Constructed by: Brad Wiegmann
Edited by: Will Shortz
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… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Reveal Answer: Three Cheers
Themed answers start with three-letter strings that , collectively, give us THREE CHEERS: HIP, HIP, HUR-RAY!
- 62A “Woo-hoo!” … as suggested by the starts of 17-, 24-, 39- and 49-Across : THREE CHEERS!
- 17A Rap songs and such : HIP-HOP MUSIC
- 24A Places to stick wallets : HIP POCKETS
- 39A Risky time for beach property owners : HURRICANE SEASON
- 49A Singer with the 1961 #1 hit “Hit the Road Jack” : RAY CHARLES
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Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
7A Yosemite or Yellowstone : PARK
President Abraham Lincoln passed a bill in 1864 creating the Yosemite Grant, which was the first piece of federal legislature that set aside park land for preservation and public use. The Yosemite Grant paved the way for the creation of Yellowstone as the nation’s first national park in 1872. Yosemite was made a national park in 1890.
19A Certain endurance race, in brief : TRI
Triathlon (tri)
20A Bowling venue : ALLEY
Bowling has been around for an awfully long time. The oldest known reference to the game is in Egypt, where pins and balls were found in an ancient tomb that is over 5,000 years old. The first form of the game to come to America was nine-pin bowling, which had been very popular in Europe for centuries. In 1841 in Connecticut, nine-pin bowling was banned due to its association with gambling. Supposedly, an additional pin was added to get around the ban, and ten-pin bowling was born.
21A Singer Tori : AMOS
Tori Amos is an American pianist and singer. She started playing the piano at two years old, and was composing piano pieces by age five. Amos was playing in piano bars (chaperoned by her father) when she was 14. I’m going to have to find some of her music …
26A “___ of the d’Urbervilles” : TESS
In Thomas Hardy’s novel “Tess of the d’Urbervilles”, the heroine and title character is Tess Durbeyfield. Her father is an uneducated peasant and when he hears that his name is a corruption of the noble name of “D’Urberville”, the news goes to his head.
29A Longtime TV brand : RCA
RCA, or the Radio Corporation of America, played a significant role in the history of television as a pioneer in the industry. RCA developed and introduced the first electronic television system in 1939 at the New York World’s Fair. RCA also created the NTSC (National Television System Committee) broadcast standard, which was adopted in the United States in 1953 for analog television broadcasting. Additionally, RCA produced the first color television sets in 1954.
31A Paula of “American Idol” : ABDUL
Paula Abdul is primarily a singer and dancer, and someone who endeared herself even more to the American public in recent years as a judge on “American Idol”. Abdul had a famous husband for a couple of years, as she was married to actor Emilio Estevez from 1992-94.
47A French fashion magazine : ELLE
“Elle” magazine was founded in 1945 in France and today has the highest circulation of any fashion magazine in the world. “Elle” is the French word for “she”. “Elle” is published monthly worldwide, although you can pick up a weekly edition if you live in France.
49A Singer with the 1961 #1 hit “Hit the Road Jack” : RAY CHARLES
Ray Charles came up with his stage name by dropping the family name from his real moniker “Ray Charles Robinson”. His life was a wild ride, and was well-represented in the excellent 2004 biopic called “Ray” starring Jamie Foxx in the title role. Ray Charles was married twice and fathered 12 children with nine different women. As I said, a wild ride …
55A “The Thin Man” terrier : ASTA
Asta is the wonderful little dog in the superb “The Thin Man” series of films starring William Powell and Myrna Loy (as Nick and Nora Charles). In the original story by Dashiell Hammett, Asta was a female Schnauzer, but on screen Asta was played by a wire-haired fox terrier called “Skippy”. Skippy was also the dog in “Bringing Up Baby” with Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn, the one who kept stealing the dinosaur bone. Skippy retired in 1939, so Asta was played by other dogs in the remainder of “The Thin Man” films.
58A Salt Lake City’s home : UTAH
Salt Lake City (SLC) was founded by Brigham Young, in 1847. The city takes its name from the Great Salt Lake on which it sits, and indeed was known as “Great Salt Lake City” up until 1868.
59A “___, and ye shall find” (Matthew 7:7) : SEEK
The quotation “Seek, and ye shall find” comes from the Sermon on the Mount in the Bible (Matthew 7:7).
