Constructed by: James Mattina
Edited by: Will Shortz
Not your puzzle? Try today’s …
… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Reveal Answer: Cross-Pollinated
Themed answers are flowering plants that come in pairs, intersecting in the grid. The letters at those intersections spell out “BEES”, the primary agents of cross-pollination:
- 38A Hybridized, botanically … or like four pairs of answers in this puzzle (and the circled letters they intersect on)? : CROSS-POLLINATED
- 17A Prairie bloom for which a creamery is named : BLUEBELL
- 4D Blossom in a lei : HIBISCUS
- 22A Late spring or early summer bloom : PEONY
- 10D Cousin of edelweiss : ASTER
- 61A Bloom whose toxic nectar is one source of “mad honey” : AZALEA
- 43D Flower found at the end of a rainbow? : VIOLET
- 62A Flower found along a metaphorical path of ease : PRIMROSE
- 48D “Link” in a botanical chain : DAISY
Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers
Want to discuss the puzzle? Then …
… leave a comment
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
4A Soccer great Mia : HAMM
Mia Hamm is a retired American soccer player. She played as a forward on the US national team that won the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 1991. Hamm scored 158 international goals, which was more than any other player in the world, male or female, until the record was broken in 2013. Amazingly, Hamm was born with a clubfoot, and so had to wear corrective shoes when she was growing up.
16A Scalper’s transaction : RESALE
Scalping of tickets, selling them above retail price for an excessive profit, originated in the mid-1800s with scalpers making money off theater tickets. There was also quite a bit of money made by people scalping railway tickets. Railroads gave discounts on tickets for longer journeys, so someone trying to get from San Francisco to Chicago might buy a ticket to New York. Once in Chicago the passenger would scalp the remainder of his/her ticket to someone wanting to get to New York, and make his or her invested money back with a bonus. The exact etymology of the term “scalper” seems unclear.
17A Prairie bloom for which a creamery is named : BLUEBELL
Bluebells are very pretty perennial plants that grow from bulbs. The flowers are a violet-blue color and resemble bells, hence the name. They are found growing wild extensively in Britain, and are generally regarded as the UK’s favorite flower.
18A DC good guy : BATMAN
Originally referred to as “Bat-Man” when introduced in comics in 1939, Batman is also referred to as the Caped Crusader, the Dark Knight, the World’s Greatest Detective and, along with sidekick Robin, the Dynamic Duo.
20A Dispensary inits. : CBD
Cannabidiol (CBD) is a chemical extracted from cannabis plants that is used as a herbal drug. It does not contain the chemical tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is responsible for the marijuana “high”.
22A Late spring or early summer bloom : PEONY
The flowering plant called a peony is named for Paean, the mythical physician to the Greek gods. Indiana adopted the peony as its state flower in 1957.
24A Texter’s “I can’t even” : SMH
Shaking my head (SMH)
30A Lunchbox staple, informally : PBJ
Peanut butter and jelly (PB&J or PBJ)
37A Country nearest to the Equator without touching it : PERU
Peru’s name comes from the word “Biru”. Back in the early 1500s, Biru was a ruler living near the Bay of San Miguel in Panama. The territory over which Biru ruled was the furthest land south in the Americas known to Europeans at that time. The Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro was the first European to move south of Biru’s empire and the land that he found was designated “Peru”, a derivative of “Biru”.
38A Hybridized, botanically … or like four pairs of answers in this puzzle (and the circled letters they intersect on)? : CROSS-POLLINATED
There are over 16,000 species of bees, with the best-known probably being the western honey bee, the most common of the honey bees worldwide. Bees feed on nectar and pollen, and in so doing play a crucial role in the pollination of many plants. That’s one of the main reasons there is great concern about diminishing populations of wild bees.
41A “Great Scott!” : HOLY TOLEDO!
The origin of the term “Holy Toledo!” is much debated. My favorite story is that it comes from the days of Vaudeville. Back then, the week before Easter (Holy Week) was the worst week at the box office. Old Vaudeville entertainers used to quip that any week in Toledo was Holy Week, that ticket sales were always bad there. They referred to the city as “Holy Toledo”.
No one seems to know for sure who the “Scott” is in the exclamation “great Scott!”. One theory is that the reference is to the commander-in-chief of the US Army during the Civil War, General Winfield Scott. Scott weighed in at 300 pounds later in his life, and was so obese that he could not ride a horse.
