A Delaunay tetrahedralization of $n$ vertices is exhibited for which
a straight line can pass through the interiors of
$\Theta(n^2)$ tetrahedra.
This solves an open problem of Amenta,
who asked whether a line can stab more than $O(n)$ tetrahedra.
The construction generalizes to higher dimensions: in $d$ dimensions,
a line can stab the interiors of $\Theta(n^{\lceil d / 2 \rceil})$
Delaunay $d$-simplices.
The relationship between a Delaunay triangulation and
a convex polytope yields another result:
a two-dimensional slice of a $d$-dimensional $n$-vertex polytope
can have $\Theta(n^{\lfloor d / 2 \rfloor})$ facets.
This last result was first demonstrated by Amenta and Ziegler,
but the construction given here is simpler and more intuitive.