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- From: guy@ulysses.att.com (Guy Jacobson)
- Subject: CWC27 Entries
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.223613.22853@ulysses.att.com>
- Sender: guy@ulysses (Guy Jacobson)
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 22:36:13 GMT
- Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories
- Lines: 274
-
- A very good batch of clues this week, for both words. I'm especially
- impressed by the many good clues for the difficult word kookaburra.
- All entries follow, in no particular order. Bonus clues are marked
- with a +, runners-up with a *, and winners with **:
- ________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- TRANSPARENT
- ________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Useless start; pen ran colorless! (11)
- ------- -------------- ---------
- anag. START PEN RAN= def.
-
- A solid clue. "Useless" isn't the best anagram indicator, though.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- See through phony Spartan tear (11)
- ----------- ----- ------- ----
- def. =anag. SPARTAN+RENT
-
- A good clue, and it makes a measure of sense given the stoic Spartan
- character. The phrase "Spartan tear" reeks of anagram, though, so the
- clue is a bit obvious.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- +Frank ran stern PTA assembly (11)
- ----- ------------- --------
- def. =RAN STERN PTA anag.
-
- Very good clue; nice and short. I like the deceptive use of "Frank"
- as the definition.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Frank and I left drills with one of the folks (11)
- ----- --- ------------- ---- ----------------
- def. = TRA(i)NS + PARENT
-
- Another very good clue, for the same reasons. Actually a little
- better since it is more deceptive (the double meaning of "drills")
- and since charades are harder to constuct and solve than anagrams.
- This runner-up came from Tovah Hollander.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- **See through pants arent bad with redhead inside (11)
- ----------- ----------- --- -------------------
- def. =PANTS ARENT anag around R(ed)
-
- A saucy and delicious clue. "Redhead" for R is a bit of a cliche,
- but it works in this clue. The winner, by Anil Nair.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Crystalline bracelet brought on hypnotic state! (11)
- ----------- -------- ---------- -------- ------
- def. =PAIR RENT after TRANCE homoph.
-
- (bracelet = brace + let = PAIR RENT)
-
- I don't think it's quite fair to expect the solver to convert
- "bracelet" into PAIR RENT, and then later to use a homophone.
- This clue is too indirect. It reads naturally, though.
-
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Easily-read motive for hard-to-read type? (11)
- ------------------ --- -----------------
- def. = def.
-
- A person with transparent motives is easy-to-read; it would be
- very hard to read transparent printing.
-
- A good double meaning. Although it would indeed be hard to read
- transparent printing, this definition is not accurate enough
- to satisfy me -- I would not be sure that I had solved the clue,
- even after I knew the answer.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Directions to get in hold are not clear (11).
- ---------- --------- ---- ------- -----
- NS inside TRAP+ AREN'T= def.
-
-
- I'm not crazy about "Directions" or "Points" when used to specify
- an arbitary string in {N,E,S,W}* -- it's too vague.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *For a brief time, using average instead of one makes it clear (11)
- ---------------- ----- ------- ---------- --- -------- -----
- TRANSIENT, subst. PAR for I = def.
-
- A very clever charade/substitution. It isn't entirely clear what the
- the clue is supposed to mean on the surface, though. This clue is courtesy
- of Ilana Stern.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Canvas structure held melted mineral, like glass (11)
- ---------------- ---- ------ ------- ----------
- TENT around [RAN + SPAR] = def.
-
- A very good charade, and fairly decptive, too. This was set in hot
- lead by the redoubtable Jake Bergmann.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Open time restricted by a new health club lease (11)
- ---- ---- ---------- -- - --- ----------- -----
- def.= T + R + A+ N + SPA + RENT
-
- Quite a feat to pack all these little pieces together in such a short
- and functional clue, by the very busy Ralph Kennedy.
-
- ________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- KOOKABURRA
-
- Two references to the song:
-
- Kookaburra sits in an old gum tree,
- Merry merry king of the bush is he,
- Laugh, kookaburra; laugh kookaburrra,
- Gay your life must be!
-
- (lyrics only approximately correct)
-
- and a couple of "laughing jackasses". While I enjoy these references,
- they pose a problem for the clue judge. Anyone who knows the nickname
- "laughing jackass" will be able to solve a clue containing that phrase
- immediately without even looking at the cryptic part, while anyone who
- doesn't know the nickname won't have a fair shot at it at all. So the
- clue is going to either be too easy or too difficult from the point of
- view of a potential solver. On the other hand, a very vague
- definition like "bird" is kind of a cop-out, and had better be coupled
- with a very good cryptic reading.
-
- Quite a few very good clues for this tough bird:
-
- ________________________________________________________________
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Oh-oh, Kay's out again - Ab, you are twice a laughing jackass! (10)
- ----- ----- --------- -- --- --------- - ----------------
- [OO + KK] anag + AB U RR A= def.