61A ___ B, a.k.a. Scary Spice : MEL
“Mel B” is the stage name of Melanie Brown, who came to fame as a member of the Spice Girls musical group. She took the name Mel B to distinguish herself from fellow band member Melanie Chisholm (Melanie C). Mel B was also known as “Scary Spice”, a nickname given to her by the media. American viewers saw Mel B on the TV show “America’s Got Talent” from 2013 through 2019, on which show she served as a judge.
67A Actress de Armas : ANA
Ana de Armas is an actress from Cuba. Having attended the National Theater School of Cuba, she moved to Spain at the age of 18. There, she made a name for herself in a Spanish TV series called “El Internado”. De Armas moved to Los Angeles in 2014, after which her performance opposite Ryan Gosling in 2017’s “Blade Runner 2049” earned her critical acclaim.
Down
5D Land of Priam and Hector : TROY
The ancient city of Troy was located on the west coast of modern-day Turkey. The Trojan War of Greek mythology was precipitated by the elopement of Helen, the wife of the king of Sparta, with Paris of Troy. The war itself largely consisted of a nine-year siege of Troy by the Greeks. We know most about the final year of that siege, as it is described extensively in Homer’s “Iliad”. The city eventually fell when the Greeks hid soldiers inside the Trojan Horse, which the Trojans brought inside the city’s walls. Beware of Greeks bearing gifts …
Priam was King of Troy during the Trojan War. Reputedly, Priam was father to fifty sons and many daughters with his many wives. His eldest son and heir to the throne was Hector. Paris was another of Priam’s sons, the man who caused the Trojan War by eloping with Helen, Queen of Sparta.
As described in Homer’s “Iliad”, Hector was a Trojan prince and a great fighter. Hector was slain during the Trojan War, as the Greeks laid siege to Troy. Hector died at the hands of Achilles, while fighting a duel.
6D Motor oil brand : STP
The initialism STP stands for “Scientifically Treated Petroleum”. The brand was founded in 1953 in Saint Joseph, Missouri.
8D Author of “The Boy Who Cried Wolf” : AESOP
“The Boy Who Cried Wolf” is one of Aesop’s fables, and the tale that gives rise to our phrase “to cry wolf” meaning “to give a false alarm”. In the fable, a shepherd boy is in the habit of tricking nearby villagers into thinking a wolf is attacking his flock by crying “Wolf!”. When an actual attack is made, the villages assume it’s another false alarm and the sheep are eaten by the wolf.
9D ___ d’etre (justification for being) : RAISON
“Raison d’être” is a French phrase meaning “reason for existence”.
10D Colonel Sanders’s chain : KFC
The famous “Colonel” of Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) fame was Harland Sanders, an entrepreneur from Henryville, Indiana. Although not really a “Colonel”, Sanders did indeed serve in the military. He enlisted in the Army as a private in 1906 at the age of 16, lying about his age. He spent the whole of his time in the Army as a soldier in Cuba. It was much later, in the 1930s, that Sanders went into the restaurant business making his specialty deep-fried chicken. By 1935 his reputation as a “character” had grown, so much so that Governor Ruby Laffoon of Kentucky gave Sanders the honorary title of “Kentucky Colonel”. Later in the fifties, Sanders developed his trademark look with the white suit, string tie, mustache and goatee. When Sanders was 65 however, his business failed and in stepped Dave Thomas, the founder of Wendy’s. Thomas simplified the Sanders menu, cutting it back from over a hundred items to just fried chicken and salads. That was enough to launch KFC into the fast food business. Sanders sold the US franchise in 1964 for just $2 million and moved to Canada to grow KFC north of the border. He died in 1980 and is buried in Louisville, Kentucky. The Colonel’s secret recipe of 11 herbs and spices is indeed a trade secret. Apparently there is only one copy of the recipe, a handwritten piece of paper, written in pencil and signed by Colonel Sanders. Since 2009, the piece of paper has been locked in a computerized vault surrounded with motion detectors and security cameras.
12D Wading bird : EGRET
Egrets are a group of several species of white herons. Many egret species were faced with extinction in the 1800s and early 1900s due to plume hunting, a practice driven by the demand for egret plumes that could be incorporated into hats.
13D Gird one’s ___ : LOINS
The phrase “gird your loins” dates back to ancient Rome. The expression describes the action of lifting “one’s skirts” and tying them between the legs to allow more freedom of movement before going into battle. Nowadays, “gird your loins” (or sometimes just “gird yourself”) is a metaphor for “prepare yourself for the worst”.
