Friday, January 26, 2018

David Poole

Title: Let's look under the water

David makes a quick return with a visual theme. There are 4 seas placed above the letters "LAB." It is a cute theme but wreaked havoc on my mind with YELLOW LAB and IRISH LAB running around in my head. Woof, woof.  The rest seemed like a Friday with many 6 and 7 letter fill. ERNESTO, EXACTOR, LOST ART, PANINIS, SWORE TO and WANNABE all interesting  fill.

Hopefully the grid will make you all smile. Grid first I think today:



17A. First U.S. national park : YELLOWSTONE (11). The YELLOW Sea is clued just above the LAB in 20A in LABEL.

35A. Co-star of the 1955 comedy "How to Be Very, Very Popular" : SHEREE NORTH (11). The NORTH Sea is clued just above the LAB in SLABS. The MOVIE ws unknown to me.

42A. Subject of a 19th-century famine : IRISH POTATO (11). The IRISH Sea is clued just above the LAB in LABREA.

62A. Aquanaut's workplace ... or a hint to what's graphically represented four times in this puzzle : UNDER SEA LAB (11). This LAB is under the CHINA Sea.

Across:

1. Big sister? : ABBESS. This is a woman who is the head of an abbey of nuns.

7. Way more than a whimper : BAWL.

11. Pixie : ELF.

14. Circus equipment : STILTS. There often is  lown with stilts.

15. Online marketplace : EBAY.

16. Madhouse : ZOO.

19. Syncopated piece : RAG. Ragtime (rag) also spelled rag-time or rag time – is a musical style that enjoyed its peak popularity between 1895 and 1918. Its cardinal trait is its syncopated, or "ragged", rhythm.

20. Calvin Klein or Perry Ellis : LABEL.

21. Caution : WARN.

22. Spilled the beans : SANG.

23. Love personified : AMOR. Cupids alias.

24. Letter writing, some say : LOST ART.

26. Oenophile's concern : YEAR. CSO to the Chairman and his wares.

28. Bear with a purple bow tie : BOO-BOO. Hannah-Barbera say Boo-Boo Bear is a cartoon character on The Yogi Bear Show. Boo-Boo is an anthropomorphic bear cub wearing a purple bowtie. Most of the pictures I see on line look blue, but....

32. "Yada yada yada" letters : ETC.

38. Revolutionary murdered in a tub : MARAT.

 The Death of Marat by Jacques-   Louis  David. 

40. Groom's garb : TUX.

41. Generous slices : SLABS.


45. Menu general : TSO. It must be embarassing to his family that he is known as a chicken.

46. Tar pits site : LA BREA.

47. "Pretty please?" : CAN I? May I never see this clue/fill again?

49. Che's given name : ERNESTO.

52. State-spanning rds. : TPKS.

56. Cross by wading : FORD.

59. Digging : INTO.

61. "The Mikado" band? : OBI. The Japanese sash. Not to be confused with 57D. Village Voice award : OBIE. (OB) No longer technically true, they were originally given by The Village Voice newspaper to theatre artists and groups in New York City. In September 2014, the awards were jointly presented and administered with the American Theatre Wing. As the Tony Awards cover Broadway productions, the Obie Awards cover Off-Broadway and Off-Off-Broadway productions. (various)

64. Dram : NIP.

65. Thailand, once : SIAM. A nice CSO to my sweet bride.

66. Recess : ALCOVE.

67. Fictional vigilante's mark : ZEE.

68. Ballpark figs. : ESTSimates.

69. Christian of "Mr. Robot" : SLATER.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U94litUpZuc

Down:

1. Sanctuaries : ASYLA. Our favorite latin plural.

2. Substitute players : B-TEAM.

3. Frodo inherited his ring : BILBO. The Hobbit.

4. Queen of mystery : ELLERY. Agatha also fits.

5. Small-runway aircraft acronym : STOL. Short Takeoff Or Landing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQJKW5vfvog

6. Spokane-to-Walla Walla dir. : SSW.

7. Software to debug : BETAS.

8. Scrub, at NASA : ABORT.

9. Aspirant : WANNABE.

10. Drano compound : LYE.

11. Biblical reformer : EZRA.

12. Library transaction : LOAN.

13. "Around the World ... " hero : FOGG. Phileas Fogg is the protagonist in the 1873 Jules Verne novel Around the World in Eighty Day (wiki).

18. Affirmed in court : SWORE TO.

22. Happy hour perch : STOOL.

24. __-di-dah : LAH.

25. Lighter brand : RONSON.

27. Bible book read during Purim : ESTHER.

29. Frank's cousin : BRAT. This is one of the wurst clue/fills ever!

30. Gambling parlors, for short : OTBS. Off track betting shops.

31. Very : OH SO. You all look oh so smart today!

32. Expressionist painter Nolde : EMIL. I did not know Emil Nolde, who was a German-Danish painter and printmaker. He was one of the first Expressionists, a member of Die Brücke, and was one of the first oil painting and watercolor painters of the early 20th century to explore color. (wiki) I like the Matterhorn Smiles.

33. Plantation near Twelve Oaks : TARA. Frankly, I no longer give a damn.

34. Nursery purchase : CRIB.

36. Rural road feature : RUT.

37. One demanding payment, say : EXACTOR. In law we often put or/ee at the end of words to make a new word, but this CREATION by Debbie seems imprecise.

39. Comparable to a beet : AS RED.

43. Pressed sandwiches : PANINIS.

44. Confucian ideal : TAO.

48. Cornell's city : ITHACA.

50. Conclude by : END AT.

51. Parts of some flutes : STEMS. My brain went to the instrument bforehte aha moment for the champagne glass.

53. First of a series : PILOT. No Honda this week, but the try out episode of a tv series.

54. __ of Hearts, accused tarts thief : KNAVE. You should know your Alice in Wonderland.
"The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts,
All on a summer day:
The Knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts,
And took them quite away!"

55. Cavalry sword : SABER.

56. With "the," TV character who first jumped the shark--literally : FONZ. Did we reallly watch this
HORRIBLE TV On the other hand I really like Winkler in his new show  BETTER LATE THAN NEVER .

58. Harvest-ready : RIPE.

60. Spreadsheet box : CELL.

62. Employ : USE.

63. KLM rival : SAS. The HISTORY of  Scandinavian Airlines System is worth reading.








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