![]() “Northwestern does not have a lot of places where you can find a community focused on something that’s just an interest,” Martin-Rosenthal said. Martin-Rosenthal said NUXW deviates from the campus culture of “AND is in our DNA.” ![]() NUXW is a community, which she said drew her in. Through NUXW, Dunbar met people she wouldn’t have otherwise known, she said. “I was like - even if (I didn’t) want to be on the team, I want to respond to these application questions,” Dunbar said. She was asked to write fanfiction for her application. McCormick sophomore Breck Dunbar, a member of NUXW, found the application process entertaining. “I’m like, ‘This would take me days!’ It’s just as fun to hear someone else come up with an answer as it is to come up with your own.”Įvery Fall and Spring Quarter, the team runs recruitment cycles to attract new members, aiming for 20 to 30 students each time, Nudell said. “We do Sunday puzzles in 20 minutes sometimes,” Martin-Rosenthal said. Everyone uses their own knowledge to solve the puzzle, he added. Martin-Rosenthal said he had never worked on a crossword with other people prior to NUXW’s inception. ![]() Nudell enjoys the social aspect of solving the crossword with a group - it’s “teamwork,” she said. “Whoever’s quicker gets bragging rights.” “Now that we’ve gotten pretty big, we’ll split into two groups and race to do the Sunday (puzzle),” Nudell said. With the influx of members, she said the team’s approach changed. The team began with five members in 2021 but has grown to about 50 members, Nudell said. But, the entire experience is engaging, Martin-Rosenthal said. He said solving the weekly puzzle has its highs and lows, like when no one knows the word. Martin-Rosenthal said figuring out the overarching clue for each week’s puzzle is exciting. “Also, we thought it sounded cooler … ‘Team’ makes it feel like you’re (a) part of something together.”Įvery Monday, NUXW solves The New York Times Sunday crossword. “It was kind of a satire on the competitiveness of other clubs,” Martin-Rosenthal said. But, calling the group a “team” also makes its community feel more legitimate, he said. Martin-Rosenthal said NUXW was branded as a “team” - instead of a club - for amusement. He may be the team’s president on paper, but he said he’s more of a figurehead. Weinberg junior Asher Martin-Rosenthal filled out paperwork to officially register NUXW on the grid as a University-recognized club. Nudell, the team’s treasurer, said the idea for the group began as a joke but eventually became more concrete. Today, NUXW aims to provide a community for crossword lovers. “Some people would come in and watch us do it … Slowly, we began to realize that a lot of people like to do crosswords at Northwestern.” “We’d hook up the computer to the TV and project the crosswords,” Nudell said. Two years ago, SESP junior Abby Nudell and her friends began gathering in a Schapiro Hall lounge to collectively solve crosswords, inspiring the start of NUXW. For the Northwestern Crossword Team, solving crosswords is a team sport.
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