Summation symbol, in math / MON 2-10-25 / Adoptable playmate introduced in 1982 / Palindromic Parisian periodical / Storks have long ones / Where Z is in the alphabet / Redhead introduced in 1918 / 18-inch figure introduced in 1986 / Fashionable pair introduced in 1959 and 1961, respectively
Monday, February 10, 2025
Constructor: Emily Rourke
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- RAGGEDY ANN (17A: Redhead introduced in 1918)
- AMERICAN GIRL (24A: 18-inch figure introduced in 1986)
- CABBAGE PATCH KID (39A: Adoptable playmate introduced in 1982)
- BARBIE AND KEN (50A: Fashionable pair introduced in 1959 and 1961, respectively)
Cabbage Patch Kids are a line of cloth dolls with plastic heads first produced by Coleco Industries in 1982. They were inspired by the Little People soft sculptured dolls sold by Xavier Roberts as collectibles. The brand was renamed 'Cabbage Patch Kids' by Roger L. Schlaifer when he acquired the exclusive worldwide licensing rights in 1982.
The doll brand set every toy industry sales record for three years running, and was one of the most popular lines of children's licensed products in the 1980s and has become one of the longest-running doll franchises in the United States. Additional Cabbage Patch products include children's apparel, bedding, infants' wear, record albums and board games. [...]
At the peak of their popularity, between 1983 and 1986, the dolls were highly sought-after toys for Christmas. Cabbage Patch riots occurred as parents literally fought to obtain the dolls for children. (wikipedia)
• • •
Outside the theme, it's an unremarkable Monday. The grid seems fine, the two long Downs are solid, although ... no one calls the sandwiches SUBMARINES (29D: Footlong sandwiches). If you're going to go all formal like that, you'd definitely say "submarine sandwiches." It's that or SUBS. There's no in-between. SUBMARINES is still a fine answer, just ... not with that clue. Now that I look the grid over carefully, there's probably more crosswordese than you want here, especially on an easy Monday. ARTIE ECRU OBI LYS ... and that's just in the broader SW section. ACAI SITH BAMA BLAH. Never ever gonna like the brand-name-only plural ECHOS (52D: Amazon smart speakers). A better, tighter core theme concept and a somewhat livelier and cleaner grid—that's what this Monday needs.
The Downs-only solve was relatively uneventful. TOON for BIRD as my very first answer (1D: Tweety, Woodstock or Woody Woodpecker) was peak difficulty drama. LEGS was also not a gimme for me, so fixed was I on the definitive stork part (the beak) (3D: Storks have long ones). Took some doing to finally see "GLAD I ASKED" (the best answer in the grid by a long shot), but once the two themers that cross it went in (giving me the "I" and the "K"), I saw it. At the very end, I had the "HELLO-" and, looking at the theme answers I had in place, and seeing they were all toys, I wrote in the only toyish thing that came to mind: "HELLO KITTY!" But that didn't last long. Finished with an error, but that's only because I didn't check my cross at 65D: Fleur-de-___ and wrote in LIS, which is how it's spelled sometimes, isn't it? Ha ha, yes—most of the time!
Bullets:
- 45A: Where Z is in the alphabet (LAST) — really glad I wasn't reading Across clues because I took one look at this clue and definitely thought the answer was going to be a geographical place. "Uh ... CUBA?"
- 33A: Long-running police drama (NCIS) — find someone who looks at you the way the NYTXW looks at NCIS, my lord. Get a room. (Everything I know about NCIS, I learned from crosswords—for instance, I hear Mark HARM-N is involved somehow)
- 4D: Summation symbol, in math (SIGMA) — speaking of things I know solely because of crosswords—this answer! I read this clue, thought "I don't know that," but looked down and found my fingers just typing in SIGMA. "Trust us," they said.
- 60D: Palindromic Parisian periodical (ELLE) — yes, ELLE is crosswordese, but at least this clue is trying to have some fun. This clue gets it.
That's it. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
66 comments:
Liked it a lot more than OFL did. Easy but fun. My only overwrite was @Rex LiS before LYS at 65D
Almost made the same error Rex did with LIS/LYS. Took French in school, but never saw FLEUR-DE-LYS. Otherwise a quick and pleasant solve.
