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Roger Squires

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British crossword compiler (1932–2023)
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Squires in 2005

Roger Squires (22 February 1932 – 1 June 2023) was a Britishcrossword compiler/setter, who lived inIronbridge, Shropshire. He was best known for being the world's most prolific compiler. He compiled under the pseudonym Rufus inThe Guardian, Dante inThe Financial Times and was the Monday setter for theDaily Telegraph.

Early life

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Squires was born inTettenhall,Wolverhampton on 22 February 1932. educated atWolverhampton Grammar School where he gained hisSchool Certificate before joining theRoyal Navy at age 15 as a Boy Seaman.

Squires served 15 years in theFleet Air Arm, in which he trained as an observer and gained commission as its youngest ever officer and visited 44 countries, including being in the first aircraft to land inPort Said in the 1956Suez Crisis. In March 1961 he survived an aircraft crash in theIndian Ocean off the coast ofCeylon, escaping from hisGannetAEW 60 feet below the sea surface and qualifying to become a member of theGoldfish Club (for survivors of aircraft ditchings).[1][2]

Squires wrote, produced and appeared in a number of shows for the forces during his service.[1] A keen sportsman, Squires represented the Royal Navy and Fleet Air Arm atfootball andcricket and became a qualifiedFootball Association Coach and Referee.

His first published puzzle appeared in 1963, the year that he left the Navy and briefly worked as an entertainments manager forButlin's,[1] in the WolverhamptonExpress & Star. The first national was theRadio Times, and in the same year he became a regular compiler with theBirmingham Post. He then started compiling for syndicates that supplied puzzles for newspapers in the UK and abroad.

Career

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In 1981 Squires joinedThe Guardian, theTimes Educational Supplement,"The Glasgow Herald" andFinancial Times and became theBirmingham Post crossword editor for 22 years. In 1986 he joined theDaily Telegraph andThe Independent. He compiled forThe Sun (1992–1998),The Times (1993–2005) and theTimes Educational Supplement (1981–2006). He has set crosswords under pseudonyms including Rufus, Dante, Icarus, Hodge and Bower.[3]

In 1990 he captained the Great Britain crossword team in the 12 nation International Crossword Marathon inBjelovar, Yugoslavia.

He registered his company name of "Cryptic Crosswords" in the early 1970s.

Squires published over 70,000 crosswords in total, and on 14 May 2007 what was estimated to be his two millionth clue was published in theDaily Telegraph. The clue was 'Two girls, one on each knee (7)'.[4]

He was recognised byGuinness World Records as "The World's Most Prolific Crossword Compiler".[5] He appeared in theGuinness Book of Records from 1978 until all crossword records were dropped in 2002. An update to December 2005 was included in the 2008 print edition.

His puzzles appeared in 32 countries outside the UK. In 2013, he celebrated his 50th year as a professional setter, on the same day as the Crossword's First Centenary. By 30 June 2013 he had compiled 74,634 crosswords, equivalent to 2.25 million clues. He holds the record for the longest word used in a published puzzle, the Welsh place name:Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, which he clued as an anagram: "Giggling troll follows Clancy, Larry, Billy and Peggy who howl, wrongly disturbing a place in Wales (58)". He is one of only four setters to have been on the regular teams of all five quality newspapers (The Times,Daily Telegraph,The Guardian,The Independent andFinancial Times). He holds the Guinness Record for the Longest Published Crossword – at 8 feet long, because Onsworld Ltd were unable to publish the whole 24 ft puzzle. He has also produced a 3D crossword that fits on aRubik's Cube.[2]

Publications

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Many crossword anthologies, includingThe Times,Guardian,Telegraph,Financial Times, and theHerald include cryptic puzzles by Squires, including one book devoted solely to 100 of hisGuardian cryptics. In collaboration with Ken Guy he produced three general knowledge books on "The 1950s", "The 1960s" and "The 1970s".

Squires was featured in a number of crossword books[6] about Squires' inclusion in "A Display of Lights (9)".

In 2000 theTimes Educational Supplement published an article titled "Clued up"[7] in which he was interviewed.

Other various appearances

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Apart from crosswords, Squires was qualified for membership ofMensa[8] andThe Magic Circle.

From 1964 to 1977 he made over 250 appearances on TV as a comedy magician.

Squires was featured talking about crosswords in the TV programmeHow To Solve Cryptic Crosswords (BBC4) in 2009, and in the BBCOne Show (BBC1) in 2011.[9] Aside from crossword-related matters, he did a three months' stint appearing in bit parts in the ITV seriesCrossroads and also appeared on BBC TV inCrackerjack! andRolf Harris shows.[1]

Personal life and death

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In 1977 Squires's first marriage foundered and he gave up professional acting and magic to work from home so that he could look after his two pre-teenage sons. He later married Anna.

Squires died on 1 June 2023,[10] at the age of 91.[11] His death was cryptically announced by means of the Guardian’s prize crossword, partly set by his colleagueJohn Halpern ("Paul"), on 10 June 2023.[12] Several old clues composed by "Rufus" were incorporated. This echoed the paper’s late solverAraucaria announcing hiscancer diagnosis in a crossword grid.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdElderwick, David (1989).50 Shropshire Celebrities, Past and Present. IMPRINT, Newtown, