Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Word of the Day: BEREA (41A: First coed and racially integrated college in the South) —
Berea College is a private liberal arts work college in Berea, Kentucky. Founded in 1855, Berea College was the first college in the Southern United States to be coeducational and racially integrated. The college provides a work-study grant that covers the remaining tuition fees after subtracting the total sum a student received from Pell Grant, other grants, and scholarships. Berea's primary service region is southern Appalachia but students come from more than 40 states in the United States and 70 other countries. Approximately one in three students identify as people of color.
Berea offers bachelor's degrees in 33 majors. It incorporates a mandatory work-study program that requires students to engage in a minimum of 10 hours per week of work for the college. (wikipedia) (my emph.)
Bullets:
- 1A: Many opera villains, traditionally (BASSES) — the plural of "basso" is "bassi" but also "BASSOS," so that is what I and many of you wrote in, come on, you know you did. Then you wondered what the hell an OMIR was and (if you're lucky) corrected accordingly (5D: Title that shares an etymology with "admiral" => EMIR).
- 29A: Half sister of Meredith Grey on "Grey's Anatomy" (LEXIE) — look, it's hard enough for me to keep "Game of Thrones" characters straight; asking me to reach back into the "GA" universe is a bridge too far. Reminds me of a time in the aughts when the puzzle was like "remember this tertiary character from 'Ally McBeal'!" and I was like "I absolutely do not, please stop." [OK I'm only now discovering that "Grey's Anatomy" is still on the air!?!? 19 seasons in!? Wow, I am walled off from network TV so hard—if people I know watch this, they neeeeever talk about it. I assumed it had its big moment and then went away after a decade or so, as most shows do. I know Shonda Rhimes went on to create "Scandal," and then "Scandal" went away so ... yeah, her chronology is all messed up in my head, clearly. Wow. OK then. LEXIE. Sure.]
- 16D: ___ cakes (cupcakes, in the U.K.) (FAIRY) — had -AIRY. Thought maybe DAIRY (?). Had to wait on that cross, which turned out to be the "F" in FOOTPADS, which, again, wtf? "Historic parlance"? Wikipedia more aptly calls it "archaic."
- 42D: Universal self of Hinduism (ATMAN) — blanked on this, though I've seen it before.
- 28D: Unwanted discovery under the bed (DUST BUNNY) — "Unwanted," I guess, but if you have pets, inevitable. Although I guess to get to full-on "bunny" stage the pet hair has to have sat for a long time and combined with a lot of other crap you don't want to know about. We don't get much of that, but we do get little clumps of hair blowing across the hardwood floors like tumbleweeds on a pretty regular basis.
- 38D: Whim-whams (NERVES) — I just realized how I know this. I've heard it precisely once, in a movie called "5 Against the House," and it made me laugh so hard I took a screenshot with the captions on:
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