07.20.07 -- Masquerade


A masquerade at the Pantheon in Oxford Street London as drawn by Augustus Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson for Ackermann's Microcosm of London (1808-11).

-----------------

Friday, July 20, 2007

Click here for LARGE PRINT.

Puzzle by Barry C. Silk, edited by Will Shortz

This A to Z ball of an alphabet soup is disguised in every way imaginable giving up its arcanum one painful square at a time -- much like meeting the guests at a masquerade with the need to know who's who, but by playing a game with every name

From its first entry, ABOVEZERO (1A Positive), to the last, SNAKEEYES (57A Loser in a casino), every entry or its clue of this crossword comes prestidigitatiously swathed with deception or duplicity -- words one's not met and old ones in dark terra incognita burkas -- LIVEALIE (13D (Be what you're not) is the rule!

Across

10 Vacuum maintainers -- no, not a repairman

15 Like some fruit bats and petrels -- anyone think Qbert?

16 Cornrow component -- could be “braid”

17 Whine -- unexpectedly colloquial

18 Royal jelly consumer -- I thought it was the “queen

19 Jungian principle -- weren’t there a few?

20 Samoan, e.g. -- so simple, it’s silly

22 Kind of party -- take your pick

23 Top of a stadium -- explain this one to me!

25 Comic character -- a stretch

26 From Niger to Zambia: Abbr. -- just geography

27 Hacker of the Middle Ages -- they had computers?

28. “The Dram Shop” author -- a tale within a novel

29. Squeals -- you’d think “oinks”

30. Start of a Spanish Christmas greeting -- I wanted “felice”

31. Certify -- lots of possibilities

34. Unwelcome discovery on a credit card -- ditto of above

36 Period to find out more -- a "q" but no "u", with an "a"

37 Tough companions? -- very sneaky clue

38 Minor leader? -- “asia”, “ursa”, etc.

39 Carving in an Egyptian tomb -- which one?

41 Relief may follow it -- “bas”, bah!

44 Botanist’s beard -- the plant, not the person

46 Rubberneck -- this one made sense

47 Where cell phones don’t work -- yup

49 Weed-B-Gon maker -- “Ortho” again

50 200 milligrams -- now I know

51 Popular reference work -- think internet

54 Match point? -- think place

55 “Shoot!” -- think “shucks”

56 Name on a truck -- not U-Haul, not Penske, think "Winona"

57 Loser in a casino

Down

1 Opportunities to run away from home -- very obtuse

2 Gustavo’s good -- foreign language

3 Require -- hop-scotch meaning

4 Female role in “Chicago” -- not Roxie

5 “Paint the Sky With Stars” singer -- who is this “Enya” anyway?

6 Suffix with proto- -- “zoa” matching 28A Zola

7 Abbr. on a key -- not "alt"

8 They're back on board -- another sly one

9 City on the Permian Basin -- this "Odessa" not that "Odessa"

10 Extend awkwardly -- just weird

11 Sparkle -- almost farfetched

12 Cousin of a hyena -- new to me!

14 Be a night watchman? -- not a profession

21 Manhattan ave. -- not Mad.

23 Sudden impact -- "bang" more appropriate

24 First home of the University of Nevada -- knew this!

27 Firm assistant, briefly --- this too!

28 Couple of pizzas? -- yesterday it was "Affluent duo?"

29 Revelation exclamation -- not "ahha", "ohho", etc.

30 Work unit: Abbr. -- this I still don't get

31 Black-and-white -- they're blue and white here

32 Spent from all the conflict -- not "worn down"

33 Webbed -- it's that "nsn" part that's strange

34 Generation-to-generation information -- long way to go

35 Poet Seeger -- Not Pete

37 Otherworldly one -- think "War of the Worlds"

39 It's appetizing to aphids -- another long way to go

40 What ochlophobists fear -- oh, those phobias!

41 Big-league promotional event -- matches 1-Down

42 For some time -- one of several possibilities

43 Drinks a toast -- another stretch

45 It's massive and relatively hot -- what begins with "bst"?

46 _____Waitz, nine-time New York City Marathon winner - var. sp.

48 King Claudius, e.g. -- nationality

49 Artist John, known as the Cornish Wonder -- another way to clue "opie"

52 Malay Peninsula's Isthmus of KRA -- Google constructing!

53 Publicity -- the final stretch!


37D - MARTIAN -- Alien tripod illustration from the 1906 French edition of H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds.

Puzzle available on the internet at
THE NEW YORK TIMES -- Crossword Puzzles and Games

If you subscribe to home delivery of The New York Times you are eligible to access the daily crossword via The New York Times - Times Reader, without additional charge, as part of your home delivery subscription.







No comments:

Post a Comment