Constructed by: Blake Slonecker
Edited by: Will Shortz
Not your puzzle? Try today’s …
… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Reveal Answer: Sounds Good
Themed answers SOUND like common phrases that use “right”, or a homophone of “right”:
- 57A “It’s a plan” … and what might be said of 17-, 23-, 35- and 48-Across : SOUNDS GOOD
- 17A Suddenly cut off all communication with … but do so nicely? : GHOST RIGHT (sounds like “ghostwrite”)
- 23A Cordial shipbuilders? : CIVIL WRIGHTS (sounds like “civil rights”)
- 35A Pens a seafaring tale? : WRITES OF PASSAGE (sounds like “rites of passage”)
- 48A Sacramental friars? : RITE BROTHERS (sounds like “Wright Brothers”)
Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers
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Bill’s time: 9m 41s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
1 1964 title role for Anthony Quinn : ZORBA
The film “Zorba the Greek” and the musical “Zorba” are adaptations of the 1952 novel “Zorba the Greek” by Nikos Kazantzakis. The 1964 film version stars Anthony Quinn in the title role, and Alan Bates. The movie is set and was filmed on location on the island of Crete, the home of author Kazantzakis.
6 Where to do one’s bidding, maybe : EBAY
eBay was founded in 1995 as AuctionWeb. One of the first items purchased was a broken laser pointer, for $14.83. The buyer was a collector of broken laser pointers …
14 Like more than half of the earth’s population : ASIAN
Most of the world’s population lives in Asia (60%), and Asia is the largest continent in terms of landmass (30% of the world). Asia also has the highest population density (246 people per square mile), and the most populous city on the continent is Shanghai, China.
16 “The ___ of the Ancient Mariner” : RIME
“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” is an epic poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge that was first published in 1798. The publication of “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” is said to mark the beginning of the Romantic period of British literature. Perhaps the lines most often quoted from the poem are:
Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, every where
Nor any drop to drink
17 Suddenly cut off all communication with … but do so nicely? : GHOST RIGHT (sounds like “ghostwrite”)
A rather insensitive person might break off a relationship simply by cutting off all communication with his or her partner, without any warning. Such a move is referred to as “ghosting” in modern parlance, particularly when the relationship relies heavily on online interaction.
19 Great Plains people : OTOE
The Otoe (also “Oto”) Native American tribe originated in the Great Lakes region as part of the Winnebago or Siouan tribes. The group that would become the Otoe broke away from the Winnebago and migrated southwestward, ending up in the Great Plains. In the plains the Otoe adopted a semi-nomadic lifestyle dependent on the horse, with the American bison becoming central to their diet.
20 Leave full : SATE
“Sate” is a variant of the older word “satiate”. Both terms can mean either to satisfy an appetite fully, or to eat to excess.
22 Jokester : CUTUP
A person who is a cutup or a riot is hilariously funny.
23 Cordial shipbuilders? : CIVIL WRIGHTS (sounds like “civil rights”)
Back in the 14th century, we used the word “cordial” to mean “from the heart”. The most common meaning today is “courteous and gracious”. The original usage also evolved into the name for a drink that “stimulated the heart”. Today’s cordial beverages are strong, sweetened liqueurs.
27 Rude rejoinder popularized by the Fonz of 1970s TV : SIT ON IT
Fonzie is a character in the sitcom “Happy Days” that was originally aired from 1974 to 1984. The Fonz (aka Arthur Fonzarelli) was written as a secondary character, but eventually took over the show. Fonzie is played by Henry Winkler.
40 ___ Paradise, narrator of “On the Road” : SAL
Jack Kerouac’s 1957 novel “On the Road” is largely autobiographical, telling the story of Sal Paradise (Jack K.) and the road trips that he and his friends took across the country in the fifties.
42 Superman’s baby name : KAL-EL
Jor-El was a scientist on the planet Krypton who was married to Lara. Jor-El and Lara had an infant son named Kal-El who they were able to launch into space towards Earth just before Krypton was destroyed. Kal-El became Superman. In the 1978 movie “Superman”, Jor-El was played by Marlon Brando, Lara was played by Susannah York, and Kal-El/Superman was played by Christopher Reeve.
43 Flap of skin hanging from a bovine’s neck : DEWLAP
A dewlap is a flap of skin that hangs below the neck of some creatures. Dewlaps are found on anything from dogs to iguanas.
