11.02.10 — Dressings









Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor, as a “Vegetable Man” (Roman God of the seasons Vertumnus), by Giuseppe Arcimboldo 1591





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Tuesday, November 2, 2010





Puzzle by Brendan Emmett Quigley, edited by Will Shortz




DRESSINGS (57A. What the last words in 16-, 22-, 36- and 48-Across are), DUDE RANCH (16A. Where a cowpuncher may work), WHITE RUSSIAN (22A. Drink made with vodka, coffee liqueur and cream), PARDON MY FRENCH (36A. “Sorry if that rude word offended you”) and JULIUS CAESAR (48A. Play whence the phrase “the most unkindest cut of all”) are the interrelated group of this fresh Tuesday crossword.





Other — ALATEEN (53A. Group for young people coping with parental substance abuse), AMBIANCE (D. Atmosphere, as at a restaurant), DEPUTIES (37D. Sheriff’s sidekicks), IRON-JAWED (32D. Exhibiting fierce determination), KODIAKS (20A. Big bears), TARANTINO (10D. Quentin who directed “Inglourious Basterds”).





Mid-size — AGGIE, BEDEW, BLUTH, COHOST, IBMPC, LIEDTO, OPART, PENPAL, PICKS, RATIO, Rock’s Guns N’ ROSES, SANDY, SODOI, SYNCS, TANTES, TEVYE, UNREP, USEME.





Short stuff — AKIN, ALE, APOP, ARI, ATOM, BAA, BBS, BROW, CEES, CIAO, CINQ, DIA and DIE, DRY, EACH, EKCO, ELO, ENDO, ENTS, ETON, EVA, FDIC, IAGO, IDEE, IRR, KIWI, LIDO, MAKO (15A. Kind of shark), MOWS, MTN, NODS, OBOE, OHO, OKOK, QEII, RABE, RIEN, RONA, SET (60D. Word with the longest entry in the Q.E.D.), SKIS, SOHO, SYR, YES.




“The embarrassing thing is that

the salad dressing is outgrossing my films.”


~ Paul Newman





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Click on image to enlarge.





Puzzle available on the internet at


 THE NEW YORK TIMES — Crossword Puzzles and Games.



Remaining clues — ACROSS: 1. Toy gun shot; 4. Machine that was often cloned; 9. Molecular matter; 13. “Don’t Bring Me Down” band, for short; 14. It may be “golden” in mathematics; 18. Sweat spot; 19. School attended by James Bond … and Ian Fleming; 26. Equipment for Olympian Lindsey Vonn; 27. Aunts, in Arles; 30. “Exodus” hero; 33. Grades in the mid-70s; 35. “Arrivederci”; 40. Double-reed woodwind; 41. Prefix with -morphism; 42. “What a pleasant surprise!”; 43. Letter-writing prisoner, perhaps; 46. Quatre + un; 55. “Othello” villain; 58. Green fruit; 61. ___ fixe; 62. “Fiddler on the Roof” milkman; 63. Game cube; 64. Signs of approval; 65. Pictures that may be difficult to focus on; 66. Word repeated in a classic “When Harry Met Sally ..” scene. — DOWN: 1. Moisten, as grass; 2. Animator Don; 3. “Same here”; 4. Like the verb “to be”: Abbr.; 5. Sheep’s cry; 6. Everest, e.g.:; Abbr.; 7. Selects; 8. Any reguylar on “The View,” e.g.; 11. “I get it already!”; 12. Does some lawn work; 17. Sinusitis docs; 21. /7 of a Spanish week; 23. Kitchen utensil brand name; 24. Nothing, in Paris; 25. 1972 #2 hit for Bill Withers; 28. Individually; 29. Greenwich Village neighbor; 30. Individually; 31. “Streamers” playwright David; 34. Matches, as two tapes; 38. Bank guarantor, for short; 39. “Five Women” author Jaffe; 44. Word that can follow pale, brown or cask; 45. Told fibs; 47. British monarch beginning in “52; 49. Overseas diplomat in N.Y.C., say; 50. Little Orphan Annie’s dog; 51. Texas A&M athlete; 53. Like, with “to”; 54. Beach resort at the entrance to the Lagoon of Venice; 58. Model Herzigova; 59 Six-Day War land: Abbr.






