Thanksgiving Stuffing (#54)

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thanks

Hey everyone, and welcome to Week 54! Happy Thanksgiving!

This is now the second puzzle on Chris Words dedicated to Thanksgiving foods, so I look forward to maybe one day publishing a collection of Thanksgiving food-related puzzles.

In other news:
THIS AMAZING ANNOUNCEMENT – I am blown away by Matt Gaffney’s selection of my Back to the Future meta as October’s Crossword of the Month. For someone who has never published a crossword in a major newspaper (yes, still), it is beyond crazy how exciting this is. I strive to make all the puzzles on here of a high caliber, and I hope you’ll continue to follow this blog for many months to come.
-In case you are here for the first time, be sure to follow my blog by subscribing via the menu on the right side.
-Dark meat is better than white meat.

Thanks everyone, and enjoy Thursday and the wonderful sleep you get from eating too much!

Chris

Series Finales (#52)

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SMPTE

Hi everyone, and welcome to Week 52!

Whipped up this puzzle somewhat quick, so I can supposedly get back to the work I’m supposed to be doing.

This puzzle was supposed to be five-theme, but I couldn’t get a certain 9-letter theme answer into the grid. So, as a bonus puzzle, what possible theme entry was left on the cutting room floor?

Also, congrats to Evan Birnholz for his amazing new position! We all believe that Evan can continue the great 21×21 tradition that Merl left, and the puzzle people of America should be ready for December 6th. Devil Cross has been a wonderful part of the Indie world, but now as he crosses into the great beyond (read “will receive paycheck”), I hope we will continue to cherish how great Devil Cross was and is. Evan gave Chris Words a shout out more than a year ago, and I like to think some of you came here for the first time via his publicity.

Thanks Evan, and congrats on everything!

Enjoy the puzzle.

Chris

P.S. The theme answers of this puzzle were clued differently 40 minutes after this puzzle went on the air, so you may have a different version of the puzzle in that case. This is because I thought of a more thematic theme. C’est la vie, so hope you enjoy it more!

Buzz Feedback – A Statistical Look

Hey everyone, and welcome to Chris Words! I hope you all had an excellent Halloween, and that you found the most sincere pumpkin patch. This last week was a bit of a hell for me, but I think I’m officially out of that hole. Either way, a puzzle didn’t get written, but since I don’t want to leave you hanging, we’re opening another chapter of Crossword Research and investigating the Buzzfeed Crossword!

buzzcross

As you probably know at this point, Caleb Madison has been captaining the new Buzzfeed Crossword puzzle, which has been targeted at new crossword solvers by incorporating things that would be relevant to them, as opposed to dusty old crosswordese. Buzzfeed has hired Caleb to make this happen, and Caleb has enlisted a BUNCH of excellent constructors to help make these puzzles happen.

The rise of the Buzzfeed crossword has also led to the creation of the site “New Grids on the Block“, where the crossword community can discuss the Buzzfeed crossword as well as the other puzzles in Indie land (including mine, despite my name not being in the drop down menu under “Indies”). [EDITED: Peter Broda has informed me that this has now been fixed. Thanks so much Peter/NGOTB crew!]

And while it’s great for us, the crossword/critic community gets to look at these Buzzfeed puzzle with a magnifying glass, we certainly must consider the clientele: the millennials, not the Boomers/Gen Xers.

Before continuing, read [this Buzzfeed article]. This probably sums up millennials in a nutshell.

I’m sure most of us check out crosswordfiend daily and see what we’ve rated the crossword of the day, if we don’t rate them ourselves. However, the New York Times crossword doesn’t really have a rating system used by the solvers themselves. The people who rate crosswords are the crossword community dedicated enough to go to a website dedicated to crossword rating and rate. The NYT doesn’t have a rating system integrated into its webpages, the app doesn’t let you rate an individual puzzle, and no one hears your comment to your spouse after you finish your crossword at the breakfast table.

Buzzfeed does. On every Buzzfeed article, there is a series of buttons you can click do describe how you felt about that article. For example, here is the image of the ratings for the article “This Girl Texted Adele Lyrics To Her Ex And It Did Not Go Well” [found here].

AdeleRatings

This article, at time of writing, has been viewed more than 345,000 time, and this is the distribution of how people rated it. FAIL is leading, followed by LOL, with [Broken heart] finishing the medal stand.

