| “I admired anyone who could ____ people” (J G Ballard) |
UNSETTLE |
| 1949 collection of articles by Albert Einstein |
The World As I See It |
| 1993 film starring Sylvester Stallone as mountain rescuer Gabe Walker |
CLIFFHANGER |
| A small lump, often seen as unattractive |
KNOBBLE |
| A substance used in chemical analysis |
REAGENT |
| Abbreviation to which Q and/or I may be added |
LGBT |
| Actor whose most famous role was that of PC George Dixon |
Jack Warner |
| Actress who asks Sam to play As Time Goes By in the film Casablanca |
Ingrid Bergman |
| An inflammation of the eye |
ophthalmitis |
| Ancient Amerindian people of the south-western US, who flourished between c 200BC and AD1500 |
ANASAZI |
| Any of the points on a compass |
RHUMB |
| Band of connective tissue consisting of collagen |
SINEW |
| Breakwater, typically of wood, extending from a beach into the sea |
GROYNE |
| British brand of watches, originally made in the Soviet Union, though later in Hong Kong |
sekonda |
| Canadian poet and musician whose final album was You Want It Darker |
Leonard Cohen |
| Civil rights activist who came to prominence after an incident on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama |
Rosa Parks |
| Cornish river which empties into the Carrick Roads |
FAL |
| Deceives or, archaically, blindfolds |
HOODWINKS |
| Early ____s are the second group in Everett Rogers’s “diffusion of innovations” theory |
ADOPTER |
| Energy company which sponsored the FA Cup from the 2006/7 season to 2010/11 |
EON |
| Family of rodents which includes squirrels |
sciuridae |
| Footballer who scored a total of 141 goals for Arsenal, Manchester City, and Sunderland |
Niall Quinn |
| Ford model superseded by the Orion |
ESCORT |
| Former Leicester City manager, currently first team coach of Everton |
Craig Shakespeare |
| German composer and trumpet virtuoso, his name very similar to that of a German statesman who won the 1971 Nobel peace prize |
Willi Brandt |
| German director of films including Wings of Desire and Paris, Texas |
Wim Wenders |
| Great brightness, or a flood of light |
EFFULGENCE |
| Hat named after the eponymous heroine of a George du Maurier novel of 1894 |
TRILBY |
| In law, an excuse for not appearing in court |
ESSOIN |