11.01.10 — kān









Cain and Abel, 1542-44, Titian






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Monday, November 1, 2010





Puzzle by Holden Baker, edited by Will Shortz




WALKING CANE (17A. Aid for a person with a limp), COCAINE (35A. Drug from Colombia), CITIZEN KANE (53A. 1941 Orson Welles classic), KEY BISCAYNE (11D. Nixon’s Florida home) and RAISING CAIN (25D. Creating a ruckus) comprise the interrelated group of this Monday crossword.





Other — BORNEO, CLIQUE, COMANCHE (36D. War chief Black Horse‘s tribe), DOPIEST, FAVORS, IRKSOME, W.W. II admiral Chester NIMITZ, OPENER, PEEPHOLE, RAGTAG, SHEIKS, SPROUTS, SQUEAK, STONES (50A. Mick Jagger and bandmates, informally), THAMES.





Five-letter — ANDRE, ARPEL, AXLES, CENTS, DOZEN, ELDER, END ON a positive note, EXCON, FRANZ, FRISK, HAUTE, GODOT (34D. Whom Vladimir and Estragon were waiting for, in a Beckett play), ORANG and OGRES, PABST, PAGES, PHLOX, PINUP, REAPS, RYDER, STALL, STOIC, SWIRL.





Short stuff — ADO and AGO, A CAT and A PIG, AER, ALA, ALIE, BONE, BYRD, COG, ERE and ERR, IAN, INCA, ITO and TITO (43A. Judge in the O.J. Simpson trial; 51D. Latin jazz great Puente), KFC, LOS, LXI, NDAK, Jacqueline Kennedy NEE Bouvier, NUTS, OIL, ORIG, Architect I. M. PEI, SSN and SSW, STUD, SVEN, TWA, Keats’s “Ode on a Grecian URN, and Yang’s counterpart, YIN.




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Click on image to enlarge.





Puzzle available on the internet at


THE NEW YORK TIMES — Crossword Puzzles and Games.



Remaining Clues — ACROSS: 1. Not reacting to pain, say; 6. Playboy centerfold, e.g.; 11. Col. Sanders’s restaurant; 1. Go round and round; 15. Tennis champ Agassi; 16. “…___ he drove out of sight”; 19. Yang’s counterpart; 20. Sound from a mouse; 21. Blue Ribbon beer brewer; 23. Brussels ___; 26. Arabian V.I.P.’s; 27. River past Westminster Palace; 28. Party handouts; 30. “That’s ___!” (“Not true!”); 31. Cosmetician Adrien; 32. Machine tooth; 35. ___ Alamos, N.M.; 38. “Long ___ and far away …”; 39. Virgil’s 61; 40. Long-armed ape, for short; 41. Late West Virginia senator Robert; 44. Island where many a 40-Across lives; 46. Disheveled; 48. Most boneheaded; 49. One out of prison; 52. ___ carte; 59. French word before cuisine or couture; 60. Respected tribe member; 61. ID on an I.R.S. form; 63. Actress Winona. — DOWN: 1. Opposite NNE; 2. Old “Up, up and away” carrier; 3. Texaco’s business; 4. Irritating; 5. In-group; 6. Senate gofers; 7. Early Peruvian; 8. Fargo’s home: Abbr.; 10. Hotel room door feature; 12. Pat down, as for weapons; 13. Number after a decimal in a price; 18. Items in a Planters can; 22. ___ Lingus; 23. Play for time; 24 Showy flowers; 26. Stereotypical Swedish man’s name; 28. Writer Kafka; 29. Fat as ___; 31. Nervous as ___; 33. Fairy tale monsters; 37. Copier input: Abbr.; 41. In a quick and lively manner; 44. Common shape for a dog biscuit; 45. First game of the season; 46. Harvests; 47. Connections for car wheels; 48. Egg carton count; 50. Poker variety; 54. Author Fleming or McEwan; 55. Put two and two together; 57. Blunder.