Theme:
NoneTotal blocks:
30I think I will enjoy themeless puzzles more once I get better at solving. I really like the open field and long words.
This is a nice puzzle. No strained or forced entries, except
ELA (35D: Old time high note). I wonder how many people know about
this high note on Guido's Music Notation.
I love the crossing of
AMERICANA (16A: Bits and pieces of U. S. history) and
VALUABLE (12D: Great worth). It reminds me of "Antiques Roadshow" and our local flea markets. I have yet to find something of "Great worth" though.
Across:1A: Trudge (on):
PRESS. I definitely need a "Iron" clue for the answer to come to me immediately.
6A: Ralph Kramden, for one:
BUS DRIVER. Easy guess. I did not know who
Ralph Kramden is.
17A: Buzzing:
ASTIR. I thought of AROAR, too strong for the "Buzzing" clue I suppose.
19A: Stone Age implement:
NEOLITH21A: Dowel:
PEG. Got it from the down clue. I did not know the meaning of "
Dowel".
22A: Spoon-bender Geller:
URI.
This looks interesting.
25A: Chronicle:
SAGA. They are not the same to me. A "Chronicle" is a real account of the event, right?
SAGA is often mythified and romanticized.
26A: Team player:
SPORTSMAN. I don't like this clue. A PGA Pro is a
SPORTSMAN, but he is not a "Team player", unless it's for the Ryder Cup.
30A: Donnybrook:
MELEE31A: Jumper cable connection:
ANODE. NY Times puzzle once had
TENDONS (53A: Kin of ligaments) clued as "Jumper's cables?".
36A: Dauphin's dad:
ROI. Another guess. I did not know that Dauphin means "the eldest son of the king of France from 1349 to 1830". Kind of like Prince of Wales.
37A: Leafy garnish:
CRESS. It's the same as watercress, isn't it? You will more likely find dried
CRESS and pickled rutabaga in Asian Stores. They are seldom eaten fresh in China.
39A: New Rochelle college:
IONA. Don McLean's alma mater. I never get tired of
"Starry Night". I also like his "
American Pie", very touching.
42A: Shown, as in a museum:
ON EXHIBIT50A: Pacific weather pattern:
LA NINA. I could only think of EL NINO.
51A: Guess at LAX:
ETA54A: Game often stalemated:
TIC- TAC- TOE57A: Miser Marner:
SILAS. I have difficulty remembering
this George Eliot book.58A: Puts up with:
TOLERATES60A: Jokes like Dangerfield's:
ONE LINERS.
Here are some of his best
ONE LINERS.
61A: Jazz vocalist Mercer:
MABEL. I forgot.
She appeared in our puzzle before. We just had " Normand of the silent movie" two days ago.
Down: 1D: Shop tools:
PLANES2D: Rebel:
RISE UP3D: La corrida beast:
EL TORO. The clue is asking for TORO, not "
EL TORO", isn't it?
4D: Admiral or cabin boy:
SAILOR5D: Actor's lines:
SCRIPTS7D: Diamond arbiter:
UMP. I can't remember clearly, did they make
UMP bobbleheads in the 1960's?
These are adorable. Senators became the Twins.
8D: Sinuous:
SERPENTINE13D: Efforts:
ENERGIES14D: Branches out:
RADIATES20D: Check out:
TEST27D: Performer with strings attached:
MARIONETTE. "Performer"? What do you call the person who manipulates the
MARIONETTE then?
28D: Run _ of Hip Hop fame:
D.M.C.. The answer emerged after I got the across fills. Had no familarity with
this Hip Hop group.
31D: Almond liqueur:
AMARETTO. I've never had it. Is it bitter?
32D: Marginal marking:
NOTATION33D: Impediment:
OBSTACLE. Obstruct has the same amount of letters.
40D: Rod in a car:
AXLE43D: Horsedrawn carriage:
HANSOM44D: Gandhi of India:
INDIRA. She had two sons, Rajiv and Sanjay.
45D: Cloning spot, for short:
BIOLAB46D: Present at birth:
INNATE. And ENATE is "Maternally related", AGNATE is "Paternally related) and COGNATE is "Related by birth".
47D: Mortarboard fixture:
TASSEL 53D: Mrs. Dick Tracy:
TESS. Does any one collect
Kellogg's Pep pinbacks?C.C.
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