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Stalin defier / SAT 12-7-13 / Keel extension / Sportscaster Nathan with star on Hollywood Walk of Fame / Onetime pop star who hosted Pyramid

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Constructor: James Mulhern

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: none

Word of the Day: SKEG (48A: Keel extension) —
skeg (or skag) is a sternward extension of the keel of boats and ships which have a rudder mounted on the centre line. The term also applies to the lowest point on an outboard motor or the outdrive of an inboard/outboard. In more recent years, the name has been used for a fin on a surfboard which improves directional stability and to a moveable fin on a kayak which adjusts the boat's centre of lateral resistance. The term is also often used for the fin on water skis in the U.S.A. and for the tail bumpers of aircraft in the US Navy. (wikipedia)
• • •

I wish beginning themeless constructors would have a close look at this puzzle, because I think it does a lot of things right. Themeless puzzles are hard to do well. If you don't construct, they seem like they'd be easier because of the lack of theme restraint—you can put whatever the hell you want in them. But the very lack of pre-determined structure can make them a formless mess in the hands of a novice (I speak as a novice themeless constructor myself, having published only one). Your temptation might be to drop the word count, because somehow that's somehow more legit, or cram the grid with Scrabbly letters, because those just look so cool. Problem—you will sacrifice overall smoothness and polish in order to clear your imaginary high bar of Cool. This grid is a 72-worder (that's the max, and thus the easiest to fill) and it's got a couple pairs of cheaters* (weird how many cheaters we've seen this past week…). So he's made it easy on himself—and with very nice results. The grid is a bit choppy and you definitely have a decent fistful of crosswordese in here, but virtually all of it is being used to hold together substantial sets of lovely, long answers. No one's going to care much about your OGEES and you LEOIs when they are proximate to big banks of solid longer answers. I'm tepid on USER NAME, but every other 8+-letter answer in this thing is a winner. BUG ZAPPER, SANDAL TAN, and BOOK SMART stand out, but the most important thing about the longer answers is that even the weakest one is strong. What's the weakest one? HAS NO IDEA? I like that. So I'll take the multiple BAAS and multiple OBIS if the end result is a smooth, interesting, EASY-GOING puzzle like this.


Four proper nouns in a row to start the Downs (all of them crossing three more proper nouns). I didn't have a problem with this, and I think the names today are colorful, but names can definitely get solvers into trouble fast. You know 'em or you don't, and when you don't, you better pray for good crosses. Actually sometimes you know 'em, sometimes you don't, and sometimes you can infer them from the pattern you've got going. I mean, even if you didn't know RA-EAU, I doubt you're going to guess ERMA STONE. Or maybe you would, but you then maybe you know enough about French names to know RAREAU is absurd. At any rate, there are ways to work through thickets of names. I didn't find this particularly thicket very thickety. Had most of my trouble in and around AIRER (because, you know … it's AIRER). Had to change SO FAR AS to AS FAR AS. Had PU-SE and still couldn't see PULSE (16A: Take it as a sign) (cute clue). OLD GEEZER feels redundant but looks too good for me to mind much.ANAIS, KAL and BPOE were all the gimmes I really needed to get my claws into this thing. All in all, an enjoyable 7+ minutes.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*cheater squares are black squares that do not add to the word count. They make the grid easier to fill. Today, see the black square after 1A or before 63A, for example.

Classical guitarist Segovia / SUN 12-8-13 / Actor Jack of oaters / English film festival city / Political title of 1930s-40s / Biblical priest of Shiloh / Youngest of Chekhov's Three Sisters

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Constructor: Patrick Berry

Relative difficulty: Easy



THEME:"Two Outs"— theme answers are words and phrases in which "two" letters are circled. Take those two letters "out," and you get a different word—answers to the wacky "?" clues are a  combination of the complete answer and the circle-free answer:

Theme answers:
  • 20A: Red wine drinker's paradise? (SANGRIA / SHANGRI-LA)
  • 22A: Employee at the Ron Paul archive? (LIBERTARIAN / LIBRARIAN) — so the theme appears a bit inconsistent from the outset. First the longer part comes second in the answer phrase, then the longer part comes first…)
  • 24A: Pitch that fixes everything? (CURE-ALL / CURVEBALL)
  • 26A: Dollar bill featuring a portrait of Duran Duran's lead singer? (SIMON LE BON / SIMOLEON)
  • 47A: The one puppy that can read? (LITERATE / LITTERMATE)
  • 53A: Creator of perfect whirlpools? (MAELSTROM / MAESTRO)
  • 83A: Minor-league championship flag? (PENNY ANTE / PENNANT)
  • 86A: Alienate a New Jersey city? (ESTRANGE / EAST ORANGE)
  • 109A: Begat a soft place to sleep? (FATHERED / FEATHER BED)
  • 113A: "Charge!," to Duracells? (BATTERY / BATTLE CRY)
  • 117A: Satisfying finale coming to pass? (HAPPY ENDING / HAPPENING)
  • 119A: Labeled idiotic? (BRANDED / BRAIN-DEAD)
Word of the Day: John Bull (80A: Whom John Bull symbolizes => BRITON) —
John Bull is a national personification of the United Kingdom in general, and England in particular, especially in political cartoons and similar graphic works. He is usually depicted as a stout, middle-aged, country dwelling, jolly, matter-of-fact man. (wikipedia)
• • •

Concept is clever, theme is dense, and the whole thing was over far too soon. I did not try to speed on this one and was still done in 11 minutes. Absurd. In some ways, this super-easiness factor is a testament to how fantastically smooth Mr. Berry's grids are. There's just nothing jarring, awkward, off, or nutso about this grid. Just start reading the answers … especially the Acrosses toward the middle. Between EERO at 41A and ELAM at 107A (!), everything is remarkably … real. EEK is as ugly as it gets, and that's just not that ugly. Again, the most impressive thing about this guy's work is the understated polish of it all. This is a grid that has been crafted. Too often we see decent theme coupled with Whatever Works-type fill. Not here. The theme is not a mind-blower, but the solving experience was definitely pleasurable. Just wish it had been a bit longer.


Unless there is some pattern I can't perceive, this theme has a bit of weirdness to it with the longer word in the imagined answers sometimes coming first, sometimes coming second. It hardly mattered, solving-wise. In fact, most of the time I didn't really put the full phrase together as I was solving. It was enough to get the long answer and see that the circle-less answer also made a word. In fact, I didn't really grasp that the full version + two-outs version (or vice versa) made coherent answers to the theme clues until after I was done. Seeing the connection between the two made for a nice little revelation. I think this puzzle would make a nice, accessible introduction to Sunday puzzles for a novice solver. You don't need a lot of arcane crossword knowledge. The theme is kind of funny. The whole thing falls on the easy side. You could have fun solving this with your family. Perhaps a precocious 13-year-old. Whatever you got.

Please allow me to call attention to two important developments in the world of independent crosswords. The first is the recent publication of Ben Tausig's The Curious History of the Crossword (Race Point Publishing, 2013). It's a comprehensive history of the crossword from 1913 to the present, and it is remarkably informative (and funny) when it comes to discussing the development of the puzzle in the Internet Age—specifically, how technology has changed the production, dissemination, and solving of crosswords in recent years. There may even be a bit in there about crossword blogs. Best of all, it contains 100 puzzles representing a great cross-section of constructors from the past century. It's the best history of the crossword I know of, and easily the best book I've read about crosswords since Matt Gaffney's Gridlock (also worth your time).

Speaking of Matt Gaffney, the second new crossword development I want to tell you about comes from him. Matt is the man behind the wildly popular website, "Matt Gaffney's Weekly Crossword Contest," where each week's crossword is a metapuzzle—once you complete the grid, you need to find the answer to some question, which is in some way hidden in or suggested by elements in the grid (see Matt's "Introduction to Meta Crossword Puzzles," here). Now Matt has launched a Kickstarter campaign (already very close to making its funding) in order to bring you "Murder by Meta," a multi-puzzle, meta-puzzle murder mystery (a mega meta murder mystery, if you will), which is scheduled to drop in March 2014. Just $10 to get in on the fun. All the info you'll need, including a handy-dandy and fairly hilarious video, can be found at the "Murder by Meta" Kickstarter page, here.

Enjoy your Sunday,

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

Mars' Norse counterpart / MON 12-9-13 / Onetime Harper's Bazaar illustrator / 1940s computer

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Constructor: Nina Rulon-Miller

Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (*for a Monday*)


THEME: CHAIR (64A: Head, as a committee ... or a word that can follow the ends of 16-, 29-, 36-, 47- and 61-Across) — just what it says.

