Constructed by: Katie Hoody
Edited by: Will Shortz
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… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Theme: None
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Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
1A Dad’s pop, perhaps : CREAM SODA
Cream soda is a carbonated soft drink that is flavored with vanilla. There is a suggestion that the name “cream soda” was chosen as the taste is reminiscent of an ice cream soda. I’m not so sure …
Dad’s root beer was developed by Ely Klapman and Barney Berns in 1937, and was given the name “Dad’s” in honor of Klapman’s father who used to make root beer for his family at home.
15A One might be used to launch promotional materials : AIR CANNON
T-shirts can be shot out of an air cannon, perhaps at a sports game.
19A Like the eyes of an American coot : RED
The coot is a water bird in the rail family. It looks as though it is bald because of its markings, but the head is actually covered with feathers. As a result, a person might be described as “bald as a coot”, meaning that the person has no hair at all.
20A Be prepared to take a weight off someone’s shoulders? : SPOT
People at the gym who are doing weight-training will often “spot” for each other. This means that the person who is “spotting” assists in the lift, allowing the lifter to work with more weight than usual.
22A Said who’s who or what’s what? : IDED
Identity document (ID)
26A Turnovers, but not crumpets : STAT
I do love a nice crumpet. They are made from flour and yeast, with baking soda added to make the characteristic holes in the surface. Served hot, with butter melted into the holes, nothing better …
34A Soprano Fleming : RENEE
Renée Fleming is a marvelous soprano from Indiana, Pennsylvania. Famous for her appearances in opera houses and concert halls all over the world, Fleming is also noted for her willingness to bring her craft to the masses. She was a guest on “Sesame Street” singing “counting lyrics” to an aria from “Rigoletto”, and she has appeared a few times on Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion”.
40A Hooter : OWL
Owls have 14 vertebrae in their necks (compared to our 7). The extra bones in the neck, along with other adaptations, allow owls to rotate the head and neck about 270 degrees.
43A ___ Ewbank, Hall-of-Fame football coach : WEEB
Weeb Ewbank was a football coach mostly known for coaching the Baltimore Colts and the New York Jets in the fifties, sixties and seventies. He won two NFL championships with the Colts (1958, 1959), and one AFL championship with the Jets (1968).
46A Margaret featured in “Outstanding: A Comedy Revolution” : CHO
Margaret Cho is a Korean American comedian and actress who was born in San Francisco in 1968. As well as performing as a comedian, Cho has also had a successful acting career, appearing in films such as “Face/Off”, “Bam Bam and Celeste”, as well as TV shows such as “Drop Dead Diva” and “30 Rock.”
47A Punch : BRIO
“Brio” is borrowed from Italian, in which language the term means “vigor and vivacity”. “Con brio” is a musical direction often found on a score, instructing the musicians to play “with energy, vigor”.
48A State-sponsored “wealth redistribution” scheme : LOTTO
Originally, lotto was a type of card game, with “lotto” being the Italian for “lot, destiny”. We’ve used “lotto” to mean a gambling game since the late 1700s.
58A Natural resource seen in arboretums? : ORE
The word “ore” is hidden within the word “arboretum”.
59A Blushing matter : ROUGE
Although the cosmetic called rouge (also “blush”) uses the French word for “red”, modern “rouge” might be brown, pink or perhaps orange. Contemporary rouge is usually a talcum-based, colored powder.
Down
1D Destination for a day trip from Sorrento : CAPRI
The island of Capri off the coast of Southern Italy has been a tourist resort since the days of ancient Rome. Capri is home to the famous Blue Grotto, a sea cave that is illuminated with sunlight that’s colored blue as it passes through the seawater into the cave.
Sorrento is a small town on the Italian coast that sits on a peninsula overlooking the Bay of Naples. It is an extremely popular tourist destination. The island of Capri lies off the western tip of the Sorrento Peninsula.
6D Website with a “Submit a Rumor” tab : SNOPES
Snopes.com is the place to go if you want to check the validity or history of an urban legend or Internet rumor. The site was launched in 1995 by Californians Barbara and David Mikkelson.
9D Fire ___ : ANT
Fire ants are stinging ants, and many species are known as red ants. Most stinging ants bite their prey and then spray acid on the wound. The fire ant, however, bites to hold on and then injects an alkaloid venom from its abdomen, creating a burning sensation in humans who have been nipped.
11D Like Belmont’s Big Sandy, among Triple Crown racetracks : WIDEST
Belmont Park is a horse racing track located just outside New York City in Elmont. The facility is home to the celebrated Belmont Stakes, the third race in the season that makes up the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing. The track is named for one of the original investors, financier and horse breeder August Belmont Jr.
The US Triple Crown horse races are, in order through the year:
- The Kentucky Derby
- The Preakness Stakes
- The Belmont Stakes
14D One of a noted quintet : GREAT LAKE
Here is a list of the Great Lakes by area (in square miles)
- Lake Superior (31,700)
- Lake Huron (23,000)
- Lake Michigan (22,300)
- Lake Erie (9,910)
- Lake Ontario (7,340)
The Great Lakes are the largest group of freshwater lakes on the planet. Lake Superior is the second largest lake in the world (after the Caspian Sea). Lake Michigan is the largest lake in the world that lies entirely within one country.
21D Small storage units : BYTES
In the world of computing, a bit is the basic unit of information. It has a value of 0 or 1. A “byte” is a small collection of “bits” (usually 8), the number of bits needed to uniquely identify a character of text. The prefix mega- stands for 10 to the power of 6, so a megabyte (meg) is 1,000,000 bytes. The prefix giga- means 10 to the power of 9, and so a gigabyte (gig) is 1,000,000,000 bytes. Well, those are the SI definitions of megabyte and gigabyte. The purists still use 2 to the power of 20 for a megabyte (i.e. 1,048,576), and 2 to the power of 30 for a gigabyte.
