08.11.13 — The Monk in the Garden — the Acrostic


Sunday, August 11, 2013

ACROSTIC, Puzzle by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon
Edited by Will Shortz


The Moravian monk and naturalist Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) labored quietly over the years in his abbey's garden, becoming known locally as a reliable meteorologist with an unusually green thumb. He was much more than that, of course, but his transforming experiments in what a later acolyte would call "genetics" were less well known. When he published the results of his many attempts to discover the mechanisms by which traits are passed from one generation to the next--in Mendel's case, in sweet peas--it was in the proceedings of a local scientific study group, and it would take nearly two decades before researchers in more august institutions would in turn discover Mendel's work and apply it to their own revolutionizing biology in the process. ~ Gregory McNamee, Amazon.com

The quotation:  MENDEL HAD NOT ALWAYS WORKED WITH PEAS; AT FIRST, HE HAD TRIED BREEDING MICE.   BUT THE LOCAL BISHOP … SEEMED TO FIND IT INAPPROPRIATE, … FOR A PRIEST WHO HAD TAKEN VOWS OF CHASTITY … TO BE ENCOURAGING — AND WATCHING — RODENT SEX.

The author’s name and the title of the work:  HENIG, THE MONK IN THE GARDEN

The defined words:

A. Short race in fiction, HOBBITS
B. Visitor of castles in the air, ESCAPIST
C. Small boy, in Britain, NIPPER
D. Like some of the things that make you you, INHERITED
E. In the style of “Dracula”, GOTHIC
F. Position played by Mike Ditka (2 wds.), TIGHT END
G. Surname in a 1582 marriage, HATHAWAY
H. Eponym of the Dodgers field in Brooklyn, EBBETS
L. Means of moving quietly in the woods, MOCCASINS
J. Worship of snakes, OPHIOLATRY
K. Worms good for controlling lawn grubs, NEMATODES
L. Foofaraw, hoo-ha, hurly-burly, KERFUFFLE
M. “O.K., let’s shake” (3 wds.), IT’S A DEAL
N. Not at all far from home (2 wds.), NEXT DOOR
O. Supplement or bonus, as to a purchase (hyph.), THROW-IN
P. Mountain or hill; N.B.A. player stat, HEIGHT
Q. Eurus, in Greek mythology (2 wds.), EAST WIND
R. Cussedly bad (hyph.), GOD-AWFUL
S. Come clean about, ADMIT
T. One in charge of a parish, RECTOR
U. Reduce in number, as troops (2 wds.), DRAW DOWN
V. 1996 movie role for Madonna (2 wds.) EVA PERON
W. Human, per a zoologist’s 1967 book (2 wds.), NAKED APE 

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The full paragraphs of the quotation:  Mendel had not always worked with peas; at first, he had tried breeding mice.  But toying with the reproduction of mammals, according to the local bishop, was simply too vulgar an undertaking for a priest.  The bishop, Anton Ernst Schaffgotsch, had irritated the monks of St. Thomas for decades.  The monks wanted to pursue their interests —  natural science, physics, musical composition -- unfettered by the restrictions of the Catholic Church.  But Bishop Schaffgotsch would not allow such irreverence.  He was especially bothered by the abbot, an independent thinker and powerful man who seemed intent on running his monastery more like a university than a cloister.  In June 1854, the year that Mendel began growing peas, the bishop visited St. Thomas, hoping to get a tighter grip on it once and for all.  His ultimate goal was to shut down the monastery altogether.

The abbot proved too wily an adversary for Schaffgotsch, who was not an especially clever man.  But the two clerics did eventually reach a compromise:  the monastery could remain open as long as the abbot changed some of the things that Schaffgotsch found most offensive.  Among them were the mice that Mendel kept in cages in his two-room flat, where they gave off a distinctive stench of cedar, chips, fur, and rodent droppings.  He was trying to breed wild-type mice with albinos to see what color coats the hybrids would have.  Schaffgotsch seemed to find it inappropriate, and perhaps unnecessarily titillating, for a priest who had taken vows of chastity and celibacy to be encouraging —  and watching —  rodent sex.

