1970 Neil Diamond song about an imaginary childhood friend / THU 7-2-26 / Simple wooden shoes / Website that added podcast info in 2021 / Unadulterated by plastic, say / "Nixon in China" tenor
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Constructor: DAVID J. KAHN
Relative difficulty: MEDIUM (Hard to tell based on time with this many rebus squares)
THEME: The 13 Colonies — Thirteen squares contain 2-letter postal abbreviations of the original 13 colonies. Their clues are all themed to early American History.
Word of the Day: OLETA (70A: Soul singer Adams) —
Oleta Angela Adams (born May 4, 1953) is an American singer, pianist, and songwriter. She found limited success during the early 1980s, before gaining fame via her contributions to Tears for Fears' international chart-topping album The Seeds of Love (1989). Her albums Circle of One (1991) and Evolution (1993) were top 10 hits in the UK; the former yielded a Grammy-nominated cover of Brenda Russell's "Get Here", which was a top 5 hit in both the UK and the U.S. Adams has been nominated for four Grammy Awards, as well as two Soul Train Music Awards.• • •
Theme answers:
- DELEGATIONS (18A: Groups at the First Continental Congress in 1774)
- BENJAMIN (23A: 10 Hamiltons)
- PATRIOTS (25A: American Revolution heroes)
- ELECT (36A: George Washington's presidential status on February 4, 1789)
- MDCCC (42A: Last full year of John Adams's presidency)
- US CENSUS (53A: Periodic survey started under Secy. of State Thomas Jefferson)
- MADISONS (58A: "Father of the Constitution" and his family)
- NAVAL (60A: Like the Revolutionary War battles led by John Paul Jones)
- JOHN HANCOCK (64A: First signer of the Declaration of Independence)
- COLONY (73A: American settlement until 1776 ... or a hint to 13 squares in this puzzle)
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| 23A: 10 Hamiltons (kinda) |
43D: Musical with the song "What's the Use of Wond'rin'?". Carousel also has THIS song, and since I'm a Liverpool fan in a soccer mood, I'm posting it instead.
The only place this puzzle really felt strain to me was in the SE corner. Crossing OLETA (70A: Soul singer Adams) with SHILO (59D: 1970 Neil Diamond song about an imaginary childhood friend) is just brutal. I like Neil Diamond and Oleta Adams seems cool, but that L is going to trip up a lot of people. Not sure it rises to the level of a full Natick, but it's close. Thankfully, I don't have much else flagged as troubling in this grid. The fill might not be too flashy, but theme more than makes up for it.
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| 51D: Start to live and breathe (Lin-Manuel Miranda getting a lot of play on the blog today) |
Speaking of the fill, just a couple of things stood out. I think of Romulus and Remus as twins first, but I supposed SIBS (6A) is accurate enough. I also can't picture SABOTS (39A: Simple wooden shoes) without doing an image search, but I have a hard time thinking of a wooden shoe as "simple." You get a little extra American History at 12D (SENATOR - One whose qualifications are enumerated in Article I, Section 3, of the Constitution). I can't decide whether it's better to have a bonus non-theme entry tie into the theme or if it would be better to clue this as a hockey player. Or maybe, since I'm going so musical theater heavy today, as the baseball team from Damn Yankees. I'm probably overthinking it. Let's move on.
| 57D: Rowena's love, in fiction |
Stray Thoughts:
That's all for today; I'll be back with you again tomorrow.
Signed, Eli Selzer, False Dauphin of CrossWorld
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- 22A: Setting of "What's Eating Gilbert Grape" (IOWA) — I was 11 and living in Iowa when this movie came out and it was a huge deal that a movie was set in (and, I believe, filmed in) our home state. I have a feeling Leonardo DiCaprio playing a mentally disabled person doesn't hold up well, but I probably won't rewatch it to find out.
- 37A: Chrome alternative (SAFARI) — I recently switched from Chrome to Safari as Google continues to devolve into unusable AI garbage. I'm liking it so far, but if Apple ever stops letting me turn off AI, I'll move on from Safari, as well.
- 23D: Two-Time Tony winner Neuwirth (BEBE) - In keeping with today's blog theme:
- 26D Bug exterminator? (SPY) — I guess I think of them more as bug planters, but I guess a good spy would exterminate them, too.
- 20A: "Les ___" (MIZ) — I think I have to.
[Follow Eli on BlueSky]
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- Westwords (Berkeley, CA, Jun. 14, 2026)
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- Pop Sensation (vintage paperbacks)

















5 comments:
This puzzle kept crashing the app on my iPhone. Did anyone else have this problem?
I’m likewise one of those freaks who likes a good rebus, and as I’m spending the morning in the London airport, I enjoyed taking the time to try to remember state abbreviations. I also realized I didn’t have the 13 colonies nailed down in my memory and had always assumed Maine and Vermont were on the list (ya know, since the land where they are was part of the original US), so this puzzle had the added perk of solidifying them for me.
Eli, I happened to be in London for England’s win yesterday, but missed the US game because of the time difference. Thanks for catching me up, and I look forward to being in the same hemisphere for the rest of the World Cup!
Fantastic puzzle - the theme is overly dense and fun and of course temporal. The themers with multiple states are impressive - I loved JOHN HANCOCK. Crazy skills building this one.
Dar Williams
The overall fill is fine given how thick the trick was. GOT A HIT, CAROUSEL, CLINGS TO, SHOW OFF are all top notch.
Hey Hey PAULA
Clearly on the list for POTY - a highly enjoyable Thursday morning solve.
ABUELita
This was a lot of fun! Took me about 25 minutes last night…. Never stuck, but 13 rebuses take a while to find! I loved this puzzle. Writeovers???? JOHNadams (which fit) before HANCOCK (“kind of a flamboyant signature, for an insurance man”, Franklin to Jefferson, from Stan Freeburg’s “UNITED STATES OF AMERICA”). Way to sneak in Benjamin, Madison, some facts about #1 and #2 (George and John). The way the rebi are only in themers/July 4th related answers, which are not symmetrical. And the way it ends with COLONY with New York represented as a rebus in the final square. All amazing touches!!!! Color me impressed!!! [Also just noticed this grid is 15 x 16--16 tall this time. Nice]. Thank you, David!
Best Thursday puzzle in memory. I knew all 13 colonies and their abbreviations, but it was still hard work. No cheats. I got the happy music after a lucky guess at the SHILO/OLETA cross (Eli is right that it's brutal), and only after somehow remembering ABUELA from earlier crosswords,.
Another stumbling block was insisting on "Nassau" for the location of "Sloop John B." ("around Nassau town we did roam...etc.").
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