Constructed by: Robyn Weintraub
Edited by: Will Shortz
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… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Theme: None
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Bill’s time: 8m 36s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
17 Features of some cheesy dinner parties? : FONDUE POTS
Fondue is a traditional Swiss dish comprising melted cheese served in a pot over a tabletop stove, into which diners dip bread. The term “fondue”, which is French for “melted”, is now applied more widely to similar dishes served in a communal pot into which a food is dipped. Traditional fondue is delicious, so very delicious …
20 Oscar-nominated director Gerwig : GRETA
Greta Gerwig is an actress from Sacramento whose best-known role is probably opposite Russell Brand in the remake of the film “Arthur”. Gerwig has turned to directing, and was at the helm for the 2019 movie “Little Women”.
21 Traffic director : PYLON
“Pylon” can be used as another word for “traffic cone”.
22 Big part of California? : SUR
Big Sur is a lovely part of the California Coast located south of Monterey and Carmel. The name “Big Sur” comes from the original Spanish description of the area as “el sur grande” meaning “the big south”.
23 Woman’s name that becomes a country when its vowels are swapped : MILA
The Republic of Mali is a landlocked country in western Africa located south of Algeria. Formerly known as French Sudan, the nation’s most famous city is Timbuktu. Mali is the third-largest producer of gold on the continent, after South Africa and Ghana.
28 Towers from which muezzins announce calls to prayer : MINARETS
A minaret is an architectural feature of Islamic mosques, a tall tower with an onion-shaped crown that is used for the call to prayer. The world’s oldest minaret is part of the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia, having been completed in 836 BCE. The term “minaret” comes from the Arabic for “lighthouse”.
A muezzin is someone responsible for leading prayer in a mosque. The muezzin is also the man who recites the Adhan, the call to prayer, at five designated times each day.
32 Xeriscape garden plants : ALOES
A location described as “xeric” is extremely dry, arid. The Greek prefix “xero-” means “dry, withered”. The derivative “xeriscaping” is landscaping that reduces or eliminates the need for irrigation, i.e. drought-tolerant landscaping.
33 Heroine of novels set at Lilac Inn, Shadow Ranch and Red Gate Farm : NANCY DREW
The “Nancy Drew” mystery stories were produced by the Stratemeyer Syndicate. The founder of the Syndicate hired a team of writers to produce the “Nancy Drew” novels, but listed the author of each book as the fictional Carolyn Keene.
34 UNESCO World Heritage listings : SITES
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is better known by the acronym “UNESCO”. UNESCO’s mission is to help build peace in the world using programs focused on education, the sciences, culture, communication and information. The organization’s work is aimed in particular at Africa, and gender equalization. UNESCO also administers a World Heritage Site program that designates and helps conserve sites of outstanding cultural or natural importance to humanity across the world.
36 Opening gambit of sorts : PLAN A
A gambit is a chess opening that intrinsically involves the sacrifice of a piece (usually a pawn) with the intent of gaining an advantage. The term “gambit” was first used by the Spanish priest Ruy Lopez de Segura who took it from the Italian expression “dare il gambetto” meaning “to put a leg forward to trip someone”. Said priest gave his name to the common Ruy Lopez opening, which paradoxically is not a gambit in that there is no sacrifice. The chess term dates back to the mid-1600s. We’ve been using “gambit” more generally for any opening move designed to gain advantage since the mid-1800s.
37 Little buggers : PET PEEVES
The phrase “pet peeve”, meaning “thing that provokes one most”, seems to be somewhat ironic. A “peeve” is a source of irritation, and the adjective “pet” means “especially cherished”.
43 What I might be : ONE
In Roman numerals, the first ten integers are I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X.
44 Get metal from, in a way : SMELT
Metals are found in ore in the form of oxides. In order to get pure metal from the ore, the ore is heated and the metal oxides within are reduced (i.e. the oxygen is removed) in the chemical process known as smelting. The oxygen is extracted by adding a source of carbon or carbon monoxide which uses up the excess oxygen atoms to make carbon dioxide, a waste product of smelting (and, a greenhouse gas).
