Expansive marine exhibits / SAT 7-4-26 / Golden goal periods, for short / "Gotcha," to a beatnik / Things often refilled, informally / Loggers' competition / False idol in the Old Testament / #MeToo activist Burke / Sancte Spiritus medieval Latin hymn / Observation by Oscar Wilde about the relationship between reality and creativity / Painter ___ Thomas, first Black woman to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum / Berry spelled with a cedilla / Soft drink originally made with egg whites / Cardiac exam on a treadmill / Brand of tights with an apostrophe in its name

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Constructor: Kareem Ayas

Relative difficulty: Easy

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: ALMA Thomas (39A: Painter ___ Thomas, first Black woman to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum) —

[Red Azaleas Singing and Dancing Rock and Roll Music, 1976]

Alma Woodsey Thomas (September 22, 1891 – February 24, 1978) was an American artist and art teacher who lived and worked in Washington, D.C., and is now recognized as a major American painter of the 20th century. She is the first African-American woman to be included in the White House's permanent art collection. Thomas is best known for the "exuberant", colorful, abstract paintings that she created after she retired from a 35-year career teaching art at Washington's Shaw Junior High School.

Thomas, who is often considered a member of the Washington Color School art movement but alternatively classified by some as an Expressionist and/or Black Abstractionist, earned her teaching degree from University of the District of Columbia (known as Miner Normal School at the time). She was the first graduate of Howard University's art department, and maintained connections to that university through her life. She achieved success as an African-American female artist despite the segregation and prejudice of her time.

Thomas's reputation has continued to grow since her death. Her paintings are displayed in notable museums and collections and have been the subject of several books and solo museum exhibitions. The Smithsonian American Art Museum maintains the world's largest public collection of her work. In 2021, a museum sold Thomas's painting Alma's Flower Garden in a private transaction for $2.8 million. (wikipedia)

• • •

[5D: Milky Way's nearest major galaxy]


Woke up at 4am (for the first time in ... I don't know, however long I've been away) and thought "oh god, how do you solve crosswords again?" Didn't solve a single puzzle on my Lake Huron vacation. Solved a few jigsaw puzzles. Well, two and a half jigsaw puzzles. Two and three quarters, maybe. We thought we could squeeze that Sherlock Holmes puzzle in there at the end, but fate intervened. Well, not fate. We decided to spend the last night of the trip watching You've Got Mail. I think that was our fifth romcom of the trip. What can I say? We got curious (How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days) and then we got carried away (Jerry Maguire, Four Weddings and a Funeral, 13 Going on 30, You've Got Mail). We also spent that last day doing something we said we were gonna do four years ago, when we started our Great Lakes Summer Vacation Extravaganza—once we'd been to every lake, the plan was that we'd all get Great Lakes tattoos. Easy for tattooless me to say in 2022, but in 2026 ... neither Penelope nor I was entirely sure we'd go through with it. We thought, Maybe we should wait? Do it later on, in Minneapolis, after we'd figured out the best design and the best artist and blah blah blah but in a moment of extremely uncharacteristic "ah f--- it, let's just do it," we did it.


So we ended up packing up the Sherlock Holmes jigsaw puzzle and taking it home for another day. It might have to wait until our next vacation, as our cats do not have a history of tolerating jigsaw puzzles in their presence. 


Anyway, I was grateful, for once, that my Saturday puzzle was (very) easy, because I felt very rusty after nine days or so away. I'm also grateful that the puzzle is so strong, because I didn't really want to resume blogging with a lot of ughs and aarghs and "why"s? Gotta keep those good vacation vibes going ... just like Cabo Verde did last night against Argentina, omg, did you see that match? Inspiring. The (extreme) underdogs ultimately lost, but not before stunning everyone (not least Argentina) by coming back to tie the match not once but twice, taking the reigning World Cup champs deep into overtime before finally losing 3-2. Funny to see the clue on OTS this morning (35A: Golden goal periods, for short), as there is no "Golden Goal" in World Cup play (as posted broadcast messages kept reminding me). You play two 15-minute OT segments, and if no one is ahead after that, you go to PKs (penalty kicks) to decide it. Argentina scored in the second OT period and that ended up being that, but Cabo Verde kept coming at them til the very end. It was the biggest world ranking disparity (no. 1 vs. no. 64) in the history of the World Cup knockout rounds and for a while there it seemed bizarrely possible that the match might go to PKs and I might witness a truly historic upset. But alas, that was not to be. Still, great, great match. And this was a great, great puzzle. Sorry, that segue was terrible. I told you I was out of practice.


Traction was never hard to come by today. Off the "C" in ACAI (sorry, AÇAI) (2D: Berry spelled with a cedilla), I got OCEANARIA. I kinda felt like I was making up a word while I was writing it in, but it fit and ... enough crosses confirmed it, so off we go. Couldn't remember TARANA or ROBB (I thought ARYA? Is that someone?) (1D: One of the Starks on "Game of Thrones"), but ANDROMEDA and TRACT and "EAT!" all went in off OCEANARIA, and I was able to piece that corner together from there. Love (love!) the clue on RAP BATTLE at 1A: Bar fight? "Bars" are rhymes in rap. The word "bars" is sometimes used to indicate someone is speaking truth eloquently—the rough equivalent of "amen to that," "you tell 'em," "testify!" After getting out of that NW corner, things got even easier. You can't give a middle-aged guy this clue on a Saturday—too easy:


Actually, I've never had a STRESS TEST, but I damn sure know what they are, and if my (temporary, harmless) palpitations had become a real problem, I might've had to have one. The short answers in that SW corner were so easy from here that I had most of CHILI PASTE and HELICOPTER in place before I ever saw their clues. The only resistance I got from this puzzle the rest of the way came in the middle of the puzzle, with the Oscar Wilde quote. I had LIFE I- and thought that the "observation" would be  "LIFE IS ..." something. LIFE IS what!? A bowl of cherries? A box of chocolates? A highway? I didn't know LIFE IMITATES ART was Wilde (8D: Observation by Oscar Wilde about the relationship between reality and creativity). I've heard people talk about "life imitating art," but I don't think I've ever seen the phrase as a simple declarative sentence. Anyway, MEN / MEDS / VENI were all coming up bad/weird because I was trying to make LIFE IS happen. Eventually, the beatnik got me out of it. Never thought I'd be "happy" to see "I DIG," but life is (!) full of surprises. Really loved the remainder of the puzzle, esp. "GOD HELP ME!" and GOLDEN CALF and CREAM SODA, which, as I've definitely indicated in recent weeks, I ADORE. I seldom drink soda, but when I do, I like root beer or CREAM SODA. I tried two new kinds of cream soda on vacation. Something called Towne Club CREAM SODA, and then Faygo CREAM SODA (Faygo being a classic Michigan soda brand). They were both fine! (59A: Soft drink originally made with egg whites)



Bullets:
  • 10A: Brand of tights with an apostrophe in its name (L'EGGS) — I didn't know they made anything but pantyhose. Famous for their egg-shaped containers (and display cases):

  • 17A: 1991 blockbuster with the tagline "One breath of oxygen and it explodes in a deadly rage" (BACKDRAFT) — really wanted a monster movie here. The "it" was very confusing, though in retrospect, it probably shouldn't have been.
  • 47A: Second-smallest U.S. state capital by population (about 14,000 people) (PIERRE) — I somehow missed the word "capital" the first time I read this clue, and thought "what state starts PI-!? I knew I was gonna be rusty today, but ... I didn't think actual state names would fall out of my head." But yes, "capital." PIERRE, no problem (once you learn that there's a state capital with a French guy's name, it's oddly hard to forget) (it's pronounced 'peer' though, not "pee-AIR")


