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 



Friday, 28 May 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle June 2021

 June Journey by eXternal

Wordplay in each clue gives the answer with a misprinted letter, forming the entry. Each set of correct and incorrect letters in clue order spells out three locations on a journey. In the final grid, solvers must highlight four cells in a vertical line and add some shading in two nearby cells to represent what was received en route to the destination, which must also be highlighted (12 cells in a straight line).

Across
1 Suffering in being empty staying at health resort (6)
6 Characters seen in Bondi’s Australian sporting event (6)
12 Convey exotic river plants to east of Turkey (9)
13Father turned weapon aside (5)
14 Regularly picked up leak on little old bucket (6)
15 Wet overlooking area resembling port? (4)
16 Loved ones are united dividing spoils (6)
17 Diner’s made spaghetti recipe that’s appropriate (7, two words)
18 Introduces second US president, not the third (4)
21 Universal joy being around one less attractive (6)
23 Enters church caught between good and evil (6, two words)
27 Violent pain no good after pub (4)
29 Adult underwear not totally expensive wore down (7)
31 Flogged everything antique in possession of star (6)
32 Commander’s silver chair oddly scratched (4)
33 Person making amends immediately putting cape back (6)
34 Discontented bohemians against meat (5)
35 Half-turn from that man feeding volume to small child (9)
36 Eagerly desire and like shave (6)
37 Son in Calais hiding case of unlawful guns (6)

Down
2 Place nail over S American plant (6)
3 Maybe Shearer’s correct to snub family members (8)
4 Near insane, Yankee’s unsettled state (6)
5 Pursuit around loch on boat (7)
7 Troy engineer ambitious taking out makeshift boat (5)
8 Winding courses of ship bearing friend taking in tour on vacation (7)
9 Removing all covers, sure slimy bed is free from sticky stuff (6)
10 Served up cereal for male animal (4) 
11 Previously avoiding an upset group (6)
19 Bill involved in excavation with Greek character finds ancient rulers (8)
20 Excellent drink thus made upright reproductive organs (7)
21 Pull down unusually bountiful bar to rent (7)
22 European further downing gallons and relaxing (6)
24 Greek serfs having revolutionary uprising ready (6)
25 Current sailors on Bute mostly ordered Scottish drink (6, two words)
26 Fix base of house in midst of wind (6)
28 Ingenious extracting inferior earth in local hillside (5)
30 Weaver bird put article beneath overturned dry grass (4)

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format describing the highlighting and shading to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th July 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.



Monday, 17 May 2021

Crossword News May 2021

 

Crossword News May 2021

The April Prize Puzzle was Round Robin XIII. The theme of Round Robin XIII is prime ministers of the UK and celebrates 300 years since ROBERT WALPOLE became the first in April 1721. (300 appears in larger print in the title.) The letters given in the preamble had to replace letters in the grid to form ROBERT WALPOLE and the surnames of 11 other PMs. As a hint, circled letters in the grid can be arranged to form a 13th – DISRAELI. 

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

A very interesting thematic concept nicely executed, the real brilliance being in the grid design which was excellent, accommodating so many changes in words to give effect to the theme, sans any outlandish entries to boot.  Lovely apposite anagram from the replacement letters as well. As was to be expected in an RR, there were different styles to the clues with some outstanding ones.  Solving didn't pose too many problems, identifying the theme and slotting in the changes took more time!

A lovely grid and very neat and successful inclusion of so many thematic members. The anagram of Disraeli allowed the theme to come readily, which was a great help. Great to have a range of clue setters - provided variety in style of clueing, which added to the challenge.  Many thanks for the consistently entertaining grids.

As usual with the Round Robins I enjoy the eclectic mix of clues from the write-ins to the real puzzlers. I needed the circled letters to finally crack the theme and then I enjoyed hunting the remaining 7 PMs in the grid. I definitely needed the replacement letters in their appropriate anagram to finish - some of the more obscure (older) ones (Petty, Lamb, Temple) being the last to come to light.

I enjoyed the puzzle and the theme. Bolding 3...0...0 in the title (presumably a reference to the 300th anniversary of the start of Robert Walpole's term as PM) was a nice touch.

There were 61 entries, of which 4 were marked wrong. The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat, is Time Anderson, who will soon be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary donated by Chambers.

A solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/05/solution-to-round-robin-xiii.html

Solvers could vote for their favourite clues and when the points were added up there was a clear winner.