50 W.W. II hero who retired from the mil. to run for president : DDE
Dwight D. Eisenhower (DDE) was the 34th US president, but he wanted to be remembered as a soldier. He was a five-star general during WWII in charge of the Allied Forces in the European Theater of Operations (ETO). President Eisenhower died in 1969 at Walter Reed Army Hospital. He was buried in an $80 standard soldier’s casket in his army uniform in a chapel on the grounds of the beautiful Eisenhower Presidential Library in Abilene, Kansas.
53 “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” character : PUCK
Puck (aka “Robin Goodfellow”) is a character in William Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, one of the Fairies in the tale. One of Puck’s tasks in the storyline is to use love juice that is made from a flower that has been hit by cupid’s arrow. The magical juice is applied to the eyelids of someone sleeping, so that the person wakes and falls in love with the first living things he or she sees. Of course, Puck drops the love juice on the wrong character …
57 Creatures that can regrow a lost tooth up to 50 times : ALLIGATORS
Crocodiles and alligators do indeed bear a resemblance to each other, although they belong to distinct biological families. One of the main ways used to distinguish them is by their teeth and jaws. Both the upper and lower sets of teeth of a crocodile are visible when its mouth is closed, whereas only the upper teeth of an alligator are visible with the mouth shut.
58 Defeater of Jörmungandr : THOR
In Norse mythology, Thor was the son of Odin. Thor wielded a mighty hammer and was the god of thunder, lightning and storms. Our contemporary word “Thursday” comes from “Thor’s Day”.
59 Canceled, to a philatelist : USED
Philately is the practice of collecting postage stamps. The term “philately” was coined (in French, as “philatélie”) in 1864 by French collector Georges Herpin. He came up with it from the Greek “phil-” meaning “loving” and “ateleia” meaning “exemption from tax”. Apparently “exemption from tax” was the closest thing Herpin could find to “postage stamp”.
60 Like electromagnetic radiation with the shortest wavelength : GAMMA
Gamma radiation was discovered by the French chemist Paul Villard, as he studied radiation coming from the chemical element radium. This radiation was called “gamma”, the third letter in the Greek alphabet, as alpha and beta particles had already been identified.
Down
1 Call upon arriving home, maybe : SAFE!
That might be baseball.
3 Meaning of the Persian suffix “-stan” : LAND
The suffix “-stan”, used in many place names, is Persian for “place of”.
4 Business abbr. : LTD
In Britain and Ireland, the most common type of business (my perception anyway) is one that has private shareholders whose liability is limited to the value of their investment. Such a company is known as a private limited company, and has the abbreviation “Ltd.” after the name. If the shares are publicly traded, then the company is a public limited company, and has the letters “plc” after the name.
12 Fancy wheels : LIMO
The word “limousine” derives from the name of the French city of Limoges. The area around Limoges is called the Limousin, and it gave its name to a cloak hood worn by local shepherds. In early motor cars, a driver would sit outside in the weather while the passengers would sit in the covered compartment. The driver would often wear a limousin-style protective hood, giving rise to that type of transportation being called a “limousine”. Well, that’s how the story goes …
13 Thames town : ETON
The town of Eton in Berkshire, England is home to the world-famous Eton College. The original settlement of Eton was located on an island surrounded by the River Thames, and the name “Eton” means “settlement on an island. A stream on one side of the island silted up almost 200 years ago, but it was cleared in 2019 so that Eton qualifies as an island once again.
24 First national magazine to feature Steve Jobs on the cover : INC
“Inc.” is a business magazine that specializes in articles about growing companies. “Inc.” publishes a list of the 500 fastest-growing private companies in the country each year, calling it the “Inc. 500”. The “Inc. 5000” is an expanded list also published by the magazine.
