Constructed by: Matthew Stock
Edited by: Will Shortz
Not your puzzle? Try today’s …
… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Reveal Answer: Are You Chicken?
Themed answers each end with a serving of CHICKEN:
- 55A Question to a scaredy-cat … to which the final parts of 20-, 32- and 42-Across would answer “Yes!” : ARE YOU CHICKEN?
- 20A Main drag through Sin City : LAS VEGAS STRIP
- 32A Valuable bit in a prospector’s pan : GOLD NUGGET
- 42A Hockey player who typically plays the entire game : GOALTENDER
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… a complete list of answers
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Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
5A Mariner’s septet : SEAS
The phrase “the seven seas” has been used for centuries by many different peoples. The actual definition of what constitutes the collection of seven has varied depending on the period and the culture. Nowadays we consider the seven largest bodies of water as the seven seas, namely:
- The North Pacific Ocean
- The South Pacific Ocean
- The North Atlantic Ocean
- The South Atlantic Ocean
- The Indian Ocean
- The Southern Ocean
- The Arctic Ocean
9A Picket line crosser : SCAB
Back in the late 17th century, a picket was a pointed stake used militarily to defend against attacking forces, and charging cavalry in particular. Ultimately, the term “picket” comes from the French verb “piquer” meaning “to pierce”. The term “pickets” then became the name for troops posted in the front lines, watching for the enemy. A picket line is a unit of soldiers lined up as a team of lookouts. The first use of “picket line” in the sense of labor disputes appeared just after the end of WWII. Our use of “picket fence” evolved from the original lines of pointed stakes used to defend positions held by early colonists.
15A St. Louis’s Gateway ___ National Park : ARCH
The Gateway Arch in St. Louis is located on the banks of the Mississippi River, and is the tallest monument in the United States. It was designed by Eero Saarinen, with the help of structural engineer Hannskarl Bandel. They did their design work back in 1947, but construction wasn’t started until 1963. In 1980, a daredevil took it upon himself to parachute onto the top of the arch, intending to further jump from the apex of the arch and parachute to the ground. He hit the arch all right, and slid all the way down one of the arches to his death. No comment …
20A Main drag through Sin City : LAS VEGAS STRIP
The stretch of South Las Vegas Boulevard on which most of the big casinos are concentrated is referred to as the “Las Vegas Strip”. The Strip was named for LA’s Sunset Strip by former Los Angeles law enforcement officer Guy McAfee. McAfee was a notoriously corrupt head of the LAPD vice squad in the 1920s and 1930s who ran several brothels and gambling saloons. McAfee moved to Las Vegas in 1939 where he opened several casinos, including the Golden Nugget.
The Las Vegas nickname “Sin City” is not a modern marketing invention. It dates back to the early 1930s, when the construction of the nearby Hoover Dam brought a massive influx of male workers to the area. The combination of legalized gambling and the establishment of red-light districts quickly earned the city its enduring moniker.
25A Indigenous Southwestern people : PUEBLO
The Ancient Pueblo Peoples were Native Americans who lived in what is now called the Four Corners area of the US. Archeologists sometimes refer to these ancestral Pueblo peoples as the Anasazi, a Navajo word meaning “Ancient Ones”. The Pueblo name was given by early Spanish explorers in reference to the villages that they found. “Pueblo” is Spanish for “village”.
31A Trireme implement : OAR
Triremes were galleys used in the Mediterranean by a number of cultures, including the Ancient Greeks and Romans. The trireme was so called because there were three rows of oars on each side of the vessel. The term “trireme” comes from the Latin “tres remi” meaning “three-oar”. There was also a less ambitious version of the trireme that had only two banks of oars, and that was known as a bireme.
32A Valuable bit in a prospector’s pan : GOLD NUGGET
When prospectors pan for gold, they do so by mixing soil and water in a pan. Because gold is very dense, gravel and soil can be washed over the side of the pan leaving the heavy precious metal at the bottom. The gold has been “panned out”, and so we often use “pan out” figuratively to mean “turn out, succeed”.
37A Like sudokus with very few given digits, generally : HARD
Number puzzles similar to our modern-day Sudoku first appeared in French newspapers in the late 1800s. The format that we use today was created by Howard Garns, a 74-year-old freelance puzzle constructor from Connersville, Indiana and first published in 1979. The format was introduced in Japan in 1984 and given the title of “Sūji wa dokushin ni kagiru”, which translates to “the digits are limited to one occurrence”. The rather elaborate Japanese title was eventually shortened to Sudoku. No doubt many of you are fans of Sudoku puzzles. I know I am …
44A Explosive-sounding TV channel : TNT
“TNT” stands for Turner Network Television. The TNT cable channel made a big splash in the eighties when it started to broadcast old MGM movies that had been “colorized”, not something that was a big hit with the public. In recent years, the TNT programming lineup is touted with the tagline “We Know Drama”.
