Tenth, in Latin / SUN 5-31-26 / Small flycatchers named for their call, not their size / Sacsayhuamán fortress builders / Jasmine's tiger companion in "Aladdin" / Longtime jazz bandleader with an Egyptian-inspired name / "Drat!," in Dortmund / Absolutely whomps, in sports lingo / Negative logic gate in electrical engineering / Where Cary Grant orders a Gibson in a classic scene from "North by Northwest"

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Constructor: Jeffrey Martinovic and Evan Park

Relative difficulty: as easy as it gets


THEME: "Target Practice" — a WILLIAM TELL-themed puzzle with shaded squares that form a BOW and ARROW and a single "APPLE" square (which the ARROW is aimed at), plus a lot of related trivia and puns:

Theme answers:
  • SWITZERLAND (22A: Home of the legendary folk hero at 116-Across)
  • MARKSMANSHIP (32A: Expertise demonstrated by 116-Across in a fabled feat of precision)
  • ARCHERY (41A: Athletic skill mastered by 116-Across)
  • ROSSINI (91A: Composer of an overture dedicated to 116-Across)
  • SHOOTING STAR (103A: Streaker in the sky ... or a punny description of 116-Across)
  • FRUITFUL (38D: Productive ... or a punny description of the feat performed by 116-Across?)
  • TAKE A BOW (56D: What 116-Across did before and after this puzzle's feat?)
  • WILLIAM TELL (116A: Legendary figure who's the subject of this puzzle)
BOW and ARROW and APPLE answers:
  • 42D: Many a liquor license applicant (CLUB OWNER)
  • 66A: Chirruping bird (SPARROW)
  • 69A: City sobriquet that might describe the target for 116-Across / 59D: Popular beverage brand (THE BIG APPLE / SNAPPLE)
Word of the Day: PEWEES (54D: Small flycatchers named for their call, not their size) —

The pewees are a genus, Contopus, of small to medium-sized insect-eating birds in the tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae.

These birds are known as pewees, from the call of one of the more common members of this vocal group. They are generally charcoal-grey birds with wing bars that live in wooded areas.

• • •

Grim. It's so disappointing to see the Sunday puzzle reduced to this complete non-challenge, this child's placemat of a trivia / pun puzzle. I stopped early to screenshot the moment when I could feel the bottom fall out of this thing:


From the clue on SWITZERLAND, I knew the topic immediately, and I could see that all I was gonna get, or most of what I was gonna get, was just random WILLIAM TELL trivia—assorted related answers arranged symmetrically, none of them particularly interesting or clever. I guess they eventually give you a couple of puns in there, but otherwise it's just a predictable parade of answers, many of whose clues I never even had to look at: MARKSMANSHIP, ROSSINIWILLIAM TELL—I didn't need the clues for any of these because the rest of the puzzle was so damned easy they basically filled themselves in. The whole concept here was transparent, and even the visual gag (which is probably the best thing about the theme) offered no real surprise or challenge. ARROW / BOW / APPLE / Shrug. The APPLE was probably the "hardest" part, but it wasn't hard. THE BIG ___ made it obvious. But that answer is oddly inapt (what the hell does NYC have to do with any of this? And was the apple in the WILLIAM TELL fable particularly big? I don't remember that). I don't think the puzzle is poorly constructed from a technical standpoint, just remedial and without any real pleasure (unless the punny stuff brings you pleasure, in which case, lucky you). 


The clue editing is also really uneven today. It's a small detail, but the puzzle doesn't seem to know when to use "?"s. If you tell us the answer is punny, then there is no need to put the "?" on the clue, which makes the FRUITFUL clue ... just ... not right (38D: Productive ... or a punny description of the feat performed by 116-Across?). If you don't believe me, just look at the clue for SHOOTING STAR (103A: Streaker in the sky ... or a punny description of 116-Across). See: no "?" Because it's not necessary. Because you've already (painfully, unnecessarily) told us that the answer is a pun. Now look at the clue for TAKE A BOW (56D: What 116-Across did before and after this puzzle's feat?). That clue demonstrates the proper use of a "?" (the "?" indicates the punniness). So the clue writing was sloppy. And not terribly imaginative (the clues use the word "legendary" twice, and there's a similar phrasing to a lot of the clues). And we get BOW twice? (as a visual element, inside of CLUBOWNER, and as a word in TAKE A BOW). Things are just ragged around the edges. I can see how a certain segment of solvers might find this puzzle breezy and delightful, but difficulty-wise and concept-wise, it just didn't feel up to NYTXW Sunday standards (or what I wish those standards were). 


There are no tough parts to this puzzle. I had trouble nowhere. I wrote in CERA for CENA, which I do all the time, despite the fact that Michael CERA and John CENA look nothing alike (19A: Wrestler/actor John). I did have trouble with SNAPPLE ... for a few seconds. Until I checked the cross and realized I was dealing with a rebus square ("APPLE"). That was my favorite moment of the puzzle—and there's a connection between the (slight) difficulty and the pleasure. The appearance of the apple was a genuine (if mild) surprise. Nothing else about the puzzle was surprising. The handling of the ARROW/BOX squares was clever, but you can see that coming a mile away if you know you're dealing with WILLIAM TELL. The rebusing of the APPLE, however, was unexpected. Hurray for the unexpected. I needed a bunch of crosses to get the OVER part of SENT OVER (77D: Forwarded) (SENT ON is the only phrase that made sense to me), but I wouldn't call that answer "hard," exactly. Just awkward. Everything else in this grid, I blew through like it was Monday. The only part I truly enjoyed was that clue on BAR CAR (35D: Where Cary Grant orders a Gibson in a classic scene from "North by Northwest"). Peak Hitchcock, peak Cary Grant (that suit! and sunglasses!), peak train scene, peak hot people meet-cute. Cinematic nirvana. I have an 8x10 of Cary Grant hanging on the wall right behind me (along with similar promotional photos of Janet Leigh, Kirk Douglas, and W.C. Fields—I picked them all up at a second-hand store, preframed, somewhat beat up, but perfect in my eyes). Here's the North by Northwest scene in question. Never gets old.

["Think how lucky I am to have been seated here." "Luck had nothing to do with it."]