Theme answers:
  • 16A: Coerce (STRONG ARM)
  • 29A: Civic group with more than 45,000 affiliates (LIONS CLUB)
  • 36A: Like some broadcast frequencies (ULTRA-HIGH)
  • 47A: Illicit Prohibition-era establishment (SPEAKEASY) — probably my favorite answer in the whole grid
  • 61A: Where lifeboats are generally stored (UPPER DECK)
Word of the Day: TYR (57D: Mars' Norse counterpart) —
Týr (/ˈtɪər/Old NorseTýr [tyːr]) is a god associated with law and heroic glory in Norse mythology, portrayed as one-handed. Corresponding names in other Germanic languages are Gothic TeiwsOld English Tīw and Old High German Ziuand Cyo, all from Proto-Germanic *Tîwaz (*Tē₂waz). The Latinised name is Tius or Tio.
In the late Icelandic Eddas, Tyr is portrayed, alternately, as the son of Odin (Prose Edda) or of Hymir (Poetic Edda), while the origins of his name and his possible relationship to Tuisto (see Tacitus' Germania) suggest he was once considered the father of the gods and head of the pantheon, since his name is ultimately cognate to that of *Dyeus (cf. Dyaus), the reconstructed chief deity in Indo-European religion. It is assumed that Tîwaz was overtaken in popularity and in authority by both Odin and Thor at some point during the Migration Age, as Odin shares his role as God of war.
Tiw was equated with Mars in the interpretatio germanicaTuesday is in fact "Tīw's Day" (also in Alemannic Zischtig fromzîes tag), translating dies Martis. (wikipedia)
• • •

Did not care for this one at all.

First, a simplistic theme-type with dull theme answers and a randomly-placed reveal. What a basic theme type like this needs is a decent revealer—say, SECOND CHAIR (a common enough concept in law and music), or better yet, redo the whole thing and go FIRST CHAIR. Of course you'd have to change some of the theme answers to make sure they were all truly two-worders. Anyway, the point is, if you want your last-words-are-CHAIRs theme, you gotta do something to make it snap. As is, it's too rudimentary. Not at all NYT-worthy, especially not in this day and age, with so many snappy puzzles out there. When I say this theme seems "old" (and it does), I don't mean it's for "old" people. I mean it seems like something that might once have been adequate, but no longer is. Not by a long shot.


Second, the fill is, as I'm sure I don't have to tell you, entirely substandard. Glutted with short, overly common stuff, including some stuff that just has no business being in an easy-to-fill 78-worder. TYR? Why does that corner, with only the lightest of theme demands, have USN, USE, ELBE, EYED, and TYR. It would be sleep-inducing were it not for TYR, which woke me right up with its not-at-all-Mondayness. But more importantly, there's just dull short stuff everywhere. ADEN / ERTE. RUER / SRS. UNE / ETES (btw: EWES beats ETES, doesn't it? Why not PEW / EWES???). ORR / NERO. VSOP / PIU. And much more. And the puzzle has cheaters*! I just don't think there's an excuse for fill this dull in a puzzle this elementary, this easy to fill. I'm leaving aside the whole PENNIB situation (20D: Fountain head?), which … I expect people to have varying opinions about.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*cheater squares are black squares that do not add to the word count. They are added to make the grid easier to fill. Today's squares can be found before 9-Across and after 67-Across.

Early tragedienne Duse / SAT 11-16-13 / G-Funk Classics rapper / Spartan gathering place / Long slender glass for drinking beer / Pioneering underground publication of 1960s / Evian competitor / Norwegian Romanticist / Italian P.M. Letta /

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Constructor: David Steinberg

Relative difficulty: Challenging


THEME: none

Word of the Day: REXALL (8D: ___ Place (Edmonton Oilers' arena)) —
Rexall was a chain of North American drugstores, and the name of their store-branded products. The stores, having roots in the federation of United Drug Stores starting in 1902, licensed the Rexall brand name to as many as 12,000 drug stores across the United States from 1920 to 1977. (The "Rex" in the name came from the common Rx abbreviation for drug prescriptions.)
Since 1985, it has been the name of over-the-counter drugs and drugstores in Canada operated by the Katz Group of Companies, and of health supplements in the United States. The Canadian Rexall brand is not related to the US operations. (wikipedia)
• • •

Well I finished with two errors, which almost never happens. I cannot remember the last time it happened. I finish with errors maybe two or three times a year, tops. I can handle failure, but it's awfully painful to have that failure occur at the dead-ugliest, worst-constructed part of the grid. As you can see (see grid), my wrong squares were between the N and the B in NLRB. NLRB (National Labor Relations Board) is not an agency I even knew about until crosswords, and it never, ever occurs to me. Any time I get it, it's through crosses. Today's crosses—hoo boy. Don't know what a REXALL is. It now sounds vaguely familiar (now that I've looked it up), but Edmonton Oilers? Who the hell knows? REXALT (my wrong answer) seemed reasonable to me. And PRS? I had to ask a friend what PRS were (i.e. I thought it was a plural, i.e. many PRs). Turns out it's the letters on the "7" key on a phone before cell phones (before there was a "Q"… not sure why cell phones can have "Q"s when "old" phones couldn't, but I don't care enough to look it up right now). So I went with PSS. Not because it made sense. But because I had NTSB at 29A: Strike-monitoring org. It didn't feel quite right, but what other org. starts "N" and ends "B" (he asked, naively)? I convinced myself that strikes might, in fact, relate to transportation safety, so NTSB / REXALT / PSS it was. I can't say the real answers look any better.

The rest of this was tough but decent. DEDE is DEDEsastrous. Just the worst thing ever please never use it again, everyone. And DREWU also sucks horribly dear god I hate it. ELEONORA is just made-up looking. [Name with a bunch of vowels] would've been just as helpful there. And aren't DOUBLE BEDs made for couples (15A: Tight squeeze for a couple?)? As opposed to a twin bed, say? I remember trying to sleep two to a twin bed in college—now *that* is a "tight squeeze."DOUBLE BED seems a reasonable choice for couples, so I'm confused on that one. But I quite liked the rest of it, especially the wickedly hard but fantastic-to-reveal ZAP COMIX (35D: Pioneering underground publication of the 1960s), the barely-remembered but super-looking AEON FLUX (37D: 1990s sci-fi series), and the fantastically-clued APPLE CARE (1A: Air protection program?) (I'm typing this on a MacBook Air). "I'M TOO SEXY" was also good, but way too much of a gimme for me (17A: 1992 chart-topper that mentions "my little turn on the catwalk").


Struggled everywhere. Actually, tore down the east side of the puzzle, but getting into the middle and west was rough for me. Had GALOSH for GAITER (48D: Boot covering), which slowed me down for a while. DADA for DEDE (duh duh). ALEYARD was very hard to come up with, and in general that SW corner was the toughest. I wouldn't be surprised if many people spun out there (as opposed to the weird place I spun out). Lots of names today, which also might've sunk people: VING, NATE DOGG, ANNA, ELON, CESAR, SOROS, ENRICO (?). I knew all but the last. [First name in fashion] = RALPH was vicious. Always expect a clue like that to be Italian or at least foreign and somehow chic. Not RALPH (Lauren). RALPH does not say "fashion." Not on its own. So that was a clever/hard clue. ROSLYN? No hope (23D: Long Island Rail Road station). Needed all crosses. Gotta live in NYC area to know that one, I'm guessing. Overall, an entertaining, if flawed, effort.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

Actress Durance who played Lois Lane on Smallville / SUN 11-17-13 / Narcissus Goldmund author / 2004 movie set in 2035 / Stan Lee's role in many a Marvel film / Dish Network competitor / Javert's portrayer in 2012's Les Miserables / Skiing maneuver at bend in course

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Constructor: Julian Lim

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME:"Vowel Play"— theme answers are two-word nonsense phrases that have all five vowels appearing in a row (broken across the two words)

Theme answers:
  • 23A: Paintings of French estates? (CHATEAU OILS)
  • 28A: Carrier for Casanovas? (ROUÉ AIRLINES)
  • 52A: Aid for submarine séance? (UNDERSEA OUIJA)
  • 82A: Hawaiian wine lover? (MAUI OENOPHILE)
  • 103A: Last words from a coxswain? (ADIEU, OARSMAN)
  • 112A: Garlicky sauce in central Europe? (PRAGUE AILOI)
  • 40D: "Happily ever after" with Han Solo? (LEIA OUTCOME)
  • 36D: All the writings of a Persian faith? (BAHAI OEUVRE)