“I turned from animal breeding to plant breeding,” Mendel later said with a chuckle.  “You see, the bishop did not understand that plants also have sex.” ~  The Monk in the Garden: The Lost and Found Genius of Gregor Mendel, the Father of Genetics by Robin Marantz Henig.


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08.11.13 — AH...!


Pleiades and Stardust

Dust is a very fragile thing. Light from a star will either push dust away or cause it to spiral into the star within a few thousand years, so to see a ton of it around another star means that something has happened recently to produce it. ~ www.bibliotecapleyades.net 

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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Added Satisfaction, Puzzle by Dan Schoenholz
Edited by Will Shortz


This Sunday crossword titled Added Satisfaction features seven common phrases with the letters AH inserted to produce an uncommon phrase  AH here being the presumed sound of satisfaction.

AFTER ALLAH (26A. Where most things rank in importance to a Muslim?)
JUST SAY NOAH (42A. Webster’s directive to the overly formal?)
HOOKAH LINE AND SINKER (62A. Equipment list for a hashish-smoking fisherman?)
LEFT BAHRAIN (86A. Departed from Manama, maybe?)
AUNTIE AHEM (102A. Niece’s polite interruption?)
SARAHA SMILE (25D. Welcome look from a Bedouin?)
HEAD TO TAHOE (52D. What many Bay Area skiers do on winter weekends?)


Other — ENCHILADA (8D. “Whole” thing), ENOLA GAY (81D. Historic exhibit at Washington Dulles airport), FEAST UPON (24A. Eat heartily), FIRE SALES (91A. “Everything must go” event), HOT DATES (52A. Exciting matches?), IMPEACHES (32A. Casts doubt on), JOE CAMEL (11D. Old ad figure with a big nose), LARKSPURS (50D. Often-blue garden blooms), ON THE EDGE (109A. Caustic), OVER-RATE (72D. Extends too much credit?), STARDUST (5D. Space specks), STUD POKER (35D. Game for those who don’t like to draw), THE BEAST (83D. Beauty’s counterpart), UPHOLSTER (92A. Cover, in a way).


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08.10.13 — Sum and Substance


Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid
Front cover design, 20th Anniversary Edition

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

Puzzle by Chris A. McLothlin / Edited by Will Shortz

Seven 15-letter answers constitutes the main feature of this Saturday crossword:

GÖDEL ESCHER BACH (1A. Title trio of a 1980 Pulitzer winner)
PRIVATE AUDIENCE (16A. One-on-one with a big shot)
SUM AND SUBSTANCE (17A. Gist)
ONE SECOND PLEASE (49A. Moment’s notice?)
STATE ASSISTANCE (57A. Some government checks)
CAUGHT A FEW WINKS (8D. Grabbed some sack time)

Other Across 19. “Just what I need”, GREAT; 20. Stamp purchases, PANES; 31. “ … we’ll TAK a cup o’ kindness …”: Burns; 33. Quail, CRINGE; 39. “SO A wise guy, eh?”.

Down 5. Dangerous things to weave on, LANES; 10. Vehicular bomb?, EDSEL; 12. Looking ecstatic, BEATIFIC; 20. Home of Sanssouci Palace, POTSDAM; 21. Wind River Reservation native, ARAPAHO; 22. Hiawatha’s grandmother in “The Song of Hiawatha”, NOKOMIS; 26. Lab growth need, DOG FOOD; 27. Designer STEFANO Gabbana; 29. Stamp purchase, BOOK; 35. Univ. in Manhattan, KANSAS ST; 41. 100 bits?, ZEROES.

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08.09.13 — The Friday Crossword


Friday, August 9, 2013

Puzzle by Patrick Berry / Edited by Will Shortz


Across — Where Union Pacific is headquartered, OMAHA; 6. Chinese ELMS (popular bonsai trees); 10. Medieval drudge, SERF; 14. Sister of Castor and Pollux, HELEN; 15. Fighter getting a leg up?, KICKBOXER; 17. Site of Tiberius’ Villa Jovis, CAPRI; 18. GERALDINE Page on the stage; 19. Comfortable, AT HOME; 21. Taking place (in), SITUATED; 22. One-point throws, LEANERS; 24. Appliance sound, BEEP; 25. Checkers, for instance, CABS; 26. Play critic?, REF; 28. Hype, BOOST; 32. Onetime Arapaho foe, UTE; 33. Grooming tool, NAIL CLIPPER; 36. Vietnamese holiday, TET; 37. O-shaped, ANNULAR; 38. Priest in I Samuel, ELI; 39. Dread Zeppelin or the Fab Faux, TRIBUTE BAND; 41. Sports div. that awards the George Halas Trophy, NFC; 42. Gold Cup venue, ASCOT; 43. Quote qualification, SIC; 44. Coin of many countries, PESO; 45. Pretension, AIRS; 48. Get more inventory, REODER; 50. Country whose flag is known as the Saltire, SCOTLAND; 54. Bubble handler?, THE FED; 55. Foundation devoted to good works?, ART MUSEUM; 57. Uniform, ALIKE; 58. Bag lady?, KATE SPADE; 59. Less often seen, RARER; 60. Deep black, EBON; 61. Twist, SKEW; 62. America’s Cup trophies, e.g., EWERS.

Down — 1. Broadway musical with two exclamation points, OH! CALCUTTA!; 2. They might have bones to pick, MEAT EATERS; 3. Like characters in a script, ALPHABETIC; 4. Some wetlands wildlife, HERONS; 5. Miyazaki film genre, ANIME; 6. Hosp. record, EKG; 7. Creates an account?, LIES; 8. Fast-food debut of 1981, MCRIB; 9. Go along effortlessly, SKATE; 10. Vending machine drink, SODA POP; 11. What to do when you have nothing left to say?, EXIT; 12. Peace Nobelist RENE Cassin; 13. Dance-pop trio Right Said FRED; 16. Symbol of happiness, BLUEBIRD; 20. Off the mark; ERRANT; 23. English Channel feeder, SEINE; 27. Bad line readings, FLUBS; 29. Launched the first round, OPENED FIRE; 30. Narcissistic one, SELF-SEEKER; 31. Hand-held “Star Trek“ devices, TRICORDERS; 33. Sea creature whose name means “sailor“, NAUTILUS; 34. Huxtable family mom, CLAIR; 35. Surgical cutter, LANCET; 40. Goldoliers, e.g., BOATMEN; 44. Like a poi sci major, maybe, PRE-LAW; 46. Woodworking tools, RASPS; 47. Underhanded schemer, SNEAK; 48. American Airlines hub, OHARE; 50. Drink served in a masu, SAKE; 51. Zodiac symbol, CRAB; 52. Palindromic man, OTTO; 53. “My man!”, DUDE; 56. Plaintive pet sound, MEW.


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08.08.13 — Object Letters




Thursday, August 8, 2013

Puzzle by Daniel A. Finan / Edited by Will Shortz


Five clues utilizing a single letter of the alphabet that resembles a common object constitutes the interrelated group of this Thursday crossword:

FISH HOOK (17A. J)
HORSESHOE (37A. U)
TIRE IRON (62A. X)
WISHBONE (11D. Y)
HULA HOOP (37D. O)


Other — AMERICA (13D. “Another name for opportunity,“ per Ralph Waldo Emerson), CLEAN-CUT (65A. Neat and trim), DOGGY BAG (1A. It wraps scraps), ERASABLE (15A. Unlocked, as a computer file), GAS LAMP (3D. Quaint illumination), MENORCA (43D. Mediterranean resort island, to locals), MESONS (24D. Accelerator particles), STARGATE (67A. 1994 film that spawned a TV series), VOODOO (32D. Activity with dolls).


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08.07.13 — LEMON



Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Puzzle by Erik Wennstrom / Edited by Will Shortz


TWIST OF LEMON (23D. Drink garnish .. Or a hint to five letters in the answer to each starred clue), along with REAL MONEY (20A. *What paper profits aren’t), ZOOM LENSES (31A. *Photo gear with variable focal lengths), IN NAME ONLY (42A. *Titularly), KILL ME NOW (53A. *Sarcastic remark upon hearing bad news) and STOLEN MOMENT (4D. *Precious, brief time with a loved one), constitute the interrelated group of this Wednesday crossword.

Other — BRINY (6D. Like pickle juice), ERNST / MACH (13D. With 61-Across, physicist who studied supersonics), JANE / EYRE (2D/7D. With 2-Down, book that includes the line “Conventionality is not morality”), NASA (55D. Friendship org. of 1962), NEW DAD (59A. One passing out cigars, maybe), PRAGUE (15A. Capital on the Vltava River), SCONCE (47A. Torch holder), UMAMI (29A. Taste whose name means “savoriness” in Japanese).


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08.06.13 — Thievery



The Cunning Thief by Moreau Paul Charles Chocame

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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Puzzle by Lynn Lempel / Edited by Will Shortz


Everyday phrases clued as thievery constitutes the interrelated group of this Tuesday crossword:

TAKE CHANCES (17A. Make off with some raffle tickets?)
POCKET KNIVES (23A. Make off with some kitchenware?)
COP CARS (39A. Make off with some vehicles?)
PINCH PENNIES (50A. Make off with some cash?)
LIFT WEIGHTS (60A. Make off with some gym equipment?)


Other — DEMONIZING (29D. Doing the job of an attack ad); HIPSTER (43D. Type who wears tight-fitting jeans and thick-rimmed glasses, maybe), SKETCHBOOK (3D. Pad of drawing paper), WINDSOR (9D. British royal name since 1917).


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08.05.13 — Space



Monday, August 5, 2013

Puzzle by Alan Arbesfeld / Edited by Will Shortz

Space takes up space in this Monday crossword:

COUNTRY STAR (17A. Randy Travis or Travis Tritt)
FORD GALAXY (24A. Minivan since the mid-’90s)
KEITH MOON (34A. Drummer for the Who)
PHOENIX SUN (49A. Arizona N.B.A.’er)
DAILY PLANET (57A. Clark Kent and Lois lane’s paper)


Other — AGITA and ANGST (1A and 61A. Uneasy feeling), Actress ANNETTE Bening of “American Beauty, ASCRIBE (44A. Attribute to), ASHTRAY (38D. Apt pig Latin for “trash”), CAPSIZE (37D. Flip over, as a boat), ELASTIC (27A. Material in an underwear waistband), GOGOLS (2D. Humongous numbers), NET GAIN (47A. Overall profit), RIFIFI (18D. Classic 1955 Jules Dassin heist film), SCOURGE of God (epithet for Attila the Hun), SETTLES (29A. Sinks to the bottom, as silt).


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08.04.13 — Should I Call the Repairman?


Section through cabin of the Otis elevator, Eiffel Tower, Paris, France. Note the pivoted floor-sections.  As the car traveled, these floor-sections were leveled by the operator to compensate for the change of inclination; however, they were soon removed because they interfered with the loading and unloading of passengers. (From La Nature, May 4, 1889, vol. 17, p. 360.) ~ Elevator Systems of the Eiffel Tower 1889, Project Gutenberg  

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Should I Call The Repairman?, Puzzle by Steven Ginzburg
Edited by Will Shortz


Six humorous clue/entry pun phrases constitute the interrelated group of this tolerably challenging Sunday crossword:

KEEPS CUTTING OUT (27A. The jigsaw … )
JUST WENT DOWN (40A. The elevator … ) 
HAS STILL GOT BUGS (53A. The mosquito zapper … )
FAILED SOME TESTS (77A. The quiz-grading machine … )
IS ON THE BLINK (89A. The crosswalk signal … )
DEVELOPED A SHORT (104A. The film-processing machine at the movie studio … )


Other — AGA KHAN (6D. High Muslim honorific), AT A DISCOUNT (66D. On sale), CORNERSTONE (3D. Place to find a date), ECCENTRIC (100A. Quirky), EYE SHADES (29A. Antiglare wear), KING-SIZE BED (14D. Part of a honeymoon suite, perhaps), RHUBARB PIE (74D. Tart dessert), STREET-WISE (5D. Savvy, in a way), TASTING / MENU (13D. With 37-Down, restaurant offering with may small dishes), WALLPAPERED (62D. Hung some strips).


