Constructed by: Rich Katz
Edited by: Will Shortz
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Today’s Reveal Answer: Who Do We Appreciate?
Themed answers start with, collectively, homophones of TWO, FOUR, SIX and EIGHT:
- 17A “You missed your chance!” : TOO LATE NOW! (giving “TWO”)
- 21A “It’s legit!” : FOR REAL! (giving “FOUR”)
- 25A Gets a pooch to attack : SICS THE DOG ON (giving “SIX”)
- 48A Picked at one’s food, in an avian metaphor : ATE LIKE A BIRD (giving “EIGHT”)
- 56A With 63-Across, question hinted at by the beginnings of 17-, 21-, 25- and 48-Across : WHO DO WE …
- 63A See 56-Across : … APPRECIATE
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Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
1A Capital located on a fjord : OSLO
The Norwegian capital of Oslo is located at the northern end of a fjord known as Oslofjord. The fjord is home to 40 islands that lie within the city’s limits. Oslo also has 343 lakes.
10A State with the highest Mormon population : UTAH
When Mormon pioneers were settling what is today the state of Utah, they referred to the area as Deseret, a word that means “beehive” according to the Book of Mormon. Today Utah is known as the Beehive State and there is a beehive symbol on the Utah state flag. In 1959, “Industry” was even chosen as the state motto, for the term’s association with the beehive.
19A Silver weapon brandished by one hoping for gold : EPEE
There are three fencing events in the modern Olympics, with each distinguished by the weapon used:
- Foil
- Épée
- Sabre
23A ___ Rica : COSTA
Costa Rica is a country in Central America that is bordered by Nicaragua to the north and Panama to the south. Costa Rica is remarkable in my opinion, a leader on the world stage in many areas. It has been referred to as the “greenest” country in the world, the “happiest” country in the world, and has a highly educated populace. In 1948, the country unilaterally abolished its own army … permanently!
25A Gets a pooch to attack : SICS THE DOG ON
“Sic ’em” is an attack order given to a dog, one instructing the animal to growl, bark or even bite. The term dates back to the 1830s, with “sic” being a variation of “seek”.
40A Obstetrician’s specialty : LABOR
In Latin, the word for midwife is “obstetrix”. “Obstetrix” translates more literally as “one who stands opposite” i.e. the one opposite the woman giving birth. The Latin term gives rise to our modern word “obstetrics” used for the branch of medical science concerned with childbirth.
43A Setting for Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible” : SALEM
“The Crucible” is a 1952 play by Arthur Miller that tells the story of the Salem witch trials. Miller wrote it as an allegory for the House Committee on Un-American Activities hearings that were being chaired by Senator Joe McCarthy around that time. Miller was called before the Committee himself, and was convicted of contempt of Congress for refusing to “name names”.
45A Dance for flexible people : LIMBO
The limbo dance originated on the island of Trinidad in the Caribbean. The name “limbo” is an alteration of our word “limber”, which isn’t surprising given what one has to do to get under that bar!
47A It might say “Home Sweet Home” : MAT
“Home! Sweet Home!” is a song that has been around at least since 1827. The melody was composed by Englishman Sir Henry Bishop, using lyrics written by American John Howard Payne.
Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam,
Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like home;
A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there,
Which seek thro’ the world, is ne’er met elsewhere.
Home! Home!
Sweet, sweet home!
There’s no place like home
There’s no place like home!
51A Baton Rouge sch. : LSU
LSU’s full name is Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, and is located in Baton Rouge. LSU was founded in 1860 as a military academy, with then-Colonel William Tecumseh Sherman as superintendent.
52A Wash with a glycol spray, as an airplane wing : DEICE
The antifreeze that we put into our cars has ethylene glycol as the active ingredient. Ethylene glycol is dangerous stuff, and is very poisonous. Ingestion causes calcium oxalate crystals to form in the kidneys. It sounds like a horrible way to go …
60A Marsupial whose name sometimes omits its first letter : OPOSSUM
Although they are both marsupials, the opossum and the possum are two distinct animals. True possums are found in Australia and other places in the South Pacific. Opossums are found in North America.
62A Tony ___, former Cowboys QB : ROMO
Tony Romo is a former quarterback who spent his entire NFL career with the Dallas Cowboys. Romo is also an avid amateur golfer and has even tried (albeit unsuccessfully) to qualify for the US Open golf championship.
68A Ivy in Philadelphia, familiarly : PENN
The University of Pennsylvania (also “Penn” and “UPenn”) was founded in 1740 by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia. Penn was the first school in the country to offer both graduate and undergraduate courses. Penn’s sports teams are known as the Quakers, and sometimes the Red & Blue.
Down
1D Kind of nerve that connects to the eye : OPTIC
The optic nerve enters the eyeball at a location on the retina called the optic disc. Because there are no light-sensitive cells at the optic disc, there is a “hole” in our visual field that is called the blind spot. People with normal vision don’t usually notice this blind spot as the brain “fills in” the blind spot with information from the other eye.
4D Babies that are supposed to be up all night? : OWLETS
A baby owl is an owlet. The term “owlet” can also be used for the adults of the smaller species of owls.
