Showing posts with label doug peterson and barry c. silk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doug peterson and barry c. silk. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2008

Friday, July 25, 2008

Title: Weekend Warrior
Author: Doug Peterson and Barry C. Silk
Theme: None

Sunny Spots:

  • 7a: Bunk (CLAPTRAP). Claptrap is a great word, apparently deriving from its attempt to gain applause.

  • 16a: It has many layers (HENHOUSE). Gosh CATHOUSE would fit, too, in a way. Of course, we already have BORDELLO (36d: House with a lot of johns), which is also a fantastic clue.

  • 35a: Test requirement, at times (NUMBER TWO PENCIL). This should have been way easier than it was. I guess it's been too long since I've had to take a standardized test that was not on-line.


  • 56a: Wedge alternative (STILETTO). Excellent.

  • 2d: 1890 Henry James novel, with "The" (TRAGIC MUSE). The fact that I didn't know this one does not detract at all from its awesomeness.

  • 3d: What this clue have (BAD GRAMMAR). This one's part grin and part grimace. But the grin wins.


  • 7d: Team with the 1980s mascots Ribbie and Roobarb (CHICAGO WHITE SOX). Nice fill, with interesting trivia associated with it.

  • 28d: It fell on Neil Armstrong in the summer of '69 (TICKERTAPE). Superb.

  • 29d: Where some dissections are performed (SCIENCE LAB). I actually had BIOLOGY LAB to start, but this is almost as good.


Sundries:

  • 1a: Turns up (AT BATS). Excellent deception here. A turn being "up", in baseball, is an "at bat". Actually, that's not officially correct, since walks, errors, and a few other sundry events do not count as at bats, even thought the batter was, in fact, at bat.


  • 17a: Nuts (MADMEN). It seems a shame not to reference the TV series of the same name that is up for more than a dozen Emmy Awards this year.

  • 18a: "Don't mind that" (IGNORE IT).

  • 19a: Encourage (EGG ON). Goes well with HENHOUSE, don't you think?

  • 20a: Intel collectors (SCOUTERS).

  • 21a: Old-style letter opener (SIRS). Admit it, you were picturing some kind of desk knife. I know I was, but I'm in the middle of a Lawrence Block novel where such a device has been used as a murder weapon, so maybe it's just on my mind.


  • 31a: Steak-___ (UMM). I had -UMS, which slowed me down on the BAD GRAMMAR fill.

  • 32a: Northern Italian city (VERONA).

  • 38a: Aoki of the links (ISAO). Gimme for me. This is a name I knew before crosswords, and it shows up enough to keep it fresh. He was (is?) a hell of a putter.

  • 39a: Azadi Tower city (TEHRAN). I've never heard of this tower, but the city name was easy enough to discern with a few crossings.

  • 41a: ___ verte (grayish-green pigment) (TERRE). I'm assuming this means "green earth".

  • 43a: Discovery of Daniel Rutherford (NITROGEN). There's a Rutherford Physics Building at McGill University, but that's named for Ernest Rutherford, who discovered protons and postulated the orbital theory of atoms. I can't find anything that indicates they're related.

  • 45a: The WHO used it to fight malaria (DDT).

  • 47a: Winter holiday of southeast Asia (TET). Gimme.


  • 48a: Vancouver Canucks logo animal (ORCA).

  • 50a: Mourned in meter (ELEGIZED).

  • 53a: Ticket's target (VOTER). As in a political ticket. Good clue.

  • 54a: New Orleans sweets (PRALINES).

  • 57a: Shell holder (PIE PAN). Pralines and pie shells. You're killing me here. Don't you know I'm on a diet?

  • 58a: Certain aerophone (TENOR SAX).

  • 59a: Having a mortgage, e.g. (IN DEBT). Seems to me there's a difference between having debts and being in debt. The latter tends to imply a negative overall balance, doesn't it?

  • 1d: Tops (ACMES).

  • 4d: Tops (AT MOST). I confidently filled in UTMOST here, which was really hard to change, except that ATBUTS wasn't making any sense at all for 1a.

  • 6d: Fig. that never ends with four zeros (SSN). Gimme.


  • 8d: Bionicle brand (LEGO).

  • 10d: X-ray particle (PHOTON). Also a type of Star Trek torpedo.

  • 12d: Penitent (RUER). One who is penitent is called a penitent. Don't you love the English language?

  • 14d: Sulky state (PET).

  • 26d: Did a line, say (SNORTED). This kind of blatant drug reference would never see the light of day at the Times.

  • 30d: "Labor omnia vincit" is its motto: Abbr. (OKLA). This is basically, find an abbreviation that fits and makes sense. Any state would do, but OKLA fit.

  • 31d: Second, e.g. (UNIT). Unit of time, to be exact.

  • 37d: "Here Come the Warm Jets" musician (ENO). Thank God for these crosswordy gimmes; they gave me a foothold.

  • 44d: Pinched the cheek of (GOOSED). Sassy clue.


  • 50d: "La Tosca" sculptor (ERTÉ). Add this to the gimme pile.

  • 52d: Hellenic consonant (ZETA).

  • 53d: Silver streak, say (VEIN). As in a vein of (silver) ore.

  • 54d: Yukon Terr. setting (PST). Pacific Standard Time.

  • 55d: Sch. with a Hartford campus (RPI). The only school I knew was in Hartford is Trinity College. I tried TRI for a bit, but it didn't last.


Suns of Bitches:

  • 23a: City between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem (LOD). I was thinking NOD, which I think is mentioned in Genesis, or was that NOB? You know, the land that Cain was banished to.

  • 40a: White, to a wahine (KEA). Well, it's a step up from the Mauna ___ guess that we usually have. Apparently, Mauna Loa means "long mountain", while Mauna Kea means "white mountain" (as it is typically snow-capped). Makes sense now.

  • 13d: 1985 William M. Hoffman play about AIDS (AS IS). My feeble brain thought this clue said William H. Macy. I blame Stephen Colbert, who coined the name Filliam H. Muffman to describe Macy and his wife, Felicity Huffman. Damn you, Colbert... Either way, I had no clue what this was.



You know, there are remarkable few SOBs in the puzzle, considering it's a Weekend Warrior. We've had Tuesday puzzles recently with more. All in all, I'd say this was a very nice themeless. Not as challenging as they can be (I was easily able to complete it in a single sitting), but entertaining for sure. Nice job.

Thanks for listening.

- Pete M.