Bullets:
  • 29A: Hero of Arabian tales (ALI BABA) — I watched Salesman (1969) yesterday for the first time. It's a classic documentary about bible salesmen. It was a hard watch for me—the relentlessness and occasional desperation of the salesmen up against the credulousness and economic desperation of the people they're selling to. Starts feeling like con men trying to rope in the suckers, only it's all done under the auspices of the Church, so ... much of the time the interactions in people's homes are so awkward and strained that I could barely look at the screen. It's hard to believe these guys and their racket ever existed. They are an amazing set of characters, though, and the movie is fascinating as a character study—lots of footage of the salesmen sitting around motel rooms smoking (so much smoking!) going over the successes and failures of the day. Speaking of failures ... the reason I'm telling you all this here is that there's a scene, maybe my favorite scene in the movie, where the main salesman ("The Badger"!) is driving around Opa-Locka, FL, trying to find an address and the street he wants is a plain old numbered street but every street he sees has some name out of Arabian Nights (including ALI BABA). And the city hall is shaped like something out of Arabian Nights. And basically he drives in circles going crazy trying to find his way out of the Opa-Locka Arabian Nightsmare, asking directions and literally getting nowhere. It felt ... like a metaphor. Ooh, looks like Documentary Now! did a parody of Salesman called Globesman, so I'm gonna have to track that down today.


  • 74A: Appointments that may lead to better contacts (EYE EXAMS) — having just watched Salesman, I figured the "contacts" were business contacts, like sales leads, but ... no. Contact lenses! Good misdirection, enjoyable clue.
  • 84A: $5 bill, slangily (ABE) — this remains a non-thing, despite decades of crossword insistence. No one calls a five this except me, ironically.
  • 12D: Absolutely whomps, in sports lingo (CREAMS) — Is the "sports lingo." It feels like playground lingo. I don't think I've heard this particular expression for "soundly defeats" since the '80s. I love "whomps," though. More WHOMPS in the puzzle, please.
  • 23D: Jasmine's tiger companion in "Aladdin" (RAJAH) — didn't know this, but it basically filled itself in. Yesterday RANEE, today RAJAH—these words for Indian royals were some of the first "crosswordese" I ever learned. You see them a lot less these days (also, in crosswords, they're somewhat more frequently spelled RANI and RAJA).
  • 33D: Longtime jazz bandleader with an Egyptian-inspired name (SUN RA) — have you ever seen Space is the Place (1974). You should see Space is the Place.
  • 51D: Tenth, in Latin (DECIMUS) — what are we doing here? Come on. You're debuting this in 2026? smh.
  • 97D: Australian city named for a scientist (DARWIN) — that scientist: Pete DARWIN, inventor of the Jell-O mold. Not Jell-O itself. That was Pearle Bixby Wait. What a great name. A great man's name. Not many guys named Pearl(e) any more.* 
  • 117D: Bucket list item? (MOP) — I get that MOPs go in buckets, but how exactly does "list" work here? I mean, on a literal level. I know the term "bucket list," but if the clue is going to work in some kind of punny way for MOP, then ... "list" has to be relevant somehow. I don't see it. Is there some imagined list of "Things That Go In Buckets" and MOP is simply on that list? Who keeps this list? What a weird idea for a list. Or is the idea that the MOP "lists" to the side when you try to stand it up in the bucket? I'm sincerely curious about the rationale.
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. a belated R.I.P. to Manny Nosowsky, one of the all-time great NYTXW constructors, who died earlier this week (obit here). He made 254 puzzles for the Times starting in 1992. I remember his puzzles as being really playful and entertaining. Looking through my write-ups of his puzzles (primarily in the late '00s), I notice I'm using the word "legendary" a lot. He was the real deal, and the puzzlescape is poorer without him.

*of course I was kidding about Pete DARWIN. But not about Pearle Bixby Wait, that dude was real.  

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105 comments:

Conrad 6:24 AM  


Easy-Medium. Had trouble in the East, in the neighborhood of the unexpected rebus square at 59Dx69A.
* * * _ _

Overwrites:
At 1D, my bummer phrase was too SAD before it was IT'S SAD.
it's me before SEe me before SEZ me at 5D.
My 14A help-wanted letters were eeo and then eOe before SOS.
OpinES before ORATES for holds forth at 50D.
For the Latin tenth at 51D, got the DECI part quickly and tried several combinations for the last three squares.
I thought Cbs might air The Situation Room at 65A (CNN).
Wanted cAnS IT, not BAGS IT for the project abandonment at 70D.

Only one WOE, Jasmine's tiger RAJAH at 23D.

Rick Sacra 6:27 AM  

An impressive, all out person-as-theme puzzle! I love the William Tell Overture--Lone Ranger and all that—but couldn’t remember who wrote it! So crosses had to help me with that. 28 minutes, so I think that’s easy-medium on Sunday. I felt like the theme material was great, consistent, symmetrical, enhanced the graphics…. And not too much dreck. These puzzles where there is just a single rebus square can be tough, cuz you’re not expecting it—and while I knew 1/10th in Latin would start with DEC, I had no idea what came after that… so the BIGAPPLE took me a few looks to get. Of course, it’s a little APPLE squished into that box, or sitting on the boy’s head… Thanks, Jeffrey and Evan, for a great Sunday puzzle!!! [I knew I was going to appreciate this more than @OFL did.... but I didn't realize HOW much!]

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

The answer for 35D is just wrong, though the scene is wonderful. Long-distance trains did not have bar cars (many had lounges - such as the one where the conductors are tallying passenger lists as Thornhill hides in the lav).

The two are in the dining car. Roger Thornhill orders brook trout, at the suggestion of Eve Kendall.

As to the rest of the puzzle - skipped over the theme answers until I had enough crosses to figure the theme. So started slowly, but finished in typicall Sunday time.

Matthew B 6:39 AM  

Maybe I'm in a particularly generous mood today but I enjoyed this. Yes, stupidly easy...except for decimus which I liked learning...and since I do it on paper and start from the SE, the theme was done before I really started, I thought it was fun. Punny fun. And the eye exam clue delightful ...maybe just revisiting the William Tell story was the softening agent. But I liked it.

Anonymous 6:40 AM  

There's an old Rockford Files episode where Jim, in trying to figure out how much of a bribe he needs to pay, asks the potential recipient whether he'd take a Lincoln. The guy asks for a Jackson and they settle on a Hamilton. That's the closest I've seen to anyone calling a $5 bill an Abe--but I'm sure that they did, maybe in the 30s or 40s or 50s.

Barry 6:42 AM  

It was great seeing Sun Ra cited in the puzzle and thank you Michael for that video. I thought he would be the Word of the Day. He was a composer and performer of spiritual jazz, and he had a huge cult following. When being interviewed if he was asked where he was from, he responded he was born on Saturn. And you felt he truly believed that. His records are rare and in high demand and often sell for thousands of dollars.

