ACROSS
1 Clean small den not good enough initially (8) SCAVENGE {S}{CAVE}{N
5 Reject/allow Indian snack? (6) CUTLET {CUT}{LET}
9 Plain gold thrown in yard (8) ORDINARY {OR}{IN+YARD}*
10 Small fire in dirty place (6) SCANTY {S{CAN}TY}
12 Demo jingle featuring representation of heart, say (5) EMOJI [T]
13 Not fully finished, I mark chief recipe to move forward (9) IMPERFECT {I}{M}{P(-r)E(+r)RFECT}
14 Depart for everyone’s high (6) PERISH {PER}{1'S}{H}
16 Church with bright yellow room (7) CHAMBER {CH}{AMBER}
19 Cricketer, injured fellow, snared tail-ender (7) BRADMAN {B{
21 Misguided action left peacekeepers at a gutted city (6) LUNACY {L}{UN}{A}{C
23 Mistake after mistake after mistake by fielder (5,4) THIRD SLIP Definition by example
25 Panel dissolved country (5) NEPAL*
26 Show up with petition not entirely right (6) APPEAR {APPEA
27 Lamas to donate shelters for old animal (8) MASTODON [T]
28 Restrain objective woman after odd tweet (6) TETHER {T
29 Valuable ring’s tip — uranium oscillator (8) PENDULUM {P{END}{U}LUM}
DOWN
1 Drunk on the way back, shows less energy (6) STONED {DENOT
2 Man adored spinning galaxy (9) ANDROMEDA*
3 Nine universal changes for boredom (5) ENNUI {NINE+U}*
4 Dress wound oddly rancid on the inside (7) GARNISH {GA{R
6 Not sure about a nice turn (9) UNCERTAIN*
7 Look at headless spear (5) LANCE
8 Play second fiddle around primary role in movie (3,5) TOY STORY {TOY} {S}{TO{R
11 Classic show’s sides splitting (4) EPIC
15 Item media broadcast at once (9) IMMEDIATE*
17 Fellow on record to change stance (9) BACKPEDAL {LAD}{EP}{<=(back)} [RA]
18 Summary of sailor’s essay (8) ABSTRACT {ABS}{TRACT}
20 New ship’s body lacking height becomes useless (4) NULL {N}{
21 He could transform Los Angeles city for one (7) LAPLACE {LA}{PLACE}
22 Ample numbers contributing to a full assembly (6) PLENUM [T]
24 Feedback on batting position (5) INPUT {IN}{PUT}
25 Famous editor supporting hundred going north (5) NOTED {TON<=}{ED}
GRID
Thank you Venkatesh for an enjoyable puzzle.
ReplyDeleteBradman is still unclear.
Injured = Bad Fellow = Man Tail-ender = R. R gets snared
DeleteThank you Col. & Shrikanth. I am rather slow on the take. I could not connect injured to bad.
DeleteSome cricketing words- enough to be calle a theme?
Nice to see Emoji - indicative of the smile on our faces on Sunday?!
ReplyDeleteBTW- cyclonic weather here in Chennai today & tomorrow. Hope it clears by Sunday. Visitors from outside Chennai to note and be prepared.
Here is an additional link on Laplace's Transform-
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laplace_transform
Remembering Laplace Transform from your engineering college days?
DeleteOnly vague memories. Had to google to brush up. Yet to read it fully. Anyway, remembered enough to connect Laplace to transform.
DeleteNice puzzle!Liked the crisp clues and smooth surfaces
ReplyDeleteI like 5a very much - pithy, unusual surface like an option in a survey at a food festival abroad before choosing items..
ReplyDeleteDoing an MB: IN 19a, the first letter in brackets that is struck off must be t.
ReplyDeleteI don't think so. It is only 'ender'-tail indicating the last letter.
DeleteNo. I think it is tail-ender=tail of ender=e...r as Col. has shown
DeleteYes - you're right. I was less than careful. Apologies to MB.
DeleteYes, that is an MB copyright!
DeleteWith dark clouds all around, with lighting dim, LIGHTNING lit up the brains with the SMILEY as an EMOJI. Got our MOJO.
DeleteTell me, Ye-all, do you solve the clues systematically , Acrosses clues first , one by one and then the DOWN ones following? Do you solve the DOWN clues first ( as to me they invariably seem easier to start with !) or the ones ACROSS? Or do you solve at random; with the first answer inserted and then connecting it to the adjoining ones and then proceed further ? What is the method by which one can solve at LIGHTNING speed? Do you feel exhausted and drained after solving a toughie? Or do you feel triumphant having won the battle of wits with the compiler? Or do you feel impotent when you get stumped and feel frustrated ? Which compiler makes you feel easy on mind and which one causes you metal stress?
Do you feel many times not equal to the task and feel guilty and get to eat your toes when the answers turn out to be so easy AFTER you missed the target clue?
Do some setters make you feel less brainy than most others? How many of you turn to gadgets and Googles and Lexicons or solver- assistance from the Net ?
I'd love to hear from all my fellow bloggers !
Raju,
DeleteWhy don't you join the S&B meet day after? You can have all the answers in one go across a sumptuous lunch- including liquids on choice.
Alas ! I am not able to ! Too many collateral damages with travel, especially to MADras ! I'm terribly allergic to Cheh - Nai !
DeleteSo,if I have to meet Raju does it have to be at Coimbatore?
DeletePaddy:I'd love, too. to meet all our friends in this blog, which has become kind of a family. Who knows when and where ? This world is too small ! A time & occasion will arise . The Col and CV refuse to enlarge our meeting occasionally into a S& B affair . I have some vague plans of holding an Exhibition of my collections and memorabilia in CBE, like I did in Nairobi. Perhaps, then that will act as a magnet for others to zoom into CBE?
DeleteWhat is the logic in TH reducing the size of the grid so much, esp. when so much of blank space all around. Even assuming no one fills up on paper, it is difficult even to read the clues.
ReplyDeleteTODAY'S SPECIAL.
ReplyDeleteTiffin: ORDINARY dosa and CUTLET
Movie: The 36th CHAMBER of Shaolin
For Children: TOY STORY
Drama: The IMPERFECT murder.
Cricketer: BRADMAN
Weather: UNCERTAIN
Pastime: ENNUI packed off by solving this crossie.
Fielder: Ponting in THIRD SLIP.
Book: The ANDROMEDA strain.
Dress: ? swimsuit
GARNISH : wide choice
Dress: Scanty?
DeleteSounds a nice combination. Would not mind hot dosa (though ordinary) and cutlet on this rainy day.
ReplyDeleteThe Hindu's Features Dept believes and thrives only in their advertisers; so does the New Indian Express whose pages contain more ads and less news and lesser views ! As opposed to these, The Deccan Chronicle gives value for money with inputs of articles, features and other news from the Spectator etc. Their Magazine section also is newsy and innovative.
ReplyDeleteTh Hindu has to use their HINDsight and the NEI has to match their Sunday edition daily with good articles by their writers .
Though I do the Hindu crossies online, thanks to this blog, I do collect the clippings regularly after solving.
The Times of India is replete with articles of interest though it costs the cheapest amongst all its sister papers.
Yes, TOI is available at a throwaway annual subscription. TH still holds on to its perch both on line and in print.
ReplyDelete