If you prefer working your crosswords on paper rather than on a screen, you’ll appreciate being able to select your choice of print formats: for right-handers or left-handers, or with large print for easiest reading. There’s also Stan’s Sunday Crossword, with a different archive puzzle every Saturday and Sunday. Just in case you prefer a more “level level” through the week, you’re invited to play one or more of these puzzles: Stan Newman’s Easy Crossword, The Daily medium Crossword, or Stan Newman's Hard Crossword – each with a fresh puzzle each day of the year from Stan’s Newsday archives, at the same level every day. Many puzzle fans utilize this increasing challenge each Monday through Saturday to sharpen their solving skills. Stan’s Sunday crossword is the largest of the week, at a Wednesday-or-so level, designed to go perfectly with a day of relaxation. Every other day of the week has a unifying theme, hinted at by the title that accompanies each byline. The challenge gradually increases still further on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, culminating with Stan’s themeless Saturday Stumper. Tuesdays and Wednesdays are just slightly more challenging. Monday’s puzzles are widely acknowledged by crossword fans and puzzle experts nationwide as the nation’s easiest crosswords for grownups. Like many of the major daily newspaper crosswords, Stan’s Daily Crossword increases in difficulty through the week. Each author’s byline appears each day, together with a puzzle title. Each one is meticulously created for you by a crew of talented crossword authors, and prepared for publication by legendary crossword editor Stan Newman. It’s the very same crossword that is published daily by the Long Island, New York, newspaper Newsday, and hundreds of other newspapers across the country. This is Arkadium’s never-published-before crossword, delivered to you brand-new every day of the year. So good luck with Stan’s Daily Crosswords, and have fun! Whichever of these ways you choose, part of the educational benefits of crossword solving come from completing each puzzle you do, anyway that you can. It’s also OK to use an Internet search or an online or paper dictionary. Or for a little more help, use the Reveal button to fill in for you a letter, word, or the entire puzzle. By using the Check button to verify a particular letter or word, or even the entire puzzle.
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