Azed No 2595 ‘Looking Back’ (6 Mar 2022)

reviewed by Dr Watson for & lit. – The Azed Slip Archive

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T

 HERE was never any doubt that this month’s competition puzzle would be a Special to celebrate Azed’s remarkable tenure as the Observer’s premier crossword setter. As noted in the Observer’s recent article Jonathan Crowther’s fifty years are made all the more notable by the knowledge that he has never missed a single week in all that time, and has conscientiously delivered his judgments and comments each month to his loyal band of competitors in the Azed Slips now archived on the & lit. site. Long may he continue into the sixth decade of Azed. The consistency and quality of his grid construction and clue-writing are of course also part of the story, and so solvers will have looked forward this week’s puzzle.

The preamble is brief, referring only to solutions that are misprinted by one or two letters, with the misprints making an appropriate message. Dr Watson assumed this would mean letter clashes in the grid where one solution’s correct letter replaced that of a crossing solution. About a quarter of the way in, it became clear that the entries at checked cells put the same misprinted letter into both solutions, and that some misprinted cells were unchecked. The next insight was that the misprints were symmetrical and fell on the two diagonals of the grid. From here Dr Watson quickly deduced the message (the Z in 9 down helped a lot) as ‘FIFTY YEARS OF AZ CROSSWORDS’, and worked steadily through the remaining solutions. The biggest hold-up was a result of the ambiguous wordplay of 1 and 10 down, as noted below.

It’s arguable that Azed made his own task easier by taking a standard, though clashing, grid and simply misprinting the letters in the diagonals. This probably underestimates the skill that went into selecting a grid that gave the right balance of misprints per solution, and moreover into the clueing of the misprinted solutions so that the grid entries could be solved with the right amount of struggle and entered with certainty (excepting the two mentioned). Clue-writing competitors may have baulked at the competition phrase FIFTY YEARS with its awkward letters and paucity of definitions, but Dr Watson is sure they’ll rise to the occasion in quality if not in overwhelming numbers.

The final grid is given below, and in the notes to the clues, each misprinted solution is given first in its form as entered, then in its unmutilated form as defined..

 

F

T

R

A

F

F

M

U

R

A

G

A

C

I

E

P

O

L

I

N

E

P

Z

O

H

E

F

N

I

E

X

P

S

C

O

N

O

M

I

T

S

W

E

N

R

I

G

O

L

O

N

I

Y

E

R

O

R

O

A

D

A

L

S

S

E

Y

S

H

A

R

R

I

R

O

T

A

R

S

E

E

I

I

O

S

S

W

I

G

W

C

O

A

N

C

U

P

M

A

R

O

H

O

R

I

R

A

S

E

A

G

R

S

T

L

S

O

U

S

A

R

T

D

E

T

R

I

A

N

G

L

O

S

S

N

S

E

E

N

C

E

R

A

T

F

 

Notes to the clues:      

ACROSS

1.      Turkey slicing, a troublesome bother to attack from above  FTRAFF (TR in faff; STRAFF)

6.      Tax for wall maintenance, strange when reverting on chief officer  MURAGA (rum, rev. + Aga; MURAGE)

11.    Fine fabric: piece unravelled round centre of cloth falls  CIEPOLINE ((cl)o(th) lin2 in anag.; CREPOLINE)  The wordplay is straightforward, and Dr Watson even guessed at lin or linn for falls, but as with many of the clues it was difficult to pin down the grid entry and its correct version until the hidden message became clear.

12.    NY bum, male knife wasted, head cut off  HEFNIE (he + anag. less k; HEINIE)  Bum in the (New York) sense of ‘ass’.

13.    Elementary particle, ingredient of drop scones  PSCON (hidden; PSION)  Dr Watson had always associated the name Psion with 1990s personal digital assistants, but it’s also the name of a type of meson. Chambers defines it as ‘a particle with a very long life’, though at 7.2 × 10-21 seconds, that should perhaps be ‘relatively long’.

15.    Flesh-eating monster, width weltering in gore  WENRIGO (w + anag.; WENDIGO)  Wikipedia offers a description of the mythical wendigo and its misappropriation by Hollywood.

16.    Garden shrub, single one, ordinary, found round fringes of Italy  LONIYERO (I(tal)y in loner O; LONICERA)  One of the last clues fully solved, simply because of the double misprint and the abundance of possible shrubs.

17.    Course, wide ‒ leader’s set off  ROAD ((b)road)  A nice easy solve that’s clearly not misprinted.

19.    Vehicle for hire has damaged expensive car, one coming behind  SHARRI (anag. + RR + I; GHARRI)  RR for Rolls-Royce isn’t given in Chambers, but is familiar enough.

22.    Roundabout abroad is booming ‒ about time  ROTARS (t in roars; ROTARY)

24.    Pin disposed of in knocking of drink  SWIG (swi(pin)g)  Azed uses no connecting words in this puzzle’s clues, and certainly wouldn’t use ‘of’. And as ‘of drink’ can’t be the definition, Dr Watson assumes it can only be a misprint for ‘knocking off’.