5D Five things in each of Shakespeare’s plays : ACTS
Shakespeare adopted the five-act structure for his plays, thereby using the same format that was used by Seneca for his Roman tragedies. Given five acts, the plays tend to unfold as follows:
- Act I is used as an introduction
- Act II is used to complicate things
- Act III contains the climax of the tale
- Act IV is used to add some suspense
- Act V is the conclusion
6D “My country, ’tis of ___ …” : THEE
The patriotic song “America” is also known by its first line, “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee”. The song was written by Samuel Francis Smith in 1831, and was the de facto national anthem of the country until “The Star-Spangled Banner” was declared the official anthem in 1931. The melody of “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” is identical with the British national anthem, “God Save the King/Queen”.
My country, ’tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing;
Land where my fathers died,
Land of the pilgrims’ pride,
From ev’ry mountainside
Let freedom ring!
9D Fixed, as a tapestry or a tatami : REWOVE
A tatami is a traditional mat used on floors in Japan. The term “tatami” comes from the Japanese word “tatamu” meaning “to fold”, reflecting the fact that the mat used to be folded up for storage. Modern tatami mats are thick (approx. 2 inches), heavy, and rigid modules with a compressed rice-straw core. They are no longer designed to be folded.
11D Word after video or Scotch : TAPE
Scotch Tape is a brand of adhesive tape made by 3M. “Scotch Tape” is one of those brand names that has become a generic term for the product. The equivalent brand name of the product that we use over in Ireland is Sellotape. This British brand also has become a generic term, and so is our equivalent to “Scotch tape”.
18D Eroticist Nin : ANAIS
Anaïs Nin was a French author who was famous for the journals that she wrote for over sixty years from the age of 11 right up to her death. Nin also wrote highly regarded erotica and cited D. H. Lawrence as someone from whom she drew inspiration. Nin was married to banker and artist Hugh Parker Guiler in 1923. Decades later in 1955, Nin married former actor Rupert Pole, even though she was still married to Guiler. Nin and Pole had their marriage annulled in 1966, but just for legal reasons, and they continued to live together as husband and wife until Nin passed away in 1977.
26D Baseball Hall-of-Famer ___ Ripken : CAL
Cal Ripken played his entire, 20-year professional baseball career for the Baltimore Orioles. Ripken was known as the “Iron Man” because he showed up for work every day, come rain or shine. He played 2,632 straight games, blowing past the previous 2,130-game record held by Lou Gehrig.
27D Rock that’s fracked to release oil : SHALE
“Fracking” is a familiar term describing “hydraulic fracturing”. Fracking involves the injection of chemicals and sand in water at high pressure into a wellbore. This creates cracks in layers of rock deep in the earth allowing perhaps oil or natural gas to flow more freely to the surface.
28D Bone in the lower leg : TIBIA
The tibia is the shinbone, and is the larger of the two bones right below the knee. It is the strongest weight-bearing bone in the human body. “Tibia” is the Roman name for a Greek flute and it is thought that the shinbone was given the same name because flutes were often fashioned out of the shinbones of animals.
29D Fusion weapon, familiarly : H-BOMB
There are two classes of nuclear weapons, both of which get the energy for the explosion from nuclear reactions. The first nuclear bombs developed, called atomic bombs (A-bombs), use fission reactions. Uranium nuclei are split into smaller nuclei with the release of an awful lot of energy in the process. The second class of nuclear weapons are fusion bombs. These devices are called thermonuclear weapons or hydrogen bombs (H-bombs). In a fusion reaction, the nuclei of hydrogen isotopes are fused together to form bigger nuclei, with the release of even greater amounts of energy.
33D Lead-in to Major or Minor in the night sky : URSA
The constellation Ursa Major (Latin for “Larger Bear”) is often just called “the Big Dipper” because of the resemblance of its main stars to a ladle or dipper. Those stars also resemble a plow, and that’s what we usually call the same constellation back in Ireland the “Plough”.
Ursa Minor (Latin for “Smaller Bear”) sits right beside the constellation Draco (Latin for “Dragon”). Ursa Minor used to be considered the wing of Draco, and was once called “Dragon’s Wing”. The tail of the “Smaller Bear” might also be considered as the handle of a ladle, and so the constellation is often referred to as the Little Dipper.
34D What a drawbridge might cross : MOAT
A moat is a protective trench that surrounds a castle, say, or an exhibit in a zoo. A moat may or may not be filled with water.
41D One of four generated by a grand slam, for short : RBI
Run batted in (RBI)
49D Emirate that was the site of Operation Desert Storm : KUWAIT
The State of Kuwait sits at the northern tip of the Persian Gulf, sharing a border to the north with Iraq. After WWI, Kuwait was a Protectorate within the British Empire and then gained independence from the UK in 1961. Iraq annexed Kuwait in 1990, which led to the Gulf War of 1990-1991.
