The name's William Ernest Butler, but please call me Bill. I grew up in Ireland, but now live out here in the San Francisco Bay Area. I'm retired now, from technology businesses that took our family all over the world. I answer all emails, so please feel free to email me at bill@paxient.comIf you are working on the New York Times crossword in any other publication, you are working on the syndicated puzzle. Here is a link to my answers to today's SYNDICATED New York Times crossword. To find any solution other than today's, enter the crossword number (e.g. 1225, 0107) in the "Search the Blog" box above.
This is my solution to the crossword published in the New York Times today ...
Completion Time: Hours!
Theme: CUTS CORNERS ... the four corners should have the word "nothing", to make sense of the answers around the edge of the grid e.g. (nothing) PERSONAL, (nothing) FANCY etc.
Answers I missed: 2 ... TRIS (TRES) CORDILLO (CORDELLO)
TODAY'S GOOGLIES (all links go to Amazon.com) ...
Across
14 D.C. CAB: The movie
16 AGAMEMNON: Agamemnon was played by Scottish actor Brian Cox
30 'ERE: "We shun it 'ere it comes" is the name, and first line of a poem by Emily Dickinson
41 EMU: A brevipennate bird is one which is "short winged", and as such cannot fly, like an emu.
44 ZED: A clever clue! "Zed" (British for "zee") is a character in the word "Zorro", so it has nothing to so with the TV show "Zorro
45 IS A: "Life is a Highway
49 SLOVENS: A slovenly person doesn't care much about his/her appearance.
51 STL: Lambert Airport in St. Louis is the largest international airport in Missouri.
52 TRIS: Tris Speaker
54 LOO: Another clever clue ... one might be charged the rate to "go" in a loo the UK.
55 KOOL: Kool brand cigarettes are made by R. J. Reynolds
62 OLLAS: An olla
63 ALEXANDER: Jason Alexander
Down
8 LENAPE: The Lenape
10 OCHS: Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. is the publisher of the New York Times (as was his father, and grandfather).
12 TAMARIN: Tamarins
15 BUT NET: "Nothing but net" is a basketball term (and new to me ... not a sports fan!).
20 SORENSEN: Ted Sorensen
26 NEREIDS: The Nereids are the fifty sea nymphs of Greek mythology
32 OUR: Sinclair Lewis
35 RRS: Railroads have railroad crossings.
36 CAUDILLO: Caudillo is general term (pun intended!) used to describe a military leader at the head of an authoritarian government.
45 ISOLDE: "Tristan und Isolde
50 VOILE: Aptly enough, voile is the French word for "veil".
59 MER: The sea (la mer) is bleu (bleu) ... French.
61 JAG: XK



4 comments:
I appreciate your honesty! "Hours"
makes me feel much better. Took me two plus the nothing corners to make sense of what was going on. Thanks!
Hi there, "annonymous" friend.
Thanks for stopping by. This was indeed a tough puzzle!
But the tough ones are almost always the most enjoyable :)
I didn't take too long doing it. But I didn't do it correctly! I've found in life if something seems easy, I'm probably doing it wrong.
Thanks for setting me straight!
Hi there "couch",
A true life lesson there ... but surely it can't always be harder than it looks!
Hope you enjoyed the puzzling experience anyway :)
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