08.04.15 — End of Discussion
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Puzzle by Joel Fagliano / Edited by Will Shortz
LIQUOR STORE (52A. Where to purchase the starts of 21-, 26- and 45-Across), FIFTH AVENUE (21A. Fashionable shopping area in New York City), SIX PACK ABS (26A. Goal of one doing crunches) and CASE CLOSED (45A. “End of discussion”) constitute the interrelated group of this Tuesday crossword.
Other — ANTIQUER (36D. One shopping for old curious), CAR and ACURA, COMIC CON (5D. Yearly gathering for superhero fans), ENERGY (47D. Part of E = mc^2), ILLINI (2D. “Fighting“ Big Ten team), KIOWA (27D. Great Plains tribe), LISP and LAPSE, LISTICLE (35D. “21 Pictures That Will Restore Your Faith in Humanity,” e.g.), PIANO MAN (11D. 1974 hit that begins “It‘s nine o‘clock on a Saturday“), SCRUB OAK (12D. Low-growing tree often in dense thickets), SPACE X (3D. Private-sector rocket launcher), TIOGA (49A. New York county bordering Pennsylvania).
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08.03.15 — Grey Cells
Albert Finney as Hercule Poirot in
“Murder on the Orient Express,” 1974
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Monday, August 3, 2015
Puzzle by David Steinberg / Edited by Will Shortz
HERCULE POIROT (23A. Fictional character who “died” in 1975); LITTLE GREY CELLS (39A. What 23-Across thinks with [as illustrated in this grid?]), MOUSTACHE (18A. Notable 23-Across feature); EGG-SHAPED HEAD (50A. Notable 23-Across feature) and DETECTIVE (62A. 23-Across’s occupation) constitutes the main feature of this Monday crossword.
Other — ACHE, AGAPE and AGAZE A LOOP, AMEND, APERÇU (4D. Cursory glance); ATONE, COCKTAILS (1D. Drinks before dinner, maybe), Mr. MOTO (Marquand sleuth); OBAMA (28A. President born Aug. 4, 1961), SET and LOT (45A and 47A. Movie filming spot), STILETTOS (33D. Pointy heels).
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08.02.15 — Literally Speaking
Sunday, August 2, 2015
Literally Speaking — Puzzle by Matt Ginsberg
Edited by Will Shortz
Edited by Will Shortz
Arrangements of letters within standard phrases further defining the base phrase within the circled letters constitutes the main feature of this Sunday crossword:
CALLBACK (20A: Result of a successful audition)
SPLIT SECOND (25A: Instant)
TORN TO SHREDS (37A: In bits)
MINCEMEAT (46A: Kind of pie)
DRIFT APART (54A: Lose that loving feeling)
SCRAMBLED EGGS (62A: Diner offering)
MIXED MEDIA (72A: Art type)
HASH MARKS (83A: # # #)
INTERMINGLED (90A: Like 0's and 1's in binary)
FAST SHUFFLE (105A: Card sharp's deception)
UNBROKEN (112A: Whole)
Other — AD RATES (82D. They vary with circulation); ANODES (80A. Battery ends); DIGHT (64D. Adorn, in old literature); ELF (59D. Figure often dressed in green); HANKS (67D. “Big” star); LOTION (93D. Bottle in a beach bag); MALI (72D. Country once known as French Sudan); ME LIKE (92D. Informal approval)p OBEISANCE (4D. Acts of deference); OBESE (68D. Big, big, big); OKAY BY ME (24A. “Sure, that’s fine”); ORCA (31D. Boat in “Jaws”); PUBLIC ENEMY (3D. “No. 1” person); RATSO Rizzo of film; REPOT (1A. Move, as a plant); SHE-CAT (6D. Tom’s partner); SKID ROWS (9D. Lush locales); SKOSH (6A. Tiny bit); START A FIRE (71D. Rub some sticks together, as at camp); TWO-ROOM FLAT (66D. Smallish London lodgings).