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08.03.13 — The Saturday Crossword

His Master’s Voice by Francis James Barraud

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Puzzle by Brad Wilber and Doug Peterson
Edited by Will Shortz


Across — Bar fixture, SOT; 4. Person who might suit you well?, HABERDASHER; 15. Start of many a “Jeopardy!” response, WHO; 16. Transported, ON CLOUD NINE; 17. Org. with an Office of Water, EPA; 18. “Poor Little Fool” hitmaker, 1958, RICKY NELSON; 19. Danny ELFMAN who composed the theme music for “The Simpsons”; 21. Eponymous Dr. HANS Asperger; 22. Onetime Michael Jackson bodyguard, MR T; 23. Benders, TEARS; 24. Sight on a “Hee Haw” set, BALE; 25. Hindu god often depicted with a bow and arrow, KAMA; 26. A choli may be worn under this, SARI; 27. “Star Trek: T.N.G.” role, WORF; 28. Name on the cover of “Yosemite and the High Sierra”, ANSEL; 29. Verb suffix?, OSE; 30. Ancient scribe’s work surface, WAX TABLET; 32. Treadmill runners, maybe, PET MICE; 34. “Sex is an emotion in motion” speaker, MAE WEST; 37. Not reliable, HIT OR MISS; 39. Empire State tech school, RPI; 40. “Price GOETH before destruction”: Proverbs; 42. Be uncooperative, BALK; 43. Showroom window no., MSRP; 44. Discipline, AREA; 45. European hub, ORLY; 46. Show stoppers?, TIVOS; 47. Leipzig-to-Zurich dir., SSW; 48. Columnist GAIL Collins; 49. Was triumphant in the end, WON OUT; 50. Inventor’s undoing?, LIE DETECTOR; 53. Mineralogical appendage?, ITE; 54. Avatar setting, ON-LINE FORUM; 55. Base man, CUR; 56. Image on Utah’s state quarter, GOLDEN SPIKES; 57. Baker’s dozen for the Beatles, for short, EPS.

Down — 1. Tree also known as a sugar apple, SWEET SOP; 2. “You’ve got to be kidding!”, OH PLEASE; 3. Perfectly, TO A FARE-THE-WELL; 44. Wedding rings?, HORAS; 5. Have AN IN (be advantageously networked); 6. Secret attachment, for short, BCC; 7. South Bend neighbor, ELKHART; 8. Court group, ROYAL FAMILY; 9. Dominick who wrote “A Season in Purgatory”, DUNNE; 10. Some Snapple products, ADES; 11. Conan O’Brien’s employer from ‘88 to ‘91, SNL; 12. 1899 painting used to promote gramophones, HIS MASTER’S VOICE; 13. Massive, as a massif, ENORME; 14. National service, RENTAL; 20. Internal investigation, for short?,MRI; 24. Hybrid menswear, BOXER BRIEFS; 25. Grasped, KNEW; 27. Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum site, WACO; 28. Many are blonde, ALES; 30. Among, WITH; 31. Enjoy the moment, BASK; 33. Copier giant absorbed by the Kyocera Corporation, MITA; 35. Appear suddenly, SPROUT UP; 36. Track consultants, TIPSTERS; 38. Banana Republic defender, maybe, MALL COP; 40. Ersatz blazer, GAS LOG; 41. Speaker of Shakespeare’s “If music be the food of love, play on”, ORSINO; 43. Calculus calculation: Abbr., MIN; 45. Like some gruel, OATEN; 46. Pioneer in cool jazz, TORME; 48. Mapped item, GENE; 49. “Marjorie Morningstar” novelist, WOUK; 51. Got out of the way, DID; 52. Head of state?, TRI.