42 Frequent flyer heads for Paris, lucky to be there in central location (6)

32 of the clues received votes and the top scores were.

1st - 22pts - 42a - PETREL - Simon Griew

2nd - 16pts - 13a - TERM-TIME - Phylax

3rd - 15pts - 8d - NETTY - Sprout

4th - 13pts - 31d - GLAIR - Tim Anderson

5th= - 11pts - 37a - REMAND - Satyen Nabar

5th= - 11pts - 7d - IAMB - Josie Barnes

I will be sending a prize to Simon.

You still have lots of time to tackle the May challenge, Confusion Down Under by Flowerman.

The June puzzle will be June Journey by eXternal. Steve Bartlett sets barred puzzles for the Listener and Inquisitor under the pseudonym eXternal; his first published puzzle was an Inquisitor in December 2012. Since then, he has expanded his repertoire to include a variety of puzzle formats for outlets such as The Independent, The Financial Times, The Telegraph and The Herald. He has also edited the Enigmatic Variations barred-crossword series in The Sunday Telegraph for the past two years, where he sets puzzles as proXimal. The June puzzle will be his third for the Crossword Centre. 

Steve grew up in Buckinghamshire and after university moved to Kent, where he still lives. He trained as a professional buyer and worked for several businesses over the years. He is an exercise enthusiast attending gym, HIIT sessions and kick boxing under normal circumstances. His current focus is on running, as he is training for the rescheduled 2020 London Marathon due to take place in October this year.

As a postscript to Cracking! by Soup, the setter has sent this explanation.
Some people asked about how I went about constructing the grid for ‘Cracking’. I’d originally started with safe contents which had about 40 letters, which I think was a bit ambitious! In the end I needed 28 letters for the three items in the safe, which is the same as the number I’d get from a ’normal’ perimetrical jigsaw puzzle (where black and white squares alternate round the perimeter), so I knew it was likely to be possible.  So, I started with the contents of the cracked safe, then (using a little computer program I wrote, in the same way that one of the solvers wrote an Excel macro) I started twirling the rings until all the scrambled letters fell over white squares – and then simply tried to fill the grid. If I couldn’t get it to fall out with sensible words, I nudged the letters a bit more, and tried again, and eventually I got something that worked. I’m mildly annoyed that I there wasn’t a letter of the contents in the outer ring, but I hadn’t even noticed that until I saw the comment! I’m so pleased people enjoyed it; it’s always fun to play about with new ideas. Hamish/Soup
***
Last month I noted the passing of CG Rishikesh, the Indian crossword setter who regularly submitted clues to our Round Robin puzzles. There was a nice obituary in The Hindu, the newspaper where he published crosswords under the name Gridman.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/gridman-goes-off-the-grid-crossword-community-loses-a-giant/article34330053.ece
In his Give Me a Clue section in the i paper, John Henderson also gave a tribute to Rishi.

The late Hindu sage CG Rishikesh, who gave us “Single-minded fellow” for BACHELOR and “TT wear” for DOUBLET, also contributed clues to the collaborative Round Robin puzzles on the excellent Crossword Centre website. Derek Harrison, the site’s founder and curator, offers these examples: “Censure priest failing to give shelter again (6)” and “Furious about escapes from Syrian city cell (5)”.

Also in a Round Robin, Rishi wrote this nice clue.

More than one spoke of terrible raid around capital of Iraq
***
It is worth noting that John Henderson took over the role of editing the Inquisitor crossword exactly ten years ago, following the death of then editor Mike Laws. He started helping when Mike became ill and was hospitalised. When asked to take over he, apparently, said yes but just for a couple of weeks! He has maintained a high standard and an excellent series. Congratulations, Enigmatist.
***
Will it be possible to have a computer that can solve crosswords? With American-style crosswords the answer is definitely yes. Matt Ginsberg has devised a program that can solve clues and fill grids. In fact, it had a lot of success in the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament this year.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-56934716

This year the ACPT was an on-line competition. The winner was Tyler Hinman. In the final play-off he completed a perfect grid in 3 minutes! Full results are here.
https://www.acptonline.com/prizes
***
With a new series of Inside No. 9 beginning this month, Steve Pemberton has posted a new Sphinx crossword to give some clues about the series.
https://twitter.com/SP1nightonly/status/1389189205784514561?s=20
***
On the Clue-writing Competition, the May challenge is to write a normal cryptic clue to TOERAG (6). The  competition is open until 29 May.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php

The competition for March, a clue to CORNFLAKES, was won by Steve Hicks with this neat anagram and &lit.