-
- This charade is too indirect for me. I don't like the gratuitous
- use of "Ab", either.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Crazy articles about sound of Northern English bird (10)
- ----- -------- ----- ------------------------- ----
- KOOK+ [A + A] around BURR = def.
-
- A very good charade. The only blemish is the vague def. I like the
- way "sound of Northern English" works in the clue. Runner-up by
- Greg Lawler.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Eccentric sailor goes to old city to meet God but finds
- the merry king of the bushes (10)
- --------- ------ ------- -------- ------- --- ---------
- ----------------------------
- KOOK + AB + UR + RA =
- def.
-
- Quite a mouthful, with a lot of non-fuctional words.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- **Senselessly bar auk, rook, and kingfisher from Australia (10)
- ----------- ------------- --- -------------------------
- anag. BAR AUK ROOK = def.
-
- An excellent anagram, given the ugly letters you had to work with.
- "Kingfisher from Australia" is a very good and specific definition,
- made a little more deceptive by the phasing of the clue. This winner
- sprung from the brow of Tovah Hollander.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Knockout nickname for Van Buren, Jefferson's VP: a laughing jackass (10)
- -------- ---------------------- -------------- - ----------------
- KO + OK + A. BURR +A= def.
-
- (nickname for Van Buren = OK - as in Old Kinderhook,
- arguably the origin of the expression. A little trivial
- pursuit never hurt a puzzle fan - though I'm sure that all
- subscribers know that Van Buren was Jackson's VP, how many
- know that Clinton (George no less) served as VP under both
- Jefferson and Madison. One more piece of trivia from the
- novel, Burr, by GORE Vidal - who suggests that VanBuren was
- really Burr's illegitimate son.)
-
- Good charade and consistent American Politics theme. A history lesson
- comes along for free with this clue, penned by the obviously
- well-schooled David Kraines.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Aussie bird reads like crazy, man: a Vidal novel, a ... (10)
- ----------- ---------- ---------- - ----------- -
- def. = KOOK A BURR A
-
- Good charade, with a good deceptive use of "bird" as a slang
- term for fellow.
- _______________________________________________________________
-
- +Australian bird, a nut-case, a nut, takes it all from the rear (10)
- --------------- - -------- - --- --------------------------
- def. =[A+ BURR + A+KOOK] rev. (words)
-
- Fair charade; a bonus clue pandering to my backwardness.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Initially, kestral, ostrich or kingfisher? a bird urgently requiring,
- rural Australia (10)
- --------- ------- ------- -- ---------- - ---- -------- ---------
- initials [ K + O +O +K + A+B +U +R +
- ----- ---------
- R +A ] &lit.
-
- These super-long initial strings read clumsily, which gives away the show.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Strange, tabu tattoo: laughing Aussie flappers strip-tease. Not petty, perky!
- ------- ---------- ------------------------ ----------- ----------------
- anag. TABU TATTOO = def. ,replace T's --> RK
-
-
- In the words of the robot on "Lost in Space", "That does not compute".
- This clue is way too indirect -- the definition is lost somewhere in
- the middle, and I'm still not sure what rules in the T -> RK
- transformation are, exactly.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *Stark woman with a divine chest turned over to receive a back rub and
- some pecker down under (10)
- ----------- ---- -------------- ----------- ---------- - ---- --- ---
- KOO + [ ARK , rev. ] around [A+rev. RUB] =
- ----------------------
- def.
-
- (KOO Stark, Prince Andrew's floozy)
-
- An X-rated clue, perhaps, but well-built. Even though it's a bit long
- and twisted, I feel that it gets the job done. One quibble - a
- kookaburra is a kingfisher, not a woodPECKER. I guess "pecker" is
- supposed to be a deceptive term for bird. I have heard some Brits
- tell me to "keep my pecker up"; I wonder what they meant? Anyway, this
- sweet clue is from the hand of Tom Deneau.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- *It's in an old gum tree -- a nutcase with prickly seed pod, found within
- the limits of area (10)
- ----------------------- --------- ---- ---------------- ------------
- def. KOOK + [ BURR inside
- ------------------
- A(re)A
-
- Excellent attempt to mask the obviousness of the "old gum tree"
- reference. The clue is a bit long but very good - the only weakness
- is "the limits of area", which doesn't read as well as the rest.
- This fine clue is the work of Ilana Stern.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- The southern kingfisher returns, to brush by a king in a castle (10)
- ----------------------- ------- -------- -- - ---- -- - ------
- def. = rev. [ (RUB + A+ K) in(A ROOK)]
-
- A good charade, if a bit complex.
- ________________________________________________________________
-
-
- --
- _________________________________________________________________
- Guy Jacobson (908) 582-6558 AT&T Bell Laboratories
- uucp: {att,ucbvax}!ulysses!guy 600 Mountain Avenue
- internet: guy@ulysses.att.com Murray Hill NJ, 07974
-