Word of the Day: ANEAR (5D: Not far from, in poetry) —
anear [əˈnɪə] Archaic
prep
near
adv
nearly (thefreedictionary.com)
• • •

Painful. Starting with ANEAR, which made me wince, and ending with SOVS, which made me literally say, out loud, "Oh, come on!" And then there was the in-between—a theme with nonsense phrases. Theme was not nearly good enough to support the generally bad quality of the fill. AWS? Gah. Nevermind the run-of-the-mill crosswordese, which abounds. The fill was just lousy. STEP TURN (70A: Skiing maneuver at bend in course) is vaguely interesting. THE SOPRANOS down the middle is pretty cool (and nice clue on that one, too) (38D: Hit show with many hits). But I spent most of this one with a grimace on my face. LEIA OUTCOME cannot be redeemed by any clue. Why in the world is "Happily ever after" in quotation marks in that clue? No one said that. Hyphenate the damn thing if you want to use it as a concept. Also, it's Mac vs. PC, not MACS vs. PCS (1D: One side in a computer rivalry). POST-GAME (59A: When scores are settled?) is a time when players do interviews. "Scores" are "settled" the moment the game is over. POST-GAME is the time *after* that. What the hell is it with the NYT's sports cluing? God-awful. Chopsticks come in pairs, not TWOS. Yes, there is a difference. [Hole in the wall] for VENT makes about as much sense as [Hole in the wall] for DOOR. ERICA Durance?????????? (98D: Actress Durance who played Lois Lane on "Smallville"). Laughable. Is that an attempt to toughen this thing up? I watched "Smallville" for like five seasons and had no idea what that actress's name was.


Clever and good beats cutesy, affected and nuts. Why is this so hard to grasp? The mail I've been getting lately supports my general contention that the NYT is in a prolonged funk. I won't call it a tailspin. Yet. But it does feel like there's a long, slow slide afoot. ABEAT. ANEAR.


Gotta go watch "National Lampoon's Vacation" with my family now. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS a little birdie alerted me to the pre-existence of this theme—see here.

Self-esteem as French would have it / MON 11-18-13 / Facial socket / Milo of Verdict / Center square of bingo card / Sea body of water south of Italy / Charles Lamb's pen name

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Constructor: Edgar Fontaine

Relative difficulty: Challenging (3:26, which is très high for me)


THEME: Add an apostrophe S and turn a celebrity's name into a possessive phrase in which the celebrity's first name is imagined as the last name of some different celebrity or some nonsense like that that could've gone on forever but mercifully didn't

Theme answers:
  • 20A: Part of a bushel belonging to Dick? (GREGORY'S PECK)
  • 34A: Car belonging to Rex? (HARRISON'S FORD)
  • 41A: Lite beer belonging to Bea? (ARTHUR'S MILLER)
  • 55A: Rock belonging to Ariel? (SHARON'S STONE)
Word of the Day: AMOUR-PROPRE (26D: Self-esteem, as the French would have it) —
Amour-propre (French, "self-love") is a concept in the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau that denotes a self-love that depends upon the opinion of others. Rousseau contrasts it with amour de soi, which also means "self-love", but which does not involve seeing oneself as others see one. According to Rousseau, amour de soi is more primitive and is compatible with wholeness and happiness, while amour-propre arose only with the appearance of society and renders human beings incapable of being happy within society. (wikipedia)
• • •

You can see how bad this is, so I'm not going to waste my breath (much). As a friend of mine just noted, the "false-possessive" is a hackneyed theme. I would add that this particular theme goes beyond merely hackneyed into the realm of the ridiculously simplistic. The theme could theoretically go on forever and (this is important) still Never Be Funny / Clever / Interesting. You're adding "'S" why? To what end? Who knows? The pronunciation change involved in 55A—who *$&%ing cares? Go for it! Clearly all standards of consistency, cleverness, polish, etc. are out the window, so go ahead, trash the place. I realize that I have been disliking a lot of puzzles lately, but please understand that it is not without a Ton of consultation with other people, mostly constructors, all much more discerning than I. I'm not going to come out here and say the puzzle is increasingly terrible—or, at minimum, well below what should be the standards of the NYT—without making sure others are seeing what I'm seeing. And they are. In spades. Oh, and we haven't even gotten to EYEPIT, which … really? And then the inexcusably lazy fill. Your LESSEES, your UTAHANS, your RATA TATA INST OPER etc. On a Monday? With a decidedly non-demanding theme? I'm going to continue assuming that this is just some prolonged bad patch, a funk from which the NYT crossword puzzle will eventually, at least partially, emerge. But right now, things look dire.


Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go wash out my EYEPITs.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

1922 Willa Cather novel that won Pulitzer / TUE 11-19-13 / Maximum loads of hay vegetables / Bite from Pac-Man / Speed units for seafarers

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Constructor: David J. Kahn

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: 150th anniversary of the GETTYSBURG Address (31D: Where 3-Down's address was delivered) — "FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO" are buried in circles inside theme answers; also, ABE LINCOLN (3D: Prez who delivered a famous address on Nov. 19, 1863)—informal "ABE" because he delivered the address in T-shirt and jeans (true story!)

Theme answers:
  • 17A: 1922 Willa Cather novel that won a Pulitzer ("ONE OF OURS")
  • 25A: Bridge or Scrabble need (SCORE PAD) 
  • 36A: Verdi's "Don Carlos," e.g. (GRAND OPERA)
  • 43A: Big attraction for bargain hunters (SALES EVENT)
  • 51A: Some school exams (MID-YEARS)
  • 66A: Maximum loads of hay or vegetables (WAGONFULS)
Word of the Day: HONUS Wagner (2D: Baseball Hall-of-Famer Wagner, one of the first five inductees) —
Johannes Peter "Honus" Wagner (/ˈhɒnəs ˈwæɡnər/; February 24, 1874 – December 6, 1955), nicknamed "The Flying Dutchman" due to his superb speed and German heritage ("Dutch" in this instance being analteration of "Deutsch"), was an American Major League Baseball shortstop. He played in the National Leaguefrom 1897 to 1917, almost entirely for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Wagner won eight batting titles, tied for the most in NL history with Tony Gwynn. He also led the league in slugging six times, and in stolen bases five times.
In 1936, the Baseball Hall of Fame inducted Wagner as one of the first five members. He received the second-highest vote total, behind Ty Cobb and tied with Babe Ruth.
Although Cobb is frequently cited as the greatest player of the dead-ball era, some contemporaries regarded Wagner as the better all-around player, and most baseball historians consider Wagner to be the greatestshortstop ever. Cobb himself called Wagner "maybe the greatest star ever to take the diamond." In addition, Wagner is the featured player of one of the rarest and most valuable baseball cards in the world. (wikipedia)
• • •

Four score and seven years and another three score and three years ago, this address was delivered. I had no idea this anniversary was coming. Too distracted by the JFK thing, I guess. Anyway, this seems fine. Adequate. A bit lackluster for someone as experienced as Mr. Kahn. I mean, hiding SCORE inside SCOREPAD? YEARS inside MID-YEARS? Not much hiding involved. Kind of hard to hide "YEARS," I'll grant you.* Still. AND isn't even broken across two words. There's just a low bar here, artistry-wise. But it's a solid grid. Easy. Nice Scrabbly corners. Note: it's only "Scrabble-F**king" if the Scrabbly letter is forced in there simply for its own sake, and to the detriment of surrounding fill. There's nothing subpar about the NE corner. Two Xs and a Z and not a clunky answer in sight.


I'm not sure how a SALES EVENT is different from a sale. Maybe there are more … Flags? Signs? Spongebob appearances? Anyway, it's a term I'm familiar with, unlike MID-YEARS or WAGONFULS (which are inferable, at any rate). I couldn't tell one opera from another, and I'm not sure I knew GRAND OPERA was its own category, but still—easy to pick up from crosses. The weirdest thing about this grid, to me, is how frequently Willa Cather's "ONE OF OURS" has been appearing lately. OK, just twice, but that's a lot for a 91-year-old novel.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*a prominent constructor friend of mine wrote me with the suggestions EARTH'S CORE and FLOPPY EARS. Which is why s/he is the prominent constructor and I am not.