Anonymous 6:48 AM  

The only interesting part of this puzzle, the bow and arrow shooting at the apple, wasn't even correct... in the legend William Tell used a crossbow. Should have been BOLT.

Son Volt 6:52 AM  

A tribute theme to WILLIAM TELL - WTF? I agree with the big guy that this was both fundamentally limp and as easy and straightforward as an early week puzzle. Trivia fest yesterday - trivia fest today.

See the lonely boy, out on the weekend

The theme was dense - so there’s that. The one redeeming aspect was the APPLE rebus - cute and the post solve graphics is neat I guess.

TESLA Girls

S SHAPE - C MINOR fall flat. There’s so many theme related entries that all the other stuff is strained. I did like the SE corner stack of TRUE TO - PARLAY - SWELLS. I was planning to get the surf on this morning but we’ll see - it’s sunny but only 43.

NRBQ

You really need to get a kick out of the story to like this one - I don’t so it was a nonstarter at 22a.

The SPARROW and the Medicine

Sutsy 7:25 AM  

Is BAGSIT a genuine term for abandoning? Sounds so contrived. I would have gone with BROWN_________. ; )

Colin 7:26 AM  

I liked this, but yes, it was very easy, YEESH. The shaded squares to me look like a cross, so I was wondering about a crossbow (tip o' the hat to @Anonymous, 6:48 AM). Took me just a little longer to figure out the APPLE rebus than Rex.

My brother is big into archery, and it's not an easy sport; I gave it a go in Lancaster, PA, a couple of years ago.

Speaking of William Tell, here's a version of the Overture by Walter Carlos on the Moog synthesizer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=si6S8b2TBCM&list=RDsi6S8b2TBCM&start_radio=1

Anonymous 7:28 AM  

Technically, a VIRE.

Liveprof 7:29 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous 7:40 AM  

Shouldn’t 56D be “took a bow”, past tense?

Lewis 7:44 AM  

I pulled up the puzzle and scanned the empty grid. First thing I saw were the gray squares – a lovely representation of a religious cross. My eyes went to the space in the SE where it looked like the revealer went, and I saw that its letter count was just right for JESUS CHRIST.

A most memorable cascade of imagining the possibilities followed.

BTW, did you know that in neither the Times nor any of the other major crossword outlets has that answer ever appeared before? Huh!

Regarding the puzzle itself, it’s one thing to come up with a puzzle idea, and a huge leap to bring it to fruition, and I’m not surprised it took Jeffrey and Evan months to pull it off (according to their notes). They skillfully succeeded, IMO. I loved the surprising rebus.

I also believe that making a bow and arrow out of BOW and ARROW is brilliant.

Congratulations, gentlemen, on your college graduations, and thank you for a fun outing with a memorable start!

Twangster 7:49 AM  

It was embarrassingly late in the game before I realized this was about William Tell and not Robin Hood.

RooMonster 7:51 AM  

Hey All !
Had a much tougher time with this puz than Rex. I did get WILLIAM TELL fairly early in the solve, but discovering the related Themers was still fun. Didn't know he was born in SWITZERLAND, for example. ROSSINI was difficult, as not up on my composers. Had it down to ROS_INI, crossing _OLTI, and put in a T. Unsophistication strikes again!

The APPLE was also a WIE. Thinking about it now, I suppose I could've figured it out, but the SN_ was throwing me, trying to think of a three-letter popular drink brand. Also having incorrect DECIMaS and ANtSeY (knew that was wrong, but end of puz, when oddly, ANGSTiness set in) got me THE CITY (regardless that City started the clue.) Ah, me. Came to the RexBlog to see an APPLE sitting there. Aha, clever. Whooshed over the ole head

All in all, a nice SunPuz. At least according to me. 😁

Hope y'all have a great Sunday!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

SouthsideJohnny 7:59 AM  

Rex’s review today is an absolute bullseye. He summed this one up nicely. I got the theme right off the bat (no harm there), but I definitely didn’t expect the barrage of inane trivia that was to follow. Yes, the non thematic material was pretty Monday/Tuesday easy, and I rarely complain about a few gimmie’s here and there, but this thing was an absolute snoozefest.

Similar to yesterday, I’m overly-fatigued with these trivia quizzes on a daily basis. I miss the good old days. Note: if a future cohort of solvers considers this approach to be the “good old days”, then the NY Times Crossword is, like the rest of the country, in big trouble.

Anonymous 7:59 AM  

The theme and its fill seemed to bombard me in a good way.So what if it was easy. A terrific puzzle. A fun solve.🎈🎈🎊🎊

Anonymous 8:01 AM  

Yes it's a real term. "I started out thinking it would be easy but it turned out to have issue after issue, so I just bagged it".

Roberto 8:25 AM  

After I got the first couple of theme entries in, it was basically fill in the blanks. I almost quit, I figured why bother. But it only took a few more minutes, so I did finish while watching a baseball game

tht 8:27 AM  

I accidentally opened Rex's blog before the crossword and saw "as easy as it gets", and was annoyed that I had seen those words even before getting started, and was thinking: I sure hope I won't radically disagree with that, because if I do, I'll probably feel a little stupid. Luckily for me, I didn't.

I got myself hilariously hung up in the beginning because I SEZ to myself: instead of just plunking down INCAS, I'll check the crosses first, saw the musical puzzle, thought to myself that I'll just compute it from first principles, laboriously traced back from C on the flat side of the circle of fifths (in a groggy state of mind), what's the relative minor of that... and then entered C MINOR for 2 Down instead of 3 Down. Then wondered "what did I do wrong?" I should have been more free-wheeling and intuitive and less computational. Because I would bet my house that Rex did no computing from first principles. :-)

The other thing hanging me up there was Sue before SEZ, and then wondering what that protein could be. I'm not sure how much extra time I added because of all this, but it wasn't looking too pretty.

Then things eased up considerably. I clocked a good (good for me) Sunday time, even though all answers were entered with my left index finger in desultory fashion.

It felt as though there was a lot of short fill. The grid itself looks a little bumpy, like bumper pool. So I was just sort of careening and bouncing around whilst recalling William Tell lore, for which not much was needed.

