Tuesday 29 June 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle July 2021

 Map by Urchin



The grid represents a map which solvers must identify. Some answers clash. In 11 clues redundant words must be removed before solving. Their initial letters indicate which letter replaces the clashes, usually leaving non-words. Solvers should colour the clashing cells appropriately and draw 2 lines through them, each touching the perimeter at both ends. Finally, solvers should write, below the grid, the next destination south. Numbers in brackets indicate grid lengths.

Across
2 Ate sandwiches diet - the bard's erased (6)
7 Little dog entertaining one with games, say? (6, 2 words)
11 Survey ends of cul-de-sac in Ruairidh's yard (5)
13 Mum's piece of skirt (4)
16 Pussy is cruel playing with mouse endlessly (8)
17 Roofing cover settled back in a length of wall (7)
18 Jock's aim - necking spirit with no money (5)
19 After starter in albergo? (5)
21 Your local is possessed by god of the deep seas (4)
23 Moldovan ready with reading lesson in Glasgow (4)
24 Fashionable card game in exciting spot (6)
26 Priestess regularly displays crowning qualities (3)
27 Receding trade plans reformed and spruced up (13)
31 Officer's lass hiding blemish? Just the opposite! (3)
32 Nothing less than crazy to man consumed by dig (6)
34 Rock song with a special composition (4)
37 Big wooden box captures African tribe (4)
39 Elements of Chromosomes - a book steeped in sex (5)
41 Ed's bounded over one track (5)
42 Ingenuity about opening for Californian flier (7, 2 words)
45 Following ridge in the country, fix something that's essential (8)
46 I can't understand a French negative (4)
47 Rust found in section of structure oxidising downwards (5)
48 Reversing rank between Sweden and Germany is settled (6)
49 Officers repaired flag with rigid fastener (6)

Down
1 Clumsily slurped little bits of fruit (7)
3 Symbol in dictionary that's lost key law (4)
4 Spies hiding over tails (5)
5 Man in the bible who made trousers (4)
6 Elbow Mourinho out of top of the league (4)
7 One making bundles must take measure with advanced electronic device (5)
8 Time to enter odd reply with impudence (6)
9 Londoner's boat races picked up islands (5)
10 Scottish singer coming up with worried scream (7)
12 With most of festive season an oriental bloomer (5)
14 Junkies taking heroin from court officials (5)
15 Before a meal in Pierre's I play a trick (4)
20 Dictator's successor could be broadcast (3)
22 Primates getting setter in a Jamaican farm (4)
24 Jag worries cycling official (4)
25 Perform part of play (3)
28 Sportsman shot pistol over nothing (7)
29 Play before midday? Not for a Sicilian. (3)
30 Passing bedroom I crashed into garderobe (7)
31 Little piece of mosaic, smaller retreating in network (5)
32 Game I must get computer in to flog (6)
33 An affectation of superiority's new in Leith's clubs (5)
35 Prison officers move around (4)
36 Sort of family with father in the sticks (5)
38 Jerry in offer for stand (5)
40 Amphibians manage to rise in extremes of aquaria (5)
42 Old penny for a sail (4)
43 Routine act elaborated for emission (4)
44 Cross judge could be banned (4)
To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format describing the completed grid and the word under the grid to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th August 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.

Friday 18 June 2021

Crossword News June 2021

 Crossword News June 2021

The May Prize Puzzle was Confusion Down Under by Flowerman. This was probably the toughest puzzle of the year. Clashes could give either ARTHUR or MARTHA, a phrase used in Australia to show a state of confusion. Letters extracted gave ALLOSOMES IN GRID. Allosomes are sex chromosomes. Males are XY and females XX. There is already one X in the grid and ENACTED can be changed to EXACTED, thus resolving the grid as female and MARTHA to be the resolution of the clashes. There is nowhere that a Y can be used.

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

This crossword has kept me entertained for nearly 3 weeks!  I repeatedly got stuck but after a break more progress was made.  My ideal crossword - difficult but always offering encouragement.  I had to google to discover the Australian phrase and with SHE and MRS in the grid I was pretty certain that I was looking for another X to go with the one in AAXES.  When I lighted upon ENACTED that easily changed to EXACTED I could not help but feel a bit of an anti-climax.  Or, have I picked the wrong entry to change?  I certainly had no need to check it out in Chambers, so maybe I have.  Apart from that final doubt, this was a superb puzzle. Thank you Flowerman.

The puzzle's end-game took a long time to resolve. The Arthur/Martha 'confusion' was revealed part of the way through the grid-fill. The instruction that 'five sets [of three consecutive letters] can be arranged' set me off seeking 9,2,4 anagrams the 15 letters - about 20000+ possibilities.... ! Realisation dawned a week or so after the grid-fill and ALLOSOMES IN GRID emerged, but then I couldn't find 'ALLOSOME' in Chambers either as a separate entry or under 'ALLO-'. Googling produced the word as an alternative to 'Chromosome'. So........ I hope that by changing 'ENACTED' to 'EXACTED', giving me two 'X's in the grid has allowed MARTHA to emerge triumphant.......Clever stuff indeed! Thanks to Flowerman and the Crossword Centre for a challenging puzzle.

Well, I waited until the last minute to submit this entry, hoping that a more satisfactory solution might occur to me, but no!!  The phrase I identified was "allosomes in grid" (is that even correct?).  Besides my eventual entry, I also considered various other possibilities that might indicate Male (Arthur) or Female (Martha) or perhaps a bit of both, including some that seemed to be hinted at, but I couldn't discern anything else that was remotely feasible!  In the end, changing 21D ENACTED to EXACTED to give two X's in the grid (indicating XX = female = MARTHA) was the best I could come up with!  Many thanks to Flowerman for a great workout, and I look forward to finding out the real solution soon.