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08.02.13 — TGIF

Antique Japanese (samurai) katana, Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Puzzle by Barry C. Silk / Edited by Will Shortz


Across — 1. Food item resembling an organ, KIDNEY BEAN; 11. Not long-departed, LATE; 15. Question after a public shellacking, ANYONE ELSE; 16. Plutoid just beyond the Kuiper Belt, ERIS; 17. Many a detective film cover-up, TRENCH COAT; 18. Squire, GENT; 19. Lack of authorisation?, ZED; 20. “Casablanca” carrier, AIR FRANCE; 22. It really stands out, LULU; 25. Be loud at a funeral, say, ULULATE; 26. Many 56-Across users, SHIITES; 29. It may have check marks, LIST; 30. General exercise?, WAR GAME; 31. Stretches out, EXTENDS; 35. “We’re in trouble now!”, UH OH; 36. Abbr. on a sports ticker, NCAA; 37. Topics at some religious retreats, MANTRAS; 41. Cousin of a screwdriver, BRADAWL; 44. Largest city in the South Pacific, SUVA; 45. Go back on, REVERSE; 46. Six bells in the morning watch, SEVEN AM; 49. Prefix with geek, UBER; 50. Hand picks?, PLECTRUMS; 52. Monogram of the author of “A Charge to Keep: My Journey to the White House”, GWB; 55. Kind of block, LEGO; 56. It replaced the Indian rupee in 1932, IRAQI DINAR; 60. Winnipeg’s IVAN Franko Museum; 61. Ithaca is at its southern end, CAYUGA LAKE; 62. Be inclined, TEND; 63. His Secret Service code name was Providence, EISENHOWER.

Down — 1. Classic name in New York delis, KATZ; 2. Subject precursor, IN RE; 3. Like some eggs, DYED; 4. Intro to Euclidean geometry?, NON; 5. Letter abr., ENC; 6. Casual assent, YEH; 7. As, BECAUSE; 8. Weena’s race, in fiction, ELOI; 9. Generally speaking, AS A RULE; 10. Big name in video streaming, NETFLIX; 11. Five and ten, e.g., LEGAL TENDER; 12. Ticketmaster info, maybe, ARENA; 13. Coloring, TINCT; 14. Compact first name?, ESTEE; 21. Formation on 28-Down, RUST; 22. About 186,282 miles, LIGHT SECOND; 23. Marathoner Pippig, UTA; 24. NASA’s Aquarius, e.g., LEM; 26. Done some strokes, SWUM; 27. Routine reaction?, HA HA; 28. See 21-Down, IRON; 32. Home of the Black Mts., N CAR; 33. Crow relatives, DAWS; 34. Stock mover, SALE; 38. Shrimp, RUNT; 39. Midas’s undoing, AVARICE; 40. Katana wielder, SAMUAI; 41. Curt, BRUSQUE; 42. Beauregard follower, REB; 43. GPS abbr., AVE; 46. Cheerleader’s move, SPLIT; 47. Relative d’un étudiant, ÉLÈVE; 48. Many an animal rights activist, VEGAN; 51. Baseball Hall-of-Famer who played for the Giants, MAYS; 52. Bother, with “at”, GNAW; 53. After-life gathering?, WAKE; 54. Backwoods relative, BR’ER; 57. Starting device: Abbr., IGN; 58. Code word, DAH; 59. Publisher of World of Work mag., ILO.


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08.01.13 — Physics



Thursday, August 1, 2013

Puzzle by Timothy Polin / Edited by Will Shortz


PHYSICS FORMULAS (60A. What the three sets of circled squares in this puzzle represent), along with “pressure” = FORCE/AREA, “speed” = DISTANCE/TIME, and “density” = MASS/VOLUME, constitute the interrelated group of this Thursday crossword with and within the following:

CRACK UNDER FORCE (17A. With 22-Across, fail to cope with difficult circumstances) and AREA,
REDUCED DISTANCE (27A. With 35-Across, highway sign meaning “Slow down”) and TIME,
POPULATION MASS (45A. Ingredient in an Arnold Palmer) and VOLUME.

J. R. R. Tolkien's watercolor illustration of Sauron

Other — DE TROP (64A. Too  much), ENVIRON (44D. Form a ring around), ERECTOR SET (28D. Old A.C. Gilbert toy), FLUENCY (5D. Language learner’s goal), NYX (68A. Greek night goddess), SAURON and SULLEN (23A. Tolkien‘s Dark Lord of Mordor; 48D. Showing ill humor), SPEAKING TO (8D. Addressing).


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