  • 11D: Elysia (EDENS) — you don't often see "Elysium" in the plural. You don't often see "Elysium" at all, actually, unless you read (or teach) classical mythology (Elysium is the "good" part of the classical Underworld—Tartarus is the "bad" (think Tantalus, Sisyphus, etc.)
  • 35D: One attracted to all gender identities, for short (OMNI) — I guess this is better than your typical [Luxury hotel chain] clue, but ... what happened to PAN? Is PAN not a thing anymore? How is OMNI different from PAN!? Hang on ... ah, here we go: "Pansexuality and omnisexuality are sometimes considered synonymous, but when a distinction is made between them, the former term emphasizes gender blindness, while the latter emphasizes the role of gender in attraction." (wikipedia). And now you (and, more importantly, I) know. If you tried to make PAN work today ("PANO?"), believe me, I understand.
That's all. Nice to be back. Thanks as ever to my reliably capable and entertaining substitute bloggers, Rafa, Mali, and Eli. It's nice to know the blog is in capable hands while I'm away. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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27 comments:

natasha 6:28 AM  

gonna be honest, as a 40yo woman, i've always been a little unsure about the exact delineation between pantyhose/tights/leggings (i know that the stretchy pants that are sometimes worn without another bottom are "leggings"; past that i'm lost), but i think that "tights" is basically synonymous with "pantyhose".

Anonymous 6:44 AM  

"There is no Golden Goal in World Cup play"... but there sure is a GOLDEN in GOLDEN CALF. I guess the editing team doesn't care about these clue-answer dupes anymore.

A solid puzzle all around, ""spoiled"" at the start by me entering RAP BATTLE right away. I've already seen that clue AND used it in one of my amateur (cryptic) constructions on crosshare.org. None of the long answers really stand out, but I do like RAP BATTLE, OCEANARIA, ANDROMEDA, SOULMATE, SEX ED CLASS. VENDEE is... the only real "?!" moment in the fill.

I ended the solve on a not-so-high note with STONE TOOL, which is definitely one of the crossword answers of all time. The SE was the only somewhat tricky part, and I would've gotten SOULMATE sooner if "One" wasn't capitalized. I also doubted ALOO because I recall only ever seeing it at the start of potato dish names in clues.

Bob Mills 6:44 AM  

I also found it easy (for a Saturday), with one sticking point. I fooled around the top, making unnecessary changes, when something inspired me to change "scheme" to SCHEMA, which had been hiding out somewhere in a brain cavity.

I agree with Rex's high rating. The Oscar Wilde quote was a highlight for me.

Anonymous 6:49 AM  

I never watched game of thrones, so I put TAPBATTLE for bar fight? Because bars have taps and when I lived in Missoula, the Rhino put in 50 taps, which could be viewed as doing ‘battle’ with other bars for business? Anyway I like that better since I don’t care about game of thrones…

Anonymous 6:52 AM  

If you’d already seen the clue, why did you then steal it? Sus.

Wanderlust 6:52 AM  

Great Lakes enthusiasts want to know, Rex - how did Huron stack up against the others? Was it inferior to Superior (my favorite)? I’ve only experienced Huron at Mackinac Island.

Son Volt 6:54 AM  

Welcome to the ink club Rex - outstanding graphic. Today’s puzzle was fine - no doubt easy but you missed Barbara Lin’s absolute gem of a themeless yesterday - that one is tough to match.

Ballad of the GREEN BERETS

The obvious highlight here is the spanning Wilde quote - wonderful. The longs were pretty flat after that - OCEANARIA and CREAM SODA are neat but the others didn’t hit for me.

There’s A Moon In The Sky (Called The Moon)

Overall fill worked OK. Don’t love the dual ON TIME - LATE pair and always dislike the “word that becomes something else when you change a letter” clues. The ROLEO - TRUMAN stack is cool and ANDROMEDA is the word of the day.

Paul Weller

Hard to compete against yesterday’s stellar grid - or the 13 colonies Thursday puzzle but this was an enjoyable Saturday morning solve nonetheless. A true Stan Stumper today featuring intersecting spanners will make for a great Fourth solving day.