Crazy folk near South Carolina?
***
There are now 227 members on the Google mailing list.

If you want to receive newsletters and clue-writing information in your in-box you should sign up to the new Crossword Centre group on Google. You can join this group at https://groups.google.com/g/crosswordcentre

Crossword News will, as usual, be available on the Crossword Centre http://www.crossword.org.uk/newsletter.html and on the blog https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/

Best wishes

Derek

Solutions to Rishi’s clues
RE-ROOF reproof minus P
ASCUS Damascus minus MAD reversed
RADII anagram RAID + I(raq)

Tuesday, 11 May 2021

Solution to Round Robin XIII

 Solution to Round Robin XIII


The theme of Round Robin XIII is prime ministers of the UK and celebrates 300 years since ROBERT WALPOLE became the first in April 1721. (300 appears in larger print in the title.) The letters given in the preamble had to replace letters in the grid to form ROBERT WALPOLE and the surnames of 11 other PMs. As a hint, circled letters in the grid can be arranged to form a 13th – DISRAELI.  





Wednesday, 28 April 2021

Crossword Centre May 2021 Prize Puzzle

 Confusion Down Under by Flowerman


The grid is confused in some way, as suggested by clashes in six cells. In five clues, three consecutive letters in the wordplay must be removed before solving, always leaving real words two or more letters long. The five sets can be arranged to form a phrase (9,2,4) which specifies the only information suitable for resolving the confusion. It was intended that the solver would be able to identify this information after solving. However, a misprint created during setting has meant that an incorrect entry was clued, and so not all the required information will appear. The solver must deduce which is the incorrect entry and change it to the intended one (which is in Chambers). Clashes must then be resolved accordingly. Apart from proper nouns, all answers to clues are in Chambers except for 10 which is in ODE and 29d which can be confirmed at Dictionary.com.

Across
1 Beside shelled pagoda unit put in a gun-platform (7) 
6 Receptacle of African orchid almost cubic (4)
10 Hardwood from Bolivia put in secure place after docking (8)
11 Wooden villas not allowed to provide drinks (4)
12 See off crass sailors (7)
14 One needing training at the front after week’s absence (4)
15 A retiring royal stays in camp (6)
16 War god departed without question and turned back ... (3)
17 ... Egyptian counterpart in two days (5)
18 Artist’s piece out of this world (5)
20 Chaps spending $100 each on junk? (5, 2 words)
22 Scottish cardinal not half welcoming cracking religious feast (5)
24 Publish one chapter about mystic symbols (5)
29 Old poet’s first reading-book missing page (5)
31 Flight to New York mostly unsatisfactory (3)
32 European years ago killing five in Philippine province (6)
33 Book African over missing limes (4)
34 English officer turned silent after the leader’s rant (7)
35 Darwin’s champion collecting a South American game bird (4)
36 Breeze swirling around sides of Eastern chapel (8)
37 Sailor’s getting rid of hurtful letters (4)
38 American editors stupidly forgetting to access codes (7, 2 words)

Down
1 Worries about college lecturer’s distinctions (6)
2 One tucking into wild mango soon expressing dissatisfaction (7)
3 Grass getting cocaine for Long Island deputy (5)
4 Sea creature with unique supporting muscle (7)
5 General meaning to meet officer in charge about headgear (7)
6 Sweetheart owned up about visits (5)
7 Imposter wanting one thousand guineas for birds (5)
8 Installed in kitchen, a copper counter six cubits in length (5)
9 Shellfish and minced duck are best avoided by bride (6)
13 Rubbish US state judges casually dismissing police sergeant (4)
14 King briefly accompanied by guards once registered (4)
19 Bad smell over south-east after barrel degrades (7)
20 Sea creature’s rising occurrences having nothing to do with pH (7)
21 No ‘bravo’ for ballet dance badly performed (7)
22 Acting priest restricting bishop’s circumlocution (6)
23 Dogs get energy out of fruit (4)
25 Earth held together endlessly by universal centre of attraction (4)
26 Fish head away from albatrosses (6)
27 Branch manager ultimately married in Australia (5)
28 Monkey cages beside colonnades (5)
29 Crystallographic lines of xenon in volcanic rocks (5)
30 Better off discarding husband’s kitchen utensil (5) 

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format giving the final entries to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th June 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.