48 Sacramental friars? : RITE BROTHERS (sounds like “Wright Brothers”)
The Wright Brothers, Orville and Wilbur, used knowledge gained from manufacturing and repairing bicycles when designing the world’s first motor-driven airplane. The key to their success was the development of a mechanical system for controlled flight, building on the existing progress made by others in the fields of wing and engine design.
50 Oxford and Surrey in “Richard III” : EARLS
“Richard III” is one of the more famous of William Shakespeare’s historical plays. A well-known 1955 version of the play was made for the big screen with Laurence Olivier playing the title role. The most oft-quoted words from “Richard III” are probably the opening lines “Now is the winter of our discontent/Made glorious summer by this sun of York”, and Richard’s plea at the climax of battle “A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse!”
56 Con Ed, e.g.: Abbr. : UTIL
Consolidated Edison (Con Ed) has its roots in the New York Gas Light Company, founded in 1823. The company changed its name to Consolidated Gas when it merged six gas companies in 1884. Consolidated Gas participated in the electrification of the New York City area, and owned the New York Edison Company. In 1936, as electricity sales dominated Consolidated Gas’s revenues, the company name was changed again, to Consolidated Edison.
62 Marathoning powerhouse : KENYA
Kenya lies on the east coast of Africa, right on the equator. The country takes her name from Mount Kenya, the second-highest peak on the continent (after Kilimanjaro). The official languages of Kenya are English and Swahili.
63 Phonetic initialism along Canadian roadways : ESSO
The Esso brand has its roots in the old Standard Oil company as it uses the initial letters of “Standard” and “Oil” (ESS-O). The Esso brand was replaced by Exxon in the US, but ESSO is still used in many other countries.
64 Nosegay : POSY
A nosegay is a posy, a bouquet of flowers. As one might expect, a nosegay is designed to make the nose gay and joyous with the aroma of fresh cut flowers.
65 Black tea region : ASSAM
Assam, located in northeastern India, is the largest tea-producing state in the country. It is also famous for its silk production, particularly the golden muga silk.
Down
2 Worker welfare grp. : OSHA
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
5 Myrmecologist’s specimen : ANT
The study of ants is known as myrmecology. The term “myrmecology” derives from the Greek “myrmex” meaning “ant”.
8 Bavarian “Bah!” : ACH!
Bavaria in southeast Germany is the largest state in the country. The capital and largest city in Bavaria is Munich.
11 What a marathoner may do around mile 20 : HIT THE WALL
Only relatively small amounts of carbohydrate can be stored by the human body, but those stores are important. The actual storage molecule is a starch-like polysaccharide called glycogen, which is found mainly in the liver and muscles. Glycogen is a quick source of energy when required by the body. Most of the body’s energy is stored in the form of fat, a more compact substance that is mobilized less rapidly. Endurance athletes often eat meals high in carbohydrates (carbo-loading) a few hours before an event, so that their body’s glycogen is at optimum levels.
18 Shankar at Woodstock : RAVI
Ravi Shankar was perhaps the most famous virtuoso (to us Westerners) from the world of Indian classical music, and was noted for his sitar playing. Shankar was the father of the pop singer Norah Jones.
The 1969 Woodstock Music & Art Fair was held on Max Yasgur’s dairy farm located 43 miles southwest of the town of Woodstock, New York. 400,000 young people attended, and saw 32 bands and singers perform over three days.
22 Prefix with gender : CIS-
The term “cisgender” is used as the opposite of “transgender”. Cisgender people have a gender identity that matches the sex they were assigned at birth.
25 Radio station on TV : WKRP
The sitcom “WKRP in Cincinnati” was produced by MTM, the production company established by Mary Tyler Moore and her husband for the “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”. “WKRP” was a successful enough show when it originally aired, but then became a blockbuster in syndication. It became MTM’s most-watched program, even outstripping the original “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”.
26 Canning tomato : ROMA
The Roma tomato isn’t considered an heirloom variety but it is very popular with home gardeners, especially those gardeners that don’t have a lot of space. It is a bush type (as opposed to vine type) and needs very little room to provide a lot of tomatoes.
27 Maxims : SAWS
A saw is an old saying, one that is often repeated and is very familiar. The term “old saw” is actually a tautology, as by definition a “saw” is “old”.
Our word “maxim” meaning “precept, principle” has been around since the early 1600s. It ultimately comes from the Latin phrase “maxima propositio”, which translates as “greatest premise”.