47A Minor disruption in the proceedings : HICCUP
Hiccups is a series of forced intakes of breath, the result of spasms in the muscles of the chest and throat. The most common cause of hiccups is some sort of irritation to the stomach or esophagus, usually taking place while eating. Apparently, we don’t really understand the reason why we hiccup, but a favored suggestion is that it may be something that we inherited from our ancestors of long ago who didn’t stand up quite as straight as we do. Gravity helps us swallow our food, but animals who walk on all fours don’t have that advantage as the food moves horizontally down the throat and into the stomach. Such beasts are in greater need of an involuntary hiccup should some food get stuck. Just a theory …
60A Lake on Ohio’s northern border : ERIE
Lake Erie borders four US states (Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York and Michigan) and one Canadian province (Ontario).
67A Water pitcher : EWER
A pitcher is a container for liquid that has a handle, mouth and spout. The term “jug” is used for the same container in other English-speaking countries. “Ewer” is an older term describing a pitcher/jug. Today, a ewer is a highly decorative pitcher, often with a base and flared spout.
Down
1D ___-Saxon : ANGLO
Germanic tribes invaded Great Britain from the early 5th century and created the nation that we now call England. The Anglo-Saxons (sometimes simply “Saxons”), as these tribes came to be called, held sway in the country until the Norman Conquest in 1066. The Anglo-Saxons were descendants of three Germanic tribes:
- The Angles, from Angeln in Northern Germany (and the tribe that gave the name “England”).
- The Saxons, from Lower Saxony and Holland.
- The Jutes, from the Jutland peninsula in Denmark.
2D Scroll read during a bat mitzvah ceremony : TORAH
A Torah scroll (also “Sefer Torah”) is a handwritten copy of the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Scriptures.
A Jewish girl becomes a bat mitzvah at 12 years of age, the age at which she becomes responsible for her actions. Boys become bar mitzvahs at 13. The terms translate into English as daughter and son of the commandments.
7D “America’s Got Talent” segments : ACTS
NBC’s “America’s Got Talent” (AGT) is part of a global franchise based in the UK. The original show is called “Britain’s Got Talent”, and the whole franchise is owned by Simon Cowell. The first host of “America’s Got Talent” was Regis Philbin (2006), followed by Jerry Springer, Nick Cannon, Tyra Banks and Terry Crews.
8D Track-and-field event with a 16-pound ball : SHOT PUT
Shot put, or events like shot put, have been around for millennia, but the first events that truly resemble today’s track and field event had to come with the invention of the cannonball. Soldiers would “put” (throw) cannonballs as far as possible in attempts to outperform each other. Shot put has been in the modern Olympic Games since day-one, with American Robert Garrett winning the gold in the first games in 1896.
12D Spam spewer : BOT
Spambots are nasty little computer programs that send out spam emails and messages, often from fake accounts. This blog gets about 500 spam comments a day that I have to delete, almost all of which are written by spambots.
14D Bill who says “Science rules!” in the intro to his TV show : NYE
That would be “Bill Nye the Science Guy”. Bill’s show ran on PBS for four years, from 1993-97.
22D “Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of ___” : RUM
The fictional sea shanty called “Dead Man’s Chest” was introduced in Robert Louis Stevenson’s great novel, “Treasure Island”. In the book, Stevenson only describes the chorus, which goes:
Fifteen men on the dead man’s chest–
…Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!
Drink and the devil had done for the rest–
…Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!
33D Resident of Muscat : OMANI
Muscat is the capital city of Oman. It lies on the northeast coast of the state on the Gulf of Oman, a branch of the Persian Gulf.
36D India’s smallest state by area : GOA
Goa is the smallest state in India, and is located in the southwest of the country. The Portuguese landed in Goa in the early 1500s, at first peacefully carrying out trade, but then took the area by force creating Portuguese India. Portugal held onto Portuguese India even after the British pulled out of India in 1947, until the Indian Army marched into the area in 1961.
43D Georgia ___ (Atlanta school) : TECH
The Georgia Institute of Technology (commonly “Georgia Tech”) is located in Atlanta. The school was founded in 1885 as part of the reconstruction effort to rebuild the infrastructure in the South after the Civil War. President Theodore Roosevelt delivered an address to the school in 1905, and then shook hands with every single student. Back then the school didn’t have over 20,000 students as it does today …
48D Words to live by : CREED
A creed or credo is a profession of faith, or a system of belief or principles. “Credo” is Latin for “I believe”.
