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"I think they should stop trying to link every bit of the grid together," Dr. Dean said in Iowa.
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"The way our forefathers designed this bit of the city – with a grid system – helped a lot," Bell says.
Because, first of all, the final 20% may be half the effort, because it gets more and more challenging as we go, trying to ring the last bits of carbon out of the grid.
Wait, CENTER BIT is in the center of the grid.
I liked the romanticism of the north sector of this puzzle quite a bit: interwoven in this part of the grid is a Valentine's Day ROSE, a WOOER, the phrase ASK TO, which I imagine to be an invitation to a date or a dance, the response "YES," and a man who seems to have been particularly successful at 21 Across, because he has seven wives.
I don't recall ever seeing a grid that brings both elements together like that in a way where both had meaning, but this puzzle by Jeremy Newton kind of gets close (Across Lite, Solution, blog) I enjoyed seeing a bit of Yiddish in the grid with NOSHING.
In nontheme news, while there is a bit of glue holding the grid together, I found it to be a smooth and fun solve.
The rules are a bit different, and the grid now involves color.
The year of the grid.
De-average the price of the grid.
Here's a reminder of the grid.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com