Friday, 16 April 2021

Crossword News April 2021

 

Crossword News April 2021

The March Prize Puzzle was Cracking! by Soup. This clever puzzle took the form of a safe dial. Turning the dial correctly revealed the three items, gem stone, secret papers and money box. Here are some of the comments from solvers.

This was a challenge with testing clues and an endgame that required patience to execute but with a rewarding denouement. I cannot begin to imagine how Soup constructed this - maybe he has supernatural powers!  Congratulations to Soup and to the Crossword Centre for continuing to supply high quality puzzles.

Well this has certainly kept me occupied for a while.  The initial grid solve was fairly straightforward.  The repositioning of the letters was a bit of a slog and did not immediately reveal the missing items. I later realised that I must have made an error in one of the circles but I was near enough to make my guesses.  Thank you Soup for a challenge of a slightly different nature.

I really enjoyed this - it very much put me in mind of Kea’s fantastic Listener ‘Safe-cracking’ but a much faster solve! Hats off to Soup on the construction - I’ve no idea how you would even start. I did like moving all the rings around and seeing the safe revealing its contents.  Thanks Soup for a really fun puzzle.

There were 55 entries to this tour de force, of which 4 were marked incorrect. The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat was John Doylend from Bungay, who will soon be receiving his prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary which is donated by Chambers.

There is a full solution and video at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/04/solution-to-cracking-by-soup.html

You have plenty time to solve our April puzzle, Round Robin XIII and email your solution. Remember to vote for your favourite clue. https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/03/crossword-centre-prize-puzzle-april-2021.html
It is very sad to note that one of our regular clue writers, CG Rishikesh, has recently died. Rishi was the longest running crossword setter on The Hindu newspaper and will be sadly missed.

The May Prize Puzzle will be Confusion Down Under by Flowerman.

We would welcome submissions of puzzles for September and October.
***
The Listener Crossword Dinner was held on Zoom with Jane Teather as host. It began with some obituaries. Jane noted the passing of Atlas (Mick Polley), Chris Butler, Symphonia (John Dawson) and The Tall’n (Terry Allen).  Don Manley gave a tribute to Richard Palmer (Merlin) and he has kindly allowed me to publish it here.

Richard Palmer MBE (31 March 1947- 25 December 2020)

 Richard Palmer and I met nearly 50 years ago when he joined The Institute of Physics Publishing Office in Bristol. It quickly became obvious that we shared a passion for crosswords and we became rival competitors in the new Azed clue-writing competition in 1972, both winning prizes early on, Richard first then me. Richard was a joint annual champion in the 1972/73 first season along with Colin Dexter and Alec Robins. The Ximenean tradition shaped our clue-writing styles for all the subsequent decades.

In 1975 Richard won the Azed monthly cup for two successive months and placed that cup on his wedding cake when he married his office sweetheart Marilyn. Later that year an opportunity for both of us to set barred puzzles was provided by The Azed Book of Crosswords in which Azed’s solvers contributed puzzles. I made a puzzle in the shape of an A and Richard one in the shape of a Z, thereby emulating Azed who had made up a crossword in the shape of an X to honour Ximenes.  Richard decided he would have a go at setting a Listener puzzle and had his first one Arosti, checked by Jim Evans and published in October 1975. It was a fairly straightforward letters latent puzzle spelling out LISTENER CROSSWORDS. Richard duly attended the Listener Dinner at Ye Olde Cock Tavern in Fleet Street where he met Azed. I was distinctly jealous and it took me a year to catch up with him, when my own first Duck puzzle saw the light of day. We subsequently went to Fleet Street together to join about twenty old codgers for something like an average school dinner.

Richard and I set crosswords for some of the same publications over the years, among which were Games and Puzzles and the lesser known IEE News, IEE being The Institution  of  Electrical  Engineers.  Eventually we both contributed puzzles to the Telegraph. Richard’s mother (who survives him) was a keen Telegraph solver who worked at Bletchley Park.

