Financial Times 14,347 – Crux

Monday Prize Crossword/Jun 24

Another enjoyable Cruxword which may be found here.  But as always (read: recently) I put some question marks to clues for which other solvers’ views are much appreciated.

Definitions are underlined wherever possible and/or appropriate.

Across
1 MOBILE Press lie about the subject of hacking (6)
    MOB (press) + (LIE)*
    Very good clue to start the crossword.
     
4 CONVERSE Communicate with husband, exchanging letters (8)
    CONSERVE (husband) with two letters (S and V) exchanged
    Another nice clue annex surface. Perhaps some might quibble about the fact that Crux doesn’t tell us which letters to exchange and how many. I’m not one of them.
     
9 RAGLAN Scrap a short country coat with unique sleeves (6)
    RAG (scrap) + LAN[d] (country, shortened)
     
10   FURNACES Place for ashes in mugs and ovens (8)
    URN (place for ashes) inside FACES (mugs)
     
12 GO HALVES Good love has, potentially, to share all costs (2,6)
    G (good) + (LOVE HAS)*
     
13 MYOPIA It wouldn’t be a marksman’s fault, optically (6)
    Cryptic definition
    Well, I think it is. “Fault, optically” is as such a proper definition but the first part of the clue??
     
15 TEES Flower often damaged by drivers (4)
    Double definition – ‘flower’ meaning river and ‘drivers’ as golf clubs
     
16 MY FAIR LADY A musical may, without a blonde (2,4,4)
    M[a]Y + FAIR LADY (blonde)
     
19 BREAK RANKS Fall out of line, like classes after the holiday (5,5)
    RANKS (classes) coming after BREAK ((the) holiday)
     
20 SPIN Children put it on top – politicians too! (4)
    Double/Cryptic definition – spinning tops & spin doctors
     
23 RATTLE Conductor’s unpleasant noise (6)
    Double definition
    Sir Simon Rattle, currently still at the helm of the Berlin Philharmonic.
     
25 COME TRUE Happen to regret following a space traveller (4,4)
    COMET (space traveller) followed by RUE (to regret)
     
27 INERT GAS Angriest exchange provokes no reaction (5,3)
    (ANGRIEST)* – strictly speaking quite a weak definition, isn’t it?
     
28 FINIAL I come in last and get highest decoration! (6)
    I inside FINAL (last)
     
29 HEDONIST Fellow apprehended in robbery may be someone on 8 (8)
    DON (fellow) inside HEIST (robbery) – again, while some consider the definition as playful, I think it is rather loose
     
30 ANANAS Fruit without a starter remains a fruit (6)
    BANANAS (fruit) without its starting letter (B)
     
Down
1 MR RIGHT Man of power possessing posh car – a maiden’s prayer? (2,5)
    MIGHT (power) around RR (posh car, Rolls Royce)
    The definition has, IMO, two separate components which can be merged into one (if one feels the need to).
     
2   BIG CHEESE Large cake of Cheshire, perhaps, for a VIP (3,6)
    BIG (big) + CHEESE (Cheshire, perhaps)
    Where does ‘cake of’ come in – other than for the surface?
     
3 LIABLE Inclined to misread braille right away (6)
    (B[r]AILLE)*
     
5 ONUS Duty, and where ours lies (4)
    Our duty lies ON US
     
6 VINEYARD Graves, for example, must have originated here (8)
    Cryptic definition
    Not ‘graves’ as on a cemetery but ‘Graves’ with a capital G, a region around Bordeaux producing wines of the same name.
     
7 RECAP About to go over the top – go over again (5)
    RE (about) + CAP ((the) top)
     
8 ECSTASY Transport in the City stays a bit disorganized (7)
    EC (the City) + (STAYS)*
     
11   NEW YEAR We are involved in NY for this midnight celebration (3,4)
    Surely an anagram of WE, ARE and NY
    But I can’t make it work. I read it as either “(WE ARE)* inside NY” or “WE + {ARE inside NY}”. Perhaps it is because Crux wrote ‘involve in’ while he meant ‘involve with’? Which, as my PinC confirmed, is different.
     
14 BACK ROW Rugby playerslove-seats? (4,3)
    Double definition
     
17 ASPERSION Slander exposed by a second Omar Khayyam, say (9)
    A + S (second) + PERSION (homophone (‘say’) of PERSIAN of which Omar Khayyam is an example)
    ‘Say’ seems to be doing double duty, something I am usually not very keen on.
     
18 SKELETON Lots keen to work with such a tiny staff (8)
    (LOTS KEEN)*
     
19 BURNISH Polish sailors I encountered in the outback (7)
    {RN (sailors, Royal Navy) + I} inside BUSH (the outback)
     
21 NEEDLES Sewers are largely redundant (7)
    NEEDLESS (redundant), largely i.e. minus the last S
     
22 DESIGN Condescend to accept Spain’s first plan (6)
    DEIGN (condescend) around S[pain]
     
24   TREAD Walk-in centre – a disaster (5)
    Hidden solution, ignoring hyphen and dash :   [cen]TRE A D[isaster]
     
26 BATS Cricketers could also be 30 with right opener (4)
    The second part of the clue refers to 30ac which with the right opener could become BANANAS again. And BANANAS = BATS (= mad). I find the use of ‘right’ a bit odd but Crux probably means ‘choosing an appropriate starting letter’ – which in this case is exactly the one we deleted in 30ac.
     
     
     

 

2 comments on “Financial Times 14,347 – Crux”

  1. 13a I think the idea is a marksman doesn’t have myopia.
    2a Perhaps just as a bar of soap can be called a cake of soap, a large block of cheese can be called a cake of cheese?
    Thanks for explaining 4a

  2. Many thanks, Bamberger, for your comment (as ever).
    Your suggestions about 2ac and 13ac did match my thoughts.

    Yet, I am still waiting for an interesting view on 11d’s NEW YEAR.
    Anyone out there?

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