Monday 21 March 2011

No 10107, Monday 21 Mar 11, Spiffytrix

ACROSS
1   - Fool jumped without velocity and attacked (9) - {ASS}{vAULTED}
6   - Referring to a period (5) - {A}{BOUT}
9   - Head off to discover American river (5) - {fIND}{US}
10 - Almost cover male revolutionary (9) - {INSURe}{GENT}
11 - Anti US missile initially got lost in a storm (7) - TSUNA(M)I*
12 - What? He is mad to display godlessness (7) - ATHEISM [T]
13 - Santa's leg? (8,6) - STOCKING FILLER [CD]
17 - Maoist problem could be a reason for divorce? (8,6) - DOMESTIC CRISIS [DD]
21 - It's a bit late in the day for ironing (7) - EVENING [DD]
23 - Meeting opponents beside a tower (7) - {S}{E}{MINAR}
25 - Haul on ice troubled Communist leader (4,2-3) - CHOU EN-LAI*
26 - The old people's country (5) - {YE}{MEN}
27 - Fire on body (5) - SHELL [CD]
28 - After a change of heart sir opens unexpected gifts (9) - {S(-i+u)UR}{PRISES}
DOWN
1   - Tough exam undertaken by a detective? (4,4) - {A}{CID} {TEST}
2   - Saint's upset with shelter lacking finish (5) - {SAD}{HUt}
3   - Release disheartened relative outside hut (9) - {UN{SHACK}cLE}
4   - Unsupported belief's not popular in education (7) - inTUITION
5   - Spiffytrix would turn up with man for women's work (7) - {DI<-}{STAFF}
6   - Disgusted expression starts to annoy and repulse girl's husband (5) - {A}{A}{R}{G}{H}
7   - Jokes about English ships (3-6) - {ON}{E}-{LINERS}
8   - Japanese rush to rag French friend (6) - {TAT}{AMI}
14 - A thing that's maximum over Antarctica? (5,4) - OZONE HOLE [CD]
15 - Madly love and marry old English Magistrate (4,5) - L(O)RD MAYOR*
16 - Old female rulers exploited artisans (8) - TSARINAS*
18 - Changes glasses after changing top (7) - (-g+t)TOGGLES
19 - Charlie's a more timid accountant (7) - CASHIERl* (Correction - {C}{A}{SHIER} - See comments)
20 - Evades bootleggers? (6) - FENCES [DD]
22 - Current business is perfect (5) - {I}{DEAL}
24 - Anaesthetises digits without hesitation (5) - NUMBerS



27 comments:

  1. AARGH,

    With TSUNAMI and TATAMI IN 11A and 8D, I got misled inito putting Japan in 26a, changing it to YEMEN only on realising it can’t be Lord Major !
    Though the crossword would have been composed before the recent Tsunami that hit Japan, there seems to be flood of Tsunamis everywhere. Readers Digest of Feb2011 also carried an item on a Tsunami!

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  2. Neat and enjoyable crossword.

    I thought a FENCE was one who deals in stolen goods. Can it also refer to a bootlegger?

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  3. Suresh
    I don't find any support for that sense of the word 'fence'.
    Not in Chambers. Nor elsewhere like onelook.
    But I might be wrong.

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  4. Aaargh, Suresh, specialiation is the bane of these times ;-) Well the boot is on the other leg !

    Well, a bootlegger deals in contraband (banned by the Contras in Nicaragua?) and stolen goods are contraband, since dealing in them ain't legit.

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  5. You'll saw the proof for HUM=TUM which I posted after the match last night?

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  6. Engineers ROXX

    After yesterday's discussion on OX tail and OX tongue, I am tempted to ask,

    Do engineers get an OX in prescription?

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  7. Or sisomso kisses?

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  8. Not convinced with 19D. Can someone explain?

    My COD, 2D

    Problem with 26A: Ye is old The and not The old and hence not convincing as I see it.

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  9. CASHIER is C (for Charlie)
    A given
    SHIER =More timid

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  10. Thanks, explanation for that clue in the main post gives it as an anagram. So I had my doubts.