1965 Physics Nobelist Richard / WED 11-20-13 / Harry Potter's owl / Third-largest city in Italia / Celebrity groom in 68 headlines / Johnny Winter's musician brother / Omertà group

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Constructor: Peter A. Collins

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME:"RUNNING / ON EMPTY" (55A: With 57-Across, 1977 Jackson Browne album … or a hint to what's depicted in this puzzle's grid) — Grid uses circles to depict an ARROW pointing at an (unchecked) "E," which sits directly opposite an (unchecked) "F"; remaining circles describe a roughly semicircular shape that spells out GAS GAUGE

Word of the Day: Richard FEYNMAN (48D: 1965 Physics Nobelist Richard) —
Richard Phillips Feynman (/ˈfnmən/; May 11, 1918 – February 15, 1988) was an American theoretical physicist known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory ofquantum electrodynamics, and the physics of thesuperfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as inparticle physics (he proposed the parton model). For his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman, jointly with Julian Schwinger and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965. He developed a widely used pictorial representation scheme for the mathematical expressions governing the behavior of subatomic particles, which later became known as Feynman diagrams. During his lifetime, Feynman became one of the best-known scientists in the world. In a 1999 poll of 130 leading physicists worldwide by the British journal Physics World he was ranked as one of the ten greatest physicists of all time. (wikipedia)
• • •

I liked this one quite a bit, largely for the weirdness of the unchecked letters (which ended up having a significant role in the theme, thank god), and also forSLOW ON THE UPTAKE (11D: A bit dense), which is just a great 15. Felt pretty thorny, but I was done in 4:11, so it couldn't have been that bad. Fill is much better in the long stuff than the small stuff, but the small stuff is largely inoffensive, so that's just fine. I got a bit worried about that unchecked "F" at first because my first reaction to seeing a physics Nobelist clue is "how the hell should I know?" But then I realized that it was one of the most popular physicists around—a guy whose mug I have seen many times in bookstores. FEYNMAN was a great popularizer of physics. Anyway, even if you didn't know FEYNMAN, the theme allows you to infer the "F"—the "Full" symbol on our imaginary gas gauge.


Didn't have any pronounced trouble, though the center was mildly rough, as I couldn't remember Harry Potter's owl and couldn't figure out what "dep." was supposed to mean in 33D: Opposite of dep. (ARR.). Had PESTS for NESTS, as I'm sure many people did before figuring out the Jackson Browne song (56D: Exterminators' targets). Didn't know HABANERA was a [Cuban dance], though I'm almost certain I've seen it before. I'm more familiar with the HABAÑERO pepper. Not much else to say. The bar is low, but this is certainly the best puzzle of the week (so far).

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

Band with 2007 #1 album We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank / TUE 12-10-13 / 1978 Bob Fosse musical / Annual Vicksburg pageant / Aperitif with white wine

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Constructor: Bill Thompson

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: M AND M (55A: Plain or peanut candy) — not sure why this isn't clued as a revealer, because I *think* that's what it was probably designed to be. Theme answers are two-word phrases, where both words start with M—vowel progression takes you from MA- MA- phrase up top to MU- MU- phrase down low:

Theme answers:
  • 17A: Pen with a fat felt tip (MAGIC MARKER)
  • 31A: Aboriginal healer (MEDICINE MEN)
  • 36A: Annual Vicksburg pageant (MISS MISSISSIPPI)
  • 45A: Band with the 2007 #1 album "We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank" (MODEST MOUSE)
  • 59A: Pooh-bah (MUCKETY-MUCK)
Word of the Day: MODEST MOUSE 
Modest Mouse is an American indie rock band formed in 1993 in Issaquah, Washington, by singer/lyricist/guitaristIsaac Brock, drummer Jeremiah Green, and bassist Eric Judy. Since their 1996 debut album, This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About, their lineup has centered around Brock, Green, and Judy. Guitarist Johnny Marr(formerly of The Smiths) joined the band in May 2006, along with percussionist Joe Plummer (formerly of The Black Heart Procession) and multi-instrumentalist Tom Peloso, to work on the album We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank. Guitarist Jim Fairchild joined the band in February 2009. Their name is derived from a passage from the Virginia Woolf story "The Mark on the Wall" which reads, "I wish I could hit upon a pleasant track of thought, a track indirectly reflecting credit upon myself, for those are the pleasantest thoughts, and very frequent even in the minds of modest, mouse-coloured people, who believe genuinely that they dislike to hear their own praises." (wikipedia)
• • •

Many of you will never have heard of MODEST MOUSE. You are forgiven.

The theme is pretty simple but at least we get some interesting answers out of it. I'm not sure how legit it is to have "MUCK" be your second "MU-""word," but I have a hard time disliking MUCKETY-MUCK, wherever and whyever it might appear. MISS MISSISSIPPI is not really much of a thing, any more than MISS ANY STATE is. Also MUCKETY-MUCK and MISS MISSISSIPPI don't just do a vowel progression—their second words basically double-up on the first *four* letters of the initial word. So it's simple and loose. But not unenjoyable. Fill is gunky in places (CAN OF, MCII, etc.), but no more than is usual for the NYT these days. The banks of 6s in the NE and SW are pretty well done. I can't tell if M AND M was rejected as a revealer, or if it's trying to be all … subtle and low-key and cool over there in the sort-of-corner. [Update: I am told that Will Shortz called the MANDM answer "a little distracting" because it looks like a revealer but doesn't fully express the puzzle's theme (specifically, the vowel progression part). But if something's "distracting," then why not change it? Ditch it. Easy fix. Change two letters. Any of you can do it. No sweat. I guess the answer wasn't "distracting" enough to merit minimal editorial intervention.]


Difficulty level felt normal. Took me forever to get BLOUSE, and yet I spelled MUCKETY-MUCK right on the first go. Had TASE instead of LASE (29A: Zap with light), SURE instead of SOME (39D: Certain), TEASE instead of TEMPT (54D: Entice), and (best/worst of all) SPHERE instead of "UP HERE!" (48D: Higher calling?). There are SPHEREs in the heavens. They are higher … than you? And you "call" them SPHERES? I don't know. Felt plausible. Perhaps because I had -PHERE and I thought "S" was the only that made a word (and, technically, I was right about that—it's just that the answer was two words).

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

Pax's Greek counterpart / WED 12-11-13 / Bygone Japanese camera brand / Red light locale / Did some woolgathering / Classic Fender guitar for short

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Constructor: Steve Savoy

Relative difficulty: Challenging


THEME: Quote about creativity by ALBERT EINSTEIN (58A: With 39-Down, speaker of this puzzle's quote)— "IF AT FIRST / THE IDEA IS / NOT ABSURD, THEN / THERE IS NO / HOPE FOR IT"

Word of the Day: MUFTI (7D: G.I.'s civvies) —
Mufti, or civies/civvies (slang for "civilian attire"), refers to ordinary clothes, especially when worn by one who normally wears, or has long worn, a military or other uniform. (wikipedia)
• • •

Quote puzzles usually play hard, especially when the syntax is odd or unexpected, as it is here ("If at first the idea is…" really seemed wrong to me; when I got to "absurd" I thought maybe the quote was by some absurdist or surrealist, maybe it was running backward … something). The quote is OK. A bit insipid. Something you might see on an inspirational poster in a corporate office—an idea that sounds good, that people like to believe is true, but that people don't value in actuality. I'm not a big fan of quote puzzles generally—the quote has to *kill* for it to seem worth it, and *kill* is something quotes rarely do. They're usually of the "isn't that pleasant!" or "how pithy!" variety. I'm slightly fond of the way ALBERT / EINSTEIN is placed in this grid, I have to say. To me, that's the puzzle's greatest accomplishment, because that's a Lot of extra theme material to fit into an already pretty theme-crowded grid. ALBERT is wedged between to quote parts, and EINSTEIN crosses two quote parts, and (to top it off) ALBERT and EINSTEIN intersect. Very neatly done.


The fill is mostly average, with a few repulsive bits. DOT EDU should just be banned (5D: End of an academic 29-Across). DOT COM is a thing. A coherent, self-standing theme. All the other DOTs are pretending. HTEN and all "Battleship" answers are decidedly not things and should also be banned. SGTMAJ is a face-plant of an answer (as in, "I planted my face into the keyboard and this was the result"). Not a great look. Then there's THAT I / IT'D / STER / SUER, all answers to which one should, ideally, say NEIN. But for a theme-dense puzzle, this grid does OK. I definitely had an out-of-my-wheelhouse experience with this one. Couldn't come up with MUFTI. Have never ever head "woolgathering" as an expression meaning "dreaming," so DREAMT was … surprising (20A: Did some woolgathering). I struggled all over with this one, ending up with a time very much on the high end for me (not absurdly high, but high). My potatoes were oddly MINCED before they were MASHED (44D: Like the potatoes in shepherd's pie). I hastily and stupidly wrote in PHI for RHO (43D: Plato's P). Had IT'S OKAY instead of IT'S ON ME (33D: "Got it covered!"). YAP (as in "Shut your ___!") for MAW (11A: Big mouth). I learned that MINOLTA is bygone (44A: Bygone Japanese camera brand). Upon running into ALBERT, I briefly (and hopefully) thought the quote author's first name might be FAT. Alas.