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08.01.15 — The Saturday Crossword
Operation Castle thermonuclear test
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Puzzle by Kameron Austin Collins / Edited by Will Shortz
Of interest — AREN’T I (48A. Defensive comeback), ENISLE (29D. Maroon); FREE UNION (32D. Cohabitation without marriage); FRIEND ZONE (32A. Relationship with unrequited love, in modern slang); HAPPY (26A. “Are you satisfied now?”); H BOMBS (9A. Big releases of the ‘50s); HOLY SYNOD (9D. Highest authority in some Eastern churches); LITTLE ONE (39A. Tot), MATCH POINT (3D. Situation in which one person might have the advantage); NAÏVE ART (50A. Works of childlike simplicity); PAS MOI (23D. “Not me”: Fr.); P A SYSTEM (56A. Principal means of address?); PEACH PIT (15A. Cobbler waste); QUIRED (42A. Put in bundles for the bookbinder); SCHLEPS (4D. Lugs); SEXTED (30D. Sent pixxx?); THE WAILERS (38D. Original band that sang “I Shot the Sheriff,“ with “the”); TONGUE-TIED (36A. Stammering).
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07.31.15 — The Friday Crossword
M. C. Escher, Drawing Hands, 1948
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Puzzle by James Mulhern and Ashton Anderson
Edited by Will Shortz
Of interest — ATOM ANT (3D. Slight ’60s superhero); AUTO-TUNE (15A. Musical tool on Time’s list of “50 Worst Inventions”); BAIT CAR (20A. Help in catching an auto thief); CANKLES (51A. Lower leg woe, slangily); DAS BOOT (1D. Oversize Oktoberfest vessel named after a classic film); DRAG SHOW (1A. It often features diva impersonators); ESCHER (60A. Drawer of paradoxes); GET WEIRD (61A. Turn awkward as a relationship); HULA SKIRT (6D. Hipster’s dance wear?); KETEL ONE (35D. Vodka with an “Oranje” variety); KERPLOP (13D. Sound head before ripples are seen); RUN AMOK (2D. Go nuts); SEXY BEAST (32D. Hunk); SLY DOG (54A. Cunning sort); SNOBALLS (17A. Sister brand of Twinkies); TALK BIG (39D. Crow); TOODLES (37D. “Cheerio!”).
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07.30.15 — Little Women
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Puzzle by Brendan Emmett Quigley / Edited by Will Shortz
Louisa May ALCOTT (45D. Creator of the characters added in 17-, 28-, 44- and 57-Across) and the March sisters of “Little Women”, MEG, AMY, BETH and JO, constitutes the main feature of this Thursday crossword:
TOUGH NUTMEG (17A: Hardy brown spice?)
BIGAMY BUSINESS (28A: Company that will get you a second spouse?)
MACBETH ‘N CHEESE(44A: Extremely tacky production of a Shakespeare play?)
TRAVEL BANJO (57A: Country instrument played by a migrant?)
Other — GUESS NOT (38D. “Looks like I was wrong”); JAM-UPS (7D. Printing problems); LANATE (37D. Woolly); MACRON (44D. Long vowel indicator); Baby MAMA; PABST (48D. “The way beer was meant to be); PLUG UGLY (3D. Downright homely); SPEX (40D. Glasses, informally); USABLE (18D. Worth keeping).
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07.29.15 — Double-Double
Basketball Team, 1911, interest
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Puzzle by David J. Lieb / Edited by Will Shortz
DOUBLE-DOUBLE (65A. Statistical achievement in basketball … or what the answer to each starred clue is), along with those answers, constitutes the main feature of this Wednesday crossword:
STANDARD TIME (18A: *It's divided into four zones in the contiguous U.S. states), e.g., DOUBLE STANDARD and DOUBLE OVER
TAKEOVER (27A: *Coup d'état, e.g.), DOUBLE TAKE and DOUBLE OVER.
CROSSTALK (33A: *Incidental chatter), DOUBLE CROSS and DOUBLE-TALK
PLAYBILLS (47A: *Handouts to theatergoers), DOUBLE PLAY and DOUBLE BILLS
BACKDATE (53A: *Make retroactive), DOUBLE BACK and DOUBLE DATE.