    And didn't know that Charlie is C.

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  11. Meghna. Like a radio operator saying C for Charlie.
    Re 'Ye old' it is like 'the French' meaning Le, la or les. Pretty standard in crosswords to write like this. Makes for better surface reading

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  12. Very enjoyable one today. Domestic crisis is my COD.

    1D is slightly iffy with "tough" and "acid test" being adj. and n. respectively.

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  13. While I do agree that surface reading is important, logical correctness is equally important to me. A setter's challenge is to keep both these aspects in mind when composing a clue.

    Saying The French to mean Le is gibberish and so is The old to mean Ye. By way of practice, we may learn to accept these as standards in crosswords but strictly speaking, they fall shorty as far as logic and grammar goes. This is what one would otherwise call `Broken English' outside the cryptic world. As I see it, setter and solvers can do without these devices. When perfection is within reach, it's better to opt for it.

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  14. Actually Prassanna, I think that tough exam is the def for 1D. It is a kind of CD. Don not ignore the
    question mark at the end of the clue.

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  15. Interesting topic Meghna. At least we agree some conventions are,by force of habit acceptable to solvers and setters alike.

    Grammar I agree is non-negotiable, but by logic I'm not sure if we both mean the same thing.

    It is all make believe with surface reading and logic might have to be defied in painting such misleading pictures.

    Outside of the cryptic world, how likely is it to hear sentences like "Fool jumped without velocity and attacked" or "Japanese rush to rag French friend" ?

    Like Sankalak said elsewhere (which I personally agree with): "Crosswords are fun but not literary compositions of lasting importance. For most solvers, each puzzle is of ephemeral interest, maybe a half hour or an hour. Another day, there is another puzzle."

    As long as the surface reading isn't too nonsensical and the cryptic reading leads to an unambiguous answer, I for one wouldn't mind the setter being creative with the components.

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  16. @Colonel, saw the HUM = TUM proof : )

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  17. So Hum is equal to tum at midnight. I was on the right track.:))

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  18. @Bhavan, creativity is nice but not at the expense of syntax. If syntax is incorrect, it can hardly communicate the intended meaning efficiently unless we force ourselves to accept these usages as standards, like in the case of The old or The French. To clarify, the above is what I meant by logical correctness.

    Some of my pet peeves: Nounal anagrinds, adjectival anagrinds that go right after the fodder without a link, abbreviations like The French, The Spanish, abbreviations that are uncommon in daily usage, improper connectors and link words, weak CD's etc to name a few.

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  19. Mad magazine advertises its multifarious uses including lining wardrobes, birdcages and wrapping fish.

    Yesterday, cleaning out an cupboard, I came across THC8732/14.10.2006. Two nice ones from it:

    11a Presentation that a journalist gives the steel baron (9)

    13a It is expensive -nothing to New York Times (4)

    Clearly, GM!

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  20. The crossie was not carrying a credit line, so clearly BNJ era.

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  21. Kishore

    I liked your epochal classification!

    I can confirm from my dB that the above-mentioned crossword was Gridman's.

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  22. CV, in that case, you will like my quote from TTOTC, paraphrased for tense:

    It is the best of times, it is worst of times,....

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  23. This 21a when I did the BangEd of ET, I found 21d as:
    Trying to get flat at the end of the day (7)

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  24. 11a Presentation that a journalist gives the steel baron (9) (SUB)(MITTAL) Journalist -SUB (editor); steel baron - MITTAL - did not occur to me on the first read. I am surprised. CV had remarked that Gridman does not use the names of living persons. May be it is one of those exceptions that proves the rule (and the reason Kishore chose to mention it here!).

    13a It is expensive -nothing to New York Times (4)(O)(NY)(X) - an easy clue

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  25. @Meghna : I think I'm beginning to see what you mean. In today's puzzle (10108) there are at least a couple of clues that were OK on the surface, but jarring in cryptic reading.

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  26. Today's HT (which means an old Times crossword) had this clue:

    Entrance hall for bringing in the old (5)

    Spiffytrix is in good company at least with his usage of "the old"

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