I don't understand Rex's tsk-tsking about debuting in 2026. When would have been a good time for DECIMUS to debut, if not now? Is the answer supposed to be "never"? I say "come on" back at Rex. DECIMUS is a fine and inferrable -- and yes, that's one way to spell it Mr. Spellcheck, with two r's -- word. I guess I just like inferring. Could be my crossword downfall.

"Child's placemat" is a little harsh. The level seems consonant with a lot of Sundays in recent years. I will agree with Rex about the cluing, and I wonder what the hell it is that the editorial team does all day. The graphics team seems to work a lot harder -- and I wish they wouldn't. I like to look back over the solved puzzle as I compose my thoughts, but I do not like to be distracted by bright red colors and moving arrows. They add not a scintilla of pleasure to the solving experience. That to me is much more childish than the entries themselves.

SANS the graphics, I thought it was more or less OK. I'll chuck in an extra half-star. See you all later.

pabloinnh 8:30 AM  

After much struggling to read my printed version I decided to do this one on line, which was a good idea (more on that in a sec). Rough start--I could have guessed INCAS but did not, I never remember TEMPEH, thekey signature could have been anything with __M_____OR so not much , and ___you had multiple possibilities, so I went elsewhere and various other things led to SWITZERLAND and the dam broke and the rest of it was a Monday-fest. I never noticed any shaded squares so missed the BOW and ARROW cross. Also had SNA and didn't think of SNApple, just put the A in and left it, but as I finished, the red apple appeared on my screen and the ARROW

Andy Freude 8:52 AM  

I sure thought so.

pabloinnh 8:57 AM  

Well there's another oops, anyway, the ARROW shot across into what turned out to be a red APPLE and there was the happy music. Oh joy, raputre.

Very much liked the TAKEABOW answer. Fun Sunday.

egsforbreakfast 9:04 AM  

Thought I saw a dupe where one PARLAY down and to the right of the one at 80D.

For a nanosecond I thought 88A [Cartesian conclusion] was IAn. It seemed so bad that it was kinda good that way.

SHOOTINGSTAR a community's reputation.

I get really thirsty when I play games. I especially parch easy at PARCHEESI.

Nice TELL-all bio of the Swiss -who-can't-miss as they call him in the NBA (National Bow and Arrow league). Thanks, Jeffrey Martinovic and Evan Park.

Christopher XLI 9:10 AM  

Rex is only in favor of debut words if they’re French

jb129 9:16 AM  

Gotta agree - EASY. I never solve a Sunday this quickly. A nice change for me, I guess. I put in NELLY & said "No, couldn't be". But it was. That set the tone for the entire puzzle. Not complaining - just saying. JERK for JOCK & I don't think I would ever say ITS SAD for What a Bummer.
Thanks for the fast Sunday
Jeffrey & Evan :)

tht 9:19 AM  

I assume that for you, the good old days were not the Eugene T. Maleska days. [Talk about trivia!] But then when were they? I really can't tell the difference in trivial levels since Shortz took over, although what I'm supposed to know about rap seems to have increased. Just different trivia that's probably going to be more of a sweet spot for younger generations.

Bob Mills 9:23 AM  

Finished it after cheating to get TEMPEH and with an alphabet run to get BIGA(PPLE) by accident. I might be in the minority, but I don't care for puzzles with an isolated square that represents a word (without any hint to that effect).

Yat 9:24 AM  

Boring puzzle (except for the apple), fabulous write-up.
The Sun Ra video made my day. (If you find earth boring….)

Beezer 9:25 AM  

Welp, I guess what you said yesterday wasn’t true. And btw. Rex’s complaint about the puzzle was that it was too easy, had some bad puns, AND the themers were comprised of only of William Tell trivia. He did not say the entire puzzle was filled with “inane trivia.” One thing you said rings true and that is -that you rarely complain about a few gimmes here and there - but the snooze-fest part is a bit much. I can’t wait until the next Robin puzzle comes out for you to see anything positive.

Mo-T 9:30 AM  

A skeleton walks into a 35D, puts an 84A on the rail, and says to the 42D, "Give me a beer and a 117D."

Bella Abzug 9:40 AM  

I thought it was pretty good, not great. Thankful that Tesla was clued as such, avoiding another RP meltdown. Thank an ICE agent. The finished solution on the Times app is clever, an arrow going across the grid to an 🍎

Beezer 9:43 AM  

Yes, very easy Sunday puzzle but taking aside Rex’s valid critique, I still enjoyed it. For one thing…learning about SUNRA is worth the price of admission…I’ll spend time after this researching him a bit further but when someone says they were born on Saturn…it intrigues me. Plus…the price of those records!

The one thing that “puzzles” me a bit is that SCRAPS is clued as “abandon a project” and BAGSIT is clued the same except “slangily.” My brain computes them both as “slangy.” It didn’t affect my solve and…I’m willing to believe that “scrapping” is a more formal term than “bagging.

All in all a pleasant and relaxing Sunday morning solve.

Liveprof 10:02 AM  

Many years ago, driving in Riverdale, my brother was cut off by Bella Abzug's car. He ran into her in the lobby and took her to task over it. "That was my husband. He's an idiot,"she told him.

Liveprof 10:14 AM  

I thought I posted these before. Sorry if they appear twice. They are bad enough once.

EYE EXAMS: tests for egoists.

Fear of a guest misspeaking on live TV: FRISK.

Where filmmaker Lee keeps his pet pig: ANGSTY

Chips and slaw: SUBSIDES.

RP's rabbit hole on Jello revealed that Tom Lehrer claimed to have invented Jello shots to circumvent alcohol restrictions in the army.

Anonymous 10:23 AM  

@Liveprof 10:02 LOL

SouthsideJohnny 10:29 AM  

@t and Beez - good points, probably some recency bias on my part. I don’t know if the data supports it, but it sure “seems” like the gunk gauge hit 40% probably a half-dozen times so far this year. I’m sure I was also subconsciously thinking about the times when Robyn would stop by periodically. I think we have seen her byline maybe once this year ? Also, we would occasionally refer to a well-constructed puzzle as Robynesque, which is a term that is rarely used anymore.

Gary Jugert 10:29 AM  

Todo está bien conmigo.

Should be a good day for -ly words before the word easy. It's early as I start to write and there are already two. Of course it takes an hour to count gunk on Sundays, so plenty of time left to get your ANGSTY on.

Early return: In the first seven acrosses, there is a place, three people, a movie, a partial, food, and a currency.

