Saturday, May 31, 2008

Shortz Shorts

Last July, killing time during a lengthy layover in the Newark airport, we made excellent use of a Borders gift certificate, buying a couple novels and a beefy book of New York Times Sunday crossword puzzles. To date, we've labored through 55 of these puzzles. Admittedly, there comes a point with some of them where we have to go to the answers in the back of the book to fill in a few gaps. One or two we felt compelled to give up on altogether. Most of the time, though, we see them through to completion.

We were filling in a couple this weekend and, as always, there were a few clues in each that stood out as especially clever. So if you're into it, you can have a go at those clues yourself. Sure, it's not quite the same, but maybe you'll enjoy them too. We'll give you all the info we had as we filled them in, for your puzzling pleasure. When you want to see the answers, highlight each answer box to reveal the "invisible" text. Have fun!


Put before Descartes

R E N E


Head material, perhaps
F
O A M


Weeks per annum?
L I I


Jr.'s Jr.
I I I


Waterproof: England :: _____: U.S.
R A I NC O AT

3 comments:

Mark Jabbusch said...

I did the same, taking a crossword book to 'paperless' Vietnam. But now its back to the Sunday paper.... this week it was trying to come up with all the James Bonds over the last 40 years.
As for your answers... I can't get the answers to show up, so mine are pretty obvious: Rene comes before De Cart, the foam is the best on a head of beer, the Roman numerals fill in LII; but Jr's jr should be Griffey's son 'Trey', and I don't see how to fit in Obama to make the U.S.A. "Bush-proof"

Aaron Burkhalter said...

How did you make those snazzy little boxes for this?

Also, I continue to dislike difficult crosswords. Megan, not content to trounce me at them with the easy Eugene Sheffer versions, has graduated to a New York Times Crossword book herself...

As a counter measure, I've taken to daily Killer Sudoku crosswords... it makes me feel less of an idiot...

Edie said...

I've actually tamed my Sudoku addiction -- by getting myself hopelessly hooked on Cricklers. Even worse -- there are several new ones every day. The difficulty of the puzzle depends on how well you do on the previous one -- so -- the better you do, the harder they get.