Other — COAT ROOMS (3D. Where forgotten umbrellas may accumulate); DRAGONS (46D. Chinese New Year decorations); GOLDEN BOY (38D. Person who can do no wrong); NEGEV (12D. More than half of Israel); NOOGIE (15A. Knuckle to the head); SPOOKY 34D. Like a haunted house); ZEBRA (7A. Parent of a zorse or a zonkey).
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07.28.15 — AEIOU
1453 A.E.I.O.U., Wahlspruch Kaiser Friedrichs III.
an der Grazer Burg
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Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Puzzle by Caleb Emmons / Edited by Will Shortz
In this Tuesday crossword, the across rows contain a group of one vowel each, e.g., A, E, I, O and U, and they descend in AEIOU order, repeated three times.
Of interest — FRESHETS (50A. Sudden floods); KLUTZ (63A. Unlikely juggler); PHILIP III (54A. King who led Spain into the Thirty Years’ War); POLTROON (20A. Utter coward); TIGHT-KNIT (18A. Close, as a community); THE CREEPS (32A. Shudder-inducing feeling).
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07.27.05 — Palindromes
Puzzle by D. Scott Nichols and Zhouqin Burnikel
Edited by Will Shortz
PALINDROMES (60A. What the ends of the answers to all the starred clues are), along with SELES, ONO, TENET and HANNAH, constitutes the main feature of this Monday crossword:
MONICA SELES (17A. *Youngest French Open champion)
YOKO ONO (39A. *”Double Fantasy” singer)
GEORGE TENET (11D. *C.I.A.’s second-longest-serving director)
DARYL HANNAH (24D. *”Splash” star)
Other — ALIMONY (4D. Payment to an ex); Desi ARNAZ of “I Love Lucy”; AVEENO (18D. Big name in skin care); BALSA (42A. Wood for model airplanes); ERROL Flynn who played Robin Hood; GRANOLA (45D. Crunchy breakfast bowlful); HIPPO (46A. Zoo heavyweight, informally); Pepé LE PEW, amorous cartoon skunk; NAME (32A. Peter, Paul or Mary); NIMROD (21A. Doofus); Nick NOLTE of “48 Hrs.”
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07.26.15 — No Escape
Simulated view of a black hole in front of the Large Magellanic Cloud. The ratio between the black hole Schwarzschild radius and the observer distance to it is 1:9. Of note is the gravitational lensing effect known as an Einstein ring, which produces a set of two fairly bright and large but highly distorted images of the Cloud as compared to its actual angular size. ~ Wikipedia
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Sunday, July 26, 2015
“No Escape” — Puzzle by Ellen Leuschner and Jeff Chen
Edited by Will Shortz
A central group of nine black squares representing ‘HOLE” with the adjacent entries of LOOP, MOUSE, POT, PIE, HIDEY, BORE, PORT, BLACK, RAT, PIN, IN THE and NAIL, along with CENTER OF GRAVITY (112A. Tightrope walker’s concern), DISAPPEARING ACT (14D. Avoidance maneuver), FATAL ATTRACTION (42D. 1987 Michael Douglas/Glenn Close blockbuster), and HEART OF DARKNESS (21A. Novella that served as the basis for “Apocalypse Now“), constitutes the main feature of this attractive Sunday crossword.
Other — AARP (93A. 50 or more people?); BAALISM and GROUPIE (47A AND 43A. Idol worshiper?); CHERUBIM (10D. Pair of figures in Raphael‘s “Sistine Madonna“); COIN PURSES (13D. Change places); COPAY (1A. Drug charge?); EASY FIX (90D. Simple solution); EPISODE I (29A. “The Phantom Menace“ in the “Star Wars“ series); HATE MAIL (74A. Some written rants); KRAKENS (89D. Mythical monsters); LAPDOGS (51D. Toy poodles, e.g.); LEANN RIMES (70D. Singer with the 1997 3x platinum single “How Do I Live“); MEAT PIE (49D. Savory dish with a crust); OHMAGE (16A. Conductor’s resistance); STYX (121A. River with a “dreadful shore,” in Shakespeare).
