Sabtu, 02 November 2013

Saturday, Nov 2nd, 2013, Barry C. Silk

Theme: Saturday Silkie



Words: 70 (missing X,Z)




Blocks: 32




 
  I expected a Saturday Silkie, and was not disappointed.  Today's
offering was pretty straightforward, at least for me.  Not too many
obscurities, and enough 'easy' crossings to take a healthy stab at the
longer fills.  Interesting middle stack of a spanner and two offset
14-letter words, and triple 8's and 6's in the corners.  For today:





 33. Sirius B, for one : WHITE DWARF STAR
- I knew we were looking for a "STAR" here, but on my first pass, I
thought it was a BINARY, um, something-something STAR.  I am a huge fan
of "Ancient Aliens", and the show repeatedly mentions how this star
system has something to do with extra-terrestrials










38. Food safety aid : MEAT THERMOMETER



39. They included Chopin's "Prelude in E Minor," in a film title : FIVE EASY PIECES - funny, but now that I know the movie has a character who was once studying piano, the title makes much more sense....





!~DRAWNO





ACROSS:





 1. Some legal cases : ATTACHES - DAH~! Right off the bat, I got "43A", thinking this was a court 'case', not a brief 'case'



9. Its results commonly fall between 70 and 130 : I.Q. TEST - I was tested in high school; care to guess what my number was?



15. Take inventory? : SHOPLIFT - "Marriage is a punishment for shoplifting in some countries"  - What movie~!?!?!?



16. Shade : NUANCE - ooh, good Saturday clue for this word



17. Nurturing : MOTHERLY



18. Shilling spender : KENYAN - I threw in BRITON, but was pretty sure it was wrong - a Kenyan shilling is worth about .012 US dollars as of yesterday



19. O or A, e.g. : ALer - ARGH~!  Got me again~!  The Athletics and Orioles
of MLB; I went with "TYPE", because they're both blood types; it wasn't
until Aphrodite showed up (alas, only in today's puzzle ) did I give it up



20. Bottom topper : TALC - Ah, yes, a quick pat on the bum with the baby powder



22. Old-school lament : EGADS~!



23. Discharged British soldier : DEMOB - to be demobilized - got it



25. Electronic music genre : TECHNO - I like the electronic genre - odd, coming from a kid who grew up on Iron Maiden.  An electronica sample










27. Cologne article : DER



29. Sign of summer : LEO - Astrological sign; I've been reading my horoscope a lot lately - it seems to be a day behind, instead of ahead....



30. Roxy Music alum : ENO




40. Princeton Review subj. : GRE - Graduate Record Examinations, follwed by -



41. MIT Sloan degree : MBA - Master of Business Administration



42. Wheels : CAR - I'm going to have to wait on new wheels - I am
officially "cut" as a driver on Jan 15th, and then all trainee drivers
will be brought back s-l-o-w-l-y



43. Took in : MISLED - not the sewing/altered took in, not the "movie" took in



46. Staircase support : NEWEL - Meh - this is more of a stair handrail support, but I'm a nit-picking carpenter








50. Arabic for "struggle" : JIHAD - a WAG, but a sensible one - the SW was my last corner to fill in



53. Salts : TARS - Slang words for sailor



55. "The Diana Chronicles" author Brown : TINA



56. Fulfills a need : AVAILS



58. They get high on occasion : SOPRANOS - Har-har~!



60. More futile : VAINER



61. Ring : ENCIRCLE - the verb today



62. Makes hot : ANGERS - ah, not ANNOYS



63. 2012, e.g. : LEAP YEAR - partial hybrid solar eclipse tomorrow AM



DOWN:



1. Equally hot : AS MAD - ah, the same kind of "hot" found in 62A



2. Oarlock pin : THOLE - sticking up from the gunwales










3. Tribal emblem : TOTEM - this is what I wanted to fill in, but it was not agreeing with my "TYPE"



4. Venus counterpart : APHRODITE - sheesh~!  Check out from whence she was born....



5. Indians' home, on scoreboards : CLEveland - always a little baseball for C.C.~!  (BTW, "Major League" was on the other night - still funny, IMO )