Lastly, what is up with the cluing on "IT'S ON ME!" (33D: "Got it covered!"). First, the phrase in the clue feels really contrived without the "I" to start it off. The clue leaves off the subject, but the answer doesn't. Awkward. Why would you leave out the "I"? Second, both the clue and the answer have "IT" in them. You're not supposed to do that. The low-grade editorial sloppiness continues unabated.

Two more things:

1. The Kickstarter for Peter Gordon's newest season of "Fireball Newsweekly Crosswords" (2014) is up. 20 puzzles published throughout the year, all of them built around current events. These are pretty easy, pretty fun, and (by design) very, very contemporary. Like, hot-out-of-the-oven fresh. $5 to get in, which you can do here.

2. My 2013 Holiday Crossword Gift Guide ("Cross Crosswords Off Your Shopping List") is up—I wrote it for Pipe Dream, my University's student newspaper. You can see it here.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

Saxophonist Al / THU 12-12-13 / Town in England Nevada / Boomer born in 1961 / Band parodied by Weird Al Yankovic's Dare to Be Stupid / Certain bullet train rider / Samson Delilah director / Energy-filled chargers / Munchies from Mars / Borg contemporary

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Constructor: David Steinberg

Relative difficulty: Challenging


THEME: ERASE Rs

Note: "After this puzzle was created, the constructor did something to 11 squares - as suggested by a two-word reading of 63-Across before alteration."

Certain squares are blank. Solvers are given no initial clue as to which squares these are, or that blank squares are even in play. It's not until you get to 63A: Moderates (E-ASE-S) that, using the "Note" provided, you can infer that the "two-word reading of 63-Across before alteration" is ERASE Rs. So: a hypothetical original grid has its Rs erased, giving us an R-less grid, which is clued (without any indication that the grid is going to have holes where the Rs were). The real feat here is that the "original" grid and the R-less one both make sense, i.e. with or without Rs, there are coherent words/phrases in the grid.

Word of the Day: Al COHN (47A: Saxophonist Al) —
Al Cohn (November 24, 1925 – February 15, 1988)[1] was an American jazz saxophonistarranger and composer. He came to prominence in the band of clarinetist Woody Herman and was known for his longtime musical partnership with fellow saxophonist Zoot Sims. (wikipeidia)
• • •

This is really quite clever, though I suspect many will have found less than enjoyable to solve (given that it was twice as hard as a typical Thursday and the "note" accompanying the puzzle was less than clear). Completely filled in, this thing is a rather dull themeless. But the ERASE R'S gimmick makes it a perilous adventure. Quality of fill still matters—and the fill here is definitely solid—but the enjoyment here is in the find-the-blanks challenge, not in the "wow" of the fill or the revelation of clever theme answers. The puzzle produces a very delayed gratification—you have to imagine a grid that's not actually (all) in order to appreciate what was done to it. In fact, you have to infer the revealer, ERASE R'S, from a. the empty squares in your grid and b. the note, which tells you that there is a "two-word reading of 63-Across before alteration." This means you have to look at E-ASE-S and figure out how the pre-altered version looked. Blank squares throughout the grid should put the concept of erasure in your head, so I don't think it's that hard to get to "ERASERS" from E-ASE-S. Still, even knowing the gimmick helps you only slightly, since none of the pre-altered (R-containing) words are clued as such. Only the altered (R-less) versions are clued, so you have to get those answers and then determine where the blanks are based on where an "R" *could* go to make a plausible word / phrase. But you can use that "R" logic only after you've picked up the ERASE Rs gimmick. Before that, god help you. There's no real way to know where blanks are going to go except by feel.


I first began to pick up on the missing letter thing with A T-EST. I had the -EST part and knew it had to be H- or A-TEST but … too many squares. Same thing for SAGE. I didn't fully get the missing letter thing, though, until I had inferred enough of [Kind of ray] to know that it *had* to be GAMMA (or G-AMMA-). That let me put in SA-GE, and then … well then at least I sort of knew what was up. Blank squares. Randomly placed. Not until much later did I get the revealer and see that if you filled those blanks with Rs, they made plausible answers (to the imagined, "original," not-clued-here grid).


Just talking about this puzzle is making my head hurt. Easy to grasp through experience than through description. I am most grateful that the fill was totally inoffensive. I don't love "I AM A" (54D: "___Rock"), but it's an outlier, badness-wise, and it also helped me change ANEMONE to ABALONE (one of my bigger post-getting-the-theme hold-ups) (58A: Awabi, at a sushi bar). I finished in the NW and was, briefly, afraid I wasn't actually going to get into that corner. Finally grokked CEDILLA from -ILLA (had wanted MANILLA…) (1A: Letter attachment?) and that was that. Ended with the "Y" in EYEBOLT (24D: Fastener with a ring-shaped head). Now I have to go rest my eye pits.
    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Chemistry Nobelist Hoffmann / FRI 12-13-13 / Sendler heroine of WW II's Polish Underground / Tennis star Petrova / Israel Philharmonic maestro / All-Star 18 consecutive times from 1967 to 1984 / Kid in shorts with cowlick / Novel followed up by Boyhood of Christ / Like Madrilenian millionairess

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    Constructor: Gary Cee

    Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (though the times I'm seeing at the NYT site suggest something closer to Challenging, so I don't Even know what's going on)


    THEME: none

    Word of the Day: IRENA Sendler (43D: ___ Sendler, heroine of W.W. II's Polish Underground) —
    Irena Sendler (née Krzyżanowska, also referred to as Irena Sendlerowa in PolandNom de guerre Jolanta; 15 February 1910 – 12 May 2008) was a Polish Roman Catholic nurse/social worker who served in the Polish Underground during World War II, and as head of children's section of Żegota, an underground resistance organization in German-occupied Warsaw. Assisted by some two dozen other Żegota members, Sendler smuggled some 2,500 Jewish children out of theWarsaw Ghetto and then provided them with false identity documents and with housing outside the Ghetto, saving those children during the Holocaust.
    The Nazis eventually discovered her activities, tortured her, and sentenced her to death, but she managed to evade execution and survive the war. In 1965, Sendler was recognized by the State of Israel as Righteous among the Nations. Late in life she was awarded Poland's highest honor for her wartime humanitarian efforts. She appears on a silver 2008 Polish commemorative coin honoring some of the Polish Righteous among the Nations. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    I'm not usually on Gary Cee's wavelength, but today was a dramatic exception. I couldn't be stopped. The only serious obstacle I had was one that I made for myself—misspelled TOCATTA thusly, and therefore couldn't make sense of either 18D: Chemistry Nobelist Hoffman (ROALD) or 23D: Hernando's hundred (CIEN) for a bit. Also, the indefinite article at the beginning of AN ACQUIRED TASTE threw me a little. Those don't normally get included. But once I dropped LIQUORED UP and that Q locked in, AN ACQUIRED TASTE went straight Across and I made steady, continuous progress around the grid from there. I had special knowledge advantage today, perhaps, as both FOUR-COLOR and ONE-OFF are very familiar terms from the world of comic books (about which I know a little). When I look at this grid, I just can't see where any major trouble could arise … but when I look at some of those times being posted at the NYT puzzle site, I know there must've been some serious pitfalls in there somewhere. The guy I normally chase, the guy whose time I measure my own by, who's almost always faster than me, was three full minutes behind me today. This is something that virtually never happens. Other names who normally post times roughly equivalent to my own were much, much farther back. So I'm baffled.


    I didn't know some of the names (like IRENA and NADIA), but those were very guessable. I got MEHTA with no crosses. Wait, what does ATP mean? (39A: Need for muscle contraction, briefly) I'm only just seeing it now. From wikipedia: "Adenosine triphosphate is a nucleoside triphosphate used in cells as a coenzyme. It is often called the "molecular unit of currency" of intracellular energy transfer. ATP transports chemical energy within cells for metabolism." I will confess I have never heard of this. Or I forgot it. ATP has something to do with tennis, doesn't it? Yes, Association of Tennis Professionals. That's the ATP I know. This ATP… not in my vocabulary. Wow, I lucked out with the crosses, that's for sure. Oh well, that's what they're there for—to keep your ignorance from destroying you.