25.    One of bases for mast with cap on shaped with copper lining  WCOANCUP (w + Cu in anag.; ACORN-CUP)  An altogether tricky clue, with a double misprint and a misleading use of mast2 meaning various types of forest nuts.

28.    Wild goat I’m surprised to see in bitter herb dish  MAROHOR (oh in maror; MARKHOR)

30.    JM’s appalled at having to hug girls regularly  AGRST (g(i)r(l)s in at; AGAST)  JM is John Milton, to whom Chambers attributes ‘agast’, though it’s a common earlier spelling that, like ‘ghost’, was probably modified by Caxton’s Flemish typesetters.

31.    Scottish snob mostly irritated about the States  SOUSAR (USA in sor(e); SOUTAR)

32.    Awful slog, train to develop figures  TRIANGLOS (anag.; TRIANGLES)  Not too difficult, but it’s a longish anagram for which anagram solvers won’t have been much use.

33.    Translation exercise, three quarters English, held in Senegal  SNSEEN (N, S, E + E, all in SN; UNSEEN)  Held up by having mistakenly put the F from 1 down in the first cell, Dr Watson took far too long to understand what ‘three quarters’ referred to, and indeed to find the IVR of Senegal.

34.    Ointment made with egg on inside, all over  CERATF (tar3 in fec., all rev.; CERATE)  Two obscure components make up this reversed charade: ‘fec.’ is an abbreviation of ‘fecit’ meaning ‘he/she made (it)’, and the ‘tar3’ is a Shakespearean word meaning to goad or egg on.

 

DOWN

1.      March so fast, deployed round line: it results in quick and easy win  FCHOLARSMATS (l in anag.; SCHOLAR’S MATE)  The clue is easier to solve than the other long entry at 10 down, but equally difficult to fit into the grid without checking letters. Dr Watson solved it with only the S from SWIG in place, which gave a feasible entry of SCHOLARSMATF. Having only one misprint, that looked like the correct answer, which caused trouble in finding a solution to 33 across.

2.      Venetian painter replacing bit of paint with mark having quivery effect  TIEMOLO (Tiepolo with M for p; TREMOLO)  A good penny-drop for the solver who knows, or discovers, the painter Giovanni Tiepolo.

3.      Kidney secretion on hand  REFIN (re fin; RENIN)  A minimalist wordplay that was too good to pass up. Could Azed have made his clue even shorter by defining RESIN instead?

4.      One affecting stealthy introduction is entering entrance hallway  FOISYER (is in foyer; FOISTER)

5.      Typical of old hound to move swiftly catching sheep  FLEWEY (ewe in fly; FLEWED)  The solution is Shakespearian word that means having a pendulous upper lip like a bloodhound.

6.      Troublemaker, one good at cocktails?  MIXER (2 mngs.)  Another simple clue to a non-misprinted solution that helps the solver to get something into the grid.

7.      Control is near with three Rs being disseminated  RESRRAINR (anag. inc. RRR; RESTRAINT)

8.      A copper initially is often right in arguing from cause to effect  APCIORI (a PC + initial letters; A PRIORI)

9.      Rum ration, gallon set before Albanian monarch  GZOG (g + Zog; GROG)  The monarchy of Albania started and ended with Ahmet Zogu (who hopefully titled himself King Zog I), and crosswords are all the richer for it.

10.    Professor and I not right, in a mess regarding colloidal system  AONODISPERSF (anag. less r; MONODISPERSE)  Like 1 down, the wordplay depends on an anagram of the misprinted solution, which allows for several possible grid entries that replace the M and one of the E’s with a combination of A and F.

14.    Make-up expert, I droop in midst of set-to, disturbed  TISAGOSTE (I sag in anag.; VISAGISTE)  The definition helped this solution to fall into place more quickly than the other doubly-misprinted solutions.

18.    Make a mistake dividing bears, looking up pedigrees  STIRRES (err in sits, all rev.; STIRPES)  Solvers could be forgiven for not bothering to search for ‘stirp’ and its plural ‘stirpes’ after solving the wordplay.

20.    Wild ass, male, one admitting sloth  HEAIONE (ai1 in he one; HEMIONE)

21.    Uncle Sam going into origin, rising like a bird  ROUSAOT (USA in root; ROUSANT)  Azed’s second use of USA in a wordplay after 31 across.

23.    Asian fox, gold or yellow, in cabinet erected  EORSAC (or2 in case, rev.; CORSAC)

26.    US bird favoured following pass  COLIN (col + in)  The last unmutilated entry, quickly inked in.

27     Poisonous plant left in Italian mansion  CASLA (l in casa; CALLA)  Another clue that needed less time to solve the wordplay than the definition.

29.    Struggle, confused and involving Greeks initially  AGDN (G in anag.; AGON)  Azed adds a little & lit.-ish colour to the final clue.

 

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