Monday, June 22, 2026

Scholarly "same" / MON 6-22-26 / Little specifics, in slang / Repository of seeds from all corners of the globe, informally / One dental speciality, informally / MetLife Stadium team, on scoreboards / Wave of antigovernment protests in the early 2010s / Explosive personality trait / What the "face with steam from nose" emoji suggests / King's partner in castling

Constructor: Victoria Fernandez Grande

Relative difficulty: Medium (solved Downs-only)

THEME: TRIPLE JUMP (62A: Track-and-field event with a sandpit ... or a hint to the ends of 17-, 23- and 51-Across) — each of the three theme answers ends with a synonym for "jump":

Theme answers:
  • ARAB SPRING (17A: Wave of antigovernment protests in the early 2010s)
  • HOMEWARD BOUND (23A: Heading back to where one lives)
  • DOOMSDAY VAULT (51A: Repository of seeds from all corners of the globe, informally)
Word of the Day: DOOMSDAY VAULT (51A) —

The Svalbard Global Seed Vault (Norwegian: Svalbard globale frøhvelv) is a secure backup facility for the Earth's crop diversity on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen in the remote Arctic Svalbard archipelago. The Seed Vault provides long-term storage for duplicates of seeds from around the world, conserved in gene banks. This provides security of the world's food supply against the loss of seeds in gene banks due to mismanagement, accident, equipment failures, funding cuts, war, sabotage, disease, and natural disasters. The Seed Vault is managed under terms spelled out in a tripartite agreement among the Norwegian government, the Crop Trust, and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center (NordGen).

The Norwegian government entirely funded the Seed Vault's approximately 45 million kr (US$8.8 million in 2008) construction cost. Norway and the Crop Trust pay for operational costs. Storing seeds in the vault is free to depositors.

As of June 2025, the Seed Vault conserves 1,355,591 accessions, representing more than 13,000 years of agricultural history.

• • •

Adequate, but kind of uninspired. Last words = synonyms for "jump." That's it. The revealer tries to make it more exciting than that. But all the "triple" means is that you have (only) three themers. The concept lacks a certain cleverness and zing that the best Monday puzzles have. It does have one wholly original and, to me, mysterious answer: DOOMSDAY VAULT. It might be "mysterious" to me because ... it's not actually called that except in sensationalist news headlines (see "Word of the Day," above). As I was working that answer out from the Downs alone, I got the DOOMSDAY part but still had no idea what the phrase could be. I don't know that many "DOOMSDAY" phrases. There's the Doomsday Clock. There's a Doomsday scenario, I've heard of that. There's also the Doomsday Book, but that seemed pretty obscure. It's actually, technically, the "Domesday Book," and I'd be surprised if very many non-medievalists knew what it was. It's an important late 11c. English MS containing a survey of England and Wales: "The survey's main purpose was to record the annual value of every piece of landed property to its lord, and the resources in land, labour force, and livestock from which the value derived" (wikipedia). Anyway, of all these options, only CLOCK fit, and the crosses made that impossible, so I just had to wait for the letters in VAULT to appear. I think that was the first actual "jump" that I got. That "V" was hard since TVAPPS was a nightmare to parse (the only thing I could think of was "streamers" / "streaming services," and I couldn't think of a shortened form for that). I think I have actually heard of the DOOMSDAY VAULT before. I remember learning about the phenomenon, though clearly the name didn't stick. Anyway, it's a fun answer, the one genuinely original thing about the puzzle. The rest, as I say, is fine. Standard fare. Not exciting, not terrible.