Steve Jobs certainly was a business icon in Silicon Valley. I don’t think it is too surprising to learn that the brilliant Jobs didn’t even finish his college education, dropping out of Reed College in Oregon after only one semester. Steve Jobs co-founded Apple in 1976, but in 1985 he was basically fired from his own company during the computer sales slump in the mid-eighties. Jobs then founded NeXT Computer, a company focused on supplying workstations to the higher education and business markets. Apple purchased NeXT in 1996, and that’s how Jobs found himself back with his original company.
26 Zaphod Beeblebrox in “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” for one : ALIEN
English writer and dramatist Douglas Adams is best known for “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”. “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” started out life as a comedy series on BBC radio in 1978, but it certainly had legs. It was adapted into stage shows, five books, a television series, computer game and a 2005 film.
27 Kind of drawing : LOTTO
Originally, lotto was a type of card game, with “lotto” being the Italian for “a lot”. We’ve used “lotto” to mean a gambling game since the late 1700s.
28 Knight clubs : MACES
A mace is a relatively simple weapon in essence. It is a heavy weight on the end of a handle that is used to deliver powerful blows on an opponent’s body.
29 Muse of lyric poetry : ERATO
In Greek mythology, Erato was the Muse of lyric poetry. She is often depicted with a wreath of myrtle and roses, and playing a lyre.
30 Barbershop fixture? : TENOR
Barbershop music is played in the a cappella style, meaning that it is unaccompanied vocal music. Barbershop music originated in African-American communities in the South, as gospel quartets often gathered in neighborhood barber shops to sing together.
31 Cobs, e.g. : SWANS
An adult male swan is a cob and an adult female is a pen. Young swans are swanlings or cygnets.
33 Highly trained body : NAVY SEALS
“SEAL” is an acronym used by the US Navy’s SEa, Air and Land teams. The SEALs were born out of the Navy’s special warfare groups from WWII, like the Underwater Demolition Teams and the Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons. The Navy SEAL unit was established soon after President Kennedy’s famous speech in which he announced the plan to put a man on the moon, as in the same speech the president allocated $100m of funding to strengthen special operations forces. The Navy used some of this money to set up guerrilla and counter-guerrilla units, which soon became the SEALs.
38 Place to find a hammer and anvil : EAR
The middle ear is the portion of the ear immediately behind the eardrum. The middle ear contains three small bones called the ossicles, the three smallest bones in the human body. The ossicles’ job is to transmit sound from the outer ear to the inner ear. The shape of the bones gives rise to their names: the hammer (malleus), anvil (incus) and stirrup (stapes).
48 Magazine that debuted in France in 1945 and the U.S. in 1985 : 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.
49 Joy of MSNBC : REID
Joy Reid is a liberal TV host and political commentator best known for her regular appearances on MSNBC. In 2020, Reid took over the channel’s evening slot following the retirement of Chris Matthews.
51 Temple building : DORM
Temple University in Philadelphia was founded in 1888, and started out as a night school offering classes to people of limited means who had to hold down jobs during the day. These students earned themselves the nickname of “night owls”, leading to the use of “Owls” for Temple’s athletic teams.
52 Actress Lanchester : ELSA
Elsa Lanchester was an English actress who made her life and career in Hollywood. Lanchester’s husband was the actor Charles Laughton.
54 Cross shape : TAU
Tau is the 19th letter of the Greek alphabet, and the letter that gave rise to our Roman “T”. Both the letters tau (T) and chi (X) have long been symbolically associated with the cross.
55 Grp. that might get a talking-to by the principal : PTA
Parent-Teacher Association (PTA)
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 “Don’t be ___” : SILLY
6 “Aren’t I somethin’?!” : TA-DA!