6. "Cotton Candy" musician : HIRT - I'll let you link away



7. Key for some clarinets : E FLAT - fill in "FLAT", and wait....



8. Panache : STYLE



9. Newspaper supply : INK



10. Nickname for Leona Helmsley : QUEEN OF MEAN



11. Sierra follower, in the NATO alphabet : TANGO - see below



12. Singer born Eithne Patricia Ní Bhraonáin : ENYA - crossword staple, and pretty much an educated WAG



13. Whole lot : SCAD



14. Place for an adder? : TENS - one who 'adds' uses ones, tens, hundreds, etc., columns to line up for summing



21. Wood shop device : C-CLAMP - great for doing you brake pads, too - which is on my to-do list this weekend



24. Author of the children's book "The Saga of Baby Divine" : BETTE MIDLER



26. Valiant : HEROIC



28. Therapy goals : REHABS - sober house goals, too



30. Major finale? : ETTE - majorETTE



31. Highland rejections : NAEs



32. Bruin great : ORR - Hockey; the NY Rangers are starting to improve; EddyB's Sharks are 10-1



33. Small dam : WEIR



34. Eat : HAVE - ah, not DINE



35. Make potable, as seawater : DESALT



36. Like some humor : WRY - minor change from Dry to Wry



37. Cabinet part : SECRETARY - Government cabinet, that is - I was in carpentry mode; stile, rail, panel, shelf, etc.



38. Plant activity: Abbr. : ManuFacturinG - industrial plant, that is



43. Bates College locale : MAINE - Oddly, I WAGed ORONO, because of the "O" from ANNOYS; HEY - I was in the right state~!



44. Oil holder : EASEL - ooh, a bit of a stretch, but yes, an oil painting can be supported by an easel



45. Go (on) dully : DRONE



47. Recoil : WINCE



48. Name on a WWII flier : ENOLA - Gay, dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima



49. Surgery tool : LASER



50. Language of software engineers : JAVA



51. Novelist Turgenev : IVAN



52. White House chief of staff after Haldeman : HAIG



54. Humane org. : SPCA



57. Yearbook sect. : SRs - Here's my senior pic, 24yrs ago











59. Criticize : RIP - and yes, you can "RIP" into my photo all you want~!!!





 SierraPapaLimaYankeeNovemberTangoEchoRomeo











Note from C.C.:



I'd to share with you this poem our regular poster Own wrote earlier this morning. If you click on the Comments button at the end of this post, you'll be treated with a daily puzzle poem from him.





Daily Challenges



Really, can you cheat on a crossword?

The fine line of what's cheating is blurred.

You alone are the judge

Of how much you can fudge,

Therefore being too harsh is absurd.



On Monday, the puzzle is easy.

The effort it takes will be breezy.

If you do it on line

Level "Master" is fine.

Ink's unlikely to make you feel queasy.



Tuesday is a little bit harder.

Some words will be puzzlement fodder.

After most clues decode,

Switch to red-letter mode,

You'll finish up like a marauder.



Wednesday a few entries get tough.

We'll see if you've got the right stuff.

From red level don't shrink;

Switch to pencil from ink.

This is where things just start to get rough.



Thursday is building up strong.

The wordplay is coming along.

Misdirection's in play,

Tricky clues rule the day.

A simple dictionary wouldn't be wrong.



Friday's the day tyros dread.

The brains seem to fly from their head.

You can sit there and doodle

Or call upon Google;

Else the end that you reach might be dead.



Saturday's grid is the worst.

Your skill will seem like it's cursed.

There's no theme to guide

Where solutions might hide.

The whole Web only helps when coerced.



Sunday's a modicum of relief.

It's not easy, but shouldn't cause grief.

The need for a reference

Might just be your preference.

Larger size is its difference in chief.



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