This web browser is not supported. Use Chrome, Edge, Safari, or Firefox for best results.

New York Times, Friday, May 24, 2013

Author:
Joe Krozel
Editor:
Will Shortz
Blog:
35-Down : Cargo on the Spanish Main
TotalDebutLatestCollabs
877/7/20066/14/201815
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
4147242621
CircleScrabDebutFresh
51.4849785%
Joe Krozel

This puzzle:

Rows: 15, Columns: 15 Words: 72, Blocks: 29 Missing: {JQW} Spans: 12 Grid has supersymmetry. This is puzzle # 64 for Mr. Krozel. Friday freshness: 3%
Jim Horne notes:

The twelve 15-letter answers (six Across and six Down) and the 44 three-letter ones both tie the record set by David Levinson Wilk back in 2009. In fact, the shapes of the two grids are identical.

Interestingly, there are two other NYT grids with the same 29 blocks, 72 words, 68 open squares, and an average word length of 5.44, and they're both by Paula Gamache. Her beautiful grids in 2010 and 2011 only have eight 15s but they're also evenly split four Across and four Down.

All four of these grids have the rare property of supersymmetry, that is, they are symmetric about horizontal, vertical, and diagonal axes

1
A
2
S
3
B
4
I
5
G
6
H
7
S
8
T
9
T
10
O
11
P
12
U
13
P
14
S
T
O
R
E
15
O
O
H
16
H
Y
E
N
A
17
H
A
S
A
N
18
I
N
T
E
19
R
E
S
T
I
N
20
I
R
T
21
E
L
K
22
S
O
S
23
R
O
D
24
P
R
O
25
C
R
A
S
26
T
I
N
A
27
T
I
N
G
28
N
E
A
29
O
Z
S
30
H
E
F
31
G
32
A
S
O
L
33
I
N
E
S
34
T
A
T
I
35
O
36
N
37
M
A
T
38
E
K
E
39
T
A
R
40
E
R
A
41
C
A
R
42
E
L
E
S
43
S
A
B
A
44
N
D
O
N
45
A
T
E
46
H
I
T
47
D
E
F
48
R
49
A
N
A
C
50
L
O
S
E
51
S
E
C
O
52
N
53
D
54
E
N
G
55
T
O
R
56
M
A
S
57
R
O
O
58
T
O
L
59
E
R
A
N
60
C
E
L
E
61
V
E
L
S
62
A
L
E
X
I
63
A
R
N
64
R
O
S
I
E
65
P
E
R
E
C
66
T
O
T
67
T
A
T
E
R
© 2013, The New York Times5/24/13 ( No. 23,208 )
Across
1
Comparable in extent : ASBIG
6
Old White House inits. : HST
9
Convertible setting : TOPUP
14
Holdings : STORE
15
"Look at that!" : OOH
16
Laughing ___ : HYENA
17
Is curious about : HASANINTERESTIN
20
N.Y.C. line : IRT
21
Some bulls : ELK
22
Stranded message? : SOS
23
Place to hang something : ROD
24
Off-putting? : PROCRASTINATING
28
Museum funding org. : NEA
29
Scale markings: Abbr. : OZS
30
Pajama-clad exec : HEF
31
It may help you get from E to F : GASOLINESTATION
37
Word with place or prayer : MAT
38
Stretch (out) : EKE
39
Besmirch : TAR
40
Long time : ERA
41
Bad quality for dangerous work : CARELESSABANDON
45
Put away : ATE
46
Google finding : HIT
47
Cool : DEF
48
Barely lost : RANACLOSESECOND
54
H.S. subj. : ENG
55
Rocky mount : TOR
56
___ o menos (basically, in Spanish) : MAS
57
Pooh pal : ROO
58
Drug study data : TOLERANCELEVELS
62
'90s soccer great Lalas : ALEXI
63
Prince Valiant's son : ARN
64
Onetime big name in daytime talk : ROSIE
65
Georges who wrote "Life: A User's Manual" : PEREC
66
See 67-Across : TOT
67
With 66-Across, little source of carbs : TATER
Down
1
"___ of fools sailing on" (Wang Chung lyric) : ASHIP
2
1998's ___ Report : STARR
3
Notorious 1960s figure : BOSTONSTRANGLER
4
Pension supplement, for short : IRA
5
Company of which Thomas Edison was once a director : GENERALELECTRIC
6
Greets with a beep : HONKSONESHORNAT
7
One perhaps having one too many : SOT
8
Doctoral candidate's starting point : THESISSTATEMENT
9
Large portion of Africa : THESAHARADESERT
10
Cries of despair : OYS
11
Source of hardwood? : PETRIFIEDFOREST
12
18-Down, for one : UNION
13
Consumer products firm since 1837, informally : PANDG
18
Dockworker's grp. : ILA
19
Infomercial pioneer Popeil : RON
25
Fig. at the top of an organizational chart : CEO
26
Lao-___ : TZE
27
Asian holiday : TET
31
Big maker of S.U.V.'s : GMC
32
Moody's rating : AAA
33
Presidential nickname : IKE
34
It may be clicked on a computer : TAB
35
Cargo on the Spanish Main : ORO
36
Grandmother, to Brits : NAN
42
Fraternity letter : ETA
43
Start of a cheer : SIS
44
Japanese computer giant : NEC
48
Draw on again : RETAP
49
Tropical lizard : ANOLE
50
Mauna ___ : LOA
51
Mineo of movies : SAL
52
"I'm serious!" : NOLIE
53
Nurse, at times : DOSER
59
Computer file suffix : EXE
60
___-Magnon : CRO
61
Intl. broadcaster : VOA

Answer summary:
5 unique to this puzzle, 2 debuted here and reused later, 2 unique to Modern Era but used previously.

Found bugs or have suggestions? Please let us know.

Like this puzzle? Please share this page on social media to help spread the word about XWord Info. Thanks!

XWord Info Home
XWord Info © 2007-2024, Jim Horne
78 ms