10 Account : TALE
14 Class some people are dying to get into? : ANATOMY LAB
16 Billboard number, maybe : EXIT
17 Features of some cheesy dinner parties? : FONDUE POTS
18 Name that means “no one” in Latin : NEMO
19 What follows both the living and dead? : … END
20 Oscar-nominated director Gerwig : GRETA
21 Traffic director : PYLON
22 Big part of California? : SUR
23 Woman’s name that becomes a country when its vowels are swapped : MILA
25 Kitchen variety : GALLEY
28 Towers from which muezzins announce calls to prayer : MINARETS
32 Xeriscape garden plants : ALOES
33 Heroine of novels set at Lilac Inn, Shadow Ranch and Red Gate Farm : NANCY DREW
34 UNESCO World Heritage listings : SITES
35 Example of exemplary service : ACE
36 Opening gambit of sorts : PLAN A
37 Little buggers : PET PEEVES
39 Suddenly think of : HIT ON
40 Possible result of a major fall : SNOW DAYS
41 Some names on buildings : DONORS
42 Runs : AIRS
43 What I might be : ONE
44 Get metal from, in a way : SMELT
47 How theremin music sounds : EERIE
50 W.W. II hero who retired from the mil. to run for president : DDE
53 “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” character : PUCK
54 Group cultivated by a recruiter : TALENT POOL
56 More than a twinge : ACHE
57 Creatures that can regrow a lost tooth up to 50 times : ALLIGATORS
58 Defeater of Jörmungandr : THOR
59 Canceled, to a philatelist : USED
60 Like electromagnetic radiation with the shortest wavelength : GAMMA
Down
1 Call upon arriving home, maybe : SAFE!
2 Privy to : IN ON
3 Meaning of the Persian suffix “-stan” : LAND
4 Business abbr. : LTD
5 “Ding, ding, ding, we have a winner!” : YOU GUESSED IT!
6 Dating preference : TYPE
7 Buckets : A LOT
8 Pulls and analyzes online information, e.g. : DATA-MINES
9 Core group : ABS
10 Boundary for “first and goal” plays : TEN-YARD LINE
11 Quad ___ (2022 record jump achieved by Ilia Malinin) : AXEL
12 Fancy wheels : LIMO
13 Thames town : ETON
15 Preceder of Christmas : MERRY …
21 Exchange rings? : PLAY PHONE TAG
22 One who’s out and about? : SLEEPWALKER
24 First national magazine to feature Steve Jobs on the cover : INC
25 Amazed reactions : GASPS
26 Zaphod Beeblebrox in “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” for one : ALIEN
27 Kind of drawing : LOTTO
28 Knight clubs : MACES
29 Muse of lyric poetry : ERATO
30 Barbershop fixture? : TENOR
31 Cobs, e.g. : SWANS
33 Highly trained body : NAVY SEALS
38 Place to find a hammer and anvil : EAR
41 “Nothing ___” : DOING
44 Row : SPAT
45 A good deal : MUCH
46 Say again : ECHO
48 Magazine that debuted in France in 1945 and the U.S. in 1985 : ELLE
49 Joy of MSNBC : REID
50 Calamity : DOOM
51 Temple building : DORM
52 Actress Lanchester : ELSA
54 Cross shape : TAU
55 Grp. that might get a talking-to by the principal : PTA
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22 thoughts on “0721-23 NY Times Crossword 21 Jul 23, Friday”
Comments are closed.
14:09, no errors. Most interesting name in a clue (to me): “Zaphod Beeblebrox”. Really?! (At least the answer was easy to guess … 🙂.)
13:23, no errors. My fastest Friday time, ever. Everything just clicked.
I’ve watched “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” several times, extremely funny. The show taught me that UFO’s are just alien teenagers who take their parents spaceships out for joy rides. The teens think it is funny to land near some poor rube, who no one would believe, and walk back and forth in front of them making funny ‘beep-beep’ noises.
@BruceB …
“Hitchhiker’s Guide” sounds like my kind of program, all right. Maybe I can find some episodes online … 🤨.
@Anonymous (from yesterday) …
It appears that @Bill may have Chloe Zhao confused with some other Zhao (either Melodie Zhao or Dizhou Zhao).
19:23. A few missteps, but I survived them. Very late today. Been a crazy week.
My yard is all Xeriscape, but I don’t think I have any ALOE in it. Grass has pretty much been outlawed now in Las Vegas.
Best –
20:52, no errors.
29:53 , no errors.