34 Kind of counter in a supermarket : DELI
The word “delicatessen” (or “deli” for short) came into English from the German “Delikatessen”. The Germans borrowed the word from French, in which language “délicatesse” means “delicious things (to eat)”. The term’s ultimate root is “delicatus”, the Latin for “giving pleasure, delightful”.
37 Dirt-digging research, for short : OPPO
In the world of politics, “oppo” is “opposition research”. The idea is to collect information on one’s opponent that can be used against him or her.
38 Heath bar shelfmate : SKOR
The candy bar named “Skor” is produced by Hershey’s. “Skor” is Swedish for “shoes”, and the candy bar’s wrapping features a crown that is identical to that found in the Swedish national emblem. What shoes have to do with candy, I don’t know …
The HEATH bar is a Hershey product that was introduced in the 1930s by brothers Bayard and Everett Heath. The candy was promoted back then with the line “Heath for better health!”, a reference to the “healthy” ingredients of the best milk chocolate and almonds, creamery butter and pure sugar cane. Different times …
39 Many links : SAUSAGES
Link sausages are so called as they can come in chains, with each sausage being a link in that chain.
45 Scale units: Abbr. : LBS
The unit of mass that we know today as a pound is descended from the old Roman unit of weight known as a “libra”. That “libra” connection is why we abbreviate “pound” to “lb”. The name “pound” comes from the Latin “pondo” meaning “weight”. Our term “ounce” (abbreviated to “oz.”) comes from the Latin “uncia”, which was 1/12 of a Roman “libra”.
46 Lemony quaff : SHANDY
A shandy is a beverage made by mixing beer and lemon-lime soda, often in a 50/50 ratio. I drank many a shandy in my younger years back in Ireland …
48 Second rule of waste reduction : REUSE
The so-called “waste hierarchy” can be restated as the three Rs: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. The preferences are in order:
- Reduce consumption
- Reuse manufactured products
- Recycle raw materials
54 Georgetown athlete : HOYA
The athletic teams of Georgetown University are known as the Hoyas. The name is derived from “Hoya Saxa”, a traditional cheer yelled out at Georgetown games as far back as 1893. The term is a mixture of Greek and Latin, with the Greek word “hoya” meaning “such” or “what”, and “saxa” translating from Latin as “rocks” or “small stones”. The cheer is usually rendered in English as “what rocks!”.
55 North Holland cheese town EDAM:
Edam cheese takes its name from the Dutch town of Edam in North Holland. The cheese is famous for its coating of red paraffin wax, a layer of protection that helps Edam travel well and prevents spoiling. You might occasionally come across an Edam cheese that is coated in black wax. The black color indicates that the underlying cheese has been aged for a minimum of 17 weeks.
58 Good Grips kitchen brand : OXO
The OXO line of kitchen utensils and housewares is designed to be ergonomically superior to the average household tools. The intended user of OXO products is someone who doesn’t have the normal range of motion or strength in the hands e.g. someone suffering from arthritis.
59 Rocksteady precursor : SKA
Ska originated in Jamaica in the late fifties and was the precursor to reggae music. No one has a really definitive etymology of the term “ska”, but it is likely to be imitative of a sound.
Read on, or …
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 1964 title role for Anthony Quinn : ZORBA