My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):
1. Little crack (4)
2. Play with one's food? (6)(7)
3. What's holding up dessert? (4)
4. Bud after Jack, perhaps? (6)
5. Head of a noted animal rescue project (4)
QUIP
DINNER THEATER
CONE
CHASER
NOAH
I guess I’m showing my (precise) age, but I found CABBAGEPATCHKID to be a delight to see on the grid (though I agree it’s weird to have it in the singular). I like when the answers hit that commonly-known-but-rarely-heard-anymore cadence—but maybe that’s just because I was the right age to pick up that short-lived fad. But since I was digging the classic-of-yore vibe, BARBIEANDKEN felt like the outlier of the theme answers.
The theme was about dolls - do you really need more justification than that? Rex always gives us a good take on the theme, sometimes I think he overthinks it though.
This one seemed to rely even more than usual on crosswordese, but that may just be my perception. The two rows in the center contain 6 entries, and only one of them uses real words (ITS ME), the others are MRS, SIA, TOA, IOU and NCIS. Not a very pretty stretch to look at.
One of those opposite-Rex days. GLAD I ASKED is a very weak entry, and does not match that clue to me. I really hate it when to supposedly equivalent colloquial phrases aren't.
But I was fine with the collection of dolls, and I think asking for some additional connection beyond being dolls is asking too much.
Umm… the answer to 45A Where Z is in the alphabet was END, although ‘last’ is definitely a better answer.
I enjoyed the dolls here, all of these played a role in either my growing up years or in my childrens’ - except the CABBAGEPATCHKIDs, what a crazy craze that was! Thankfully we never got involved in it.
The singular Cabbage Patch kid was also used on May 25, 2011, Why ? Adding the "S" uses 16 spaces not 15.
Sweet to uncover the beautiful GLAD I ASKED, then to later learn that it’s never appeared in a Times puzzle before. Great find!
Sweet to course through the puzzle’s schwa-de-vivre with its ten answers ending in that sound – BALSA, BAMA, NINA, DATA, MICA, ARENA, HENNA, SIGMA, SIA, and TO A.
Sweet to work my brain, trying to figure out the revealer without looking at its clue. I failed, but my brain was glad for the trying.
So, I read the clue, uncovered the revealer's first letter, then BAM the answer came with a happy-burst from simultaneously cracking the riddle, seeing the DOLLY pun, and the funny thought of saying “Hello, Dolly” to a doll.
That was a sweet moment.
One answer triggered a sweet memory of how my older sister and I, as little kids, got a big kick out of funny-sounding words. When we heard one, we’d look at each other with mirth in our eyes; it was our little secret. And BOSOM, to us, was one of the funniest-sounding words of all.
Sweetness in the box today for me – a lovely gift. Thank you so much for coming up with this, Emily.
delightful puzzle,.. wouldn't solving it by only entering the downs remove all the fun since the acrosses carry the theme?,. I guess Rex is a downer these days,.
Yeah, Fleur de LYS is bizarre! Not a French spelling for sure. I think Cabbage Patch Dolls are still sold. At least when my 15 year old was younger someone got her one as a gift.
Dolls schmolls -- it was a Super Bowl theme: BLAH DISMAY MESS BOMB
loved it. never seen dolls in a puzzle this way before. certainly better than all the sports references i have to put up with all the time. it was a nice change of pace.
Hey All !
Original CABBAGE PATCH KIDS are selling for a decent buck. Break them out, put 'em on e-Bay! (Speculation, haven't really looked!)
Decent theme. DOLLS. All known here except for AMERICAN GIRL. Fill OK. It is a MonPuz, after all
Super Bowl hangover anyone?
Another good ole Monday. Today should be a paid day off work. Har
Happy Monday.
No F's (NULLS! Two days in a row, it needs to END.) 😁
RooMonster
DarrinV
Agree with RP for a change -fast but not too impressive. Had a few highlights as noted by other posters. LATimes much better this am
Obvious but fun theme; I guessed AMERICAN GIRL from the dates in the clue, which made it clear we were dealing with dolls, and the rest was easy. HELLO DOLLY is a great revealer.
I do object to the verbification of NULLS. We have a verb already, annuls, and don't need another. And I always want to say IT is I, but I know that won't be it. Not much else to say.
I think Rex is trolling us with that LAST business; sometimes he gets bored. But it's hard to know.
As for theme coherence--well, I would certainly appreciate the theme more if the entries had more in common00but that didn't stop me from appreciating it as is. Why? I have no idea.