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07.25.15 — Rosebud
Orson Welles, “Citizen Kane”
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Puzzle by Kevin G. Der / Edited by Will Shortz
Of interest — AROINT (16A. “Begone,” to Shakespeare); BIBELOT (33A. Trinket); BOUNCE HOUSE (45A. It’s blown up at a carnival); BOX SCORE (33D. Some sports figures); COURT VISION (19a. Hoopster’s playmaking ability); EGOMANIA (15A. Citizen Kane’s affliction); FOOT BATHS (27D. Dog washers?); NEPAL (43D. Traditional birthplace of Buddhism); ON SALE NOW (13D. Available for purchase); ORANGINA (51A. Beverage in a pear-shaped bottle, ironically); POWER NAP (49A. Stopgap for an energy shortage); SNEEZE (52A. Something you close your eyes for); TIME BOMB (1A. One waiting to go off); TON ROWS (35A. Modern composer’s constructions); VIOLA SOLO (12D. Feature of Berlioz’s symphony “Harold en Italie”); WET ONE (31A. Sloppy kiss); WIN THE WAR (31D. Ultimately prevail).
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07.24.15 — Briefly Featured
Rita Hayworth, “Gilda” 1946
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Puzzle by Patrick Berry / Edited by Will Shortz
Of interest — ALLAH (34A. Deity with 99 names); ANTI-NOVEL (52A. Literary term popularized by Sartre); FALSE TEETH (12D. Wood choppers of old); GHOST TOWN (32D. Nobody’s home); GILDA (23A. Rita Hayworth film briefly featured n “The Shawshank Redemption“); HIT OR MISS (19A. Wildly uneven); ILLITERATE (13D. “X” signer); I’M SO SORRY (4D. “My deepest condolences”); INSIDE MAN (1A. Helper in a heist); LOBSTER and PINE NUT (37D. Bisque bit; 38D. Biscotto bit); NEW MEXICO (15A. U.S. state with the oldest capital city); ONE AND ONLY (24D. Perfect match); SKELETONS (46A. Dancers in danse macabre imagery); SWEET-N-LOW (56A. Product in pink packets); TEAR-GASSED (25D. Put down, in a way, as a group of rioters).
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07.23.15 — Mouthful
Puzzle b Timothy Polin / Edited by Will Shortz
SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALIDOCIOUS (39A. Mouthful from a 1964 song), with each syllable in a square, MAGNIFICENT (19A. What 39-Across means) and MARY POPPINS (62A. Musical featuring 39-Across), constitutes the main feature of this Thursday crossword.
Other— ANADEM (6D. Floral garland); APOLITI[CAL] (4D. Nonvoting, say); BEARDS (53A. What shadows become as they lengthen); FERMIS (22D. Miniscule distance units); INSTRUMENT (29A. Woodwind or wind gauge); LUNA (8D. 1960s-'70s Soviet space program); NAIL GUNS (57A. Sharp shooters?); [PER]SIAN RUG (40D. Grand Bazaar purchase); THE TUXE]DO] (12D. Jackie Chan action film featuring a high-tech jacket); TUNERS (3D. Workers with pitchforks?).
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07.22.15 — Chopped Liver
Chopped Liver, Sammy’s Roumanian, New York City
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Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Puzzle by Peter A. Collins / Edited by Will Shortz
CHOPPED LIVER (58A. What’s found on some canapés [and hiding in the answers to 20-, 31-, 38- and 49-Across?]), along with those answers:
SUPER VILLAIN (20A. Lex Luthor, notably)
SAVILE ROW (31A. High-end tailoring area in London)
NAVEL RING (38A. Belly dancer’s decoration)
DEVIL RAYS (49A. Tropicana Field team renamed in 2008)
Other — EXAMPLES (39D. For-instances); INHUMAN (2D. Barbaric); LIVEN UP (47D. Add zip to); ROD LAVER (8D. Tennis star ranked #1 in the world, 1964-70); ROSSINI (1D. “The Barber of Seville” composer); SEAPORT (3D. San Diego, but not Santa Fe); SHRILL (9D. Like the sound of a siren); YEAR ONE (48D. Beginning of time, figuratively); ZIG and ZAG.