So, I have taken the liberty to organize the first 14 Buzzfeed crosswords, and analyze the number of ratings, plus what the individual ratings were. During the writing of this post, the Friday 10/30 puzzle had yet to receive any votes.

Click for larger picture

BFeedRatings

The penultimate column, Consensus, is just a percentage of how many people that voted for the #1 selected option. This way, you can see if there is more “room to debate” about a certain puzzle. The final column is simply the rating of the Buzzfeed article on crosswordfiend with the number of people that voted on it.

The real question when analyzing this data is determining what some of these options mean. Like, what does FAIL mean? Does it mean “This puzzle sucks!” or “This puzzle is really hard!” or “I’m so bad at crosswords!”. Same for WTF or [Broken heart].

The total votes column now graphed as a line.

LineGraph

The premiere puzzle by friend-of-the-show Neville Fogarty led, as all TV pilots do, but it just seems odd to me that Elizabeth’s Gorski’s puzzle had SUCH a huge spike. I’ve done some quick internet research about why, and I haven’t found anything yet.

As the data seems to say, people generally [Heart] most of the puzzles, always appearing in the top 3 for any puzzle.

Few other bits of odds and ends:
-Only one puzzle of the list did any put FRESH, just Finn’s 10/23 puzzle. I assume it was so FRESH, that some viewers decided against [Heart] and put FRESH instead.
-Matt Gaffney receives the first WTF award for his crossword. Did the Buzzfeed solvers thing vowel progressions are just too WTF?
-What does [Broken heart] mean?!? “I’m sad because I can’t do puzzles” or does it mean something else?
-Besides “First constructor”, Neville became the first repeat constructor in Buzzfeed history. As an analog, Manny Nosowsky was the first repeat constructor in the Will Shortz era.

And let it be known, I want the Buzzfeed puzzles to succeed. The Buzzfeed crossword is allowing people to get paid for crazy indie puzzles to be published for the masses, where “NETFLIX AND CHILL” can be a central theme answer.

Hopefully, the Buzzfeed crosswords will pick up more steam, and will be enjoyed by the masses. Not sure if that means featuring puzzles on the home page or a rework of the in-site solving app or PDFs that you can actually print, but I hope that the Buzzfeed puzzles will grow into an equal of the other publishing places. Caleb has done an amazing job, and I look forward to more puzzles and to me actually sending some in.

And finally, I leave you with this excellent nugget from Twitter, with an amazing juxtaposition.

BEQwtf

New puzzle next week! See you then!

Chris

Well, I Started Dating a Witch the Week Before Halloween (#51)

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Witches

Before I go into the meta, this week’s puzzle is my Halloween entry! And, to keep celebrating the season, feel free to flashback to last year’s Halloween puzzle

Anyway, let’s go over last week’s meta.

This puzzle was looking for an appropriate eight-letter word that relates to this tribute puzzle.

As it should have been clear, the topic of this tribute puzzle is “Back To The Future”, which was in the news last week as Delorean-solutionOctober 21st, 2015 was the setting of part of “Back To The Future II”.

17A: [Popular 1985 film that begins and ends in the year 1985] = BACK TO THE FUTURE
23A: [Protagonist of 17-Across] = MARTY MCFLY
47A: [Antagonist of 17-Across] = BIFF TANNEN
58A: [Event critical to 17-Across] = HIGH SCHOOL DANCE

Also, the final theme entry to this puzzle was found in the dead center:
39A: [Important feature of a crossword puzzle or to a 58-Across] = THEME

So, of course the the theme to the crossword puzzle is BTTF, but the important part is finding the theme of the HIGH SCHOOL DANCE. As Doc would say, the “rhythmic ceremonial ritual” that got George and Lorraine back together was “Enchantment Under the Sea”.

That dance theme is now the important part of this crossword, as the name “Under the Sea” can be reworked as the pun “Under the C”.

As many of you saw, there are exactly 8 Cs found in this puzzle, and if you look “under the C”, the eight letters spell, from left-to-right, the name DELOREAN, the glorious car that Doc Brown turned into the time machine, and the answer to this meta puzzle.

delorean-back-to-the-future

Guys, last Wednesday was Back to the Future Day! And, it was my birthday! The fates aligned. To celebrate, I wore this shirt, which has my birthday on it.