    My solve went a little something like this: From the NW, I worked my way into the NE until it was done and JOSHUA TREE dropped. Then I went back and worked on that TOCATTA / TOCCATA disaster until it cleared up (22A: Organ showpiece). Then it appeared I'd have some trouble working down the west coast, but BEEB threw me a lifeline (25D: English channel's nickname, with "the"), giving me the front ends of all those Acrosses. Once I dropped MAGNA CARTA, the rest was a blur. I knew as I was solving, especially when I hit the BLUE TOOTH area, that I was flying at some kind of insanely high speed. I felt very briefly what it must be like to be one of those Top 5 solvers; everything just leapt into view. In retrospect, I think the grid is really nicely filled. There's a good hunk of stuff that is unpalatable—the lackluster duo of ATAD and ASAD, the foreign bloc of FENG ANGE RICA ENSE CIEN, the not-terribly-lovable ENTRAIN / REHEM crossing. But mostly this one pops with fresh entries and interesting words and phrases. HERE'S HOW TO ORDER is a great grid-spanner (52A: Line near the end of an infomercial). I initially wrote in HERE'S THAT NUMBER! Thank god that was wrong.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Scandinavian goddess of fate / SAT 12-14-13 / Husband of Otrera / Ottoman ruler nicknamed Lion / Quattro relatives / Protagonist in David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest / Forrest Tucker's F Troop role / Cagney classic of 1935

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    Constructor: Martin Ashwood-Smith

    Relative difficulty: Medium


    THEME: none

    Word of the Day: NORN (27D: Scandinavian goddess of fate) —


    Norn1
    n
    (Myth & Legend / Norse Myth & Legend) Norse myth any of the three virgin goddesses of fate, who predestine the lives of the gods and men
    [Old Norse] (thefreedictionary.com)
    • • •

    Martin Ashwood-Smith appears to do only quad stacks. That's it. I can't remember the last time I saw his byline and the puzzle wasn't a quad stack. I guess if you have a shtick and it's working for you, then … keep going? This one feels pretty average, quad-stack wise. Don't like any of those grid-spanners particularly. First two are boring, don't know the reference for the third (Jumbo?), and recoil at the fourth because it's one of the dreaded, cliché ONE'S answer (the locus classicus being A LOT ON ONE'S PLATE). Also, this puzzle seems astonishingly reliant on proper nouns. Both the top 15 and the bottom 15 feel not-that-famous, and while I knew TERENCE MCNALLY, being under 60 I have never seen a single episode of "F-Troop," so SERGEANT O'ROURKE (52A: Forrest Tucker's "F Troop" role) was a big "?". Also a big "?"—four (4!) adjacent Downs that were also proper nouns: ALI PASHA (17D: Ottoman ruler nicknamed "The Lion"), FILIPPO (23D: ___ Brunelleschi, Italian Renaissance architect who developed linear perspective), VANESSA (25D: 1958 OPERA by Samuel Barber), and EILEEN FORD (31D: Big name in modeling agencies). At least the puzzle was well constructed enough that I could work them out via crosses and inference. Still, generally a good puzzle is going to balance things out a bit, proper noun-wise.


    I know they have nothing to do with each other, etymologically, but I do not like SARGENT and SERGEANT in the same grid. Pronounced the same, so … the same. Fair, yes, but distracting and inelegant (unlike SARGENT's work, which is phenomenally elegant). The puzzle has some genuine ugliness because, well, it's a quad-stack puzzle, and so we see the usual rat's nest of short crosses: AFTA NORN CRAT! Actually, it could've been, and has been, much worse. Things get a little morbid at the bottom there, but I don't mind that. Had EAP before ERB (Edgar Rice Burroughs). ERAT before AMAT. "GMAN" before "GMEN." None of these errors are that interesting. My movement through the puzzle was pretty much guided by my familiarity with the major proper nouns involved. Knew MCNALLY, so top was pretty easy. Didn't know that chunk of Downs in the middle, so that was a bit slower, and then the front half of the bottom grid-spanner (SERGEANT, inferable from a few crosses) was easy, where the latter (O'ROURKE, being much less inferable) was not.

    Good day.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Farmworker in Wizard of Oz / SUN 12-15-13 / Walt Disney's middle name / Her name is Norwegian for beautiful woman who leads you to victory / Girl group with four #1 hits in 1990s

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    Constructor: Jeff Chen

    Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


    THEME:"A Cut Above the Rest" — Word "CUT" is spelled out at the top of the grid, with Cs (representing the answers "seas""seize" and "sees") making a "C," Us (representing the answers "ewes""use" and "yews") making a "U," and Ts (representing the answers "tease" and "tees") making a "T"; [Cut] then acts as the clue for a series of Downs that are clued "[See above]" (You: "What the hell do they mean by 'above'?" Answer: "See puzzle title")

    The CUTs:

    • PLAYED HOOKY
    • PIECE OF THE ACTION
    • ALBUM TRACK
    • EDITED DOWN
    • KICKED OFF THE TEAM
    • SNIDE REMARK

    Word of the Day: Angelica (87A: Angelica and others => HERBS) —
    Angelica is a genus of about 60 species of tall biennial and perennial herbs in the family Apiaceae, native to temperate and subarctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere, reaching as far north as Iceland and Lapland. They grow to 1–3 m tall, with large bipinnate leaves and large compound umbels of white or greenish-white flowers.
    Some species can be found in purple moor and rush pastures. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    Today's puzzle provides a nice reminder that it always helps to consider the puzzle title. I looked at it and promptly forgot about it, which left me wonder how clues could say [See above] when there was no clear referent. Looked for a "note." Scanned the clues. Nothing. Hey, maybe it has something to do with that "U" and "T" you've got up there for no clear reason! Hmmm, can't see how. What do all these  long Down phrases have to do with "-UT"? PUT? BUT? [this went on] [I finished the puzzle in the NW without ever, up to that point, having picked up on the full extent of the theme] [Finally…] CCCCCs! CUT! Oh okay. Yeah, that works. A multi-layered theme that is both clever and Highly doable, with very little true junk in the grid. Hurray.


    I would've complained that this puzzle was too easy, except apparently (for me) it needed to be, because I got all those long Downs precisely because I could infer the answers from the (relatively easy) crosses. I finished with a below-average time even though up until the very end I had at best only half-grasped the theme. There's not a ton to talk about, fill-wise. There is a "roll-your-own" quality to both BIONIC LEG (!) and TOOK A TAXI (which, fittingly, sit on the same row). Neither one bothers me too much, but I like the former a lot better (in that I would like BIONIC-anything (well, anything plausible; BIONIC PANCREAS, maybe not), whereas TOOK A TAXI… I don't know—I like TOOK A CAB better, and I wouldn't much like a lot of other stuff that you could plausibly stick in there, e.g. TOOK A BUS, TOOK A TRAIN, etc. Once again the most interesting trivia tidbit of the day involves SIRI. Last week we learned that she's called "Karen" in Australia (?!). This week, that [Her name is Norwegian for "beautiful woman who leads you to victory"]. That is oddly specific—the Norse really have a word for that? How often does one have occasion to use it?


