Saturday Times 26274 (5th Nov)

I don’t have a time for this one as I was more interested in the boozing last Saturday – and the special crosswords we had strewn across the tables too of course! So I just picked at it occasionally and had it finished by the end. A bit of a shame as it was a fine puzzle which I should have probably kept back for later. Never mind, eh.

Across
1 One denies detective worked miracles (10)
DISCLAIMER – DI (detective) + (miracles)*.
6 Block, playing back what are bowled short of a length (4)
SLAB – BALLS (what are bowled) minus an L (short of a length), reversed.
8 Gradually introduced new heads to secure housing (6,2)
PHASED IN – (heads)* inside PIN (secure).
9 Epic finale essential to Chitty Chitty Bang Bang? (3,3)
BIG END – BIG (epic) + END (finale). The larger end of the connecting rod in a car engine, apparently.
10 When skipping I exercise joint (4)
WELD – WIELD (exercise), without the I.
11 Chemical used to break into bank, without a doubt (10)
RESOLUTELY – SOLUTE (chemical) inside RELY (bank).
12 The very best prizes (two) kept back (3,6)
TOP DRAWER – REWARD + POT (two prizes), all reversed.
14 Alignment of feet determines such a distance (5)
METRE – double definition.
17 Come to church to find something uplifting (5)
HITCH – HIT (come to) + CH(urch).
19 Quality of chicken cubes added to company strife (9)
COWARDICE – DICE following CO(mpany), WAR (strife).
22 Figure heading column left Londoners stunned (4,6)
LORD NELSON – (L, Londoners)*.
23 Express coming, with no announcement (4)
VENT – ADVENT (coming), without the AD (no announcement).
24 Remarkable gesture (6)
SIGNAL – double definition.
25 ‘Get up, having drunk tea’ put in old words (8)
ARCHAISE – ARISE (get up) around CHA (tea).
26 Recited ballads don’t do much (4)
LAZE – sounds like “lays” (ballads).
27 Those not finishing strongly, it’s said, who won’t be here for long? (10)
WEEKENDERS – sounds like “weak enders”.

Down
1 Light control key originally tested in E Anglian town (3,6)
DIP SWITCH – D (key) + T(ested) inside IPSWICH (E Anglian town).
2 Exclusive duck’s off — everyone’s eaten shellfish (7)
SCALLOP – SCOOP (exclusive) minus an O (duck’s off), around ALL (everyone).
3 Fine briefly raised with leading European (8)
ANDORRAN – NARRO(w) (fine briefly) reversed after AND (with).
4 ‘Blasted feminists are OTT’ — government official (8,2,5)
MINISTER OF STATE – (feminists are OTT)*.
5 Fragments from books written in code (6)
RUBBLE – BB (books) inside RULE (code).
6 Long walk to go through for the first time (5-4)
SIGHT-READ – SIGH (long) + TREAD (walk).
7 Recall artist turning up in a band (7)
ANNULAR – ANNUL (recall) + RA (artist) reversed.
13 In ten years’ time, he won’t show depravity (9)
DECADENCE – DECADE HENCE (in ten years’ time), without the HE.
15 In SE, mounted talks to dismiss posh governor’s wife (9)
ELECTRESS – SE reversed around LECTURES (talks), minus the U (to dismiss posh).
16 On the coast it’s hard to remove salt in mere (8)
BARNACLE – NACL (or strictly NaCl, sodium chloride = salt) inside BARE (mere).
18 Battleground has James in a state, turning over inside (3,4)
IWO JIMA – JIM (James) inside IWOA (IOWA “turning over inside”). This is a small island which the Americans took from the Japanese near the end of WWII, with huge casualties on both sides.
20 Sage’s wife missing after couple set out separately (7)
ITEMISE – WISE (sage) minus the W (wife’s missing), after ITEM (couple).
21 Roar coming from lower down, with twice the heart (6)
BELLOW – BELOW (lower down), with the middle letter doubled (twice the heart).

7 comments on “Saturday Times 26274 (5th Nov)”

  1. 32m. I remember enjoying this a lot, and finding it tough. As usual, looking at it now I can’t see what I found so difficult.
  2. Not easy for me. 40 minutes this am. Spent ages trying to justify BARNACLE – didn’t recognise the chemical. And I had to trawl laboriously through the alphabet for WELD, my LOI. Glad you all had a boozy weekend. So did I – but in different company. Choir booze-up following Bach’s Christmas Oratorio. From the sublime… Ann
  3. 54 minutes. Great puzzle, with three off the four 4-letter clues being especially recalcitrant.
  4. 40 minutes with a couple unparsed until I looked again today – one being BARNACLE which is rather a fine clue when understood.
  5. ANNULAR, SIGHTREAD, & SLAB were my LOIs, in that order. The Battle of Iwo Jima is of course more familiar to Americans; there’s a famous, nay iconic, photograph of GIs planting a flag there.

Comments are closed.