IMG_3052

And my birthday cake featured a design that made the day even better.

IMG_3059

What a glorious day! Remember that USC Puzzle Hunt I talked about all those months ago? Well, the theme of this year’s Hunt involved a series of movies that should seem obvious at this point. Here’s the link for more evidence.

BTTFBanner

And, that let me cosplay as an important person in science history, during the opening kickoff.

12045340_1286611858020787_6705739167127860573_o

What a glorious day it was. Back to the Future Day has now come and gone, and it makes me kind of sad that the BTTF is now in a period piece. My intention for last week’s puzzle to be both a tribute puzzle and a meta puzzle, and I like to think I accomplished it. I hope I did the two Bobs proud.

So, 21 readers submitted “DeLorean”. Congrats to those who got it! This week’s randomly selected winner was Charles Montpetit. He will join Jon Delfin, John L. Wilson, Jim Quinlan, Eric Maddy, Andy Keller, David Cole, Roger Barkan, Patricia Miga, and Erik Agard in a future section of the site. Congrats Charles!

Finally, thanks to Ben Johnston for blogging about last week’s puzzle on the new New Grids on the Block website. Thanks Ben!

That’s all I got this week. The future is whatever you make it, so make it a good one.

Chris

Meta: That’s the Power of Love (#50)

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HueyLewis

Hey everyone, and welcome to Week 50! Chris Words celebrates its golden anniversary, and it’s exciting that the blog has now gone through 10 full cycles of puzzles.

October 21st, 2015 is a great day for a bunch of people, mostly me, since I turn 23 this week. And, it’s also the anniversary of something that’s bigger than all of us. It’s THAT day, people. The day we’ve been waiting for now for YEARS. And since this puzzle’s number ends with a 0 or 5, it’s time for a meta.

For this tenth meta of the blog, I’m looking for an appropriate eight-letter word that relates to this tribute puzzle. When you think you have it, email me at cking.gow(at)gmail.com with your answer. I’ll accept answers all the way to noon ET on Saturday.

In puzzle news:

1- The Buzzfeed crossword just finished its first week of puzzles. A great slate of puzzles, that certainly seem to be a little less aggressive than the opening puzzle Caleb gave us (not that there was anything wrong with that!). Constructors for Week 1 included Neville Fogarty, Andrew Ries, and Jeffrey Harris, and I look forward to see what other puzzle stalwarts will make their listicle debut this next week.

2- A new crossword blog is now online, titled New Grids on the Block. Led by Lena Webb, Ben Johnston, Michael Sharp, Erin Milligan-Milburn, and Peter Broda, this new website essentially is the equivalent of Crossword Fiend for those puzzles who are published each week and aren’t in the print media. It’ll be covering the Buzzfeed crossword, all the puzzles published by my colleagues and friends here on the web, and will excitedly be covering Chris Words. This week’s meta won’t go discussed until next Saturday, but I’m looking forward to seeing how they react. Hopefully, well.

Thanks everyone, and enjoy the puzzle. Be sure to email me your answer!

Chris

The Crying Alot (#49)

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Pynchon
Hello everyone, and welcome to Week 49!

If it wasn’t obvious, this puzzle’s theme comes from the number puzzle it is, and I’m glad I got to incorporate one of my favorite books “The Crying of Lot 49” as a puzzle. The theme comes from the title, and I hope you’ll enjoy this week’s puzzle. And hopefully it won’t be as confusing as the book.

In other news:

1) Puzzle Boat 3 has set sail! For those of you who are on teams, good luck! I was lucky enough to playtest some of the puzzles, and there’s a wide sample of everything. Hope all of you are able to make it to the end!

2) In case you haven’t seen the ad on Crossword Fiend yet, fellow young-person K(ameron) Austin Collins is launching a biweekly themeless puzzle series. I’ve added his name to the Blogroll for this site, and you can go straight to his frontpage [here]. Be sure to subscribe!

3) What a week for SC. The state of South Carolina has been hit by a series of floods that has put much of the state without drinking water, loss of property for thousands and thousands of people, and has sadly caused 17 deaths for fellow South Carolinians.