42A Bird adapted for silent flight : OWL
Much of an owl’s diet consists of small mammals. As a result, humans have used owls for centuries to control rodent populations, usually by placing a nest box for owls on a property. Despite the fact that owls and humans live together in relative harmony, owls have been known to attack humans from time to time. Celebrated English bird photographer Eric Hosking lost an eye when attacked by a tawny owl that he was trying to photograph. Hosking wrote a 1970 autobiography with the wry title “An Eye for a Bird”.
43A Charging option : VISA
VISA doesn’t actually issue any credit or debit cards. The company just sells the electronic systems and infrastructure to banks which then put the VISA logo on their own cards. Seeing the logo, both customer and merchant know to use the VISA system when making a transaction.
44A Deciding periods, in brief : OTS
Overtime (OT)
50A Movement started by Tarana Burke in 2006 : ME TOO
The use of the #MeToo hashtag was encouraged initially by actress Alyssa Milano in 2017 to draw attention to sexual assault and sexual harassment. Milano was acting in response to the growing number of allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein. The use of the phrase “Me Too” in the context of sexual misconduct dates back to 2006. Social activist Tarana Burke started to use the phrase on the Myspace social network after a 13-year-old girl told her that she had been sexually assaulted. Apparently, Burke had no response at the time the girl confided in her, but later wished she had responded, “Me too”.
55A Philosopher William of ___ : OCCAM
Ockham’s (also “Occam’s”) razor is a principle in philosophy and science that basically states that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one. This explanation is a corollary to the more exact statement of the principle, that one shouldn’t needlessly use assumptions in explaining something. The principle is referred to as “lex parsimoniae” in Latin, or “the law of parsimony”. Parsimony is being thrifty with money or resources. The principle was developed by 14th-century logician and Franciscan Friar William of Ockham (or “Occam” in Latin). The principle is dubbed a “razor” as it is used as a philosophical tool used to cut out absurd and spurious reasoning in an argument.
59A ___ method (type of teaching) : SOCRATIC
In ancient Greece, Socrates was a respected thinker of his day. One of Socrates’ most clever students was Plato, who spent much of life espousing the work and thinking of his mentor and teacher. In later life, Plato himself had a student who built on the work of both Socrates and Plato. That second-generation student was Aristotle. Socrates fell out of favor with the political leaders in Athens who put him on trial on trumped-up charges. He was found guilty of corrupting the youth of the city-state and of not believing in the gods of the state. The sentence levied was death by drinking hemlock.
61A Bloom whose toxic nectar is one source of “mad honey” : AZALEA
Azaleas are very toxic to most animals. If you go to Korea, you might come across “Tug Yonju”, which is azalea wine made from the plant’s blossoms. Azaleas are usually grown as shrubs, but are also seen as small trees, and often indoors. The name “azalea” comes from the Greek “azaleos” meaning “dry”, reflecting the plant’s ability to thrive in sandy soil.
62A Flower found along a metaphorical path of ease : PRIMROSE
The “primrose” name comes from an older term meaning “first rose”, reflecting the fact that the primrose is one of the first plants to flower in spring in Europe. That said, the primrose is not very closely related to true roses.
According to the idiom, one might be “led down the primrose path”, meaning that one can be led astray or deceived. It’s likely that the phrase “primrose path” was coined by William Shakespeare, in “Hamlet”. Ophelia says:
Do not, as some ungracious pastors do,
Show me the steep and thorny way to heaven,
Whiles, like a puff’d and reckless libertine,
Himself the primrose path of dalliance treadsAnd recks not his own rede.
63A A bad review might merit a rotten one : TOMATO
Rotten Tomatoes is a website that mainly provides reviews and ratings of movies, although it now covers TV shows as well. The site was launched in 1998 and takes its name from the practice of audience members throwing rotten tomatoes at an unappreciated performer on stage.
65A Manhattan liquor : RYE
The cocktail called a manhattan is made from whiskey, sweet vermouth and Angostura bitters. I favor my own version of a brandy manhattan, using brandy, sweet vermouth and orange bitters.
Down
1D First sign of fall : LIBRA
Libra is the seventh sign of the zodiac, and is named for the scales held by the goddess of justice. It is the only sign of the zodiac that isn’t named for a living creature.
3D One of 12 in a Pulitzer-winning piece by composer/pianist William Bolcom : ETUDE
An étude is a short instrumental composition that is usually quite hard to play and is intended to help the performer master a particular technique. “Étude” is the French word for “study”. Études are commonly performed on the piano.