8:15, no errors. Like I mentioned before, NYT Games is having one of the editors is supposedly rewriting the clues to make them easier (still don’t understand why) and releasing them. I’m still half-curious to see a set of them just to see what’s going on, but don’t have a subscription. Bigger question for me though is why they’re doing this in the first place.
I saw where you got hung up on the one yard line there, at first and goal, otherwise you were headed for around 7 min. You better step yo’ game up (just kidding; phenomenal time). I made the same correction around the 3 and 1/2 min. mark.
If you’re saying they are writing clues differently on the NYT site vs. the syndicated version? If that is going on, my take is the same as when I first started hearing this talk of, “thou shalt not introduce invidious comparisons with other solvers,” ” lookups are educational,” etc., on this blog, i.e., my thought rightly or wrongly was it’s just part of the current woke “participation ribbon” political culture where you cannot have winners and losers even though that is a fact of life. Dealing with losing is part of life but the woke ethos tried to protect its own , sometimes referred to as “snowflakes,” from realities like that.
The NYT is the bastion of liberalism. It’s very possible I have this completely wrong, but simply put, I think it’s considered politically incorrect to make their readers feel stupid. It’s not PC to suggest one person may be smarter than the next, even if being better at crosswords doesn’t necessarily mean that (or maybe it does, in a way), esp. if they are NYT readers. Similarly the ‘almost there’ screen is a nice way of saying ‘you failed, your answer is wrong.’ Instead their users get a little pat on the and a patronizing pep talk.
It’s just an option they call “Easy Mode” they started up within the last month or two which is published on a different article. See this for what I’m talking about. Course you got to be a subscriber to read that. But yeah it’s moving the goalposts in a way, which is definite question mark. From looking at the constructor notes, Weintraub herself has issues with it (more from a “someone is stepping in and messing with my work” standpoint). Wonder when the time’s going to come that someone’s going to step in and say “I did the Friday grid.” and not fess up that it was with the “Easy Mode” cluing instead of what the rest of us see. Again honesty problems rear their ugly head.
As for 10D, I can tell the constructor and editors have no knowledge of football (they demonstrate that well here) and just slap something together they think is correct. Again shoddy cluing. If I was mic-ed up you probably would have heard me put that a lot less diplomatically.
Course I’d be remiss to mention that the general trend of difficulty in all the New York Times puzzles has been trending downward (rather sharply I might add). Doing all the freebies the last few weeks has definitely proven that to me in abundance.
More clarification: Maybe why that thought popped into mind was that they rolled out that “feature” starting with this puzzle.
That said, I was able to find out what (exactly) is going on, so my questions are answered.
The ten yard line is the farthest boundary from the end zone, so I think the clue and answer work well.
The ten yard line is the farthest boundary from the end zone, so I think the clue and answer work well.
You must be kidding. All the Woke are smarter than the unwoke.
BTW to reduce it to absurdity, you get the same words of encouragement if you enter junk in the grid. I did a test on the mini NYT by entering random garbage, and got the same pep talk, “the end is in sight!” “just about!” , etc.
Then again , more practically, maybe there’s a demographic of their subscribers who find the puzzles too hard (maybe there is a lingering cultural / age bias in favour of older white guys much as they try to make it hipper to the times), and it’s a matter of keeping their paying subscribers up. Anyway, I’d like to see examples of that too, if it’s true. That might reveal motivation.
Oh, fer crying out loud…. Do we really need to to sink into the same swamp as the general tenor of the current political climate? It’s a crossword puzzle, not the op-ed page. FWIW, I remember when “liberal” and “coservative” were descriptive, not pejorative terms.
No real headwind as things quickly fell into place. 22-D gets my “clue of the week” award.
finally, a great puzzle
also, nick, you lost me with all that drivel today
Verbose drivel at that.
DNF-ed. Wrote “IKE” for 50-across and never questioned it.
Thank you, Ben F.! As to the NYT offering a T-ball version of their crossword puzzles, what’s the harm? Sounds like a great way to introduce folks to the game. The rest of us can continue to solve the regular version.