I live on campus proper at USC, and I’m fortunate enough to say that I never saw in person much of the damage. The university is located in one of the higher spots of Columbia and doesn’t feature a river too close, so the campus was mostly fine. But Columbia was shot. Neighborhoods evacuated, dams breaking, and houses and cars totaled. The main thing that has affected campus is the lack of drinking water, with the citywide caution that water should be “boiled vigorously”. Bottled water has been passed out on campus, and I’ve seen efforts of rescue and assistance by Columbia people on the news. My brother and I stayed on campus until Tuesday midday, when word came down that classes had been cancelled for the rest of the week, where we then went back home, to our parents’ request.

Today, I’m going back to USC, and I hope to help out the community and campus as much as I can for the next few weeks, as I know we’ll need it.

For those of you living in the other 49 states, continue to keep our state and people in your thoughts, and there are lots of ways you can donate to charities creating relief effort, if you are inclined to do so.

Thanks everyone, and I’ll see you next week for the meta puzzle and 50th puzzle!

Chris

Themeless Ten (#48)

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Evolve

Hey everyone, and welcome to Week 48!

Back from the week off, and my cousin got married as intended. While at the church, I gave my brother 300:1 odds on a standup at the altar. Now he owes me $2.

Quick announcements:

1) The first reveal of the BuzzFeed crossword was earlier this week. The sample puzzle was by constructor and BuzzFeed crossword editor-in-chief Caleb Madison, and can be found [here]. The fill is certainly clean, but as BuzzFeed is trying to reach a certain demographic, it don’t hurt to know about 2000s/2010s TV, movies, music, and Internet. Also, the clues are more sentency than your usual puzzle. Still, give it a solve, and see what you know / can figure out from context!

2) Chris Words is now a little over a year old! Puzzle #1 went online September 21st, and now I’ve made 47 other puzzles for all of you people to enjoy, plus all the bonus material that Chris Words has had to offer. I don’t really count #48 as my big anniversary, since I like round numbers to do those for me. But still, I’m pleased to see how far my puzzle-making ability has come from making this blog, and how much all of you have enjoyed them. Thanks everyone!

Enjoy the puzzle!

Chris

My Week Off – Trivia Substitute

Trivial

Hi everyone! I had a wedding to attend this weekend, so last week I decided not to write a puzzle for this Sunday. I give myself a break every 2-3 months or so, and I thought I’d use one this weekend. That paid off handsomely.

I couldn’t arrange to get a new installment of the X-word Files ready (please bite potential interviewees!), so instead, I’d thought I’d let you play some trivia.

The questions below come from two main sources: a trivia night I hosted at a residence hall on USC’s campus, and questions about universities the Gamecocks play that are sent in a weekly newsletter on campus.

The trivia night was played in rounds, with two category questions in each round. There was eight questions about USC, but those have been skipped. Pictures were a part of the trivia night, and those pictures have been provided for you. Click on any picture for a better look.

The newsletter questions usually focus on the school and the city/state where they are located, except for Georgia, which is just about the schools. Sports biased on many questions, so this is where you can improve if you’re a poor sports player.

No prizes here, just questions. There is a PDF at the bottom of the page so you can see how you did.

There will be a new crossword next week.

Enjoy!

=TRIVIA NIGHT, September 17th, 2015=

Science

1. If you know one thing about Albert Einstein, it’s that he developed the theory of relativity, which is represented by the equation E=mc2. What the letter “c” represent in that equation?

2. If the periodic table added the element “Volkswagonium”, it would probably be represented the symbol “Vw”, which has the property of being a two-letter symbol whose two letters are consecutive letters. Name any one of the three actual elements that have this property.

Music

1. The two bestselling albums of Bruce Springsteen, which have collectively went 21 times platinum, both begin with what word?

2. The recently-released song “What Do You Mean?”, which will be a part of the artist’s upcoming fourth album, is the current Billboard #1 hit as well as the first Billboard #1 hit for what artist?

Appreciation

1. The central figure of this painting is the Captain Frans Banning Cocq, and the nickname of this painting comes from the dark varnish surrounding it. One point for the name of the Dutch painter who created it, and one point for the name associated with this painting.