And of course, no one pays any attention to KEN--we even have a song about that now--so no need to include him in the HELLO DOLLY addressed to Barbie.
Maybe there were some ‘talking’ dolls that could have better matched a ‘hello dolly’ revealer?
After getting RAGGEDY ANN, I skipped down to read the revealer clue. No problem there -- it was HELLO DOLLY. And so, off I went to look for other famous dolls.
A pleasant, very easy Monday with no junk fill other than NULLS -- a really, really bad Plural of Convenience. There was a certain serendipity involved in constructing this: with a limited number of famous dolls to choose from, I can imagine Emily shouting "Eureka!" when the symmetry worked so well. Yes, she did need to come up with BARBIE AND KEN for it to work -- but they are a real pair after all. A smooth and nicely executed puzzle.
Hey Rex, 45A in my puzzle is END not LAST
NCIS is really not a “police drama” - just like you wouldn’t call FBI one.
(See the bullets section)
Lys is actually the French spelling!
Well, another review asking the "Why these answers?". I'd say "they're all dolls" and let it go it that, but I'm not writing a blog. Knew all of them, just found out about the AMERICANGIRL species by way of a granddaughter, as we raised two boys. Never know when the things you learn will show up in a crossword.
Today saw both ECRU and ELS emerge from hiding. Nice to see you both.
Seemed like a herd of moo-cow easies today, wondering which one(s) M&A will pick out. I'm voting for "items in an Easter hunt".
Nice little MONDECITO, ER. Exactly Right for the day of the week, and thanks for all the breezy fun.
Interesting that Rex said he considered the revealer was HELLOKITTY because this same creator did a similar puzzle with HELLOKITTY as the revealer a couple of years ago. I remember PINK PANTHER and COWARDLY LION among the answers.
"another serious problem with this theme: " IT'S SERIOUS FOLKS. DOLLS!
4 years of French. Never saw it spelled that way.
What did they say about the model-maker who wouldn't back down from anything or anyone? That guy's got BALSA wood!
In retaliation, our neighbor to the south has renamed the doll MexICANGIRL.
FYI (from M-W)
null
3 of 3
verb
nulled; nulling; nulls
transitive verb
: to make null
Gotta love this tribute to my wife, MRS EGGS.
I know I wasn't the onli one who had LiS, but how about FLOP before BOMB for failing on Broadway? That had me flummoxed for a nanosecond. I do, however, want to congratulate myself on anticipating that this might be a "why these?" write-up from @Rex. That's when the themers make use of the common characteristics of 4 or 5 members of a larger set to set up a revealer that ties them together or makes you see their commonality. Puzzles of these type have been constructed in large numbers over a long period of time. I wonder if @Rex looks at the winning lottery numbers and thinks, "why these".
Although I wasn't aware of it at the time due to my D.O. solve, I am now actually pretty surprised that no one has jumped on the repetition of Play Station in the clues for 12D and 62A. Or maybe that's one of those cute "almost repeat intentionally" situations.
Anyway, after a day of moving furniture, I enjoyed a different type of DOLLY. Thanks, Emily Rourke.
Same creator did a puzzle with a HELLO KITTY revealer a couple of years ago. Those answers were PINK PANTHER, COWARDLY LION and TONY THE TIGER.
I thought this was cute! (I had an American Girl doll as a kid.) But I’m really over how much they keep using BAMA as of late. We get it! It’s a school! Roll tide or whatever!
Easy. A reasonably smooth grid, fun theme, amusing reveal, liked it a lot more than @Rex did.
I suspected the only WOEs for my Gen-Z grandkids (who are both doing the puzzles with some frequency) would be ARTIE, BALSA, ELLE, NAOMI. and EMILE.
I checked with my grandson and I was mostly right, except he also did not know HELLO DOLLY and ECRU which I subsequently instructed him to memorize.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #983 was a medium-tough Croce for me with the top half a skosh tougher than the bottom. Good luck!
Croce 983 was medium - a little to the hard side of medium. I wonder what 33D means. And after the 33A debacle in the NYT puzzle recently, that was interersting to see.
Dr. A
Fleur de Lys.
I was puzzled by your comment that this a bizarre spelling because I have seen it before. So I looked it up. According to the internet, LYS is an alternative spelling. Both are correct the entry says. Based on the entries, LiS is more common though.
Southside Johnny
I agree that Rex often overthinks things. Dolls are a coherent group to me. Why these? Why not!