[28D: Group whose "Gold: Greatest Hits" is the second-best-selling album]

Three wrong answers and a handful of ???s kept this one interesting, from a Downs-only perspective. Wrote in FOOL for 1D: Hoodwink (SCAM), which was a foolish mistake. Should've just waited for crosses. That one kept ARAB SPRING from coming into view very quickly. Also, just couldn't figure out SHREWD. No good reason, just ... wasn't coming to me (6D: Brilliant at negotiating). Worst, though, in the end was NYG (9D: MetLife Stadium team, on scoreboards). Also these corporate-named arenas, I cannot keep track of them. Had no idea what kind of sport I was even dealing with. Blank-blank-G gave me fits. Seemed to want to start with "N," but only PHONE or PHONO seemed to work at PHON-, which gave me NEG or NOG, respectively, and neither of those is a team (that I know of!). Finally realized PHONY was also on the table, and bam, there it was: NYG. New York Giants. Very weird to be held up by something so minor, but that's the great thing about solving Downs-only: the potential chaos created by the most ordinary of answers. I also had trouble parsing "I'M MAD" (I had ANGER in there at first) (13D: What the "face with steam from nose" emoji suggests), and THAN—that one was really rough (37D: Greater ___). I had GOOD in there for a bit. And yet I dropped A FIRST in without a second thought (32D: Unprecedented). That two-word-ness of that answer is the kind of thing that would normally trip me up, but somehow I saw right through it today. 


Bullets:
  • 31A: Harsh, as a takedown (BRUTAL) — not sure how "as a takedown" adds anything here. I don't associate BRUTAL with "a takedown" any more than I do "harsh." BRUTAL is just a word for "Harsh." The clue could've just been "Harsh," or "Very harsh," I suppose. 
  • 16A: Scholarly "same" (IDEM) — oof. Brutal. The kind of crusty crosswordese that a Monday puzzle should avoid at all costs. ("Avoid at all costs" is a cliché, another thing you should avoid) (not as bad as "avoid like the plague," though)
  • 35D: Explosive personality trait (SHORT FUSE) — nice. Probably the nicest non-theme answer. This was a bit of a challenge to get Downs-only. Somehow, "Explosive" wasn't giving me "anger," necessarily. I thought maybe the person in question was just ... a firecracker, you know. Like, maybe they had a big, dynamic personality. 
  • 52D: One dental speciality, informally (ORTHO) — this is a small technical matter, but ... I don't really get what "One" is doing in this clue. [Dental specialty, informally] works perfectly. Of course it's one. All answers are "one" unless you say otherwise. Baffling, unnecessary use of "One" here. Not that anyone's going to care, or even notice. I'm just curious what the logic is for including it.

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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21 comments:

  1. Cute enough early week theme - Rex summarizes nicely - not a lot of splash or nuance but it works. The reveal is a bit of letdown.

    First the tide rushes in
    Plants a kiss on the shore


    Overall fill was strong - liked RAMPANT, SHORT FUSE and DROOLS. MOUSY - IDEM had some edge. Keep the DEETS out next time.

    Enjoyable Monday morning solve.

    The Royal SCAM

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bob Mills6:25 AM

    I enjoyed it, even without noticing there was a theme. My bad.

    ReplyDelete
  3. How Salvador's wife greets him when he comes home from a hard day at the easel: Hello DALI.

    Are you the one who knows the old name of Thailand? Yes, SIAM.

    Something creepy you don't want to find in your dermatologist's office: ASKIN

    How to determine if the kids are old enough to drink: IDEM

    Popular bar soap in the Middle East: ARABSPRING, marketed in Israel as Yiddish Spring.

    Clothing for a modest male sheep: RAMPANT

    Brutus: Julie -- I can't remember the first name of that great female blues singer James. It's killing me. Oops, poor choice of words.
    Caesar: ETTA, Brutè.

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  4. Sure, there’s sweet wordplay in this theme, but it’s sweeter still when you look at its four answers, all interesting and colorful – ARAB SPRNG, HOMEWARD BOUND, DOOMSDAY VAULT, and TRIPLE JUMP.

    Icing on the cake is that all four answers have never appeared before in the 80+ years of the Times puzzle.

    Outside of the theme there is more beauty: RAMPANT, SHREWD, OBLIGE, SHORT FUSE.