Painting
2. The music about to be played is the allegro section of a section of music that is a part of a larger suite of four violin concerti. One point for naming the Italian composer who created the set, and one point for naming the movement (not the name of the entire suite) the song comes from. [I actually played the song for teams to recognize. The movement I played is from the first of the four violin concerti. By context clues, you ought to be able to identify the music in question]

Sports

1. Clayton Kershaw, Yasiel Puig, Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley, and Zack Greinke are all members of what California-based sports team? Include both location name and team name, like “Detroit Red Wings”.

2. Identify the university whose football stadium is partially shown here.
Sports Literature

1. John Steinbeck’s novel “The Grapes of Wrath” begins in which US state?

2. Artist Gustave Dore created a set of 38 illustrations depicting a famous poem by a well-known British poet. Shown here are two illustrations of that set. Name the poet whose work is displayed here.
Dore1Dore2

Television

1. In reality, this building is Pasadena City Hall, but is certainly more famous for its use for exterior shots for a television show that is set in which US state?
TV2. First awarded in 1974, Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children’s Series has saluted the best of non-animated kids shows. Name two of the three shows that have been nominated the most for the award.

History

1. On April 12, 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested and jailed, along with civil rights activists Ralph Abernathy and Fred Shuttlesworth, in what Southern city?

2. The time of fifth-century Athens, also known as the “Golden Age of Athens” is largely attributed and associated with what leader, a noted statesman, orator, and general?

Business

1. Alphabet Inc. is a holding company that was created in 2015, and will serve as the umbrella company for what major tech company, which was founded by Larry Page and Sergey Brin?

2. What corporation headquartered in Maplewood, Minnesota and whose products include everything from car-care products to Scotch Tape to Post-it Notes has the ticker symbol MMM at the New York Stock Exchange?

Religion

1. Celebrated by the blowing of the shofar and translating to “head of the year”, what holiday serves as the Jewish New Year?

2. Which book of the Bible has the most chapters, with 150?

Food

1. Originally from the Spanish region of Andalusia, what soup features a tomato base, is made from raw vegetables including garlic and cucumber, and is served cold?

2. Besides cucumber, what fruit or vegetable is found in a California sushi roll?

Fashion

1. What color is best associated with a pair of Christian Louboutin shoes?

2. What clothes item, first introduced by fashion designer Sonja de Lennart in 1948, rose to popularity in the late 50s / early 60s after actresses like Grace Kelly were seen wearing the clothes item on its namesake island while vacationing?

Movies

1. The titles of the highest grossing film of the year 1993 and the highest grossing film of the year 2015 both begin with what word?

2. This image is a screenshot of what influential 1967 film?
MovieGeography

1. Name the thoroughfare pictured here.
Geog2. The second most populated island in the world, what island is home to the city of Tokyo?

Games

1. Name the object depicted here.
GAmes2. In the board game Clue, name the colors of the pieces that represent women. List only the colors, not the names of the women (e.g. if Lady Tangerine was a character from Clue, write down “orange”)

=KNOWING IS HALF THE BATTLE – NEWSLETTER TRIVIA=

-University of Kentucky: The school and the state

1. What three-word term is the name of the fan base for all University of Kentucky athletic programs?

2. What university famously beat the Kentucky Wildcats in an Elite Eight basketball game 104-103 in 1992, which ended with a buzzer beater shot by Christian Laettner?

3. What current Senate Majority Leader is an alumnus of the University of Kentucky College of Law?

4. The University of Kentucky is considered the “daughter institution” to a school once known as “Kentucky University”, but changed its name in 1908 to a rather spooky name. What is the current name of that school, a cross-town rival to UK?

5. What was the occupation of John T. Scopes, who majored in law and minored in geology as part of the Class of 1924 at UK, and who became nationally known in 1925?

6. The Order of the Palmetto is the highest civilian honor awarded by our state. What is the equivalent of this award for the state of Kentucky? The honor shares its name with a military rank, and the most notable person to ever receive this award for Kentucky often went by this name, despite never serving in the military.

7. As opposed to using the word “state”, the states of Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia feature what 12-letter word in their official state names?

8. Who is the most recent winner of the Kentucky Derby?

9. Eliza and her son cross the Ohio River on an ice floe, escaping Kentucky, at the beginning of what 1852 novel?

10. What National Park found near Brownsville, Kentucky is home to the longest cave system known in the world?


-University of Georgia: Just the school

1. Founded in 1785, the University of Georgia is one of three schools that claim the title “Oldest Public University in the United States”. Name either school that also claims this title. Note: USC is not one of them.