I am also wondering where you all are eating with crosswords on the placemats. It's a favorite phrase of derision around here. I haven't seen a placement at a restaurant in years, so maybe it's not a crossword problem any more than an eat-at-better-resaurants problem. AND before I leave this SCREE, kids crosswords are all theme, sometimes only have one or two crosses on a word, and no crosswordese at all. Show a little love.

I couldn't remember our hero's name today, nor that he was from Switzerland, nor the composer, but I did remember the apple and loved the rebus, so maybe a little tougher for me than others, and thankfully crosses worked.

In other bow and arrow news, my boss is a world class archer and hopes to be in the Olympics or World Championships, or something sporty I don't fully grasp.

I wanted a negative logic gate in electrical engineering to be a PHYSICS UNIT, but it wouldn't fit. See also TESLA. And a non-OHM Georg poser in SOLTI. I also wonder if a Cartesian conclusion in IAM is also a Popeye conclusion (or is that YAM).

Germany is probably thinking, "We have other words other than ACH."

❤️ DEADBEAT. Whoa, NELLY. [...begins at the end]. SEZ me. Bad spelling? YEESH.

😩 DECIMUS. SIS/SISSY.

People: 17
Places: 5
Products: 12
Partials: 13
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 50 of 140 (36%)

Funny Factor: 5 😐

Tee-Hee: LSD ... just can't seem to grow out of it, can we?

Uniclues:

1 Billionaires' only friend.
2 Ghost no longer caring about aiming too low.
3 Loses soda belly.

1 SWITZERLAND TREASURER
2 AFTER LIFE WILLIAM TELL
3 SCRAPS SNAPPLE SWELLS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Ocean faring Muslim with a TikTok account. ARABIAN SEA E-BOY.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Joe 10:35 AM  

I agree. That initially threw me because the answer to 62A obviously was “via”. I reluctantly changed took to take.

Arra 10:38 AM  

Even though it was easy for a Sunday, I had fun doing it and especially enjoyed looking at the finished grid - I thought it was a masterpiece. I found all the quibble comments a bit embarrassing.

Anonymous 10:52 AM  

Really enjoyed today’s puzzle

SharonAK 10:56 AM  

Do Not agree with Rex that it was so easy and do not feel dumb as a result. Several names I haver heard of and did not find familiar once seen. Never heard of tempeh17a, Sunra 33d. Did not know Raimi 104d, and see no reason I should be expected to.
Did not remember Tell wa from Switzerland. Several answer before116 would be impossible to answer before getting it.
I do feel about how long it took me to realize there where a rebus where 69a met 59d.
On the whole liked the theme and the puzzle, BUT question how sent OVER is the answer to clue 77d forwarded.
Especially liked eye exam and shootingstar clues/answers

Ken Freeland 11:03 AM  

Your wordplay is entertaining enough that the repetition is condign. FRISK -- ROFL

Ken Freeland 11:06 AM  

Count me among the fans of this puzzle ...two Sundays in a row with no naticks...one could begin to suspect actual puzzle editing. True, tribute puzzles tend to be bit meh, but I'll take what I can get...

Teedmn 11:10 AM  

I got a chuckle from Rex's bucket list discussion. But it's amazing what kinds of lists you can find on the internet. Yesterday, I was trying to think of Monopoly properties (for a puzzle I was solving) and voila, there was a list of them. I'm often consulting a website that lists authors' series in order. It helps me find which book I need to place on hold next at the library.

I thought this puzzle had some good wordplay, but looking back, I'm not sure why I thought so. The clue for eye exams, as Rex mentions, was about the only one. I was solving randomly so I had to wait for many crosses before the theme answers started filling in but something clued me in early on that we were probably looking at a William Tell tribute puzzle and so it turned out. Perhaps it was the puzzle title, Target Practice. The bow, arrow and apple rebus were very nice touches.

Jeffrey and Evan, thanks.

tht 11:13 AM  

Thanks for the reminder to look up SUN RA. At first I thought it might be Krupa, first name Gene, despite the apparent lack of an Egyptian connection there (which for all I know could have just been another thing I didn't know).

I also want to look up PEWEE. So often little birds look adorable to me, but on second look, the little guy also looks kind of bad-ass, and it's surely not for nothing that he belongs to the family whose name is Tyrannidae.

thefogman 11:22 AM  

It's a story about a dictatorial tyrant who gets his just desserts in the end. Where is our modern-day William Tell when we need him (or her)?

Anonymous 11:26 AM  

Puzzle had some interest but (as usual) needed better editing.

jae 11:37 AM  

Yep, very easy. Obvious theme with no real resistance equals a whooshy solve.

That said, I encouraged my Gen-Z grandson (who has the NYT puzzle app on his phone) to give the puzzle a try because I thought it was easy. I even gave him a hint about the theme only to realize he had no idea who WILLIAM TELL was.

Breezy and fun with a great graphic, liked it more than @Rex did.

Carola 11:58 AM  

Nicely constructed! And I don't mean to damn with faint praise. I thought it was great that the constructors saw the potential in SWITZERLAND and WILLIAM TELL having the same number of letters (which doesn't work in Wilhelm's homeland, die Schweiz), and I thought the parallel MARKSMANSHIP and SHOOTING STAR were very good. Beyond the theme, I liked SWITZERLAND adjacent to PASTURES, reminding me of Heidi and her goatherd friend; also TREASURER flanked by EURO and by ALI BABA, one of whose 40 thieves may have kept the books for their loot.

Anonymous 12:04 PM  

Hated it. Why William tell? Does anyone care about that legend any more? I’m pretty sure my kids have no clue about him…this seems a puzzle for older folks.

Anonymous 12:14 PM  

For the 2nd year in a row I saw an Eastern King Bird, tyranus tyranus, which thankfully moved on, they are known to harass swallows and swifts which are now happily nesting in my barn.

Niallhost 12:19 PM  

As easy as it gets if you know a lot about William Tell perhaps. I didn't. One of those Sundays that moseys along, nothing too exciting or difficult. But I've solved much easier Sundays. 25:22

Anonymous 12:31 PM  

Putting Ringo instead of Starr really got the center confusing for me. Also had the big Apple as 69 across, but didn’t even think about a drawing of an apple in the last square.

Gary Jugert 12:37 PM  

By the way, I did rename our Hall of Fame in honor of @Beezer.

