the Q and Z appeared, I was looking for a pangram. 6A should have had the door Ajar rather than SHUT to give us the J.
I don’t know why I notice these things, but the NE corner had a plethora of EAs (BEAM, TEAL, EARN, EASE, BEASTS). Then a little pocket in the west centre (EAT, HEART, TEAR, SEA).
Happy 81st birthday Misty.
Wishing you all a great day.
In spite of quite a few unknowns names like HAUER, LOESSER, MATT, UREY, and INZS, FIR with help of perps and WAGS. Also the theme was easy to detect with the first bird TEAL, though at that point I wasn’t sure if it was going to be a bird or a color but the DOVE settled that. We had an extra bird in the EMUS of 30 down.
The 3 S letters at first threw me off until I figured it was the name of a SEA.
Thank you CED for a fine review. Happy birthday Misty. 🎊🎉🎂
There should be no s on unknown and that band should be INXS. Sorry.
Hola! Happy birthday, Misty! I like the way you regale us with stories.
A nice puzzle by Alan. Thank you for that. And thank you, Dave, for today's narrative. You do fit right into the job.
BARQ'S is a blast from the past! It was my favorite drink growing up.
ALEUT threw me off for a moment; I had INUIT. And many years ago, I had a student from Alaska who was Tinglit. That was my first encounter with that name and with a native Alaskan.
Have a lovely day, everyone!
Hi All!
Thanks Alan for a fun puzzle that almost got off to a bad start when I was trying to ink A&W at 1a. Perp checks & the known TOGA & CHAN saved me.
A very fun writeup, CED. Mardi Gras "for one" comment & the IAGO caption tickled me.
//If I'd have done today's expo, RUSH would be linked at HAND OVER FIST :-)
WOs: N/A
ESPs: HAUER; LOESSER, UREY; ROSS SEA
Fav: QUANDARY is a fun word.
When I was a kid, being sick meant chicken noodle soup. But then I learned about Pho* and it's my go to for a cold.
Happy Birthday Misty!
Cheers, -T
*Coincidentally, I saw that clip last night - I've never seen the show.
Busy day - but quick solve - and didn't want to miss celebrating Misty!
Puzzle recap…
14 Across Cross Eyed Dave please be aware that “Eskimo” is considered rude and offensive. Its akin to being a racist.
Edmonton, Alberta changed their Canadian Football league name to the Elks after pressure from Indigenous groups not to use the aforementioned word !
They haven’t eliminated the word from ‘The Christmas Song’ which plays on the radio abundantly these days.
Oh My Gosh!, I'm late to my own review... (busy, busy, busy,)
I had to do the puzzle before I came, only had a couple of inkblots...
In reviewing my own review, I had intended to to link the only difference between Emu and Rhea was location, location, location. (Australia Vs South America.) but it turns out, there are differences. Emus are taller, have a tuft of hair on their head, distinct orange-brown eyes, and blue-black skin on their face/neck, while Rheas are smaller, lack head hair, have blue-to-brown eyes, and their legs and neck are mostly feathered. But I deleted it, thinking, "Nah, this is for the birds..."
Happy Birthday Misty!
FIR in 9:22 which was a minute faster than yesterday. Perps needed for the unknowns REGAN, UREY, LOESSER, and HAUER (it’s always the names). Had to change bored to CORED and like Lucy, Inuit to ALEUT. Would have been more of a challenge to find the birds without the circles, but it is Tuesday. There used to be a restaurant called ‘PHO Q’, which supposedly combined Vietnamese cuisine with Texas BBQ, not surprisingly they are no longer in business. Thanks to Alan for the enjoyable solve, and to CED for filling in for Hahtoolah!
Happy birthday to Misty 🎉! Always enjoy reading your narratives!
Well this is a learning moment, I had no idea!
I'm glad you brought this up. Here is the latest from the Internet.
Forgive me, for my 70 years, this word was used to describe a race of people without any malice whatsoever. I think it was even used in the Disney "it's a small world" ride... I was not aware things had changed, please forgive my ignorance. I am still having trouble with my kids jumping all over me if I mention the train "The Oriental Express,"
It's going to take some time to adjust...
It all came together pretty easily. My favorite clue was "salty drop". I like circles but they weren't necessary in this one. I thought it was a good Tuesday workout. Thanks for filling in Dave, nice job.
I think Monday and Tuesday got switched this week. And since the birds are in circles, they look more like eggs to me!