18D ___ tai (cocktail) : MAI
The mai tai cocktail is strongly associated with the Polynesian islands, but the drink was supposedly invented in 1944 in Trader Vic’s restaurant in Oakland, California. One recipe is 6 parts white rum, 3 parts orange curaçao, 3 parts orgeat syrup, 1 part rock candy syrup, 2 parts fresh lime juice, all mixed with ice and then a float added of 6 parts dark rum. “Maita’i” is the Tahitian word for “good”.
22D Japanese dog : AKITA
The Akita breed of dog is named for its point of origin, Akita Prefecture in Japan. When Helen Keller visited Japan in 1937, she asked for and was given an Akita breed of dog, with the name of Kamikaze-go. Sadly, the dog died within a year from distemper. The following year the Japanese government officially presented Keller with a replacement dog. Supposedly Keller’s dogs were the first members of the breed to be introduced into the US.
24D Big banking inits. in the U.K. : HSBC
HSBC is a UK-based financial services company that was the largest bank in Europe in 2018. It can trace its history back to 1865, when it was founded in British Hong Kong as the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank. The initialism “HSBC” stood for the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation.
25D Sportscaster Howard who cried “Down goes Frazier!” : COSELL
Howard Cosell was one of the most popular of all sports journalists. With his high profile came a lot of controversy as Cosell wasn’t afraid to express his personal opinions. For example, he came out against professional boxing in 1982 after witnessing a one-sided fight between Larry Holmes and Tex Cobb. Two weeks earlier South Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim had died after a match against Ray Mancini.
29D Greek P : RHO
Rho is the Greek letter that looks just like our Roman letter “p”, although it is equivalent to the Roman letter R. It is the 17th letter in the Greek alphabet.
32D Fish ladder locale : DAM
A fish ladder is a structure built around a barrier in a river, a structure designed to allow fish to pass around that barrier. The focus is on fish that routinely swim upstream or downstream for spawning. The structure comprises a number of small steps that are easily navigated by the fish, hence the name “fish ladder”.
33D Chicago-style pizza chain : UNO
The chain of pizza parlors known today as Uno Chicago Grill used to be called Pizzeria Uno, or just “Uno’s”. Apparently, Uno’s created the world’s first deep-dish pizza.
37D Nursery rhyme’s “little piggy” : TOE
This little piggy went to market,
This little piggy stayed home,
This little piggy had roast beef,
This little piggy had none,
And this little piggy went wee wee wee all the way home.
46D Afghan language : PASHTO
Pashto is the native language of the Pashtun and Afghan peoples.
48D Features of lasagna or an onion : LAYERS
“Lasagna” was originally the name of a cooking pot, but the term came to mean a dish that was cooked in it. “Lasagna” also became the name of the flat noodle used in the dish. If you order lasagna on the other side of the Atlantic, you’ll notice the “lasagne” spelling, the plural of “lasagna”. The plural is used as there is more than one layer of pasta in the dish.
49D Dance from Cuba : RUMBA
The rumba (sometimes “rhumba”) is a Cuban dance, with influences brought by African slaves and Spanish colonists. The name “rumba” comes from “rumbo”, the Spanish word for “party, spree”.
51D Site where Allies met in 1945 : YALTA
Yalta is a resort city on the Black Sea on the Crimean Peninsula. Crimea is very much in the news in recent years because of the war between Russia and Ukraine. Yalta was also in the news at the end of WWII, as it was the site of the 1945 Yalta Conference between the leaders of the three main Allies.
The Yalta Conference was a wartime meeting between WWII leaders Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin. Held in February of 1945, the conference is most remembered for decisions made on the post-war organization of Europe. To a large extent, the three leaders made decisions carving up political influence around the world, decisions that have profound implications to this day.
53D City NE of Manchester : LEEDS
I went to school for a while not far from Leeds in West Yorkshire in the north of England. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, Leeds was a major center for the production and trading of wool, and then with the onset of mechanization it became a natural hub for manufacture of textiles. These days Leeds is noted as a shopping destination and so has been dubbed “the Knightsbridge of the North”.
Manchester is a large city in the UK, located in the northwest of England. It grew in size dramatically during the Industrial Revolution. Home to a thriving textile industry, Manchester is often referred to as the world’s first industrialized city. People from Manchester are known as “Mancunians”.
56D Rich cake whose name comes from German : TORTE
A torte is a type of cake made primarily with eggs, sugar and ground nuts (but no flour). A favorite of mine …
60D Ellington’s “Take ___ Train” : THE A
The A Train in the New York City Subway system runs from 207th Street, through Manhattan and over to Far Rockaway in Queens. The service lends its name to a jazz standard “Take the ‘A’ Train”, the signature tune of Duke Ellington and a song much sung by Ella Fitzgerald. One version of the lyrics is:
You must take the A Train
To go to Sugar Hill way up in Harlem
If you miss the A Train
You’ll find you’ve missed the quickest way to Harlem
Hurry, get on, now, it’s coming
Listen to those rails a-thrumming (All Aboard!)
