I recently read a book called Pretty Girl In Crimson Rose (8)[1], an autobiography interweaved with interesting stories about crosswords. One such anecdote is about a remarkable crossword puzzle published in the New York Times in 1996. I looked it up on the net and (bless Google) found the puzzle online.
Here is a screenshot of the grid and clues:
Crossword Copyright 1996 New York Times
The NYT puzzle is not a cryptic one; it has straight clues with the occasional pun or cryptic definition. You’ll notice another dissimilarity with regular cryptic crosswords: the NYT clues do not mention solution lengths. This feature was put to ingenious use in the 1996 Election Day Crossword.
The special clue is the one cutting across the centre of the grid – 39A(+43A):
Lead story in tomorrow’s newspaper (!)
The answer to the central clue corresponds with two 7-letter spaces.
This puzzle was published on 5th November 1996, the day of the Presidential Election in US in which Bill Clinton and Bob Dole were the prime candidates. The lead story in the next day’s newspaper would naturally be about the result of the election.
The checking letters for 39A worked out as:
39D Black Halloween animal CAT
40D French 101 word LUI
41D Provider of support, for short IRA
23D Sewing shop purchase YARN
27D Short writings BITS
35D Trumpet BOAST
42D Much-debated political inits. NRA
The solution stood like this, then:
Lead story in tomorrow’s newspaper (!): CLINTON ELECTED
BUT at the time the crossword was