Constructed by: Nam Jin Yoon
Edited by: Will Shortz
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… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Theme None
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Bill’s time: 20m 11s
Bill’s errors: 2
- ETS (EDS)
- KATANAS (kadanas)
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
16 Artist ___ de Toulouse-Lautrec : HENRI
The celebrated French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec came from an aristocratic family. This breeding may have made life comfortable for him, but it was the source of his famous disabilities. He had congenital conditions that resulted from the inbreeding that was a tradition in his family (Henri’s parents were first cousins).
20 Overdrawn account? : YARN
The phrase “to spin a yarn”, meaning “to tell a tall tale”, originated in the early 1800s with seamen. The idea was that sailors would tell stories to each other while engaged in mindless work such as twisting yarn.
21 Actress MacDowell : ANDIE
Andie MacDowell is an American actress who seems to turn up in quite a few British productions set in that part of the world. Most famously she was the love interest in the fabulous film “Four Weddings and a Funeral” starring opposite Hugh Grant. I also enjoyed another of her movies, “Groundhog Day”, which is a fun tale set back here in the US.
22 Classical music tradition from Hindustan : RAGA
Raga isn’t really a genre of music, but has been described as the “tonal framework” in which Indian classical music is composed. Ravi Shankar was perhaps the most famous raga virtuoso (to us Westerners). Western rock music with a heavy Indian influence might be called raga rock.
29 He’s been called the “Father of Science Fiction” : WELLS
The full name of the English author known as H. G. Wells was Herbert George Wells. Wells is particularly well known for his works of science fiction, including “The War of the Worlds”, “The Time Machine”, “The Invisible Man” and “The Island of Doctor Moreau”. He was a prolific author, and a prolific lover as well. While married to one of his former students with whom he had two sons, he also had a child with writer Amber Reeves, and another child with author Rebecca West.
31 Quarters : ABODES
We use the term “quarters” for a place of abode, especially housing for military personnel. Back in the late 16th century, quarters were a portion (quarter) of a town reserved for a military force.
33 Bit of mayo? : DIA
In Spanish, we can look at a particular “día” (day) on the “calendario” (calendar).
In Spanish, “mayo” (May) is one of the months of the “año” (year).
35 Taps : FAUCETS
The common “faucet” in an American house is almost always referred to as a “tap” on the other side of the pond.
37 With some side-eye : ASKANCE
To look askance is to look with suspicion, or to look with a side glance.
42 Home to the three highest capital cities in the world : ANDES
The Andes range is the longest continuous chain of mountains in the world. It runs down the length of the west coast of South America for about 4,300 miles, from Venezuela in the north to Chile in the south. The highest peak in the Andes is Mt. Aconcagua in Argentina, at an elevation of 22,841 feet. Interestingly, the peak of Mt. Chimborazo in Ecuador is the furthest point on the Earth’s surface from the center of the planet. That’s because of the equatorial “bulge” around the Earth’s “waist”.
The administrative capital of Bolivia, La Paz, is officially named Nuestra Senora de La Paz (Our Lady of Peace). La Paz is the seat of the Bolivian government, even though the constitutional capital of the country is Sucre.
The full name of the capital city of Ecuador is San Francisco de Quito. Quito is the second highest administrative capital city in the world, after La Paz, Bolivia.
Bogotá is the capital city of Colombia. Noted for having many libraries and universities, Bogotá is sometimes referred to as “The Athens of South America”.
44 Big inits. in admissions : ETS
The Educational Testing Service (ETS) was founded in 1947, and produces standardized tests for students from kindergarten through college. Perhaps most famously, ETS operates the SAT testing process.
45 Alternatives to toilet paper : BIDETS
“Bidet” is a French word that we imported into English. In French, the word “bidet” originally described a small horse or a pony. The bidet bathroom fixture was so called because one straddles it like a horse in order to use it.
53 They rate very high on the Scoville scale : HABANEROS
The habanero chili has a very intense flavor. Interestingly, the correct spelling of the chili’s name is “habanero”. We often try to be clever in English and add a tilde making it “habañero”, which isn’t right at all …
The Scoville scale is a measure of the spiciness of chili peppers. The scale was invented by a pharmacist in 1912, Wilbur Scoville. To determine the position of a pepper on the Scoville scale, the amount of capsaicin in the chili is measured. Capsaicin is an irritant that causes the sensation of burning when it comes into contact with tissue, particularly mucous membranes.
58 Fictional Harvard Law student played by Reese Witherspoon : ELLE WOODS
“LEGALLY blonde” is a 2001 comedy film starring Reese Witherspoon as a girlish sorority president who heads to Harvard to earn a law degree. “LEGALLY blonde” was successful enough to warrant two sequels as well as a spin-off musical that played most successfully in London’s West End (for 974 performances).
Down
2 Establishment where indoor smoking is permitted : HOOKAH BAR
A hookah is a water pipe, a device for smoking tobacco in which the smoke is passed through a water basin before it is inhaled.
3 Beyond the pale : EGREGIOUS
Something described as egregious is especially obvious, flagrant. The word “egregious” comes from the Latin “ex grege”, which translates as “rising above the flock”. The original use of the word was very positive, meaning “distinguished, excellent”, but that morphed into a disapproving sense in the late 1700s.