Richard set fifteen Listener puzzles, the peach of which was his Royal Flush puzzle of 2002 celebrating the Golden Jubilee by incorporating all the kings and queens of England – and even the Commonwealth. The puzzle survives in The A-Z of Crosswords by Jonathan Crowther. Richard won prizes from Azed right to the end and my last message to his hospital bed on Christmas Eve was that he had won a second prize for STUDENTY. He told Marilyn   that he was relieved not to have won first prize because posting off the cup was a faff.

So much for Richard and crosswords, for now. There are other things you should know. Richard spent all his working life at The Institute of Physics and was awarded the MBE in 2006. He was an exceptional bridge player and a very good chess player. On the day of his funeral his beloved Leicester City were top of the table. He was a cricket fanatic too. More than all that, our families were big pals, never very far apart though our career paths diverged. Richard and Marilyn had a daughter Claire, and a son Andy to whom I am a godfather. He was a proud grandfather and loving husband to Marilyn who remains a close family friend. No longer can Richard and I compare clues and no longer can I phone for hints when I have filled in a Listener puzzle and cannot see what to do next. I am missing Richard – that’s for sure.

Don Manley Oxford, March 2021

Shane Shabankareh then announced that the winner of the Radix Auditorum claret jug for the best first-time solver was Australian, James Lever. He had started solving at the end of January and managed an incredible 43 correct out of 46 entries. Then to the Solvers’ Silver Salver was awarded to Peter Blayney. Apparently, there were some all-correct solvers who stumbled in 2020, one of whom was Neil Talbott, who, after almost 4 years of perfection, failed to beat the record set by Simon Long.

Peter Blayney reported on the voting for the Ascot Gold Cup. There were 18 other all-correct solvers who were asked to vote for their 5 favourite Listeners of 2020. In the end 26 puzzles got at least one vote. The winner was Tip Top Condition by Twin (Colin Thomas). This puzzle was remarkable in that the first set of down answers could be spelled with an I or an O. This was resolved by a message to write the puzzle’s number in binary.

The voting was as follows.

1. 4630 Tip Top Condition by Twin
2. 4638 Head Start Clues by Elgin
3. 4606 Isolated in May by Dysart
5= 4617 Selfie by Sabre
5= 4609 Where Next? by Harribobs
6. 4604 Tour de Force by Kea
7. 4627 Flappy by Shark
8. 4597 Bunch of Fives by Brock
9. 4595 Equity by Elap
10 4603 In Round Numbers by Colleague.

Jane Teather then turned to the quiz. Guests had had 24 hours to solve one of Enigmatist’s devious quizzes. Matching up two sets of 13 pictures gave places where previous Listener Dinners had been held. The quiz was ‘Beginnings’ and the initial letters of those places in order gave HONEYDEW MELON, which had been the starter at the very first dinner. You then had to write a clue to it. A short list of 5 clues were shown and we voted. I was relieved that my clue had made it to the short list but, in the end it came 4th. Winner was the clue by Oli Grant’s team who will be receiving the Bronze Casket.

Cook stuck with this for the lockdown menu? Yes!

The event was over in an hour, with 105 guests. Thanks go to Jane and John for organising such a great evening.

I managed to take some screenshots of the prize winners and you can see them here https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/03/listener-crossword-dinner.html
***
Last Christmas Phi published his annual Apex puzzle. It was a tricky challenge, based on the phrase MAXIMUM SECURITY PRISON. Solvers had to write a Letters Latent clue to the Playfair code word, SECURITY. The results are now available and I am delighted to have secured a podium place among such a distinguished field.

Winning clues to SECURITY (with a latent letter)

1st       Collateral has Cruise playing the lead in thriller                                                                                                       Philip Marlow

2nd      Earlier over-confidence is vanishing as tense EU crisis develops                                                                             Kevin McDermid

3rd       Bond picture is out with premier’s opening suspended for a year                                                                             Derek Harrison