Do I ever remember the fights over CABBAGE PATCH KIDs. I had a seven year old who desperately wanted one for Christmas. Somehow, I managed to score one and was so thrilled (no I didn’t fight over it). I watched expectantly as she opened her gift from Santa. What a smile on her face. Her joy, and mine, was short-lived, though. Turns out my great find was imported from France and all the very important descriptions attached to the doll, including her name, were in French. My daughter decided it wasn’t a “real” one and had very little to do with it after that. Funny that I was thinking about this recently and asked her if she remembered. Oh yes, she said. I never liked that doll.
Dr. A
In Wikipedia in French I started typing in Fleur de and up popped Fleur de Lys.
So clearly it is not bizarre. I have always associated the y with the symbol of the French monarchy.
Extremely easy Monday for me, only somewhat sticky part was the SE corner, where I really wanted LONG odds which thus prevented me from seeing HELLODOLLY (not familiar with the musical). Luckily DIMES cleared up that something was wrong, even if I had to let go of my beloved LONG odds.
Nicely dolled-up MonPuz.
@RP: Why these dolls? I reckon mostly cuz they're well-known ones that fit nicely into the puzgrid. [It is a MonPuz, after all, so well-known stuff is a good thing.]
Was a pretty eazy-E MonPuz theme mcguffin to decipher. I went around and figured out most of the themers, before startin to fill in answer one.
staff weeject pick: SIA. Gettin to know this artist's name, now. No idea what her songs are, tho.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {The "T" of T/F} = TRUE.
other fave stuff: GLADIASKED & SUBMARINES [only non-themers over 6-long]. BIRD clue [mainly cuz it rhymes with BIRD flu, but also cuz it foofed the M&A into startin to fill in the puz with TOON. Then had to change my TOON, in a nanosecond or two later].
Thanx for the fun, Ms. Rourke darlin. Good job.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
... on the canine side ...
Stumpy Stumper: "Wiener Dog Runt #72" - 16x3.5 12 min. themeless runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Cute, easy Monday. Gotta remember SIA.
Thanks, Emily :)
My 5-year-old niece had to have a cabbage patch kid, but the shelves were empty. My brother-in-law found a knock-off and it turned out one leg was shorter than the other. They named her Eileen. Niece loved that knock-off doll.
I think I disagree with Rex the most when he critiques a theme. It is probably related to the fact that he does so many crosswords ( I only do the Times). I thought the theme and revealer were fine.and coherent A selection of dolls from different eras, a fact he didn’t mention But the giveaway for me was the 1959 date so I got Barbie and Ken first. American Girl dolls are American history themed and tied into a book for each doll. They are also the most expensive of the bunch.
I agree with Pabloinnh that EGG is a likely choice for M& A’s moo cow easy answer. Liked the puzzle
I usually post later although I live on the East Coast, unlike CDilly one of my favorite commenters now moved to the West Coast . I am really happy to see her a regular again.
I have been reading this blog for over a decade. Thanks Rex and everyone for keeping this blog going.
Funny how different experiences inform us. I also took French, but I think Fleur-de-lys is more familiar to me either from reading "The Three Musketeers" or from happening to be in Quebec one year for Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day. There could be some connection with the Lys river, though I agree Fleur-de-lis does seem to be the most usual spelling these days.
FWIW, here's what the Wikipedia ChatBot has to say:
The spelling variations "fleur-de-lis" and "fleur-de-lys" both refer to the same stylized emblem commonly associated with French royalty and heraldry. The difference in spelling arises from variations in French orthography. "Lis" is the modern French word for "lily," while "lys" is an older spelling that was used historically. Both spellings are correct and interchangeable, reflecting the emblem's long history and evolution in language use.
Oops, that was Britannica, not Wikipedia. Keep those sources straight!
MRS. SITH RACED over to the barn for EGGS. To her DISMAY, the BIRD ONLY laid a MINI. She clutched her BOSOM and let out a ROAR. She was DYEING for a bunch of EGGS because she always ATE them in the AMS.
Her daughter, ANN (who was a DOLL of a GIRL) had been in the MARINES on a SUB where she met an IRANI named EDDY who wanted to become an AMERICAN GOTH. EDDY wore a HENNA ARMOR TUNIC that was a bit RAGGEDY but he was a DIY BOMB and could fix anything.
