Financial Times 17,586 by FALCON

A solid puzzle with some clever surfaces from Falcon . . .

. . . with nothing even to quibble about from me, but please let me know if I have missed anything.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 BY RIGHTS
Correctly believe ceremony’s on the radio (2,6)
Homophones of (on the radio) BUY (believe) + RITE’S (ceremony’s)
5 WALRUS
Action taken by us to protect large marine mammal (6)
{WAR (action taken . . .) + US} around (to protect) L (large). Arguably, this clue is an &lit, since I think that “taken by us to protect” is doing double duty in order for us to derive “war.”
10 AUBERGE
Vegetable that’s given away in French inn (7)
AUBERG[IN]E (vegetable) minus (that’s given away) IN
11 EMPATHY
Compassion of European politician at hospital close to bankruptcy (7)
E (European) + MP (politician) + AT + H (hospital) + last letter of (close to) [BANKRUPTC]Y
12 CLIMB
Cold, member making ascent (5)
C (cold) + LIMB (member)
13 IN GENERAL
Mostly at home with army officer (2,7)
IN (at home) + GENERAL (army officer)
14 SLOT MACHINES
Cash lost in ‘em in resort? (4,8)
&lit and anagram of (resort) CASH LOST IN ‘EM
18 LANDING STRIP
After touching down, take off from here? (7,5)
Cryptic definition/&lit and LANDING (touching down) + STRIP (take off)
21 GUITARIST
Musician’s good universal appeal playing sitar (9)
G (good) + U (universal [content rating]) + IT ([sex] appeal) + anagram of (playing) SITAR
23 PINTO
Quietly enthusiastic about piebald horse (5)
P (quietly) + INTO (enthusiastic about)
24 THEREAT
Danger involving English on that account (7)
THREAT (danger) around (involving) E (English)
25 REEL OFF
Quickly list items in roll of film no longer available (4,3)
REEL (roll of film) + OFF (no longer available)
26 ROTATE
Go round old gallery, following king (6)
R (king) + O (old) + TATE (gallery)
27 ASTEROID
Heavenly body of a bodybuilder? (8)
A + STEROID (“bodybuilder,” i.e., muscle-building substance)
DOWN
1 BRANCH
Initially, Bible-basher was manager of church’s regional office (6)
First letter of (initially) B[IBLE-BASHER] + RAN (was manager of) + CH (church)
2 RABBIT
Leader in synagogue and Buddhist finally talk at length (6)
RABBI (leader in synagogue) + last letter of (finally) [BUDDHIS]T
3 GARIBALDI
Loose blouse I put among clothes laid out (9)
I inside (put among) GARB (clothes) + anagram of (out) LAID
4 THE NITTY-GRITTY
Brass tacks article on one of Capone’s men, reportedly uncompromising (3,5-6)
THE (article) + homophone of (reportedly) NITTI (one of [Al] Capone’s men, i.e., Frank Nitti) + GRITTY (uncompromising)
6 ASPEN
Tree in a small enclosure (5)
A + S (small) + PEN (enclosure)
7 RETIRING
Modest, bowing out (8)
Double definition
8 SPYGLASS
Bring over short gypsy girl’s telescope (8)
GYPS[Y] minus last letter (short) and inverted (bring over) + LASS (girl)
9 SERGEANT-AT-ARMS
Officer material, star batman heading off abroad (8-2-4)
SERGE (material) + anagram of (abroad) {STAR + [B]ATMAN minus first letter (“heading off”)}
15 HAIRPIECE
Brutus, for one, in musical number (9)
HAIR (musical) + PIECE (number).  I was vaguely aware of this as the name of a hairstyle, but the first definition in Chambers is “a kind of wig.”
16 BLIGHTER
Beggar born on barge (8)
B (born) + LIGHTER (barge)
17 INDIRECT
Evasive about being put in charge (8)
RE (about) inside (being put in) INDICT (charge)
19 IN TOTO
Altogether popular, Miss Gale’s best friend? (2,4)
IN (popular) + TOTO (Miss Gale’s best friend, referring to Dorothy Gale’s pet dog in “The Wizard of Oz”)
20 GOLFED
Played Sawgrass, say, with shot with iron across lake ending in hazard (6)
GO (shot) +{FE (iron) around (across) L (lake)} + last letter of (ending in) [HAZAR]D, referring to the course at Tournament Players Club Sawgrass
22 AVERT
Prevent a check pinning rook (5)
A + VET (check) around (pinning) R (rook)

17 comments on “Financial Times 17,586 by FALCON”

  1. Geoff Down Under

    Will I be the only one on here who didn’t know that Frank Nitty was one of Al Capone’s men? Has my life to date been incomplete? I had as much chance of solving that clue as I had of flying to the moon.

    Never heard of a brutus hairstyle either. Nor Dorothy’s surname. Nor a garibaldi as a loose blouse. And I’ve only just managed to work out after much effort that Sawgrass is a Florida golf course. Sheesh!

    So plenty of head scratchers.

    I also don’t much like “abroad” or “resort” as anagrinds, although it has been pointed out before that they’re both somehow legit. (For “somehow”, I presume Chambers?)

    Despite this abundance of new experiences, I found this enjoyable, and definitely more achievable than today’s Paul in the Guardian. Thanks Falcon & Cineraria.