The phrase “beyond the pale” describes something that is offensive, outside the bounds of what is acceptable. The expression has its roots in the palings that defined boundaries in the Middle Ages. Those palings (fences) were made from “pales”, from the Latin “palus” meaning “stake”. The noun “pale” came to describe that area within the palings. The most famous “Pale” was that part of Ireland controlled for centuries directly by the English government, which was land surrounding Dublin that was bounded by ditches and fences. People living outside the Pale did not share the beliefs and customs of those within the boundaries, which gave rise to our usage of the phrase “beyond the pale”.
5 Sterilize, in a way : SPAY
Our verb “to spay”, meaning “to surgically remove the ovaries of” (an animal), comes from an old Anglo-French word “espeier” meaning “to cut with a sword”.
6 First female dean of Harvard Law : KAGAN
Elena Kagan was the Solicitor General of the United States from 2009 until 2010, when she replaced Justice John Paul Stevens on the US Supreme Court. That made Justice Kagan the first female US Solicitor General and the fourth female US Supreme Court justice. Kagan also served as the first female dean of Harvard Law School from 2003 to 2009.
9 Digits on a paper card, for short : SSN
A Social Security number (SSN) is divided into three parts, i.e AAA-GG-SSSS. Originally, the Area Number (AAA) was the code for the office that issued the card. Since 1973, the Area Number reflects the ZIP code from which the application was made. The GG in the SSN is the Group Number, and the SSSS in the number is the Serial Number. However, this is all moot. Since 2011, SSNs have been assigned randomly. However, some random numbers have been excluded from use, i.e. Area Numbers 000, 666 (!) and 900-999.
10 Trousers named for an Asian country : CHINOS
Chino is a twill cloth that is most often used to make hard-wearing pants. The pants have come to be referred to as chinos. Chino cloth was originally developed for use by the military, but quickly became popular with civilians.
13 Like many jobs in the gig economy : FREELANCE
The term “free lance” was coined by Sir Walter Scott in his 1820 novel “Ivanhoe”, when he used it to describe a medieval mercenary warrior. Forty years later, a “freelancer” was a journalist who did work for more than one publication without a long-term commitment.
Musicians use “gig” to describe a job, a performance. The term originated in the early 1900s in the world of jazz. The derivative phrase “gig economy” applies to a relatively recent phenomenon where workers find themselves jumping from temporary job to temporary job, from gig to gig.
21 Book with scales : ATLAS
The famous Flemish geographer Gerardus Mercator published his first collection of maps in 1578. Mercator’s collection contained a frontispiece with an image of Atlas the Titan from Greek mythology holding up the world on his shoulders. That image gave us our term “atlas” that is used for a book of maps.
23 Rock group whose name came from letters found on a sewing machine : AC/DC
The Heavy Metal band known as AC/DC was formed by two brothers Malcolm and Angus Young in Australia. Malcolm and Angus chose the name “AC/DC” after their sister Margaret noticed them on a sewing machine (the abbreviation for alternating current/direct current). The group is usually called “Acca Dacca” down under.
25 ___ Sports Bureau (official 32-Down keepers) : ELIAS
(32D See 25-Down : STATS)
The Elias Sports Bureau has been providing research and statistics for professional sports since 1913. The business was set up in 1913 in New York City by Al Munro Elias and his brother Walter.
26 Mountebanks : FAKES
A mountebank is a charlatan, a swindler. The term applies more specifically to someone who sells quack medicines to a small crowd, using tricks and exaggerated stories to convince individuals to purchase. “Mountebank” comes into English via Italian from “monta” meaning “to mount” and “banco” meaning “bench”. The idea is that the swindler would “mount a bench” from where he can address the crowd and hawk his fraudulent wares.
34 Minimalist style : SANS SERIF
Serifs are details on the ends of characters in some typefaces. Typefaces without serifs are known as sans-serif, using the French word “sans” meaning “without” and “serif” from the Dutch “schreef” meaning “line”. Some people say that serif fonts are easier to read on paper, whereas sans-serif fonts work better on a computer screen. I’m not so sure though …
36 Polite form of address, abroad : SRI
“Sri” is a title of respect for a male in India.
38 Blades used in “Kill Bill” : KATANAS
A katana is a curved sword worn by the samurai of Japan. A katana is sometimes referred to as a “samurai sword”.
“Kill Bill” is a 3-part Quentin Tarantino movie (I haven’t seen it, as I really don’t “do” Tarantino). “Kill Bill” started off as one film, but as the running time was over four hours, it was split into two “volumes”, released several months apart in 2003 and 2004. There has been a lot of talk about making “Kill Bill: Volume 3”.
41 Masked warning? : EN GARDE
“En garde” is a French term that has been absorbed into the sport of fencing. Originally a warning (meaning “on guard!”), it is spoken at the start of an encounter to warn the fencers to take a defensive position.
43 Notre Dame setting : SEINE
There are two famous “îles” (islands) in the middle of the River Seine in Paris, one being the Île de la Cité, and the other Île Saint-Louis. Île de la Cité is the most renowned of the two, as it is home to the cathedral of Notre-Dame.
