Solving Time: just under 28 minutes, but not a hard puzzle. It would have been less, but I had trouble in the NW corner, mainly caused by writing two wrong answers for 4dn.
This crossword is distinguished first by being an interesting historical example of how even in the last twenty years, the Times style has changed significantly; and second by being transcribed badly onto the website – it appears to have at least two errors. Despite that I much enjoyed it. I am almost prepared to say I preferred it to the present day style. Almost. Many of the clues are simple cds or dds, puns almost, and so I have not gone into much detail – ask (or correct!) as necessary.
As for the qualifying puzzle, I will blog that when the solution is published, on 26th April.
cd = cryptic definition, dd = double definition, rev = reversed, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as *(–)
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | forth – dd – forth as in “to go forth” and the bonny Scots river |
| 4 | forestall – FOREST + ALL |
| 9 | offspring – OFF + SPRING |
| 10 | offer – First printing error.. It seems likely the clue should say “officer” rather than repeating the answer in the clue! Actually this would have been a good clue, but.. |
| 11 | lyric – *(cyril) |
| 12 | well-found – dd. A well-found ship is in good nick |
| 13 | outstay – “where in France” = OU + TAY containing ST.. a second Scottish river! |
| 15 | retinue – The def. is obviously “following,” and we have about = RE and then point = E and one = UNIT, both rev. So RE + TINU + E |
| 18 | epithet – EP + I(THE)T |
| 20 | shut-eye – *(THEY USE) |
| 21 | take place – dd |
| 23 | left out.. Ask if need be |
| 25 | moist – MO + IST |
| 26 | apple-cart – dd, though can a booth be a cart? The ODO says it is “a small temporary tent or structure” |
| 27 | dog-collar – cd |
| 28 | Natal – dd, first one in, NATAL = to do with birth having come up only the other day |
| Down | |
| 1 | footloose – FOOT + LOO(S)E |
| 2 | refer – I think this is F = foot, with soldiers = RE both above and rev., below.. |
| 3 | hopscotch – HOP + SCOTCH |
| 4 | fairway – cd, a golfing reference for Jimbo. First however I wrote “furlong,” with no great conviction. Then I got 12ac and changed it to “faraway.” When I eventually got 9ac, this became the last one in! |
| 5 | regular – dd |
| 6 | spoof – dandies = FOPS rev. and containing a O |
| 7 | affluence – A F(FLU)ENCE |
| 8 | lurid – cover = LID containing “you are, they say” = UR |
| 14 | left out.. Ask if need be |
| 16 | truncheon – cd |
| 17 | elemental – *(LET ME LEAN) – neat clue, this |
| 19 | travail – Second mistake, I think. It should be “Initiators of train robbery” = TR + serve = AVAIL |
| 20 | sleeper – cd. The way in question being a rail-way |
| 21 | timid – TIM + I’D |
| 22 | patio – PAT + I + O. I was not aware of this second meaning of patio, but dictionaries confirm it |
| 24 | blast – a pound = A LB rev., then fourteen pounds = ST (one) |
It says something (bad) about my approach that I didn’t actually notice while solving either of the errors pointed out in the blog. Scratch me off that proof-reading shortlist.
The pie chart for Q.4 is probably the one you were thinking of, but it’s “How long have you been solving’ rather than ‘At what age did you start?’. The latter might be a good question for the 2012 Festive Survey (if there is one). I’ll add it to the list of ‘questions I should have asked’.
I’m sure starting young helps, but the decisive factor is probably the amount of practice. The sports writer and former Olympian Matthew Syed has been writing a lot on this over the last few years, highlighting research which suggests that very regular practice at anything over many years is a more decisive component of success than is talent. I seem to recall that one of the eminent music academies carried out similar research in the 80s and 90s with similar findings – the children learning to play music who ended up as successful musicians were the ones who practised hard, not the ones who showed the most talent early on. But then, of course, you have your Mozarts and your Chopins …
1 When did you start solving crosswords of any kind (non-cryptic included)?
2 When did you start solving cryptic crosswords?
3 When did you start solving the Times (cryptic) crossword?
I didn’t start solving the Times crossword regularly until I was 18, but I started solving children’s crosswords aged about 5 and graduated to adult cryptics at 6 or 7.
Edited at 2012-04-18 01:33 am (UTC)
This is peculiar. I went to the Times archive to see whether the typos were in the original and it’s not showing up.Thurs April 19, 1984 = 16409.
Sat April 21, 1984 = Jumbo & Concise only as far as I can see.
So 16,410 should have been out on Friday April 20: unless that happened to be Good Friday and there was no paper??
Still, that search draws a blank.
ON EDIT: Ah, found it. It’s a prize puzzle (Times Atlas) and appears under the header of solutions to previous puzzles. Now I can confirm that the typos aren’t in the original.
Edited at 2012-04-18 06:33 am (UTC)
A thought occurs to me, is this puzzle in the paper, or only available on the crossword website? If so, I think that is good treatment and a point in favour of membership..
Edited at 2012-04-18 07:46 am (UTC)
The qualifier was easy again. I’m always left wondering wether it’s really ethical to set the entry barrier so low compared to the usually excellent puzzles that are used in the championship
Conclusion: has aged well (the puzzle, not me).
The only one I didn’t understand was the omitted 23!
I spotted the error at 10 but just had a QM against 19 as I couldn’t see how it worked and went for travail on the basis of def and checkers, hence this was my LOI.
Good puzzle though. I only used to do the Telegraph back in those days, on a smoky train up to Victoria.
People are quick enough to complain about the Times website, when things go wrong; maybe they should be equally quick to recognise and acknowledge when they are offered something extra..
I hope the weather is better on your planet than it is here!
Though I agree about the newspaper.
Edited at 2012-04-18 09:54 pm (UTC)
It didn’t seem strikingly different from one of today’s puzzles, at least not in the same way that puzzles from the 1940s and 1950s are.