MRS. SITH ran over to the PATCH where EDDY had SEEDED a bunch of RYES to feed the BIRD. He said it was a TEASER and instead of laying BLAH MINI EGGS, they'd be GLAD and lay a BOMB of SONY side ups.
The BIRD was eating CABBAGE over by the RAGGEDY PATCH that EDDY had SEEDED with RYES. He grabbed his DOLLY, threw his SHAWL OVER his TUNIC, let out a ROAR, and shooed the BIRD into an ARENA by the barn. It was a MESS of a STY but only a RAGGEDY BIRD could be SATED with SEEDED RYES. It's TRUE!
"IOU" MRS. SITH cooed. "IT'S ME....OVER here....HELLO EDDY...I'm GLAD I ASKED you to TEASE the BIRD over to the ARENA. It's a MESS of a STY but the BIRD looks SATED and will surely LAY a BOMB of EGGS." She did...
The DATA is in. No more BLAH EGGS. Why ELS would BARBIE AND KEN let out ECHOS like TRUE A TEAMS waiting to be SATED with a BOMB of MINI EGGS. They knew EDDY was a TRUE GAMER; he was the ARTIE in ARMOR who saved the EGGS.
Her daughter, ANN, who was a DOLLY of a GIRL, married EDDY, the AMERICAN GOTH. MRS. SITH clutched her BOSOM with joy. ACAI you not! They left on a SUB for the island of TOA where they could TALK TO an AMERICAN BIRD named SIA. They sat with that KID, NINA, and watched the sun EBB at the END of the SONY DAY. It was magic...And that's the truth...
Hands up for solving down clues only and getting tripped up by LIS. I finished the puzzle in about 7 minutes, did not get the Happy Pencil, and spent another 3 minutes searching for the error. Way down there was ONLI which looked unlikely even without reading the clue; found and fixed.
@rorosen 7:50 am said "wouldn't solving it by only entering the downs remove all the fun since the acrosses carry the theme?" Answer: absolutely not! It adds to the challenge, and the fun, and once you figure out the theme without looking at the clues, you can guess any missing themers which in turn helps with other blanks. As I've said many times, I used to not even bother doing Mondays because there was no challenge and it was over way too quick. Once I changed to down clues only, Monday became a puzzle I look forward to as much as say, Friday.
Goodness, so many tech clues. Even on a Monday they can’t unplug their soulless matrix neck coils and be a little more original and interesting. Just let AI write your grids if you’re going to be this pathetic. This is a joyless race to the generic middle.
p.s.
@pabloinnh & dgd: yep. EGGS clue definitely had the sufficient moo, but it had pretty much been used before in other MonPuzs.
Best past MonPuz mooer for an EGGS clue, IM&AO:
{The yolk’s not on them, but in them} = EGGS.
M&Also
Not that much into dolls so the theme was a bit on the BLAH side for me. The bigger issue is one I have with a lot of themed puzzles. With five longish themers and reveal and 38 black squares, there's precious little room left for anything else. You know, the interesting words crossing one another part of crossword puzzles.
With the perfunctory parade of threes and fours, if the theme doesn't tickle your fancy then that's it. It's OVER. The END.
I expected an easy puzzle and got one, and was glad. I knew about all those DOLLS, and remembered the CABBAGE PATCH KIDS, which were IMO disgusting. Now the AMERICAN GIRL ones brought back fond memories of a long ago trip to New York with my wife and kids.They're in Rockefeller Center now, and they were certainly somewhere midtown back then. I'll have to ask if they got any back then.
I thought GLAD I ASKED was just brilliant -- and the only answer I initially had any difficulty with,
Sheesh! Having a bad day, are we? It was a cute, little Monday puzzle. Emily is a budding crossword constructor and I like her puzzles. This sort of review does no one any favors. It's a Monday for god's sake.
Bonnie Braids, Wanda the walking doll, Miss Peep.
I agree that it's not a modern French spelling, but I'm old enough to remember when it was still quite commonly used. See @TexanPenny's report from Britannica above. Some references I looked at said the term "probably" refers to the Lys river. Wherever it came from, "fleur-de-lys" is now embedded in my brain as the "real" spelling, and damn these modernizers who insist on changing the spellings of perfectly good words. ;-)
@ Rex
Did you wake up with a hangover or what?
Why not these dolls? It was somewhat entertaining to se the dates they were introduced. And to see that Raggedy Ann , which I coveted a a child had been around for 21 years before I was born. The rest were all too late for me, but certainly familiar. I could not remember the title of Hello Dolly so my "aha" came late and with a big grin. It was a very clever theme answers /revealer combo. Delightful.