Notre-Dame de Paris is the spectacular Gothic cathedral that sits on the Île de la Cité, one of the islands in the middle of the River Seine in Paris. Notre-Dame is home to many beautiful and significant artifacts, the most famous of which is the Crown of Thorns supposedly worn by Jesus Christ at his execution, placed in the cathedral in 1239. It’s also home to some magnificent gargoyles on the roof, and you can climb up to the roof and take a very close look at them. Well, you used to be able to, until the tragic fire of 2019.
44 Follower of an “I’m late” text, in brief : ETA
Estimated time of arrival (ETA)
45 They might be loaded with singles : BASES
That would be baseball.
47 Deadpan : DRYLY
The term “deadpan”, slang for “impassive expression”, comes from “dead” (expressionless) and “pan” (slang for “face”).
49 Like Falstaff : OBESE
Sir John Falstaff is the lead character in Shakespeare’s “The Merry Wives of Windsor” and a supporting character in the two “Henry IV” plays. Falstaff is a self-promoting, obese and cowardly man. In “Henry IV, part I”, Falstaff refers to his portly size, saying, “thou seest I have more flesh than another man, and therefore more frailty.”
51 One might fly close to the sun : COMET
Comets and asteroids are similar, both being relatively small celestial bodies orbiting the sun. Comets differ from asteroids in that they have a coma or tail, especially when they are close enough to the sun. The coma and tail are temporary fuzzy atmospheres that develop due to the presence of solar radiation. Comets are sometimes referred to as “dirty snowballs”, a reference to their composition: rock, dust, water ice and frozen gases.
54 “No Ordinary Love” singer : SADE
Singer Sade’s real name is Helen Folasade Adu. Although born in Nigeria, Sade grew up and lives in the UK. She was the lead vocalist for the English group Sade, and adopted the name of the band. The band’s biggest hits were “Smooth Operator” (1984) and “The Sweetest Taboo” (1985).
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 [Perfection!] : CHEF’S KISS
10 Face to scale : CLIFF
15 Some exercise wear : YOGA PANTS
16 Artist ___ de Toulouse-Lautrec : HENRI
17 What the name “Renée” means : BORN AGAIN
18 List of pointers : INDEX
19 Pull (out) : EKE
20 Overdrawn account? : YARN
21 Actress MacDowell : ANDIE
22 Classical music tradition from Hindustan : RAGA
24 “Dear future me …” : NOTE TO SELF …
27 Nest egg yield : CHICK
29 He’s been called the “Father of Science Fiction” : WELLS
30 Pastoral sound : BAA
31 Quarters : ABODES
33 Bit of mayo? : DIA
34 Scuttled : SANK
35 Taps : FAUCETS
37 With some side-eye : ASKANCE
39 Some transcript omissions : ERS
40 Strips : PARES
42 Home to the three highest capital cities in the world : ANDES
43 March alternative : SIT-IN
44 Big inits. in admissions : ETS
45 Alternatives to toilet paper : BIDETS
48 “Can we chat real quick?” : GOT A SEC?
52 Nose-crinkling : ACRID
53 They rate very high on the Scoville scale : HABANEROS
55 “I got you” : SAY NO MORE
57 Food truck output : AROMA
58 Fictional Harvard Law student played by Reese Witherspoon : ELLE WOODS
59 Favored, with “with” : SIDED …
60 Artful : SLY
61 Like many apartment rentals : NO-FEE
62 Bash : FETE
Down
1 Connection point not seen much anymore : CYBERCAFE
2 Establishment where indoor smoking is permitted : HOOKAH BAR
3 Beyond the pale : EGREGIOUS
4 Deadly household appliance, according to Korean urban legend : FAN
5 Sterilize, in a way : SPAY
6 First female dean of Harvard Law : KAGAN
7 Straight : IN A ROW
8 Wasn’t generous : STINTED
9 Digits on a paper card, for short : SSN
10 Trousers named for an Asian country : CHINOS
11 Gives, as credence : LENDS
12 They don’t have a major-label contract : INDIE BAND
13 Like many jobs in the gig economy : FREELANCE
14 Make whole : FIX
21 Book with scales : ATLAS
23 Rock group whose name came from letters found on a sewing machine : AC/DC
25 ___ Sports Bureau (official 32-Down keepers) : ELIAS
26 Mountebanks : FAKES
28 Stay quiet : KEEP IT DOWN
32 See 25-Down : STATS
34 Minimalist style : SANS SERIF
36 Polite form of address, abroad : SRI
38 Blades used in “Kill Bill” : KATANAS
41 Masked warning? : EN GARDE
43 Notre Dame setting : SEINE
44 Follower of an “I’m late” text, in brief : ETA
45 They might be loaded with singles : BASES
46 Poker declaration : I CALL
47 Deadpan : DRYLY
49 Like Falstaff : OBESE
50 Take the edge off? : ERODE
51 One might fly close to the sun : COMET
53 Printmaker? : HOOF
54 “No Ordinary Love” singer : SADE
56 Pastoral sound : MOO
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