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07.21.15 — It's in the Bag
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Puzzle by David Phillips / Edited by Will Shortz
IT’S IN THE BAG, (56A."We have this won" ... or what could be said about each of the first words of the answers to the starred clues), along with those words, BOOK, TEA, ICE and SAND, constitutes the main feature of this innocuous Tuesday crossword:
BOOK ‘EM DANNO (16A. *Hawaii Five-O” catchphrase)
TEA PARTIER (22A. * Sarah Palin or Glen Beck, e.g.)
ICE ROAD TRUCKERS (35A. *History channel show frequently set in Canada or Alaska)
SAND CASTLE (45A. *Structure built from the ground up?)
Other — ACAI BERRY (29D. Brazilian fruit export); AMERICAN (14D. Swiss sub?); DECOUPAGE (30D. Paper cutouts as a decorative art); GEOFFREY (20A. Rush experienced during a movie?); JAMES KIRK (1D. TV movie lead character whose middle name is Tiberius); OJO (9A. Eye of the tigre?); OSTRICHES (9D. Big egg producers); RIND (37D. Thick skin); TESSA (62A. Nickname for Theresa).
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07.20.15 — Morning
Puzzle by John Westwig / Edited by Will Shortz
MORNING PERSON (37A. Early riser … or what each of 17-, 24-, 50- and 61-Across is?) and the initials AM of four proper names constitutes the main feature of this Monday crossword:
AKIO MORITA (17A. Sony co-founder)
ANDY MURRAY (24A. 2013 Wimbledon champion)
AL MICHAELS (50A. Longtime “Monday Night Football” sportscaster)
ALI MACGRAW (61A. “Love Story” actress)
Other — DE SADE (48D. The Crimes of Love” author); ED HARRIS (10D. “Apollo 13” co-star); ELIZA (52D. Doolittle of fiction); GEEK (55A. Overindulge in a brainy subject, with “out”); RATTY (8D. In bad condition); Jackie ROBINSON who broke baseball’s color barrier; WAKE UP (2D. “Rise and shine!”).
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07.19.15 — The Short Form
Gandalf’s Rune
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Sunday, July 19, 2015
"The Short Form" — Puzzle by Tom McCoy
Edited by Will Shortz
Edited by Will Shortz
In this Sunday crossword, seven abbreviated words are used as full words to give familiar phrases a make-over:
- FIRST PERSON SING (23A. “Belt it out, Adam!”?), Singular
- DON’T GIVE AN IN (38A. “I forbid you from providing special access”?), Inch
- POP DENSITY (42A. Your father’s blockheadedness?), Population
- TURN OF THE CENT (66A. Coin flip with a penny?), Century
- APT COMPLEX (92A. Emotional problem that is surprisingly fitting?), Apartment
- CUT QUITE A FIG (94A. Prepared some amazing Mediterranean fruit?), Figure
- LOOK OUT FOR NO ONE (112A. Do a bad job as a watchman?), Number
Other — ALL IS LOST (79D. “We’re done for”); AMUR (21A. Border river between China and Russia); BITTERER (5D. More resentful); CRUST (68D. Piece of pie); ELFIN and RUNE (102D. Like some characters in “The Hobbit”; 107D. Character seen in “The Hobbit“); HANG IN THERE (16D. “Keep up the fight”); HARRUMPHS (3D. Openly expresses disapproval); I’M OUTTA HERE (65D. “Later!“); LE MENU (64D. Old frozen dinner brand); PAULIE (87A. Title parrot in a 1998 film); SAHIB (1A. Polite Indian form of address)
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