    Just a reminder: my Holiday Crossword Gift Guide is up. Useful for those of you scrambling for last-minute presents for loved ones (or for ways to preoccupy yourself during the oceans of "family time" you'll undoubtedly be enduring enjoying). Check it out.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Farewell Vladimir / MON 12-16-13 / Unmemorable low-budget film / Wrestler's wear / Weapon for reindeer / Chairmaker's strip / Candy heart sentiment

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    Constructor: Greg Johnson

    Relative difficulty: Medium


    THEME: GOODBYE (34A: This puzzle's theme) — theme answers are phrases meaning "GOODBYE," in this and other languages:

    Theme answers:
    • 17A: "I'm outta here!" ("SEE YA LATER!")
    • 6A: "Gotta go!" ("CIAO!")
    • 11D: "Godspeed, Bruno!" ("ARRIVEDERCI!")
    • 24D: "Farewell, Vladimir!" ("DOS VIDANIYA!")
    • 50A: "Adios, amigo!" ("HASTA LUEGO!")
    • 58A: "Cheerio!" ("TATA!")
    Word of the Day: SINGLET (38D: Wrestler's wear) —
    wrestling singlet (or simply singlet) is a one-piece, tight-fitting, colored uniform, usually made of spandex/lycra, or nylon, used in amateur wrestling. The uniform is tight fitting so as not to get grasped accidentally by one's opponent, and allows the referee to see each wrestler's body clearly when awarding points or a pin. Unlike judo, it is illegal to grasp an opponent's clothing in all styles of amateur wrestling. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    Startlingly unambitious theme—the kind of thing that feels old-fashioned in the worst way—but thankfully the constructor didn't put all his eggs in the theme basket, so this puzzle was actually reasonably entertaining to solve. But as for the theme—I don't know why a theme like this was approved. Super-straightforward, while also strangely off-kilter. The theme answers aren't even all from different languages. They're just … some phrases in English, some not, all of them meaning, vaguely, "GOODBYE." Loose, inconsistent, weird. Also, it is absurd to have some of the clues refer to a person's name (i.e. "Bruno" ???) where the others don't. I get that you are trying to tip the language there, but names for all or names for none. I mean, the name thing isn't even consistent for foreign-language phrases—We get a Bruno and a Vladimir, but not a Juanita? These inconsistencies wouldn't rankle me so much if the clues weren't clearly *going* for consistency, with all of them being quoted, spoken phrases.


    Puzzle had weird moments of brief difficulty. SMILE clue is massively un-Monday (21D: "Peace begins with a ___": Mother Teresa) and the spelling of DOSVIDANIYA was half-guesswork. Crazy-looking. Never seen that phrase written out before today, that I can recall. Also, I'm seeing it spelled "DOSVEDANYA" and a bunch of different ways on-line. Had no idea there was a conventional spelling of this phrase in English. No big deal. Still picked it up fast from crosses. Just one more thing that feels slightly off about this puzzle. Fill is pretty good, I think. Not the slop-fest we've been seeing too much of in recent months. I like AC DUCTS and SKI SLOPES and B-MOVIE, though I totally disagree that a B-MOVIE is "Unmemorable" (25A: Unmemorable low-budget film). The Lord of the Rings movies were unmemorable. Kiss Me Deadly, however, is scorched on my brain forever. Elitist nonsense, that clue.


    See you tomorrow,

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Suffix meaning little one / TUE 12-17-13 / Bruce who played Dr Watson / Supercute marsupials / Hemingway novel title location / Italian granny

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    Constructor: Paula Gamache

    Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging


    THEME: NBA (54A: Org. found in the answer to each asterisked clue)

    Theme answers:
    • 17A: *Sheriff's insignia, in old westerns (TINBADGE) 
    • 3D: *Tanning method (SUN BATH)
    • 29A: *Actor named in a "Six Degrees" game (KEVIN GAME) —wtf is "a 'Six Degrees' game"? There's only one such game. It's not a genre of game. It's "Six Degrees of KEVIN BACON." The "a" is comical, and not in a good way.
    • 11D: *Recover, as lost love (WIN BACK)
    • 46A: *Tangy breakfast item (ONION BAGEL) —"tangy" is not an adjective I'd ever use to describe this breakfast item. Orange juice is tangy.
    • 40D: *Tommy's game in the Who's rock opera "Tommy" (PINBALL)
    • 44D: *Feature of many a charity gala (OPEN BAR)
    • 59A: *Packers' hometown (GREEN BAY)
    Word of the Day: KIR (57D: ___ Royale (cocktail)) —
    A drink consisting of dry white wine or champagne flavored with cassis. (thefreedictionary.com)
    • • •

    Pretty bad. Just because you manage to shove eight theme answers in there doesn't mean it was worth it. With no concept and no real revealer, this is just a bunch of theme answers that happen to have a letter string in common. Snore. What's the point? And yet I should probably be grateful for the theme, since the theme answers are the only tolerable part of the puzzle. They look positively Gorgeous next to the rest of the mediocre-to-horrid stuff that dominates the grid—stuff a real pro should have down to a bare minimum, even in a theme-dense grid. Buncha sounds like HOS (ugh!) and HAHA and OOP OOH NAH. The NW alone is a disaster zone. SATI?! *and* THESEA *and* ACADS *and* the totally arbitrary SCENEV? And then, all over: KNT, ENT, KIR (Yet Again), ASON, ULA, AARE, SNERT, GES, NONNA. The repetitiveness of RELY ON  / SPIT ON / IN ON. And for what? A no-concept letter-string puzzle. Depressing. No care. No craft. Adequate, perhaps, but you'd think more would be expected of Old Hands.


    That's all.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Outermost Aleutian island / WED 12-18-13 / What Charlie rides in 1959 hit / Serengeti speedster / Longhorn's grid rival / Clark's Smallville crush / Adopt-a-thon's adoptees

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    Constructor: Ed Sessa

    Relative difficulty: Medium (leaning toward Med-Challenging)


    THEME: Definite article breakaway— Phrases that begin w/ indefinite article "A" are clued as if that "A" were affixed to the beginning of the subsequent word. As for cluing: There Will Be Wackiness!

    Theme answers:
    • 17A: Plaque from a governor? (AWARD OF THE STATE)
    • 36A: Mime's motto? (AWAY WITH WORDS)
    • 59A: Arrive via a red-eye? (ALIGHT IN THE DARK)
    Word of the Day: ATTU (15A: Outermost Aleutian island) —
    Attu (AleutAtan) is the westernmost and largest island in the Near Islands group of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, and the westernmost point of land relative to Alaska, the United States, and North America. The island is currently uninhabited.
    The island was the site of the only World War II land battle fought on an incorporated territory of the United States (theBattle of Attu), and its battlefield area is a U.S. National Historic Landmark. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    Pretty thin theme means fill has to be good, and it isn't. Really isn't. There's just no excuse for the north—specifically, that ATTU / ATTN crossing. ATTU is the worst kind of prehistoric crosswordese and should only come out In Case Of Emergencies. But these are tiny little sections we're talking about. 3x4 stuff. Every constructor I know can fill that section better, within a matter of minutes, possibly less. Consider also the almost-as-terrible southern section (180 degrees from the ATTU disaster). You're crossing IRE and IRAE? Really? Really??? Aside from IRAE's sucking and IRE's being dull, there's the somewhat glaring fact of their being So Closely Etymologically Related They May As Well Be the Same Word. Constructors I know wouldn't want IRE and IRAE to be *in the same grid* let alone crossing each other. It's actually kind of mind-boggling how lazy this sort of thing is. Dear lord, just go to SASHES instead of GASHES and watch the possibilities for a non-IRAE universe open up! Again, it's a tiny section. You can gut it and refill it Over and Over. Why subject your subscribers to such half-assert?


    Longer Downs are solid enough. Really like SHOEBOX and its clue. Longer Acrosses were just confusing—answers that long are usually themers. Very distracting. Not as distracting as Getting The Hamlet Quote Wrong (44A: "Something is rotten in Denmark"), but distracting nonetheless. For whatever reason, I found this one slightly harder to move through than most Wednesdays. My first problem was misreading 1A: Good ol' boy (BUBBA) as [Good ol' cowboy] (???). Then there was the Aleutian island thing (old school solvers know that AT-- has *two* viable Aleutian answers). Real problems around USE BY—had UNTIL there, and also wanted RACE or HEAT for DASH and EMIT for SPEW. Otherwise, no real difficulties.

    Nominated for permanent retirement: ATTU, BAHA

    Good day.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Light for Aladdin / THU 12-19-13 / 1960s British PM Douglas-Home / Rio Amazon feeder / Longtime Red Sox nickname / Seattle Center Coliseum since 1995 / L'chaim literally / Falstaff's quaff

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    Constructor: George Barany and Michael Shteyman

    Relative difficulty: Medium



    THEME: LIKE WATER AND OIL (36A: Incompatible)— rebus puzzle with three OIL squares up top, three WATER squares below, and the upper and lower halves of the grid separated not by full black squares but just the slim black lines between the squares.