Many of us tend to use “Operation Desert Storm” as the overall name for the conflict more correctly called the Persian Gulf War. Operation Desert Storm was in fact just the air and land battle that took place between January 17th and April 11th 1991. The buildup of forces was called Operation Desert Shield, and the withdrawal of forces after the liberation of Kuwait was known as Operation Desert Farewell.
53D Chris with the 1991 hit “Wicked Game” : ISAAK
Chris Isaak’s 1991 hit “Wicked Game” is taken from his 1989 album “Heart Shaped World”. The song took a couple of years to become a hit after release on the album. “Wicked Game” received a boost in popularity after it was featured in the 1990 David Lynch film “Wild at Heart”.
55D Revise, as text : EMEND
The verb “to amend” means “to change for the better, put right, alter by adding”. The related verb “to emend” is used more rarely, and mainly in reference to the editing of professional writing. Both terms are derived from the Latin “emendare” meaning “to remove fault”.
58D Finding a penny with the tails side up is said to be a bad one : OMEN
The two sides of a coin are known as the “obverse” and the “reverse”. The obverse is commonly referred to as “heads”, as it often depicts someone’s head. The reverse is commonly called “tails”, as it is the opposite of “heads”.
59D Actor/rapper Omar : EPPS
Actor Omar Epps was originally a rapper and was a member of a group called “Wolfpack” before he pursued acting full-time. His really big break came in the form of a recurring role on the popular medical drama series “ER”, followed by a recurring role in the TV series “House” as Dr. Eric Foreman.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A Capital located on a fjord : OSLO
5A Battling militarily : AT WAR
10A State with the highest Mormon population : UTAH
14A Snow clearer : PLOW
15A Selected : CHOSE
16A ___ minimum : BARE
17A “You missed your chance!” : TOO LATE NOW!
19A Silver weapon brandished by one hoping for gold : EPEE
20A Huge : IMMENSE
21A “It’s legit!” : FOR REAL!
23A ___ Rica : COSTA
24A One with special access, in brief : VIP
25A Gets a pooch to attack : SICS THE DOG ON
33A One who might call you out if you get home late? : UMP
36A Hindi term meaning “master”… or “mister” : SAHIB
37A “My apologies!” : SORRY!
38A Part of a house or a mouth : ROOF
40A Obstetrician’s specialty : LABOR
42A Part of a shoe or many a bra : LACE
43A Setting for Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible” : SALEM
45A Dance for flexible people : LIMBO
47A It might say “Home Sweet Home” : MAT
48A Picked at one’s food, in an avian metaphor : ATE LIKE A BIRD
51A Baton Rouge sch. : LSU
52A Wash with a glycol spray, as an airplane wing : DEICE
56A With 63-Across, question hinted at by the beginnings of 17-, 21-, 25- and 48-Across : WHO DO WE …
60A Marsupial whose name sometimes omits its first letter : OPOSSUM
62A Tony ___, former Cowboys QB : ROMO
63A See 56-Across : … APPRECIATE
65A All over again : ANEW
66A “No bid from me” : I PASS
67A Bad forecast for a parade : RAIN
68A Ivy in Philadelphia, familiarly : PENN
69A Letter-shaped groove for a fastener : T-SLOT
70A Barely made, with “out” : EKED …
Down
1D Kind of nerve that connects to the eye : OPTIC
2D Manner in which sports replays are shown, familiarly : SLO-MO
3D Hangs (over) : LOOMS
4D Babies that are supposed to be up all night? : OWLETS
5D Five things in each of Shakespeare’s plays : ACTS
6D “My country, ’tis of ___ …” : THEE
7D Was victorious : WON
8D Since : AS OF
9D Fixed, as a tapestry or a tatami : REWOVE
10D Original name of a popular shared-ride service : UBERPOOL
11D Word after video or Scotch : TAPE
12D About 8,100 square feet, for a baseball infield : AREA
13D What helps you get a leg up? : HEEL
18D Eroticist Nin : ANAIS
22D Purges, with “of” : RIDS …
26D Baseball Hall-of-Famer ___ Ripken : CAL
27D Rock that’s fracked to release oil : SHALE
28D Bone in the lower leg : TIBIA
29D Fusion weapon, familiarly : H-BOMB
30D Weight unit at British markets : GRAM
31D Sea sight in black and white : ORCA
32D The decline of Russia? : NYET
33D Lead-in to Major or Minor in the night sky : URSA
34D What a drawbridge might cross : MOAT
35D Word with vault or position : POLE
39D Collapsed : FELL DOWN
41D One of four generated by a grand slam, for short : RBI
44D Kind of soup often served with sushi : MISO
46D Surgeon, informally : OR DOC
49D Emirate that was the site of Operation Desert Storm : KUWAIT
50D Longing : DESIRE
53D Chris with the 1991 hit “Wicked Game” : ISAAK
54D One who’s “adorbs” : CUTIE
55D Revise, as text : EMEND
56D Prepare for gifting : WRAP
57D Sharpen : HONE
58D Finding a penny with the tails side up is said to be a bad one : OMEN
59D Actor/rapper Omar : EPPS
60D “In that neighborhood” : OR SO
61D Gnat or nit : PEST
64D Bud : PAL
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