MONDAY-LY EASY Hall of Fame © @Beezer
absurdly, actually, appropriately, awfully, boringly, certainly, childishly, definitely, despairingly, disappointingly, disconcertingly, embarrassingly, equally, eventually, extremely, fairly, frifly (?@kitshef), insultingly, laughably, mind-numbingly, mostly, overly, painfully, preposterously, probably, psychotically (lol@Liveprof), really, relatively, ridiculously, supercalifragilisticexpialidociously (!@egs of course), surprisingly, terribly, trivially, undeservedly, unfairly, and unusually.

JoePop 12:40 PM  

Yeah the puzzle was easy, but still fun. I love the North by Northwest scene that Rex included. I presume that's supposed to be the Hudson River in the background, but it seems odd to be going north out of NYC. They end up in the midwest, right? (Isn't the cropduster scene in Indiana?). And do you think Eva Marie Saint could bribe the stewart with $5 in todays money? It would probably be $25.

tht 12:46 PM  

Sorry to keep talking at you ("Everybody's talking at me, can't hear a word they're saying"). With all due respect to esteemed fellow commenter @Gary, I guess I treat the Gunk Gauge with a hefty grain of salt. I read it, it's amusing and all, but because it has to be so inclusive (based on its internal rules), it's a bit broad-brushed in the way it winds up tarring so much fill as "gunk". As a result, I've now taken to thinking of so-called "gunk" as having merely a technical meaning as assigned by Gary, without any inherent moral valuations, instead reserving the word "junk" for the stuff that is truly ugly, dreary, absurd, etc. (in my opinion). Anyway, the Gunk Gauge just measures what it measures and nothing more, is the way I look at it.

Liveprof 12:56 PM  

Condign! I'm in awe.

Les S. More 1:00 PM  

This was supposed to be a crossword puzzle, not a pre-Pong video game. And why WILLIAM TELL? Is it National Shoot an Apple off the Head of your Kid Day?

This was like my dog and I rambling down a trail we’d walked a hundred times. Oh, yeah, there might be a bird we’ve never noticed before but mostly it’s just the same old cedar and hemlock trees and huckleberry bushes that were here last time. Oh look! Salal! How exciting. And moss.

Thanks to Rex for the Sun Ra clip. I’m sure there a lot of people who have only known him as a name in a puzzle and now they have some idea of how weird (or maybe visionary) he was. If you cut and paste the url below, it will take you to a promo for a PBS show about him. From there you can dig deeper if you wish.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpZOcDPjV20&t=139s

Anonymous 1:17 PM  

Everything was so all over the place ... no real cohesion ... even the theme was scattershot.

A 1:20 PM  

@Rex, re the “legendary” Manny Nosowsky, I searched your site to find Manny’s nyt puzzles. I’ve only done a few but wow, what a breath of fresh air. Great long phrases and thankfully not a lot of then-current events/names that I’ve long forgotten. Anyway, after solving I read your write-ups and the blog comments. On Friday April 10, 2009, you wrote, “He's rightly legendary for lively open grids and tough, tough puzzles.”

True, today’s puzzle doesn’t rise to anywhere near the quality of those, and if I had the patience I’d count the 3-letter entries, but it took all my patience just to answer them all. But I did enjoy the theme and the bow and arrow and the single square rebus - which, solving on paper, I was able to draw an apple for a true rebus. When do we get to see SWITZERLAND, ARCHERY, MARKSMANSHIP and a SHOOTING STAR?

Too bad the musical key isn’t associated with the overture, but surely some part of the opera is in C MINOR.

Here’s a fun 17 seconds from the also legendary Victor Borge.

Les S. More 1:22 PM  

Agree with Anon 8:01. "I just bagged it" is fine. I feel the same about CREAMS. As a sports-playing kid I would never have said "we whomped them". It was always "we creamed 'em".

okanaganer 1:33 PM  

On Friday and Saturday I complained there were too many names. And now today, yikes! I did a quick count and got 29. They're absolutely everywhere. Fortunately for me, not too too many Unknown Names so it went pretty fast. But I completely didn't notice the circled squares, or the bow and arrow, or the rebus (I just put THE BIG A at 69 across).

Only a few typeovers: ALADDIN before ALI BABA, SENT ONTO before SENT OVER, DECIMAL before DECIMUS, etc.

Masked and Anonymous 1:52 PM  

har. Well, this here SunPuz was aptly en-titled. It proved excellent "Target Practice" for @RP.
I did think it was awful easy-ish, as Sunday solvequests go. But it was worth it all, for the APPLE rebus square ahar moment.

Just a Q short of pangrammar.
Luved the North by Northwest clue. A fave M&A flick.

staff weeject pick, of a mere 34.5 choices: SN[apple]. honrable mention to the crossin BOW, of course.

Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Martinovic & Park dudes. It was an enjoyable walk in the martinovic.

Masked & Anonymo11Us

p.s.
Runt puzzle:
**gruntz**

M&A

Beezer 1:58 PM  

❤️

Beezer 2:04 PM  

Wow. This makes me kind of sad. Why does anyone care about ANY legends? As for “why William Tell”? I don’t know. It’s okay that you hated it, but since the William Tell legend started in the 1300s…how did “older folks” just occur in 2026?

Beezer 2:11 PM  

I have nothing to say except that I LOVE that you have Bella Abzug as your blog name!

Beezer 2:17 PM  

@Bob…I somehow got TEMPEH without cheating, but I’m really not good with food-related items. Throw in the “vegan v. vegetarian” I’m like a deer in headlights.

Les S. More 2:31 PM  

Well, at least i learned a new word today - from the comments, not the puzzle. Thank you, Ken Freeland, for condign.

Masked and Anonymous 2:33 PM  

p.p.s.s.
Moment of incredible relief: 54-Down turned out not to be PEWITS.
Moment of loss: No Lone Ranger references.

M&Also

MetroGnome 2:43 PM  

Not *that* easy -- TEMPEH/HEPA?! RAIMII/PARASITE (as clued)?! PAESE?! SNA?! SYRAHS?! (Filled in the last three from the crosses, and still have no idea what they are.)

jazzmanchgo 2:47 PM  

And his saxophonist, Marshall Allen, is still active, leading the band (for local gigs around Philadelphia) at age 102!!