Lewis I definitely concur with your favorite clues 1,2, and 5.
Now to read the rest of the comments.
Oh, I just read the one above and agree com;;lately with " this sort of review does no one any favors (tho I would ave said an good)
BLAH MINI EGGS! I know how disappointing that can be when you get them home and open them up. Such a downer! And especially when they cost so much!
BTW, @GILL, I sent you first an e-birthday card and then a day or two later an email letting you know I'd sent it. Have you perhaps changed your email address? I sent them to the address that begins "2m".
I'm with Song
Pretty sure I saw spellcheck change Sonnig to song
I smiled at your first Q and A joke, but much more at " I wonder if @Rex looks at the winning lottery numbers and thinks, "why these" "
They actually don't sell that well. Everyone and their mother thought they'd be worth money one day so they saved them. You might find some that are listed high but just because someone listed it doesn't mean someone will buy it lol. Now find so.e random toy from the 80s still in the box, that'll sell!
Why on earth wasn’t Polly Bluth (Arrested Development) included? Is it because she’s “the FAT one”?
Famous Dolls EXCLUDED in NYTXW!
Really, NYT editors, do better!
(And Rex - don’t ever change)…
I agree with @Anonymous 10:31. Do all the puzzles now require BAMA as an answer? I'd like a break from it. Other than that, I really liked the puzzle. Cute and fun theme (especially if I don't nitpick it). Thanks, Emily Bourke, for the fun.
Bless you Rex Parker
"I wine 'em and dine 'em, but I don't let them tell me what to do."
SharonAK
Your reference to Raggedy reminded me
In the mid fifties the Disney Davey Crockett show was a big hit. Coon skin hats etc were all the rage for boys As a four year old, I wanted a Davey Crockett doll so my mother got it for me. I carried it everywhere with me until my older brother decided to pull its head off. I was very upset. So that was one doll aimed at pre school boys.
well, i enjoyed it, but i had all of these dolls and it sparked fond memories, so. as others have said, i don't see why not these dolls. i think barbie & ken are the outlier because the others are all similar in size and kind of like 'baby you would take care of' where as barbie & ken are more like action figures. [furby isn't a doll. polly pocket isn't a doll either.] also it's weird for rex to complain about cabbage patch kids because their "fame was short lived"...you literally take this snippet from wiki "has become one of the longest-running doll franchises in the United States." so, uh....no, it wasn't. and i would bet money the average person knows cabbage patch over american girl.
anyway, i was born in 1983 and some relative of my mom's risked life and limb to get me one of the first cabbage patch dolls before i was born. my mom took one look at it, thought it hideous, and got rid of it! the joke was eventually on her when as a young child i absolutely LOVED cabbage patch dolls. i had easily over a dozen. i always had one with me, as well as a real diaper bag and diapers, baby food, change of outfit, the special carseat carrier, you name it. it was always a special day when my mom would take me to toys r us and i would beeline to the cabbage patch section. as it happened, my aunt also collected them, and she could sew, too. so i had some handmade outfits including [faux] fur coats!
i also had a sizeable american girl collection, as well as all the books, paper dolls...everything. i knew all the stories and names of things by heart. this was back when they only offered the historical dolls from different eras. i even went to a few special american girl themed events that we traveled for. i loved my dolls and took care of them like they were my real children. i believe we still have them all.
the one thing my mom had high hopes for me to like - barbies...she saved all of hers from when she was a kid, and all their clothes and accessories for me - i never liked them. and you could tell the size of the box too when someone that didn't know you well would get you one for your birthday and that was such a bummer lol. [this didn't happen very often thankfully, and i wasn't a brat, i was always polite and grateful. then it would go on to someone who would enjoy it.]
i will agree the rest of the fill on this one was pretty musty/heavy on the crosswordese but the theme just struck such a happy chord with me i didn't care :)
-stephanie.
Do all the puzzles now require BAMA as an answer?
Damn straight.
D. Smith/Hurts, rah. Producing excellence where it counts, on the football field.
And why need BAMA appear just once in the game, when four or fives times would be so much bettah. Hit all the corners, then hit the center.
Dolls or.. BAMA BAMA BAMA BAMA BAMA. Is that even a fair choice. No, it isn't, is the answer.
You'd love it. Be honest.
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