![]() ![]() “I thought it should have been the way I had it.” “I was disappointed,” Lempel said yesterday. 3, Times editors replied and said Lempel had raised “a thoughtful point about clean coal” but that Will Shortz “still finds the clue better as it is without any hedging.” That’s why I used the qualifier and I wonder if it should stay in there,” Lempel wrote. “If you Google ‘clean coal,’ there seem to be a lot of questions as to whether it’s actually clean. 29, Lempel sent an email to the Times puzzle editors questioning the change. That’s not uncommon at all,” said Lempel, who is 75. “You have to realize that editors change clues all the time. In a telephone interview yesterday from her home in Daytona Beach, Fla., Lempel said that when she submitted her puzzle to the Times in December, the clue she used was “dubious term for a greener energy source.”īut when the Times sent the edited puzzle back to her, the clue was changed to “greener energy source.” Lempel has been constructing puzzles since the 1970s as a freelancer and is paid $500 to $750 for weekday puzzles accepted by the Times. ![]() On Tuesday, joined the pile on, reporting gleefully that social media users “banded together to agree that clean coal was not actually ‘clean’ and shamed the Times for the suggestion and leaving a dirty taste in their mouths.”īy this time, Lynn Lempel, the puzzle constructor, began to hear about the controversy and wrote a note on Wordplay, the Times’ online crossword column, blaming “the editing team” for changing her clue. “Wtf? Eugene T Maleska would never had written that,” someone else wrote referring to the revered former Times puzzle editor whom Shortz replaced in 1993. “Manchin’s favorite crossword,” wrote another. “Wonder how much they got paid to slip that one in there,” one Twitter user wrote. One of the clues in today’s NYT crossword is “greener energy source” and the answer is “Clean Coal” □□ /uNPcSV8aML He is currently director of the Initiative on Communication Innovation and Impact at Columbia University’s climate school. ![]() “It’s tough to navigate this terrain because the language around climate and cleanliness is really such a hot button,” Revkin said in an interview yesterday. Within hours, thousands of Twitter users had liked or reposted Fisch-Friedman’s tweet, including former New York Times environmental writer Andrew Revkin, who linked to a Times column he wrote in 2008 calling “clean coal” technology a “pipe dream.” Logging on to Twitter on Sunday at 7:38 p.m., Fisch-Friedman wrote, “Okay I am sorry for the spoilers for Monday’s crossword but clean coal is not a ‘greener energy source.’ Do better.” "This really demonstrates how easy it is for misinformation to spread," said Fisch-Friedman, who is 27. She originally thought the answer was “wind power.” The controversy began Sunday night after the Times posted the Monday crossword online and Molly Fisch-Friedman, an analyst at the environmental group Climate Nexus, solved the puzzle and began fuming about 47 across.įisch-Friedman, who has been doing crosswords since she was in middle school in New Jersey, was incredulous that the Times would imply that coal is an environmentally friendly energy source. “The fact that that filtered down to something like The New York Times crossword puzzle is an example of how these approaches by industry are ultimately successful at influencing our discussions and approach toward climate,” Hastings-Simon said in an interview. Sara Hastings-Simon, a University of Calgary physicist and Times crossword aficionado, said there was “such a violent reaction” to the crossword clue because promises of “clean coal” have been used “as this delay tactic, as a way to say we don’t need to do anything else” to address climate change. The Times’ backtracking shows the fading acceptance in the Biden years of the once-popular phrase “clean coal.” The Energy Department has abolished the Office of Clean Coal and Carbon Management established under President Trump, who romanced about “beautiful, clean coal.” And the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity recently changed its name to America’s Power. ![]() “For the Times to actually embrace coal is a mortal sin - and I’m Catholic.” “They got pounded by their base,” former coal lobbyist Fred Palmer said in an interview. It’s also a minor humiliation for Will Shortz, the legendary New York Times puzzle editor who, according to the puzzle constructor, changed her original clue and inserted the error over her objection. ![]()
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