    Beauty and interest make a puzzle more an experience than simply a fill-in. Victoria, your last puzzle – your Times debut – had this same quality. Both made me go “Mwah!” after I filled in the last square. Thank you for this, and more soon, please!

    ReplyDelete
  5. My five favorite original clues from last week
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Field trip? (3)(3)(4)
    2. Rate of passage (4)
    3. Be prepared to take a weight off of someone's shoulders? (4)
    4. Bulb that becomes translucent when heated (5)
    5. Sound made when something snaps into place? (3)


    HOME RUN TROT
    TOLL
    SPOT
    ONION
    AHA

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My favorite encore clues from last week:

      [Certain canine] (4)
      [Moment of high spirits?] (5]


      TUSK
      TOAST

      Delete
  6. Andy Freude7:19 AM

    A lovely Monday. Like Rex I was almost fooled by SCAM, and for a moment I thought the I’M MAD emoji might be the crossword favorite Irate, but no.

    ReplyDelete
  7. EasyEd7:38 AM

    Felt this puzzle had sort of an elevated aura, almost poetic, tho the revealer brought it back to earth. For a Monday puzzle some interesting allusions. Thanks Rex for the background on DOOMSDAYVAULT. Recognized the reference immediately but had never looked into the specifics. And thanks @Liveprof for the irreverent puns.

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  8. Hey All !
    Middle of puz is sitting there asking, "Why wasn't I included in the Theme?"

    Never knew MOUSY as a hair color. Thought it meant shy and meek.

    Crossing ROOs, which is neat. No points taken, though, as they are parts of other words.

    Nice MonPuz, took a hair longer than normal, I'm a FAN. (ARE NOT! AM TOO!)

    Hope y'all have a great Monday!

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  9. Re: 31A "Harsh, as a takedown" - I think the "as a takedown" part is good and helpful for a Monday level puzzle. "Harsh" on its own has too many other potential contexts, like harsh sunlight, or harsh texture (think sandpaper), or even as modern lingo in verb form, to harsh one's buzz.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I've heard of the TRIPLE JUMP, but was not sure what it was, and thought maybe it consisted of the broad jump, the high jump, and the pole vault. So "vault" was in my mind, but I still couldn't see DOOMSDAY VAULT until I had a couple crosses in place. Odd name for it--if DOOMSDAY comes, there won't be anyone to take those seeds from the Arctic to anyplace they can grow.

    As for the Domesday Book, we learned about that in junior high. We didn't learn much, just that the Normans wanted a survey to help them control the country. But that was in the mid 1950s, I guess maybe the curriculum has changed. Also, I only remember it because of the odd spelling.

    I looked up TRIPLE JUMP, and learned that it's another name for the Hop, Skip, and Jump, which I have at least seen on TV.

    I'm having fun imagining myself responding to the question "What is ASIA?" with "Oh, it's that area East of the Urals."

    ReplyDelete
  11. At one time ABBA was certainly one of the most recognizable bands in the world and by some metrics I’d bet it was THE most famous band, and now two, three, four decades later it’s easily the most recognizable band in all of CrossWorld. Fortunately, constructors haven’t yet run out of new and creative ways to clue it (thus, it hasn’t become OREO-ized yet - that would actually be a pretty good clue for it - “Band that hasn’t been oreo-ized in CrossWorld”).

    Two areas that are definitely not my strengths are Latin and emojis, so the IDEM cross with I’M MAD was a bit of a sticking point, but IDEM popped up from the dark recesses of my brain and all was good. I suspect I may not be the only one of us that had some hesitation there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:13 AM

      ABBA, ELO, REO, and AC/DC seem to be the fav XWorld bands.

      Delete
  12. Anonymous8:22 AM

    Surprised Rex didn’t call out RAMPANT—I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen that word in NYTXW. 👍

    ReplyDelete
  13. Sort of caught on to the theme after ARABSPIRNG and HOMEWARDBOUND (great song, BTW) but all I could think of for DOOMSDAY was "bank". Knew it was a place where they stored all the seeds and VAULT finally showed up and made perfect sense. Doh!, I said.