6D Bed cover : MULCH
Mulch is a layer of material applied by gardeners over the top of soil. The intent can be to retain moisture, to add nutrients, to reduce weed growth, or just to improve the look of the garden.
7D Scary Spice, by another nickname : MEL B
“Mel B” is the stage name of Melanie Brown, who came to fame as a member of the Spice Girls musical group. She took the name Mel B to distinguish herself from fellow band member Melanie Chisholm (Melanie C). Mel B was also known as “Scary Spice”, a nickname given to her by the media. American viewers saw Mel B on the TV show “America’s Got Talent” from 2013 through 2019, on which show she served as a judge.
8D Texter’s “just a sec” : BRB
Be right back (brb)
10D Cousin of edelweiss : ASTER
Apparently, most aster species and cultivars bloom relatively late in the year, usually in the fall. The name “aster” comes into English via Latin from the Greek word “astéri” meaning “star”, a reference to the arrangement of the petals of the flower.
11D Pattern based on nature, for short : CAMO
Our word “camouflage” (often abbreviated to “camo”) evolved directly from a Parisian slang term “camoufler” meaning “to disguise”. The term was first used in WWI, although the British navy at that time preferred the expression “dazzle-painting” as it applied to the pattern painted on the hulls of ships.
25D Home of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music : MEMPHIS
Memphis is the largest city on the Mississippi River, and the largest city in the state of Tennessee. Memphis is also relatively young, having been founded in 1819 as a planned city. The founders were John Overton, James Winchester and future US president Andrew Jackson. The American Memphis is named for the Egyptian Memphis, the ancient capital of Egypt located on the River Nile.
27D Alice, in Wonderland : VISITOR
The title character in Lewis Carroll’s 1865 novel “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” is based on a child named Alice Liddell. Lewis Carroll (real name “Charles Lutwidge Dodgson”) met the Liddell family while he was photographing Christ Church Cathedral in Oxford, after which he befriended the Liddells. Carroll told the three Liddell sisters (including Alice) a story about a little girl named Alice and her adventures, in order to entertain the children while on a boating trip on the River Isis in Oxford. He elaborated on the story for the girls on a subsequent boat trip, and agreed to write down the tale as the children loved it so much. Carroll’s writings became a full-fledged manuscript, including the author’s own illustrations. It was first published in 1865, three years after that boat trip.
28D Part of M.I.T.: Abbr. : INST
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
30D Politician Buttigieg : PETE
Politician Pete Buttigieg is a former mayor of South Bend, Indiana and an unsuccessful candidate for US president in 2020 Democratic Party primaries. He is a Harvard graduate and also graduated from Oxford, which he attended on a Rhodes Scholarship. He served as an intelligence officer in the US Navy Reserve for eight years, and was deployed to Afghanistan for seven months in 2014. He was appointed as Secretary of Transportation in the Biden administration in 2021, making him the first openly gay cabinet secretary in the history of the US.
32D Sport with throws : JUDO
Judo is a martial art from Japan that developed relatively recently, in 1882. The name “judo” translates as “gentle way”. Practitioners of judo proceed through a series of proficiency grades known as the kyu-dan system. At each progression, a different colored belt is awarded.
33D Siete + uno : OCHO
In Spanish, “ocho” (eight) is “uno más siete” (one plus seven).
43D Flower found at the end of a rainbow? : VIOLET
The common violet is a flowering plant that is native to Europe and Asia. It is a hardy perennial that is often found growing in the wild near the edges of forests and in clearing. The same species is also referred to as the wood violet, sweet violet and garden violet.The color violet is named for the plant, and not the other way round.
“Roy G. Biv” can be used as a mnemonic for the colors in a rainbow:
- Red
- Orange
- Yellow
- Green
- Blue
- Indigo
- Violet
45D Cold, hard cash : MOOLA
Lettuce, cabbage, kale, dough, bread, scratch, cheddar, simoleons, clams and moola(h) are all slang terms for money.
46D Ancient marketplace : AGORA
In early Greece, an agora was a place of assembly. The assemblies held there were often quite formal, perhaps for the reading of a proclamation. Later in Greek history, things became less formal as the agora evolved into a marketplace. Our contemporary word “agoraphobia” comes from these agorae, in the sense that an agoraphobe has a fear of open spaces, a fear of “public meeting places”.
48D “Link” in a botanical chain : DAISY
The flowers of the daisy plant close tightly at sunset and then open up again in the morning. It is this behavior that led to the name “daisy”, from the Old English for “day’s eye”. So, the daisy could be called a “well-rested” plant. And, someone who is well-rested attacks the day “fresh as a daisy”. Interesting, huh?