Get on the A Train
Soon you will be on Sugar Hill in Harlem.
63D Taxi : CAB
A hansom cab is a very specific design of horse and buggy that was patented by Joseph Hansom in 1834 in England. The “cab” in the name is short for “cabriolet”, an earlier design of carriage on which the hansom was based. It’s from “hansom cab” that we get our modern term “cab”.
We call cabs “taxis”, a word derived from “taximeter cabs” that were introduced in London in 1907. A taximeter was an automated meter designed to record distance traveled and fare to be charged. The term “taximeter” evolved from “taxameter”, with “taxa” being Latin for “tax, charge”.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A Undergoes a chemical change : REACTS
7A Yosemite or Yellowstone : PARK
11A Hairstyling stuff : GEL
14A Send out of the country, as goods : EXPORT
15A One of many in an autumn pile : LEAF
16A Alter ___ (secondary identity) : EGO
17A Rap songs and such : HIP-HOP MUSIC
19A Certain endurance race, in brief : TRI
20A Bowling venue : ALLEY
21A Singer Tori : AMOS
22A “You got that right!” : AMEN!
23A Brewski : BEER
24A Places to stick wallets : HIP POCKETS
26A “___ of the d’Urbervilles” : TESS
28A “There’s ___ in ‘team,’ but there is one in ‘win'” : NO I
29A Longtime TV brand : RCA
31A Paula of “American Idol” : ABDUL
35A Something named on a license plate : STATE
39A Risky time for beach property owners : HURRICANE SEASON
42A Chose : OPTED
43A Highway stopover : MOTEL
44A Married : WED
45A Keg attachment : TAP
47A French fashion magazine : ELLE
49A Singer with the 1961 #1 hit “Hit the Road Jack” : RAY CHARLES
55A “The Thin Man” terrier : ASTA
58A Salt Lake City’s home : UTAH
59A “___, and ye shall find” (Matthew 7:7) : SEEK
60A Tehre are two in tihs clue : TYPOS
61A ___ B, a.k.a. Scary Spice : MEL
62A “Woo-hoo!” … as suggested by the starts of 17-, 24-, 39- and 49-Across : THREE CHEERS!
64A Slight amount : BIT
65A The slightest amount : A TAD
66A Make fizzy, as a drink : AERATE
67A Actress de Armas : ANA
68A Freight car weights : TONS
69A Picnic food holder : BASKET
Down
1D Physical therapy and such, informally : REHAB
2D Send out of the country, as a disgraced leader : EXILE
3D Fruit pastry that pairs well with vanilla ice cream : APPLE TART
4D Stick together : COHERE
5D Land of Priam and Hector : TROY
6D Motor oil brand : STP
7D Pleasingly round : PLUMP
8D Author of “The Boy Who Cried Wolf” : AESOP
9D ___ d’etre (justification for being) : RAISON
10D Colonel Sanders’s chain : KFC
11D “See what I mean?” : GET ME?
12D Wading bird : EGRET
13D Gird one’s ___ : LOINS
18D ___ tai (cocktail) : MAI
22D Japanese dog : AKITA
24D Big banking inits. in the U.K. : HSBC
25D Sportscaster Howard who cried “Down goes Frazier!” : COSELL
27D Responded to a doctor’s request : SAID AH
29D Greek P : RHO
30D Baking quantity : CUP
32D Fish ladder locale : DAM
33D Chicago-style pizza chain : UNO
34D “Live and ___ live” : LET
36D Right now : AS WE SPEAK
37D Nursery rhyme’s “little piggy” : TOE
38D Finish line : END
40D [Gag!] : RETCH!
41D Observes : SEES
46D Afghan language : PASHTO
48D Features of lasagna or an onion : LAYERS
49D Dance from Cuba : RUMBA
50D Stayed home for dinner : ATE IN
51D Site where Allies met in 1945 : YALTA
52D Showed again, as on TV : RERAN
53D City NE of Manchester : LEEDS
54D Barely manage, with “out” : EKE …
56D Rich cake whose name comes from German : TORTE
57D Strong suit : ASSET
60D Ellington’s “Take ___ Train” : THE A
62D Tit for ___ : TAT
63D Taxi : CAB
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