Prefab Sprout

Anonymous 6:54 AM  

Misspelled TaranE Burke’s name and schemE was also correct for “conceptual framework.” Took me forever to find that mistake. Sorta unfair.

Rick 6:58 AM  

Tough cross with TARANA (an unknown name and not inferable) and SCHEMA (which could easily be SCHEMe)

Rex Parker 7:03 AM  

1. Superior, 2. Michigan, 3. Huron/Erie (tie), 5. Ontario

Anonymous 7:03 AM  

OCEANARIA crossing TARANA was a WOE for me, but ultimately what could it have been but an A? Otherwise agree with @Rex--an easy and enjoyable Saturday.

Wideright 7:04 AM  

The puzzle was easy except for the schema/Terana quasi-Natick. Not being familiar with Tarana Burke, scheme/Terance was my "obvious" deduction. Ooof.

Rick Sacra 7:16 AM  

Nice. Agree with ****. And agree with easy.... 12:35 for me which is definitely easy on a Saturday. Welcome back, Rex! I think we are on day 4 without SW....You missed some nice puzzles, a 16 wide grid, a 16 tall grid, you'll catch up I'm sure. Love the Great Lakes tats! Nice. Like you, NW was tough-ish but got me ANDROMEDA and the start of LIFEIMI... , and then the rest of the puzzle got easier. Finished up back in the NW when I finalized TARANA and ROBB and OCEANARIA and RAPBATTLES. Yes, I like CREAMSODA too.... sometimes used to mix in a little non-alcoholic beer to cut the sweetness a bit. Enjoyed seeing TAPIRS. Smallest state capital, by population, is Montpelier VT at around 8,000. Amazing. My 41st anniversary is in 2 days, so SOULMATE seemed like a timely reminder. Thanks, Kareem, for a terrific Saturday puzzle!!! : )

RooMonster 7:18 AM  

Hey All !
Welcome back, Rex! No more vacations for you. 😁

Found today's puz easier than YesterPuz. Easier than the ThursPuz, also. Got some funky Blocker pattern going on in the grid today, too.

Easy SatPuzs are good for the ever shrinking thinkability of the ole brain. Har.

TARANA unknown here, got from crossers. VENDEE's clue was odd to me. Wanted HELENE briefly for PIERRE. Remember the commercials and store displays for L'EGGS growing up. Very popular in the 70's-80's. Every time I see TRACT, I think of the Monty Python movie line, "She's got huuuuuge ... TRACTS of land!"

Uniclue:
Statement when panicking over a woman's overdue monthly visitor
LATE? GOD HELP ME!

Hope y'all have fun today! The USA is 250! I was around for the 200th Birthday (I was 6), trying to see if I can stick around for age 300!
Happy 4th of July!

Have a great Saturday!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Lewis 7:18 AM  

Sweet looking grid design, with its four chunky corners and four lightning bolts, a design never before seen in the Times puzzle.

Also, for the first time are seven debut answers. Debuts always add freshness, but they don’t always add interest. However, IMO, these do: BACKDRAFT, BIKERACE, CHILI PASTE, GOD HELP ME, LIFE IMITATES ART, SEX ED CLASS, TARANA.

My senses loved remembering the taste and aroma of CREAM SODA, and flashing on what the quirky, beautiful TAPIR looks like. Tapirs make me smile.

Here’s another Wilde quote that I like: “Be yourself, everyone else is already taken.”

Kareem, your puzzle brought me mucho joy. Thank you so much for making it!

Lewis 7:19 AM  

Welcome back, Rex -- so good to hear your voice!

Anonymous 7:28 AM  

When I saw the Throne clue, I was ready to rip up the puzzle. I had thought the Times had abandoned that junk. Luckily, I decided to solve it and was surprised how easy and fun it was to do so. ( I also fell into the natick schema trap)🎈🎈🎊🎊

Kent 7:31 AM  

The SCHEMA/TARANA cross snared me too. The name was a total unknown to me (I didn’t recognize it as a name, let alone know the specific person), so I figured that’s where my mistake was when I finished, but I thought maybe OCEANARIA was spelled with an I or something. I got it quickly sorted, but Natick territory for sure.