    [The grid in AcrossLite (pictured) is nuts, as the circles sometimes represent rebus squares (not marked at all in the low-fi version), and sometimes represent where a new Down answer begins. In the PDF / newspaper, you have to discover rebus squares for yourself and the dividing lines between top and bottom halves of the grid are represented merely by extra-dark black lines between boxes]

    Word of the Day: ALEC Douglas-Home (62A: 1960s British P.M. ___ Douglas-Home) —
    Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, Baron Home of the Hirsel (/ˈhjuːm/ hyoom), KTPC (2 July 1903 – 9 October 1995) was a British Conservative politician who served as Prime Minister from October 1963 to October 1964. He is notable for being the last Prime Minister to hold office while being a member of the House of Lords, prior to renouncing his peerage and taking up a seat in the House of Commons for the remainder of his premiership. His reputation, however, rests more on his two spells as the UK's foreign minister than on his brief premiership. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    An interesting idea with a somewhat awkward execution. Full disclosure—I just solved one of the greatest puzzles of the year earlier in the day, so my standards for this kind of tricky-grid stuff may be unreasonably high at the moment. Still, there's an oddness to the way this concept is represented. First, the OIL and WATER *do* mix, so the visual is all thrown off. We'd need a solid line across the grid to get it right, but instead we've got this alternating jagged thingie which is visually wrong. Whole point of the puzzle is that OIL and WATER don't mix. But here they do, in the weird central Across answer. Then there's the rebus squares. There are three (why?) and they are oddly symmetricalish (why???). The mirror symmetry with the rebuses was a let down. Once I'd noticed it up top, I tried it down below, and sure enough, the WATER square was in the perfect mirror symmetry position. What is the point of this? To make puzzle easier? It's already easy enough. The number and position of the rebus squares seem odd and arbitrary. The black squares are oddly placed, and (necessarily) not the same below as they are up top. None of these features are fatal flaws, they're just … compromises and accommodations that took me out of the puzzle, dampening the effect the puzzle seemed to be going for. It's like a decent balance beam routine with a decidedly unstuck landing. Interesting, nice in parts, but not great. Puzzle gets points for unusualness, but its high concept is somewhat rough in reality.


    There were an odd lot of terminal-I answers in the long Downs, and those things are just too easy to uncover. Got ARTICLE I and CLEMENT I with virtually no problem. Ditto LIBRETTI. I like how TOILET WATER gets in on the upper- and lower-half rebus (31D: Lightly scented perfume). I have never encountered a HOT WATER BAG (52A: Soother of an aching joint). It's a bottle, where I'm from, even if it is vaguely bag-shaped. ET VOILA was a very clever way of picking up a rebus square. Both KEY ARENA (37D: Seattle Center Coliseum, since 1995) and LAST PASS feel quite original, which is nice. I had a lot of the puzzle done before I hit TINF- and realized that rebus squares were involved. I thought the 34A: Chicken for dinner (BROILER) was a FRIER — it fit so nicely — so that held me up for a bit there in the center. But nothing else about this puzzle was that tough. Probably took a little longer to solve than normal, but that's pretty typical on a puzzle where you have to pick up some tricky concept. Once you lock on to the concept, the puzzle's pretty easy.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    South American carrier founded in 1927 / FRI 12-20-13 / Mexican revolutionary of 1910 / Transport for Miss Gulch / Controversial 1715 measure of Parliament / Clueless protagonist / TV game show on the Discovery Channel, 2005-12

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    Constructor: Ian Livengood

    Relative difficulty: Medium


    THEME: none

    Word of the Day: RIOT ACT (61A: Controversial 1715 measure of Parliament) —
    The Riot Act (1714) (1 Geo.1 St.2 c.5) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain that authorised local authorities to declare any group of twelve or more people to be unlawfully assembled, and thus have to disperse or face punitive action. The Act, whose long title was "An Act for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies, and for the more speedy and effectual punishing the rioters", came into force on 1 August 1715. It was repealed for England and Wales by section 10(2) of, and Part III of Schedule 3 to, the Criminal Law Act 1967. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    This puzzle is expertly made, but left me a little cold. There aren't many longer entries, so the exciting seed answers I expect from a Friday (and especially a Friday Livengood) just weren't there. "CASH CAB" was pretty fresh. "IT WORKS" works. But most of the rest of it, while perfectly solid, felt somewhat ordinary. I also just had a hard time with this one. Well, not Hard hard. But it was slippery for me. Some "?" clues I didn't quite get (Warm up? Draft pick?). Some dull/vague clues like [Kind of figure] for CARTOON and [Jacket option] for LEATHER. Some phrases I'm not that familiar with or virtually never see (TAR OIL, CROPLAND). Again, none of these answers are bad. I just had my hopes up because of the constructor, and ultimately found this one didn't have as much kick as I'd anticipated.

    Took a while to get traction, as initial entries in both NW and NE went nowhere. Gave up and went down to the east and all of a sudden got three short answers in a row (ANTE, MOHR, STET). That led me over to BICYCLE (52A: Transport for Miss Gulch, in "The Wizard of Oz"), which was the first answer to really open up the grid. SEAT BACKS was terribly easy, and helped me get into that SW corner, and my answers just percolated up from there, ending with the "D" InMUD (8D: Joe). Not many wrong answers holding me back today. Forgot how to spellVARIG (49D: South American carrier founded in 1927), so had VAREG or something like that. Had SEAL for OPAH (25D: Great white shark prey). INNIE for OUTIE (shocker!) (13D: Certain belly button). Had no idea what kind of DUCK was going to be "Chinese" (21D: Chinese restaurant staple). ROAST is undoubtedly accurate, but even with R-A-T in place, I didn't get it. I thought of the end of "A Christmas Story," when they're at the Chinese restaurant and the dad complains to the waiter that the duck is smiling at him, and then the waiter quickly beheads it, much to everyone's horror/delight. Anyway, the smiling duck in the Chinese restaurant made me think, "Is RIANT DUCK a thing?" I honestly thought this. I *might* have tried to write it in. It's all a bit hazy now.

    [Warning: the opening of this scene is pretty racist]

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    Creator of first crossword / SAT 12-21-13 / Jerry Orbach role in Fantasticks / Kingdom vanquished by Hammurabi / Girl's name in #1 1973 1974 song titles / Ranch sobriquet / Neighborhood org since 1844 / Fruit whose name comes from Arawak / Morlocks enemy

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    Constructor: Todd Gross and David Steinberg

    Relative difficulty: Easy



    THEME: First crossword puzzle — today is the 100th anniversary of the crossword puzzle. The shaded area corresponds to the shape of that original puzzle, which looked like this:


    Puzzle's creator (ARTHUR WYNNE) and publisher (NEW YORK / SUNDAY WORLD) both appear in the grid, as does the puzzle's publication year (MCMXIII)

    Word of the Day: KREWE (12D: Mardi Gras group) —
    krewe (pronounced in the same way as "crew") is an organization that puts on a parade and/or a ball for the Carnivalseason. The term is best known for its association with New Orleans Mardi Gras, but is also used in other Carnival celebrations around the Gulf of Mexico, such as the Gasparilla Pirate Festival in Tampa, Florida, and Springtime Tallahassee as well as in La Crosse, Wisconsin and at the Saint Paul Winter Carnival.
    The word is thought to have been coined in the early 19th century by an organization calling themselves Ye Mistick Krewe of Comus, as an archaic affectation; with time it became the most common term for a New Orleans Carnival organization. The Mistick Krewe of Comus itself was inspired by a Mobile mystic society, with annual parades inMobile, Alabama, called the Cowbellion de Rakin Society that dated from 1830. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    I've been seeing references to the 100th anniversary of the crossword all over the web today, so this feels rather anti-climactic. Yes, 100 years. Yes, that's the publication and the creator. Yes, that gray area is the shape of the original puzzle—though nothing about the content of that gray area (with the notable exception of FUN) corresponds to the original puzzle. If you want a FUN puzzle with which to celebrate the anniversary of the crossword, I suggest Merl Reagle's Google Doodle (if it's still up … it was on Friday). This was very easy if you were aware of the anniversary, maybe a little less so if you weren't. I've seen ARTHUR WYNNE's name so many times in the past few days that "gimme" doesn't even begin to describe it. Not sure how anyone's supposed to know what the gray area represents—did you get a note? My .pdf had no note.  It's a bit insidery, esp. the FUN bit. Maybe there's a note out there that my version just didn't have. Who can say?


    I like FUNGICIDE (16A: Jojoba oil is a natural one). Otherwise, shrug, puzzle's OK. Only trouble today was spelling AMIDALA (22D: "Star Wars" queen and senator), which is not AMADALA. Nor is it AMYGDALA, though it's close. Had I SWEAR instead of IT WAS I (40D: Formal confession). No other bumps to speak of.

    If you want to read a little something on the 100th anniversary, I recommend this thoughtful little piece by Ben Tausig: "The Shape of Clues to Come: The Crossword at 100."

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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