49D Play the host : EMCEE
The term “emcee” comes from “MC”, an initialism used for a Master or Mistress of Ceremonies.
51D Automaker Ferrari : ENZO
Enzo Ferrari was an Italian race car driver, and founder of the Ferrari car manufacturing company. Ferrari died in 1988, and in 2003 the company named the Enzo model after its founder.
56D Viper, e.g. : CAR
The Dodge Viper is an American sports car with a V10 engine. The Viper was introduced in 1991, and finally discontinued in 2017.
58D Language of Vientiane : LAO
Lao, the language of Laos, does not use spaces between words (or periods!), although this is apparently changing. Spaces are used between sentences and clauses.
Vientiane is the capital city of Laos, and is situated on the Mekong River. The city was originally called the “city of sandalwood” by Buddhist monks, naming it after the valued trees that grew in the area. The French took the Pali words for “city of sandalwood” and rewrote it as the French-sounding “Vientiane”.
Read on, or …
… return to top of page
Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A Don’t believe it : LIE
4A Soccer great Mia : HAMM
8A Prepared (for) : BRACED
14A Feature of a spy film : INTRIGUE
16A Scalper’s transaction : RESALE
17A Prairie bloom for which a creamery is named : BLUEBELL
18A DC good guy : BATMAN
19A They’re found in a circle : RADII
20A Dispensary inits. : CBD
22A Late spring or early summer bloom : PEONY
23A Leave speechless : AWE
24A Texter’s “I can’t even” : SMH
26A In perpetuity : EVER
28A Winter coat? : ICE
29A Narrow margin of victory : HAIR
30A Lunchbox staple, informally : PBJ
33A All primes except 2 : ODD NUMBERS
37A Country nearest to the Equator without touching it : PERU
38A Hybridized, botanically … or like four pairs of answers in this puzzle (and the circled letters they intersect on)? : CROSS-POLLINATED
40A “Stop right there!” : HALT!
41A “Great Scott!” : HOLY TOLEDO!
42A Bird adapted for silent flight : OWL
43A Charging option : VISA
44A Deciding periods, in brief : OTS
45A Airdrops? : MIST
46A [I’m a good boy!] : ARF!
47A Summer cooler : ADE
50A Movement started by Tarana Burke in 2006 : ME TOO
53A Dip : SAG
55A Philosopher William of ___ : OCCAM
57A Become part of a club : ENROLL
59A ___ method (type of teaching) : SOCRATIC
61A Bloom whose toxic nectar is one source of “mad honey” : AZALEA
62A Flower found along a metaphorical path of ease : PRIMROSE
63A A bad review might merit a rotten one : TOMATO
64A Like some advice : SAGE
65A Manhattan liquor : RYE
Down
1D First sign of fall : LIBRA
2D Family tree addition : IN-LAW
3D One of 12 in a Pulitzer-winning piece by composer/pianist William Bolcom : ETUDE
4D Blossom in a lei : HIBISCUS
5D Period in history : AGE
6D Bed cover : MULCH
7D Scary Spice, by another nickname : MEL B
8D Texter’s “just a sec” : BRB
9D Harvesting machine : REAPER
10D Cousin of edelweiss : ASTER
11D Pattern based on nature, for short : CAMO
12D Stylish flair : ELAN
13D Turn down : DENY
15D King, in Portuguese : REI
21D First word from a wedding officiant : DEARLY
25D Home of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music : MEMPHIS
27D Alice, in Wonderland : VISITOR
28D Part of M.I.T.: Abbr. : INST
29D Very, slangily : HELLA
30D Politician Buttigieg : PETE
31D Partner of born : BRED
32D Sport with throws : JUDO
33D Siete + uno : OCHO
34D Cry in a gunfight : DRAW!
35D Cutie pie : DOLL
36D Gives a lift : BOOSTS
37D Besties : PALS
39D “I’ll pass” : NOT FOR ME
43D Flower found at the end of a rainbow? : VIOLET
45D Cold, hard cash : MOOLA
46D Ancient marketplace : AGORA
47D Company man? : ACTOR
48D “Link” in a botanical chain : DAISY
49D Play the host : EMCEE
50D Nitty-gritty : MEAT
51D Automaker Ferrari : ENZO
52D Airport transport : TRAM
54D Some vipers : ASPS
56D Viper, e.g. : CAR
58D Language of Vientiane : LAO
60D Smoke : CIG
Leave a comment (below), or …
… return to top of page