There were 29 entries, of which 8 were marked incorrect. The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat, was Philip Wood, who will be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary.

A full solution with notes is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/06/solution-to-confusion-down-under-by.html

You still have until 8 July to send an entry to this month’s puzzle, June Journey by eXternal.

The July Prize Puzzle will be one of mine. I hope you will enjoy Map by Urchin.
***
I am sure you will enjoy this Indie puzzle by Rodriguez as solved by Simon Anthony on Cracking the Cryptic. A fantastic grid!
https://youtu.be/NEMRKMA1vLA
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I have mentioned the puzzles compiled by Dave Gorman in earlier newsletters. You can find out much more about the setter, Bluth, in this interview with Alan Conor.
***
I have been alerted to this letter in Private Eye complaining about a clue in the Cyclops crossword.

Sir,
Having fondled a few scrotums in my time, I dispute the answer to 15 ac in Eye crossword No. 701. They are WRINKLY not CRINKLY. Crinkly can only be used to describe crepe paper. I would get out more but the country has gone nuts.
Danielle
London

Cyclops writes: The dictionaries I use (Chambers and Collins) have crinkly and wrinkly as more or less interchangeable. They also show both as meaning “an old person” . Sadly, “scrotum” is not cited as an example, so I based my secondary definition on personal observation. (OK, maybe my skin in that particular location is like crepe paper.) I hadn’t noticed when clueing that the first letter of the answer did not cross with another answer – so, I have to concede that either CRINKLY or WRINKLY would have fitted.

In the next issue there was this comment in Pedantry Corner.

...I don’t get out much, so my sheltered life has never required me to use the plural form of “scrotum”. However, surely it should be “scrota” rather than “scrotums”?
John Swan, Whitley Bay.
***
On the Clue-Writing Competition the results are in for the April task, a clue to ODYSSEY. This was a resounding win for Don Manley with a neat anagram and extraction clue which echoes current government advice.

Do say yes to travel, but not a long journey (7)

Voting is about to end for clues to TOERAG. What are the odds on Azed choosing the same word for his June competition! It will be interesting to compare the winning clues.

The June challenge is for a Right & Left clue to NELSON/PRINCE. Entries close on 30 June.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php


There are now 234 members on the Google mailing list.

Best wishes

Derek

 

Thursday 10 June 2021

Solution to Confusion Down Under by Flowerman

 Confusion Down Under by Flowerman - SOLUTION


Two names, ARTHUR and MARTHA, can be formed from the possible sequences of letters in the six contiguous clashing cells suggesting that the confusion might be about gender. The expression “to not know whether one is Arthur or Martha” meaning to be in a state of confusion, not necessarily about gender, is an expression apparently originating in Australian and New Zealand (hence the title). Sequences of letters removed from clues can be arranged to form ALLOSOMES IN GRID. This confirms that the confusion is about gender as allosomes are sex chromosomes, identified as X and Y in humans, with females described as XX (cells containing two X chromosomes) and males described as XY (cells containing one of each). A single X was present in the initial grid fill rather than a pair of allosomes, meaning that the misprint must have involved either an X or Y being changed to another letter. ENACTED can be changed to EXACTED whereas no words can be changed to a new one in Chambers with a Y. Having identified the grid as female, clashes were to be resolved to show MARTHA.

Clue Explanations
Letters removed from wordplay are given after clue numbers where relevant.
 

Across
1 EMPLACE (t)EMPL(e) ACE
6 DISC DIS(a) C
10 COCOBOLO BOL in COCOO(n)
11 CHAS CHA(let)S
12 LASCARS LA CRASS*
14 WANT W (A N(eeding) T(raining))
15 LAAGER REGAL< around A
16 TIU (q)UIT<
17 MONTU MON TU
18 MANET MAN ET
20 AT SEA (c)ATS EA
22 crack[ING] AGAPE (tw)AE around GAP
24 RUNIC RUN I C 
29 RIMER (p)RIMER
31 LAM LAM(e)
32 BATAAN BATAVIAN – (V I)
33 li[MES] AMOS SOMA(li)<
34 ELOCUTE E COL< (m)UTE
35 GUAN GUN around A
36 EBENEZER BREEZE* around E(aster)N
37 SINS SIN(bad)’S 
38 USER IDS US EDI(to)RS*

Down
1 ECLATS EATS around (C L)
2 mang[O SO]on MOANING I in (MANG ON)*
3 LOCUM LOLIUM with C replacing LI
4 ABALONE AB ALONE
5 CORONET (TENOR OC)<
6 DONAH HAD< around ON
7 SHAGS SHA(m) GS
8 CANEH (kitc)HEN A C(opper)<
9 b[RID]e OSTREA (O ARE (be)ST)*
13 SCUM SC UM(ps)
14 WRIT WIT(h) around R
19 HUMBLES HUM (SE< after BL)
20 ANEMONE (ph)ENOMENA<
21 b[ALL]et ENACTED ((b)ET DANCE)*
22 AMBAGE A (MAGE around B)
23 POMS POM(e)S
25 CLOU CLO(d) U
26 UMBERS (c)UMBERS
27 RAMUS (manage)R (M in AUS)
28 STOAI SAI around TO
29 A-AXES XE in AAS
30 RICER RIC(h)ER