2. “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the NCAA / They’re investigating Georgia players to see how much their paid / After counting all the cars, and the loans alumni made / They outpaid the NBA” is a stanza from what song written by rival Georgia Tech, to which they call Georgia “the cesspool of the South”?

3. UGA is the proud owner of three international residential centers for students to use when studying outside of the United States. One is found in Oxford University, one is found in Cortona, Italy, and the third is found in what country, whose capital is San Jose?

4. What iconic feature of Sanford Stadium, the home of Georgia football, had to be removed temporarily while the field was being used for soccer during the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta?

5. Georgia-native Ryan Seacrest attended UGA for basically a year before he left to pursue a Hollywood career. While his American Idol gig is almost over, Seacrest is still the host of what radio program, which first came on the airwaves in 1970?

6. Although he was both a Governor of Georgia, as well as serving in the US House of Representatives, what political office was Class of 1832 graduate Alexander H. Stephens best associated with? Stephens is also the only person in history to have ever held this position.

7. What Georgia Bulldog who received the 1982 Heisman Trophy famously began his post-collegiate career playing the now-defunct United States Football League (USFL)?

8. An air-conditioned dog house can be found on the football field during games as the rest area for what dog, the live mascot for the University of Georgia?

9. While Hootie & the Blowfish formed at USC in 1986, what rock band, with lead singer Michael Stipe, formed at the University of Georgia in 1980, and produced their first hit “Radio Free Europe” in 1981?

10. What winner of the 2012 and 2014 Masters Tournament in Augusta once played on the golf team at UGA?

-University of Central Florida: The school and the home city of Orlando

1. The University of Central Florida boasts having the most undergraduate enrolled for the entire US (at 51,269), but it has the second-highest enrollment for total enrollment (59,770, compared to USC’s 32,848). What university found in the city of Tempe has the highest total enrollment?

2. Surely the greatest UCF Knight to ever play football is what quarterback, who in 2004, while playing for the Minnesota Vikings, set the NFL single-season record for most total yardage by a QB at 5,123 (which has since been broken)?

3. What comedian and TV host who is a part of the UCF Class of 1996 has said “Your GPAs don’t matter, I went to UCF, my head writer went to Harvard and guess who tells him what the **** to do”?

4. The official university magazine for UCF is named after what mythological creature, which is also found in the school’s logo, which apparently “symbolizes the university’s vision of limitless possibilities”?

5. The UCF Knights were an inaugural member of the SSC from 1975 to 1984, an athletic conference that serves Division II teams (UCF has moved up to Division I FBS since then). Since all schools that play in the SSC are in Florida, it seems appropriate that the “SS” in SSC stand for what two words?

6. Orlando is the county seat of what Florida county?

7. Which Magic Kingdom attraction first opened in 1971 with 36 “participants”, and today features 43 “participants” (the most recent addition being added in 2009)?

8. Nickelodeon Studios in Orlando once featured a mighty “geyser” outside of its iconic building that spewed what substance? Sadly, the geyser has been removed because it apparently doesn’t fit with the “Blue Man Group” studio which has now taken over the Nickelodeon Studios building of the 90s.

9. What’s the official name of the giant geodesic ball that is found at EPCOT?

10. The mailing address for Walt Disney World Resort is technically not Orlando, but rather a city named for what lake, that comes from the Spanish for “good view”? Comically, the 2010 census shows that the population of this city was 10.


-University of Missouri: The school and the state

1. A 1911 game between Mizzou and the University of Kansas is considered the first occurrence of what kind of annual event in college football history? The Gamecocks will celebrate this kind of occurrence on October 17th, against Vanderbilt.

2. Remarkably, Mizzou is a member of the SEC East, like the Gamecocks. Of the seven members of the SEC West, Mizzou is actually more geographically west than five of them, with the exception of two schools. Name either of the two SEC West schools that are actually more geographically west than Mizzou.

3. The official mascot for the University of Missouri is a tiger named after what famous American, who never actually earned a college degree?

4. What celebrity who enrolled at the University of Missouri in 1982 and left the school a mere two weeks before graduation is a three-time Academy Award nominee, whose first nomination was for Best Supporting Actor in the 1995 film “12 Monkeys”?