31D Fair weather followers : SNOWBIRDS
Snowbirds are people from Canada and the northern US who head south for the winter, to places like Florida and California.
33D Chillaxing, more formally : AT LEISURE
“Chillax” is a slang term meaning “chill and relax”. Who’da thunk it …?
49D Moment of high spirits? : TOAST
The tradition of toasting someone probably dates back to the reign of Charles II, when the practice was to drink a glass of wine to the health of a beautiful or favored woman. In those days, spiced toast was added to beverages to add flavor, so the use of the word “toast” was an indicator that the lady’s beauty would enhance the wine. Very charming, I must say …
51D “Got it” : ROGER
The term “roger”, meaning “yes” or “acknowledged”, comes from the world of radiotelephony. The British military used a phonetic alphabet in the fifties that included “Roger” to represent the letter “R”. As such, it became customary to say “Roger” when acknowledging a message, with R (Roger) standing for “received”.
52D Rijeka native : CROAT
The Republic of Croatia is a Balkan country. The Croats declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Croatia became a member of NATO in 2009, and a member of the European Union in 2013.
57D Shakehand or penhold, in table tennis : GRIP
Ping-Pong is called table tennis in the UK, where the sport originated in the 1880s. Table tennis started as an after-dinner activity among the elite, and was called “wiff-waff”. To play the game, books were stacked in the center of a table as a “net”, two more books served as “rackets” and the ball used was actually a golf ball. The game evolved over time with the rackets being upgraded to the lids of cigar boxes and the ball becoming a champagne cork (how snooty is that?). Eventually the game was produced commercially, and the sound of the ball hitting the racket was deemed to be a “ping” and a “pong”, giving the sport its alternative name. The name “Ping-Pong” was trademarked in Britain in 1901, and eventually sold to Parker Brothers in the US.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A Dad’s pop, perhaps : CREAM SODA
10A Attempt, informally : SWING
15A One might be used to launch promotional materials : AIR CANNON
16A It’s often set on the stove while cooking : TIMER
17A That’s not the whole story! : PLOT POINT
18A Fancy and then some : ADORE
19A Like the eyes of an American coot : RED
20A Be prepared to take a weight off someone’s shoulders? : SPOT
21A ___ Howard, activist known as the “Mother of Pride” : BRENDA
22A Said who’s who or what’s what? : IDED
24A Allies often share one : ENEMY
26A Turnovers, but not crumpets : STAT
27A “Be my guest” and “Go right ahead” : OKS
29A Fixture at a chocolate factory : VAT
30A Rate of passage : TOLL
31A With 28-Down, set hanging by a door : SPARE …
34A Soprano Fleming : RENEE
36A Call for a pass? : YEA
37A “I’ve done better” : NOT MY FINEST WORK
40A Hooter : OWL
41A Resonates beautifully : SINGS
42A What might lead to a pile of dirty laundry : CHUTE
43A ___ Ewbank, Hall-of-Fame football coach : WEEB
45A I : EGO
46A Margaret featured in “Outstanding: A Comedy Revolution” : CHO
47A Punch : BRIO
48A State-sponsored “wealth redistribution” scheme : LOTTO
50A Support of a sort : ARCH
54A “I’m not sure what to make of that” : IT’S ODD
56A Helen with the podcast “Go Fact Yourself” : HONG
58A Natural resource seen in arboretums? : ORE
59A Blushing matter : ROUGE
60A Creature whose appendages allow it to camouflage in masses of kelp : SEA DRAGON
62A N.B.A. analyst Burke : DORIS
63A “That’s what they say, anyway” : OR SO I HEAR
64A Smooth and shiny : SLEEK
65A Celebratory opening : LET’S PARTY
Down
1D Destination for a day trip from Sorrento : CAPRI
2D Got to : RILED
3D Break the bank, say? : ERODE
4D What one might put on to impress others : ACT
5D Plans, with “out” : MAPS …
6D Website with a “Submit a Rumor” tab : SNOPES
7D Bulb that becomes translucent when heated : ONION
8D “That’s a subject you should absolutely avoid” : DON’T EVEN GO THERE
9D Fire ___ : ANT
10D Big name in lights : STAR
11D Like Belmont’s Big Sandy, among Triple Crown racetracks : WIDEST
12D “Nice try, wise guy” : I’M ON TO YOU
13D Jokey warning before diving into a niche topic : NERD ALERT
14D One of a noted quintet : GREAT LAKE
21D Small storage units : BYTES
23D Stories of college students? : DORM
25D Things that lions and zebras have in common : MANES
28D See 31-Across : … KEYS
31D Fair weather followers : SNOWBIRDS
32D Saw getting turned on, say : POWER TOOL
33D Chillaxing, more formally : AT LEISURE
34D Man’s name whose first four letters spell a word describing its last letter : RINGO
35D Score with some acid : ETCH
38D Arena : FIELD
39D “Get outta here!” : WHOA!
44D Get down : BOOGIE
46D Some vacation rentals : CONDOS
49D Moment of high spirits? : TOAST
51D “Got it” : ROGER
52D Rijeka native : CROAT
53D ___ Louis Gates Jr., host of PBS’s “Finding Your Roots” : HENRY
55D Anchor position : DESK
57D Shakehand or penhold, in table tennis : GRIP
60D ___ de Mayo (symbol on the flags of Argentina and Uruguay) : SOL
61D Sound made when something snaps into place? : AHA
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