Beezer 2:51 PM  

To @tht…and ALSO hugely to @Gary J…I think GaryJ sees his Gunk Gauge (I tried to do a “circle c” for copyright but couldn’t) as a “service” similar to what @Z did in the past (with the PPP%…yikes I hope I remember) which was pop culture, proper names and…dammit…I forget the other P). Gary has threw in “foreignisms” (I think?…but now I’m stuck here and can’t check). What’s my point? Not sure, except I don’t think either @Z or @Gary J used that “excoriate” a puzzle…to be clear…@Z said that over 30% PPP meant a puzzle was a bit “over the limit.” @Gary J’s “Gunk Gauge” is very different (and I think more inclusive) but I don’t think he set a “standard.” (Gary can elaborate on that if he wants…I’m not a 100 percenter on blog attendance).
Anyway…I THINK that both @Z AND @Gary J MIGHT say that their respective gauges could be irrelevant to…1) your personal enjoyment of that days puzzle, and, 2) an everyday comment on the demise of the NYT.

kitshef 2:52 PM  


Easy peasy. With most of the NW corner done, got to Switzerland, and knew who the theme would be about (there being only one Swiss folk hero most people would be expected to know), and could even guess what some other theme answers would be.

jazzmanchgo 2:55 PM  

If I saw a kid actually doing a crossword on a placemat instead of dildding a keyboard and staring into a screen, I'd probably buy the entire family's meal for them in celebration. Meanwhile, RE: DEADBEAT -- what do you call the rhythm that was laid down by Bill Kreutzman and Mickey Hart?

Les S. More 3:00 PM  

tht. I agree with you about the persistence of the annoying graphic. I also like to review my puzzle without distractions. There must be some way to shut that down. Maybe just take a screen shot to freeze the thing?

And, as a former graphic artist for a sizeable newspaper, I can confirm I worked harder than most editors. (Could it be that I just wasn't very good at my job? I'm sure that the editors I've just disparaged would think that. But they'd be wrong.)

PH 3:01 PM  

I mentioned before that sometimes I finger-tap the WILLIAM TELL Overture on the back of my two cats. I like to think they recognize the tapping pattern and enjoy it, but their slow blinks could very well be a sign of boredom. Sometimes I vocalize the notes. Yes I'm weird.

Post-solve after reading the Constructors Notes, I don't view this as a Tell tribute puzzle but more as an answer to the question, "How can one (or two in this case) make a theme based on a BOW/ARROW representation?"
I can appreciate the construction and creative process it took to come up with the theme answers from that germ of an idea.

With 3 punny answers, it was a publish-worthy NYT IMO. Well done, Jeffrey and Evan!

If anyone likes percussion, here's a drummer playing along with the William Tell Overture (I've watched this dozens of times over the past 19 years):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3vLQ7iCz94

MetroGnome 3:17 PM  

Okay, so SNA{pple}/THE BIG A[pple] was a cross/gimmick, which I didn't even realize. I just assumed that some city (Atlanta? Anaheim? Albquerque?) was actually called THE BIG A by hipsters and/or locals, so I went with it.

melle 3:24 PM  

Hah!

Les S. More 3:25 PM  

Colin. I would agree. It's not an easy sport. A few years ago my son, during a particularly boring winter, decided to buy a compound bow and practice in the workshop, a converted barn with an eighty foot long central alley. He set up a bunch of straw bales on a bench in front of the overhead garage-type door (with windows) outside my studio. If I wanted to leave my studio and go up for lunch I had to open my door a crack and present a red flag and shout, as loudly as I could, "I'm coming out. Don't kill me!"

He managed to pierce the metal door at least a half dozen times and take out one of the tempered glass windows. A few months ago I finally replaced the glass and that spurred him to repair the door. I haven't, thankfully, seen the bow for a long time.

Anonymous 3:58 PM  

Strangely, in today's NYT print edition, there's a crossword puzzle on page 9 of the Arts & Leisure Pop section. No explanation anywhere as to why. The answers are printed on p. 11. The puzzle is by Jeff Tweedy. On the SE corner of the grid is the date 5/1/26. However, that is not the puzzle that appeared in the 5/1/26 edition of the Times. The theme was 70's pop music, appropriate to the Pop section. It seemed like a Wednesday puzzle to me, fairly easy and rather fun.

Anybody know anything about this?

Gary Jugert 4:09 PM  

@tht @Beezer @SouthsideJohnny
Fun discussion. I count "gunk" which I define every day as proper nouns, abbreviations (broadly envisioned), and foreign words. I don't think of it as good or bad, just a quantification of stuff I believe should be managed well. Every time it goes above 35% the grumbling also goes up. So yeah, it really is about the avalanche of "trivia." Where people lose their minds trying to discredit the act of tabulation. For example, ONO and ENO and ORA aren't "trivia-like" to us, but for normal people, especially younger solvers, those are hardcore trivia. They would be unlikely to run into them in real life. I work with a dozen 20-somethings and none of them knew Led Zeppelin. There's no line to be drawn about good trivia vs. bad trivia because it's always specific to the individual and it's "knowledge" to one person and "useless garbage" to the next person. There's also no point in counting JUNK as honestly it's really fun to love the stupidest things in crosswords. And finally, if foreignisms weren't so consistently awful with ACH leading the charge, I might not care about them, but seriously, almost every foreign word is pure desperation to make a grid work.

ac 4:17 PM  

this is insultingly easy its like a walk off home run no stars why are the times catering to beginners on a Sunday - this puzzle doesn't even take any brain power thank goodness for other outlets

Anonymous 4:47 PM  

I liked it. It was fun. Isn’t that supposed to be why we do these? If a puzzle is easy for you but it leaves you in a snit because it was, that doesn’t sound fun to me.

LiamJM 5:08 PM  

I finished on “The Big A” and it accepted it, turning the naked A into an Apple. I feel like I cheated.

lodsf 5:11 PM  

Liked the puzzle a LOT more than Rex and others here. I thought it was going to be about Robin Hood until that didn’t fit. I had ice in my bucket before a MOP. Alladin held me up in the NE - same letter count as ALIBABA., same 1st 2 letters which fit the crosses … it took awhile for me to give up Alladin.

Beezer 6:39 PM  

Omg. I presume it is by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco? If so, I may look it up. And for anyone interested, Nick Offerman wrote a book, Where the Deer and the Antelope Play…and a segment includes when he, Jeff Tweedy, and George Saunders (Lincoln on the Bardo) camped and hiked together in Yellowstone.

Hans 6:44 PM  

1) knowing that Tell actually used a Crossbow in his journeys threw me off for that shaded region for a minute
2) “City Soubriquet” since I knew the theme, I figured Apple (and likely Big Apple) was the answer here, but not realizing it was a rebus, I instead went with the respectably close answer of The Pitt.

Anonymous 7:47 PM  

The only good thing about this puzzle was OFL’s link to the Sun Ra piece. Crazy entertaining.