6 Where to do one’s bidding, maybe : EBAY
10 Not that : THIS
14 Like more than half of the earth’s population : ASIAN
15 Some fancywork : LACE
16 “The ___ of the Ancient Mariner” : RIME
17 Suddenly cut off all communication with … but do so nicely? : GHOST RIGHT (sounds like “ghostwrite”)
19 Great Plains people : OTOE
20 Leave full : SATE
21 Something that may be up one’s sleeve : ACE
22 Jokester : CUTUP
23 Cordial shipbuilders? : CIVIL WRIGHTS (sounds like “civil rights”)
27 Rude rejoinder popularized by the Fonz of 1970s TV : SIT ON IT
30 For real : KOSHER
31 Like cheering audiences : AROAR
32 Something up one’s sleeve? : ARM
33 Classroom projectile : WAD
35 Pens a seafaring tale? : WRITES OF PASSAGE (sounds like “rites of passage”)
40 ___ Paradise, narrator of “On the Road” : SAL
41 X a box, say : OPT
42 Superman’s baby name : KAL-EL
43 Flap of skin hanging from a bovine’s neck : DEWLAP
46 Fence-sitter’s question : SHOULD I?
48 Sacramental friars? : RITE BROTHERS (sounds like “Wright Brothers”)
50 Oxford and Surrey in “Richard III” : EARLS
51 Novelist Chang-___ Lee : RAE
52 Tooth trouble : ACHE
56 Con Ed, e.g.: Abbr. : UTIL
57 “It’s a plan” … and what might be said of 17-, 23-, 35- and 48-Across : SOUNDS GOOD
60 In the public eye : SEEN
61 Let go : AXED
62 Marathoning powerhouse : KENYA
63 Phonetic initialism along Canadian roadways : ESSO
64 Nosegay : POSY
65 Black tea region : ASSAM
Down
1 Sharply turns back the other way : ZAGS
2 Worker welfare grp. : OSHA
3 Run ___ : RIOT
4 Start of a paint job : BASE COAT
5 Myrmecologist’s specimen : ANT
6 Draw out : ELICIT
7 6-0 set, in tennis lingo : BAGEL
8 Bavarian “Bah!” : ACH!
9 So far : YET
10 Horse’s watering spot : TROUGH
11 What a marathoner may do around mile 20 : HIT THE WALL
12 Cry from one who’s fuming : I’M OUTRAGED!
13 Oozes : SEEPS
18 Shankar at Woodstock : RAVI
22 Prefix with gender : CIS-
24 As to : IN RE
25 Radio station on TV : WKRP
26 Canning tomato : ROMA
27 Maxims : SAWS
28 Lightens up? : IRRADIATES
29 Travel kit filler : TOILETRIES
32 Back on a cruise : AFT
34 Kind of counter in a supermarket : DELI
36 Take off : SOAR
37 Dirt-digging research, for short : OPPO
38 Heath bar shelfmate : SKOR
39 Many links : SAUSAGES
44 “Uh … huh-uh” : WELL … NO
45 Scale units: Abbr. : LBS
46 Lemony quaff : SHANDY
47 Obey : HEED
48 Second rule of waste reduction : REUSE
49 Makes even : TRUES
53 Swindles : CONS
54 Georgetown athlete : HOYA
55 North Holland cheese town EDAM:
57 Syrupy stuff : SAP
58 Good Grips kitchen brand : OXO
59 Rocksteady precursor : SKA
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13 thoughts on “0906-23 NY Times Crossword 6 Sep 23, Wednesday”
Comments are closed.
8:29, no errors. Clever.
Continuing my slow brain freeze, 20:16, no errors. I was pun-ished by the puns. Anyway, finished on OPPO which made no sense to me until I read Bill’s answers. I hate politics so it didn’t register. Kept thinking about archeology.
11:01, no errors. A good Wednesday effort for me. Last box to fall was the RAE/SHANDY intersection, both totally unknown to me. I have tried various ‘beer cocktails’ in the past. Didn’t like any of them. A SHANDY doesn’t sound any better, but that won’t stop me from trying it.
7:52. I got all the answers right/write/Wright/rite.
I remembered OPPO from a recent crossword here – maybe a few weeks/months back.
A SHANDY doesn’t appeal to me at all, but to be fair I’ve never tried one. For now I’ll take Bill’s word for it that it’s worth trying…someday.
“My kingdom for a horse” in Richard III is often quoted as meaning “I’d give my entire kingdom for a horse right now” – i.e. seeking a deal or something to that effect. In truth, what he was saying was an exasperated “OMG, I’m going to lose my entire kingdom for lack of a horse”.
A subtle difference a high school English teacher drove into our little skulls full of mush.
Best –
More never heard ofs
SHANDY or BAGEL (in tennis)
No errors…this is a Wednesday puzzle?
Stay safe😀
thanks for mansplaining richard III, Jeff
I really don’t see how Jeff’s comment can be viewed as an example of “mansplaining” … 🧐. Please anonymousplain.
Meaning that “anonymous” may refer to a man or a woman?
Meaning just that I was asking “anonymous” to explain.
I always thought a shandy (gaff)
was 50/50 beer and ginger beer. I’ve made them and enjoyed them. In England in my senior year in college, in a bar, I had a Scotch and lemonade, which likely sounds bad to a Scotch purist. But English lemonade is not like American, but I think is tastier than 7-up or Sprite. I think because it’s brewed and fermented.
okay kennison, i’ll bite. explaining something that’s already fairly obvious
Okay, so I looked up a definition of “mansplaining” and it’s less specific than I had thought:
the explanation of something by a man, typically to a woman, in a manner regarded as condescending or patronizing
I suppose Jeff’s comment could be viewed as satisfying that definition. I thought it was an interesting alternate point of view from an English teacher (who may have been either a man or a woman) and I think he (or she) may well have been right.