Solving time: 35 minutes elapsed, about 20 spent in actual solving
I was not able to solve continuously, as I watched a couple of shots in the playoff, and then solved a few clues. I had a hard time getting started, but once I got a few answers in I made steady progress. A few of the cryptics, like
Music: None, watching golf on TV
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | PANELLISTS, PANE(anagram of STILL)S. In the US, we would not so describe jurors, since the word has been worsened by game shows. |
| 7 | Omitted, ask if you can’t see. |
| 9 | BETHESDA, anagram of S[om]E + BATHED. Not the one in Maryland, nor the one in Central Park, but the original. |
| 10 | TALENT, TALE + NT. A clue whose literal meaning is a decomposition rather than a construction, which is entirely allowable and proper. |
| 11 | ISOMER, anagram of IS MORE. I saw right away it was an anagram, but that was all I saw for quite a while. |
| 14 | COURT MARTIAL, sounds like COURT MARSHALL. |
| 17 | SIGHT READING, double definition, where Reading is the team. I mistook the ‘without’ for a surround indicator, and wasted a lot of time on that theory. |
| 20 | WASHED UP, double definition, easy, simple, and should have been obvious. |
| 21 | BAY RUM, B(AYR)UM. American usage has crept in, I see, spoiling traditional English vernacular. |
| 22 | GUINEA, GUIN(EVER)E + A. The African country that supplied the gold for a posh coin. |
| 23 | THREATEN, TH(R EAT)EN. Here, ‘taken out’ is used in the sense of taken on the outside, surrounding. |
| 25 | TESS, [poe]TESS. |
| 26 | HARTEBEEST, sounds like HEARTY + BEES + T[orment] |
| Down | |
| 2 | AVERSION, A + VERSION. |
| 3 | ETH, a letter in Anglo-Saxon, Icelandic, and Faroese. I have never heard a girl named ‘Ethel’ addressed as ‘Eth’, but that is apparently what the setter had in mind. |
| 4 | LOSER, RESOL[ution] upside down. |
| 5 | SLAPPER, S(L)APPER. |
| 6 | SATELLITE, S(A TELL)ITE. I am not entirely satisfied with this, because ‘show’ and ‘tell’ are really two different things, but I cannot see any other way to parse the clue. |
| 7 | ALL SOULS DAY, anagram of A LASS LOUDLY, and quite a tricky one. |
| 8 | LINDEN, NIL backwards followed by DEN. I suspect some careless solvers may have put LINNET, L(INN)ET. However, there is no possible way to make ‘let’ equivalent to ‘tree’. |
| 12 | MARASCHINOS, anagram of CHAIRMAN’S + O.S. We have not had this abbreviation for over-size for a long time. |
| 15 | MEGADEATH, M(EGAD)EATH. I thought for a long time this was going to be an Irish county I could not remember that was an anagram of ‘huge human’. |
| 16 | END USERS, [b]END(US)ERS. |
| 18 | TAPSTERS, TA(P[ub])STERS. I was tempted by ‘tipplers’ for a while, but couldn’t make it fit the cryptic. |
| 19 | MATURE, MA + T[rade]U[nion] + RE., Lift, clean, and separate! |
| 21 | BARGE, double definition, and a tricky one. I saw immediately that ‘lighter’ was a boat, and still couldn’t see it until I had all three crossing letters. |
| 24 | Omitted, alas. |
BAY RUM from wordplay alone, and MEGADEATH, MATURE, and HARTEBEEST from definition – is the latter really pronounced that way?
Having been brought up in the area, 17 raised a smile, as Reading Football Club is hardly synonymous with the beautiful game. Huntley & Palmer’s biscuits, perhaps. David Brent’s soliloquy after learning he’s been fired put Reading on the map forever. And Burghfield …
‘My world does not end with these four walls. Slough’s a big place, and when I’m finished with Slough, there’s Reading, Aldershot, Bracknell, you know, I’ve got Didcot, Yateley. Winnersh. Taplow, you know? Because I am my own boss, I can – Burghfield – I can wake up one morning and go, “Oh, I don’t feel like working today, can I just stay in bed?”’
Who said this blog was about crosswords?!
I disagree there are no obscurities as I think ETH qualifies (the letter, not the name though I note that caused problems in some quarters ). Collins even lists it as an alternative to the (presumably better known) EDH (!) though the Oxfords have them the other way round.
I knew BETHESDA from the fountain in Central Park but not the biblical reference, never heard of BAY RUM and ISOMER was a distant memory from schooldays that I needed to check to be sure of it.
I don’t like clues such as 4dn where one is expected to remove a chunk of meaningless letters.
What with mistresses, slappers, bums and spanking going on I wonder if I detect the setting hand of an old friend of this forum?
But this was a good puzzle I thought and I like Vinyl’s ref to the Megadeth album (though theirs has a space after the ellipsis). The Wik entry has a sentence that could be straight out of Spinal Tap:
“Two months after lead guitarist Dave Mustaine was fired from Metallica due to drinking, drug use, violent behavior and personality conflicts with James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich and former bassist Ron McGovney…”.
And .. how many Bethesdas? There must be one in Pennsylvania?? I was once visiting Bethlehem PA and kept seeing signs to Nazareth. I knew it meant something and that I should go there. Two days later, on the plane flying out of the US, I found a card in my wallet that was a free invitation to the Martin guitar factory. It came with my 7-28L. Bugger!
The standard pronunciation for 26ac is: |ˈhärt(ə)ˌbēst| — so either “hart” or “hartuh”. Over to you Jim ….
Edited at 2011-01-24 10:12 am (UTC)
And another echo of 1950s humour came with 26: A bison? An okapi? Could it be a HARTEBEEST?
Regarding A SHOW = A TELL it works in the manner of poker playing – as a noun TELL is the tic or trait that an opponent picks up on when you are bluffing (or not bluffing). A giveaway.
In any case my first completion for a couple if days and in a very reasonable time for me.
Last in was MATURE, which took quite a long time to see for some reason.
About 9 months after discovering this blog I’ve finally worked out how to add a picture!
I tried MELODRAMA for the human tragedy, for no good reason, until nothing else worked. Also spent time trying to justify MATURE, which turned it into the last entry.
Is “slapping” really equivalent to “spanking”?
No enthusiastic CoD today, but I quite liked COURT MARTIAL.
And as for the 26 supposed homonymy, as a Scot I’m used to being very liberal about anglicisations.
One of us remembers Bay Rum from the barber’s shelf in ca 1954. Has anyone used it since then?
About an hour with some assists, so tricky for a Monday.
Not hard today, 12mins or so
I agree that the homophone in 26 doesn’t really work.
Remember the Glums very well, used to listen whilst cuddling the girl friend – happy days!
Probably around 20 mins with the last few trying to be definitive about ETH.
I remember both the Radio and TV versions of The Glums. (My wife was Patricia Brake’s health visitor so we had a particular interest in the latter.) I saw Flanders and Swann at the Fortune Theatre in the late 1950s, so there were plenty of memories evoked by today’s puzzle.
Minor quibble with vinyl – “tapster” and not the plural. Cheers to all.