  2. Diane

    No, Geoff, you’re not the only one! I didn’t know Frank Nitti either but I got this from the definition and other crossers I had. It was a favourite, along with GUITARIST, PINTO, SLOT MACHINES and GOLFED.
    I also landed the ‘hairpiece’ and ‘loose shirts from their wordplay and crossers rather than definitions. Interesting to learn, anyhow.
    Thanks to Falcon for a
    – mostly – breezy puzzle and to Cineraria for a fine job on explaining everything away.

  3. Martyn

    Too many unknowable words in the long references and SE corner, where I slowed considerably

    Perhaps I was in a bad mood, but in addition I found several clues annoying – e.g I would expect a homophone to be logical rather than two unrelated words such as in 1ac. As another example I find it difficult to see how SLOT MACHINES is & lit – no matter how many times I read it, it looks like a clue missing a definition. And, I really cannot put my finger on a single clue that was a favourite.

    But, on a slight twist to what GDU@1 wrote, despite all that, all-in-all I enjoyed much of the puzzle and 100% of the blog. Thanks Falcon and Cineraria.

  4. Martyn

    PS I do not want to blow your cover Cineraria, but are you in the UK? If so, you went beyond the call of duty publishing the blog so early in the morning! Wherever you are, many thanks again

  5. Cineraria

    Martyn@4: Thank you. Elsewhere on the blog, I have made no secret of being an American. For me, the Tuesday puzzle appears at 7:00 P.M. on Monday, so it is (usually) a pleasant evening’s diversion.

  6. Roz

    Thanks for the blog, I thought this was very good.
    The GARIBALDI blouse was modelled on the red shirts worn by his followers.
    Martyn@3 the UK has seaside resorts such as Blackpool with its Golden Mile containig many amusement arcades full of slot machines, such as Roll-a-Penny and one-armed bandits where people generally loose their cash.

  7. Roz

    LOSE their cash even , I was going to say lose their loose change and got mixed up.

  8. Fiona

    Like others I did not know that GARIBALDI was a loose blouse but it couldn’t be anything else from the crossers. Also hadn’t heard of Nitti but googled Al Capon’s men and there he was.

    First time I have done a Falcon puzzle and I enjoyed it. Lots of neat clues.

    Thanks Falcon and Cineraria

  9. Fiona

    Or even Al Capone….

  10. Moly

    Bits of this one flew in but then it was a bit of a haul to complete. Nevertheless, very enjoyable and everything other than Frank Nitti was fair. My last three were the nitty-gritty, slot machines and hairpiece . Like others, I have never heard of a Brutus naughty Garibaldi blouse, and also took too long to find Rabbit, being convinced that the word must be begin with S from synagogue. 🙂

    I thought slot machines was a fantastic clue and also spyglass, when I finally got it.

    Thanks for the excellent explanations

  11. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Falcon and Cineraria

    5ac (WALRUS): I think “action” works as a definition for “war” in the sense of “warfare”. Trying to include “to protect” would make it a definition by example that would require an indication.

  12. PostMark

    I thought this was a most enjoyable solve. SLOT MACHINES is a very neat &lit as far as I’m concerned and I also liked ASPEN, SPYGLASS, BLIGHTER, GOLFED and AVERT.

    Nitti was well beyond my ken – hard to judge whether it’s reasonable to expect that to reside within most folk’s GK – and I’d not heard of the blouse; the great Italian unifier has been remembered in an eclectic combination of items: a dress, a biscuit, a fish, a cocktail …

    Thanks Falcon and Cineraria

  13. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Falcon, that was suitably and enjoyably challenging. I revealed BLIGHTER but solved (or guessed) everything else. I didn’t know Brutus as a HAIRPIECE and I only knew GARIBALDI as the Italian unifier and the British biscuit (which I regularly order in bulk.) I did know Frank Nitti; along with Al Capone and Eliot Ness they have become crossword denizens. My favourites were AUBERGE, the very clever SLOT MACHINES, INDIRECT, and IN TOTO. Thanks Cineraria for the blog.

  14. Amoeba

    I nearly bunged in ALERT but came to my senses in time. Didn’t know Nitti at all, but not ambiguous from crossers and definitions. I don’t think either he nor the blouse would be common knowledge, but fair enough in the puzzle’s context; I knew neither, but was confident of both.

    I especially liked SLOT MACHINES and SPYGLASS.

    Thanks Cineraria and Falcon.

  15. Pelham Barton

    Amoeba@14 and others earlier: I am reminded of a remark attributed to the much missed John Graham (Cinephile here, Araucaria elsewhere), that no one ever learned anything from doing a Sudoku. I agree that a well written cryptic clue can leave you confident of an answer having learned a new meaning of a word on the way

  16. Newbie

    Thanks Falcon for an enjoyable puzzle and Cineraria for the parsing which I couldn’t see for BYRIGHTS(homophones are difficult) or WALRUS. I thought resort was a sneaky anagrind but fair enough. Am I correct that removing the ‘Played Sawgrass say with’ from the clue for 20D would turn it into an elegant &lit?

  17. Pelham Barton

    20dn in response to Newbie@16: It would still be a definition by example, so it would need a question mark on the end. Subject to that, I agree with you.

Comments are closed.