Happy Birthday, Misty! I always look forward to your little stories that use words of the day. So clever.
Nice job, CED, of handling all those guys. LOL
Wow! What a gorgeous cake. I hope Misty gets to see it.
Took 5:23 today.
Lots of names in the puzzle.
Oh joy, circles!
Thanks to Alan for his easy to swallow puzzle! FAV was the merit badge holder being a SASH, not a scout.
Monkey@9:38 already pointed out the unhoused EMUS.
Thanks to -T for the PHO clip. Too true!
Thanks to CED! I like your theme .gif and your cake for Misty.
Speaking of... Happy Birthday Misty! I appreciate all the time you put into sharing your literary mind with us!
Well, I was all prepared to start making comments about today's delightful puzzle when I came to the end, and was startled to see that sweet and kind message from C.C. wishing me well on my 81st birthday, and followed by the moving image of me and my wonderful, sweet, late husband Rowland. What a lovely gift, and I realized I would need to thank C.C. for that lovely message before sending comments to everybody about the puzzle. But then came the next surprise: messages from one person after another also sending me sweet messages on my birthday. I began to make a list, and although I don't know if it is complete, I now need to thank you all for your loving birthday messages to me: thank you, Jinx, and Subgenius, and Irish Miss, and Husker Gary, and CanadianEh!, and Monkey (thank you for the cake), and Lucina, and AnonT, and Inane Hiker, and Youper Phil, and Rusty Brain. I apologize to anyone I missed, and I can't thank you all enough for making this my best, happiest, most joyful birthday ever. What loving and kind friends you all are, I just wish I could hug you all with thanks in person, but you will be in my heart and in my thoughts for ever with this gift. And I thank you for your forgiveness if I missed thanking you, but thank you, again, everyone. You make this site such a loving and kind place for a whole community to communicate and I love you all for it. Hugs, Misty
Hi, UncleFred at 8:42 AM! I figured that CED's illustration would raise some feathers! Pigeon is just a common name for Rock Dove or Rock Pigeon. There are many types of doves, and pigeons are just one type. Pigeons were domesticated over many centuries, prized for their homing abilities that allowed them to be used as messengers, and for use as food, and just for their attractive variations. The rise of chicken farms and telegraphs put pigeons back on the street. They are all feral now. But other types of doves -- like Mourning Doves -- were never domesticated, are not feral, and are certainly not pigeons. From a bird brain.
I can relate to Kevin. My first pho was when one of my project management students took me to his favorite. Unlike in the sitcom, he had to order for me, in Vietnamese. I didn't hear a word of English spoken during our lunch.
Reminded me of my SoCal days. There was a great Mexican restaurant in Sylmar that I liked for lunch. When I went there, they had to go find the person who understood English to wait on me. The restaurant was a spinoff to their primary business, making tortillas and tamales for other local restaurants. They sold tamales by the dozen to the public, and if you wanted to have them for Christmas and New Year you had to place your order shortly after Thanksgiving because there was a limit on how many they could produce in a day. Great business that not many Anglos knew about.
Things change over time. Stephen Foster was certainly no racist (he was actually an abolitionist,) but we wouldn't think of singing My Old Kentucky Home with his lyrics "Tis summer, the darkies are gay."
The birds were easy but the names did me in. I didn't know REGAN and BARQ'S and guessed MEGAN instead :/ Didn't know UREY and WAYNE either. Oh well! QUANDRY's a nice word, I haven't seen that word in a long time.
Happy birthday, dear Misty! Your participation here goes a long way toward making this the best little Corner on the internet.
I enjoyed seeing the birds housed in the theme answers, and I liked the rest of Alan's puzzle as well. CrossEyedDave treated me to some LOLZ. It takes a lot to make me laugh. Congratulations!
Pigeons? Flying rats is a good definition.
Hard to believe it’s almost 70 years since Disney ran the series (and that I can remember the theme song)
“Zorro, the fox so cunning and free
Zorro, he makes the sign of the Zee”
CED, asking for forgiveness is kind of you, but not necessary. The message you sent is has nothing to do with how Anon @ 11:16 might have received it. There was no malice in your usage, and it wasn't directed AT any indigenous Arctic people.
This half-Yupik Alaskan takes no offense whatsoever.
HBD Misty! I always look forward to your short stories. Sometimes, for some unknown reason, I’m scrolling down the posts to find yours, then start reading it and say, “What, no story!?” Then realize that I mistook IrishMiss for Misty! Duh!
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