5. In 1902, the University of Missouri (then known as Missouri University) bestowed an honorary degree to what famous Missourian? In an autobiography, this man wrote “I rejoiced again when Missouri University made me a Doctor of Laws…I not knowing anything about laws except how to evade them and not get caught.”

6. What’s the official state nickname of Missouri, which is said to have come from a quotation by Missouri Congressman Willard Vandiver in 1899?

7. Inside what structure could you find a plaque that featured the mathematical formula “y=-127.7ft x cosh (x/127.7 ft) + 757.7 ft”?

8. What classic 1971 video game begins in Independence, Missouri and ends (assuming you don’t die somewhere in between) at the Columbia River?

9. As opposed to a panhandle, the southeastern part of Missouri is known by what term? The Salento region of Italy is also known as “Italy’s” this.

10. What legendary baseball player and St. Louis native who sadly passed away on September 22nd, described the reason why he no longer went to the St. Louis restaurant Rigazzli’s with “Nobody goes there any more. It’s too crowded.”?

[ANSWERS]

Scholarly Pursuits (#47)

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Gameday
Welcome everyone to Week 47! It’s now time to finally look at the the meta from two weeks ago, so let’s do it!

Also, if you tuned in for the first 30 minutes this blog post went live, sorry for the odd incompletion. Some strange draft of the post went live instead of the full post, but thankfully WordPress had the full version on autosave.

This puzzle was looking for an appropriate six-letter word, and the puzzle didn’t really have any theme answers, except for PNG045one 15-letter entry 40A – [Intersection locations] = STREET CROSSINGS.

The other grid entries didn’t really have many interesting things to say, but hopefully this entry helped lead you where you needed to go, with the synonyms CROSSING/Intersection/”Meeting” being found in the puzzle or its title, the word “street” is where you needed to go.

While the words in the grid didn’t hide that much, there were 12 clues in the puzzle whose first word was a word that can precede “street”.

17A [Easy target for auto insurers] / 1D [Bourbon container] = (S)PORTS CAR / CA(S)K

4A [Elm City collegian] / 7D [Wall sized movie theater name] = YAL(I)E / (I)MAX

16A [“Coronation Ode” composer Edward] / 11D [Main shopping location in ancient Greece] = EL(G)AR / A(G)ORA

68A [Fleet detector] / 54D [Baker supply that comes in squeeze tubes] = SO(N)AR / ICI(N)G

72A [Sesame seed snack] / 59D [Side lot, e.g.] = H(A)LVA / ARE(A)

65A [Back of the $1 bill insignia] / 62D [“E” of BPOE] = GREAT SEA(L) / E(L)KS

These twelve streets intersect at six different letters, and reading these letters from left to right, and top then bottom, you get the word SIGNAL, which is found at street intersections.

TrafficSignal

So, 15 readers submitted “signal”. Congrats to those who got it, since this certainly was a trickier meta puzzle than usual. This week’s randomly selected winner was Erik Agard. He will join Jon Delfin, John L. Wilson, Jim Quinlan, Eric Maddy, Andy Keller, David Cole, Roger Barkan, and Patricia Miga in a future section of the site. Congrats Erik!

So, a few notes before I’m done with the post here:

-For those who didn’t get this week’s meta, don’t worry. The one that will celebrate the 50th puzzle on this blog will be coming up, and it will be easier.
-Themeless Nine will make its debut in two weeks, since I’m taking next week off. My first cousin is getting married next weekend, so I have zero idea how much time I’ll have, so I’ll be back the next week for a new puzzle. However, I will have some educational stuff next Sunday, so be sure to tune in for that.
-Unfortunately, that educational stuff will not be an “X-word file”. I like having breaks on the blog, and I love that “X-word files” are a great way to use those breaks. However, I’ve been putting out a LOT of feelers for interviews that have gone nowhere. As of this writing, I have tried to arrange interviews regarding ASTA, OMOO, EPEE, ULEE, and ERTE, and the people I’ve emailed did not reply. Don’t worry, I will continue to do this interview session, and I sincerely hope that I’ll be able to interview noted experts on each of those 5 topics (and more!), but I just haven’t been able to get the right people with my recent attempts. But soon, I promise!

Thanks everyone, and enjoy the puzzle.

Chris