53D Outdoor John? : DEERE
John Deere invented the first commercially successful steel plow in 1837. Prior to Deere’s invention, farmers used an iron or wooden plow that constantly had to be cleaned as rich soil stuck to its surfaces. The cast-steel plow was revolutionary as its smooth sides solved the problem of “stickiness”. The Deere company that John founded uses the slogan “Nothing Runs Like a Deere”, and has a leaping deer as its logo.
58D Drink served by the Mad Hatter : TEA
In Lewis Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”, the Mad Hatter makes his first appearance in a chapter called “A Mad Tea-Party”. This event is usually described as “The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party”, even though the Mad Hatter was just a guest. The host was the March Hare. In fact, the phrase “Mad Hatter” doesn’t appear anywhere in Lewis Carroll’s novel, although the character, the Hatter (and sometimes “Hatta”), is described as “mad”.
59D Like the fish in poke : RAW
Poke is a Native Hawaiian dish featuring diced raw fish. “Poke” is a Hawaiian word meaning “to slice”.
Read on, or …
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A The slightest bit : A TAD
5A Mariner’s septet : SEAS
9A Picket line crosser : SCAB
13A Like a situation with only bad outcomes : NO-WIN
15A St. Louis’s Gateway ___ National Park : ARCH
16A Voice above tenor : ALTO
17A Thanksgiving boatful : GRAVY
18A Spanish cat : GATO
19A Nutritionist’s plan : DIET
20A Main drag through Sin City : LAS VEGAS STRIP
23A “Fancy meeting you here!” : OH, HI!
24A Apply, as a new skill : USE
25A Indigenous Southwestern people : PUEBLO
28A Body part that can serve as a pencil holder : EAR
30A “Delicious!” : YUM!
31A Trireme implement : OAR
32A Valuable bit in a prospector’s pan : GOLD NUGGET
37A Like sudokus with very few given digits, generally : HARD
38A “Nope, not for me” : I’M OUT
39A Online “haha” : LOL
40A Steep-walled canyon : GORGE
41A Hoarse voice : RASP
42A Hockey player who typically plays the entire game : GOALTENDER
44A Explosive-sounding TV channel : TNT
45A Crow’s call : CAW!
46A Punk-inspired music genre : EMO
47A Minor disruption in the proceedings : HICCUP
49A [Their typo, not mine!] : SIC
51A Be a passenger : RIDE
55A Question to a scaredy-cat … to which the final parts of 20-, 32- and 42-Across would answer “Yes!” : ARE YOU CHICKEN?
58A “You have a point there” : TRUE
60A Lake on Ohio’s northern border : ERIE
61A Nine-member musical group : NONET
62A Lack of difficulty : EASE
63A Pimples : ACNE
64A Like a lot : ADORE
65A Amazed : AWED
66A From ___ to riches : RAGS
67A Water pitcher : EWER
Down
1D ___-Saxon : ANGLO
2D Scroll read during a bat mitzvah ceremony : TORAH
3D Overflowing (with) : AWASH
4D Apportioned : DIVVIED UP
5D Long stories : SAGAS
6D Wipe clean : ERASE
7D “America’s Got Talent” segments : ACTS
8D Track-and-field event with a 16-pound ball : SHOT PUT
9D British novelist Jones : SADIE
10D Portable writing surface : CLIPBOARD
11D Devoured : ATE
12D Spam spewer : BOT
14D Bill who says “Science rules!” in the intro to his TV show : NYE
21D Sanskrit word for “teacher” : GURU
22D “Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of ___” : RUM
26D Massive : LARGE
27D Pick from the menu : ORDER
29D Tiny hill dweller : ANT
30D Bellow : YELL!
32D Measurement around the waist : GIRTH
33D Resident of Muscat : OMANI
34D Something that’s beyond help : LOST CAUSE
35D Luminesce : GLOW
36D India’s smallest state by area : GOA
37D What students abide by when they don’t cheat : HONOR CODE
40D Precious stone : GEM
42D Period before starting more school : GAP YEAR
43D Georgia ___ (Atlanta school) : TECH
45D Pool player’s stick : CUE
48D Words to live by : CREED
49D Taking to court : SUING
50D Some frozen drinks : ICEES
52D “No need to remind me!” : I KNOW!
53D Outdoor John? : DEERE
54D “Come in” : ENTER
56D Oceanic predator : ORCA
57D All ___ day’s work : IN A
58D Drink served by the Mad Hatter : TEA
59D Like the fish in poke : RAW
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