***
Committed puzzlers will be keen to get their hands on The Golden Treasure of the Entente Cordiale. Michael Becker is offering a prize of a gold casket valued at over £5,000 to anyone who can solve the clues that are hidden in the book. A French version and an English version of the book are published on 8 March, with each containing different clues leading to two separate locations. Each book contains nine puzzles, made up of illustrations by Becker, and secret text hidden in the accompanying story, written by Pauline Deysson. Readers must crack the hidden code in the illustration to find the missing text, which will help them solve the conundrum. Once all nine puzzles are solved, readers will be able to find where two geode crystal keys have been buried, one in the UK, and one in France. The hardback edition is expensive at £27.99. You can read more in this Guardian article.
***
To celebrate the appearance of Alan Turing on the new £50 note, GCHQ have published a series of puzzles that they say are their most difficult ever. If you want to see if you could qualify as a spymaster you can try the puzzles here.
https://www.gchq.gov.uk/information/turing-challenge
***
Crossword setter Bluth, better known as stand-up comedian Dave Gorman, is continuing to set high standards. His Independent puzzle on 16 March had so many constraints that it was incredible that he could get so much thematic material in and manage a fantastic Nina in the completed grid. Try it here https://puzzles.independent.co.uk/games/cryptic-crossword-independent?puzzleDate=20210316#!202103
***
I was leafing through a copy of Anatomy of the Crossword by D St P Barnard which I found on my bookshelf. Published in 1963 it was one of the first attempts to dissect the crossword, following Ximenes on the Art of the Crossword (1961). I was bemused by the section that Barnard calls the Paragrammatic Parabole, I was wondering what present-day solvers would make of them. I will give the answers at the end of this newsletter.

1. Ass! He’ll probably go and fall in it (5)
2. As, Bs, Cs, Ds, Fs, Gs (5)
3. Instructio.. (6)
4. Poisonous bully beef? (5)
5. - - - (it certainly must be impolite) (6)
6 ‘O Winne!’ That’s how to make a certain person agreeable! (3, 3, 5)
***
I received an email from Joe Williams, Kentucky, asking if I had a solution to Gallimaufry by Ximenes. I could not find one so I tried solving it. What a mammoth task but there were some brilliant clues which had stood the test of time. I have put a copy on the blog https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/p/gallimaufry-by-ximenes.html

If you want a solution, you can email me.
***
29 March saw the final of the BBC2 quiz programme, Only Connect. On the Puzzle Hunters team was a Listener crossword setter, Paul Taylor, who has published under the pseudonym Apt. You can watch the final on YouTube. https://youtu.be/7ps8O5aTvsc
***
On the Clue-Writing Competition your challenge for APRIL is a STANDARD CRYPTIC clue to ODYSSEY (7) by the closing date of MIDNIGHT BST WEDNESDAY 28th APRIL.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php
***
There are now 223 members on the Google mailing list.

If you want to receive newsletters and clue-writing information in your in-box you should sign up to the new Crossword Centre group on Google. You can join this group at https://groups.google.com/g/crosswordcentre

Crossword News will, as usual, be available on the Crossword Centre http://www.crossword.org.uk/newsletter.html and on the blog https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/

 

Best wishes
Derek

Clue answers.
1. ABYSS (A by SS)
2. NOTES (not Es)
3. LESSON (LESS on)
4. TOXIN (ox in TIN)
5. MOROSE (O in Morse (code))
6. WIN ONE OVER (WIN in ONE!)

Saturday, 10 April 2021

Solution to Cracking! by Soup

 Solution to Cracking! by Soup




GEM STONE
SECRET PAPERS
MONEY BOX
Across
6: MIMESIS - M<IM>E SIS
7: SEW UP - PU[G] WE(e)S
8: DAMN - DAM N
10: TORSION BAR - cd
12: VIENNESE - V I[R] ENNESE
14: ESSAYS - [F]ES<SAY>S
15: SEGUE - SE<GU>E
16: TAXES - AT SEX rev
21: ZEPHYR - HYPERSENSITIZES* less SENSE IT IS*
23: HOROLOGY - HO<RO[L]LO>G Y(ell)
24: INDIAN HEMP - PAN IM [B]EHIND*
25: OBEY - OBE (abho)R def(Y)
26: DAISY - DAIS-Y
27: ROSETTE - RO SETTE[E]

Down
1: partakinGINNeat
2: TEA TREE - T(h)E<A[R]T>(f)R(e)E(z)E(r)
3: FIERCER - REF rev + ERIC*
4: TENNIS BALL - BEN IS TALL spooner
5: QUEASY - QUE<AS>Y
9: ALIKE - A L[A]IKE
11: IDEA - (encyclop)AEDI(a)
13: NAUGHTIEST - HISGAUNT[L]ET*
17: EAGLE - (pressur)E A LEG*
18: ERIN - E[D]RIN
19: PHAETON - NOTAHE[L]P*
20: CROPPED - CRO(C) DEPP rev
22: ENNEAD - Acrostic
25: OATH - O [R]AT H