Anonymous 7:49 PM  

"And Bingo was his name-o" 😀

ChrisS 8:07 PM  

I think debuting an obscure Latin word these days is problematic because it is so out of date. Most schools stopped teaching Latin in the 60's. So over 60 years ago. The Deci was easily inferable, but the Mus not for me, I had deicmas for too long.

ChrisS 8:21 PM  

Sam Raimi has directed around 20 films some good, most pretty popular & seen by hundreds of millions (this is a W.A.G.). A Simple Plan is a great movie with a couple Oscar nominations.

CDilly52 9:00 PM  

Well, just like OFL, I quickly filled in the NW and SWITZERLAND made me curious. I thought of a couple possibilities, WILLIAM TELL or something having to do with mountains/skiing. So, I took a gander at the whole grid and went down to see what the (I really hoped necessarily) shaded grey squares were and bullseye! Sure enough, it’s WILLIAM TELL.

So, this could have been more fun if only the editors hadn’t insisted on shading the BOW and ARROW squares that then serve to jump up and down blasting the ROSSINI overture while flashing a sign that says WILLIAM TELL, get it? But, in the spirit of supporting more quickly solvable puzzles that buoy the spirits of newer solvers feeling bold enough to try a big fat Sunday grid and (using a few look-ups or not) succeeding and then appropriately celebrating, ok. I have a myriad of other sources where I find puzzles that make my brain writhe with confusion.

However, if that’s actually the new NYTXW editorial policy, I wish whomever issued the official fiat would fess up and admit that in the name of the almighty dollar (i.e. simply to increase subscriptions) this puzzle no longer officially claims to be “The best Sunday crossword in the world.”

I am not assuming that for many solvers, this wasn’t fun, clever, or even challenging. I actually thought the idea worked, and for fans of cute “you did it!” grid art, excellent, even though the art was, given the grey squares absolutely unnecessary. Really, I am an absolutely enthusiastic “to each his/her/their own” person and I hope each solver working this puzzle receives the desired pleasure level. Crosswords are my favorite pastime. My daily solving goal is to have a good time and learn something new. I hope every single solver approaches the solve in whatever manner they choose, and that each receives the reward desired. Or to all solvers out there and as my granddaughter says at least several times a day, “You do you.”

My life has been chaotic lately, and this breezy yet cohesive theme allowed me some relaxation. Nothing offensive or cringeworthy, but I do prefer some comedy or bad but funny puns in my Sunday. This felt a bit like the biggest Monday themed grid in history. According to the computer, I have a new Sunday solve time record for my labors.

Editors, care to comment? I’ve been asking for quite a while now.

H V 9:36 PM  

Was thrown off by knowing that Tell actually used a crossbow, not a bow and arrow, and that the shaded region LOOKED like a crossbow.
Also, didn’t catch the rebus after a long time and for a while had what I thought was a punnily reasonable answer of THE PITT in place of THE BIG (APPLE).

Charles Vongo 12:29 AM  

Sun Ra in the puzzle and NRBQ in the comments, outstanding. Now we need NRBQ in a puzzle.

Anonymous 2:54 AM  

The shaded area in the paper version is in the shape of a crossbow.

Anonymous 3:19 AM  

Am I the only who has never heard of a statue was up lit iso lit up?

CDilly52 4:07 AM  

Easy for you and I, and obviously others here in the ‘hood, yes, but since crosswords are usually not a team sport, I opted for a different take than too easy for me (my full diatribe is below, if you’re interested).

I have been on a bit of a crusade lately for the NYT leadership (meaning decision makers) to tell us once and for all if the editorial policies related to the crossword have changed and the publisher has decreed that the NYTXW is to be much more easily solved than in bygone days in hopes of garnering more subscribers - at least to the games. I have even tried direct contact - as yet to no avail. But today certainly does not live up to the claim that this is “the best Sunday crossword in the world.”

CDilly52 4:09 AM  

Oooooh yes, Beezer! I remember that segment from the book. Nice catch.

CDilly52 4:29 AM  

PH, great story! You are not weird, just a cat lover! My late husband was a professional percussionist. They bang on absolutely anything, with any implement handy at any time, day or night when the spirit moves them. And it moves them pretty much constantly.

He used to use his softest tympani mallets to “play tunes” very lightly on our yellow tabby (my avatar) when she was stretched out on him in bed at night. She loved it and would purr loudly and stretch to her full length so “Dad” could do scales and arpeggios, nose to tail.

The favorite was the tune from “Nola,” which I only know as a brutal marimba piece/etude that the percussion chair had every freshman percussion major play during their first lesson at Illinois (at least in the ‘70s). If the student passably made it through certain sections, it did not become an assignment. If not, the student became one of many whose efforts were heard throughout the basement practice rooms of Smith Hall incessantly during first semester every year. I don’t think by Thanksgiving each year there was a music major who couldn’t hum the tune!

I often whistled or hummed along while I read next to them at night. See? Not weird at all!!

CDilly52 4:41 AM  

A, 1:20 PM, when I was writing my “why have the puzzles become so easy” comment, wonderful memories of Dr. Nosowsky’s puzzles came to mind. He was prolific and had such a dry bite to his clever humor. I often go into the archives to find puzzles I could never have solved in my youth, and look for his.

Old puzzles provide a challenge and some fun as well as fabulous memories because anything in the archives from 1959 through about 1982 are ones I watched Gran solve, later solved with her and finally solved on my own until I was the one putting in the answers for her the night she passed.

CDilly52 4:49 AM  

@Anon 12:04 PM, how sad that our kids education has become so focused on core subject test scores that they do not get to hone their creativity studying ancient legends that feed their imagination and need to create. Our kids have fallen tragically behind as other countries’ students are vastly more prepared for adult responsibilities and higher education.

Rob K 7:58 AM  

Chiming in a day late (because I'm a traveling minister and often do the puzzle Sunday night instead of morning). Could someone explain how "deadbeat" is the opposite of "go-getter"? (60A: Go-getter's opposite.) I thought deadbeat was someone who fails to pay up. MW dictionary: one who persistently fails to pay personal debts or expenses. If not for the crosses, I would not have written that in.

noni 3:25 PM  

I made all these mistakes plus more so it was doable but not easy. I assumed there was a drink called SNA and a city called BIGA. I was surprised when I got the happy music and an APPLE appeared. Oh, yeah, BIGAPPLE. Ignored SNA, duh.

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