    Very much liked the dearth of names in this one, and am waiting for someone to point out that Bogie never actually says "Play it again SAM". TVAPPS was about the only bump in the road and crosses made it easy. Oh, and ROOK, which was obvious, becomes a problem if you read "castling" as "casting", which I did. Trying, unsuccessfully, to think of who would be in movie with someone name King. Couldn't.

    I liked your Monday just fine, VFG, found it to be a Very Fine Gunk-free effort, and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  14. An absolutely fine Monday with a cute theme, some pretty themers and a revealer that does it's job. All this with some very solid non-theme fill that contained virtually nothing that made me wince, nothing seemed forced. I always admire puzzles like this where everything seems just right where it's supposed to be, like it was always meant to be there. What more can you ask for in a Monday?
    DOOMSDAYVAULT was interesting to learn and now, along with my usual Grateful Dead, I have Simon and Garfunkel tunes swimming around in my head. This should help to keep whatever ABBA material that tries to sneak into my consciousness at bay. No judgement, they're just not my cuppa. So not a bad way to start my work week!
    Thank you for this one Victoria, this was a neat and tidy good time!
    And now on to Hugh's Monday Haiku:

    More THAN SAFE to say
    DALI's works ARE NOT PHONY
    Many are A FIRST

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  15. Couldn’t quite finish it downs only, so I ended up having to look at a few across clues. But since I was solving down only, I had no “clue” (pun intended) that 62A was the revealer, and I thought the theme was just the set of SPRING, BOUND, VAULT, and JUMP (all of which I got through down clues only). But it’s Monday, so I should have known there’d be a revealer.

    Also had trouble with NYG, and also had anger (and irate) before I’M MAD. And like Rex, I liked SHORT FUSE.

    I always enjoy solving down only on Monday, even if I have to look at a few across clues at the end. Tempted to try across only sometime…

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  16. Se aprende viviendo.

    Smooth. Plenty of gunk, but well balanced and nothing outside of my wheelhouse. A fun little geography quiz. Condolences to those of you having your puzzles rejected because the theme is too bland. Blander than this. 😉 I like the phrase DOOMSDAY VAULT.

    I do wonder if they're ever getting beyond the FRAT HOUSE and beer obsession. Probably not.

    ❤️ PHONY. BRUTAL. MOUSY. SHORT FUSE.

    People: 4
    Places: 7
    Products: 4
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 5
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 26 of 78 (33%)

    Funny Factor: 0 😫

    Tee-Hee: NSFW.

    Uniclues:

    1 Sometimes a tee-hee graduates to a uniclue.
    2 J-Lo?
    3 Arrange the hypotheses in a rat maze experiment.
    4 Home for boys in space.
    5 What I said in the car a after every romantic breakup. {And to be fair, I was pretty good at causing the electronics to short circuit for no reason.}

    1 DROOLS ATOP (~)
    2 AMERICA'S SEÑORA
    3 SORT MOUSY BETS
    4 OUTER FRAT HOUSE (~)
    5 ADIEU SHORT FUSE

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Don't say a word to the hula dancer, grampa. DENY COCONUT SPEECHES.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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  17. Anonymous9:03 AM

    My downs only solve was eerily similar to Rex’s, complete with snags at PHONE, ANGER, and GREATER GOOD. Also had FRAT PARTY at first and struggled to see OBLIGE.

    ReplyDelete
  18. 11D (ADIEU) was a slam dunk for 6% of Spelling Bee players.

    I saw a reimagined take on King Lear told through the eyes of Ophelia. It's called LEARN Me.

    Gore: Hey Tipper! Would you like some sweet Champagne?
    Tipper: I'd prefer BRUTAL

    Instruction from the New Jersey yoga instructor: Now hold DISPOSE.

    Fun D.O. solve. Thanks, Victoria Fernandez Grande.

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  19. Anonymous9:58 AM

    What a wonderful Monday solve! 🎈🎈🎊🎊

    ReplyDelete