JJK 7:31 AM  

As a 70 yo woman who grew up in the era of early pantyhose-wearing, I can say that pantyhose were revolutionary, the replacement for stockings. Stockings have to be held up by a garter belt. Someone had the brilliant idea of adding ‘panties’ to stockings so that they were all one piece and didn’t need a garter belt. So much more comfortable! And tights are the same thing but thicker and come in dark (usually) colors. Leggings are a whole different animal, even thicker, more like pants.

Rick Sacra 7:33 AM  

Thanks for the ranking! Let's the rest of us know where to start : )

JJK 7:38 AM  

Glad you had a wonderful vacation, Rex! It’s very nice to have you back, although the guest bloggers did a good job. I found the puzzle easy but in a nice way, and I actually had a hard time in the NW. Can never remember the Starks’ names (I never watched even one minute of GOT) didn’t remember TARANA’s name, and OCEANARIA is a new term for me.

Enjoyed learning those factoids about PIERRE and TRUMAN.

Anonymous 7:38 AM  

I also had SCHEMe before SCHEMA. Didn’t know Tarana.

SouthsideJohnny 7:40 AM  

To me, STONE TOOL seemed very much like GREEN PAINT or EAT A SANDWICH. Hopefully there is some specialized meaning that I am unfamiliar with. I also got a chuckle out of ROLEO which sounds like something that Monty Python would do a skit about as parity of loggers trying to have a RODEO. I wonder if there is actually a backstory to the word’s derivation.

I’ve been going through a GOCHUJANG phase recently (it was a natural successor to my recent Calabrian Chili infatuation). Yummy stuff, and the mild versions are easy to play nice with.

Anonymous 7:48 AM  

13 going on 30 is an absolutely gem and a tearjerker. Our daughter is 14. When Ann Hathaway gets into her mom’s bed during Vienna (Billy Joel) your parents’ heart just melts. Especially seeing how much our sweet little girl is pulling away from us as she finds herself. We are faithful that she’ll come back around. So it’s just nice to see that being portrayed. It’s a moment of answered prayer. And what a great song to play over it!

Slow down you crazy child!

Also, and I’m not a political person at all…like haven’t voted in the last two elections just because the mockery the whole thing has become…AND, I happen to think that the idea of political borders is one of the most backwards social constructions that we collectively think is necessary to our survival.

But it does seem a little tone-deaf that the flipping NYT would publish a crossword puzzle ON THE SEMIQUINCENTENNIAL with no reference to the semiquincentennial. If nothing else, it’s an 18 letter word that’s begging to be a marquis answer.

Conrad 7:56 AM  


Easy-Medium. Most of my difficulty was in the NW; luckily, ANDROMEDA (5D) was a gimme.
* * * * _

Overwrites:
My 3D small smack was a buss before it was a PECK (at least I was thinking along the right lines).
irkED before RILED for "Steamed" at 34A.

WOEs:
At 1D, ROBB Stark (all of the GoT Universe is beyond me).
TARANA Burke of the #METOO movement at 6D.
Hymn VENI Sancte Spiritus at 20D.
Painter ALMA Thomas at 39A.
I'd never heard of the dish at 53D, but I knew that ALOO means potato in Hindi.

kitshef 7:59 AM  

Another week, another unsatisfyingly easy Saturday. Themeless puzzles can't entertain with the theme, so all they can offer is a mental workout. Or in this case, not even that.

Puzzle got off to a dismal start with GoT at 1D, followed by ACAI at 2D, but the fill did improve after that.

EasyEd 8:00 AM  

Welcome back Rex! With tats no less! Could not get a strong foothold anywhere on this one and Arya gave me nothing to start, so looked up ROBB and voila, the whole puzzle came into focus bit by bit, except for that darned TARANe/SCHEMe natick. Agree with @Southside that STONETOOL is kinda green paint, but it is unusual enough to get by, and overall this puzzle has little in the way of crosswordese.

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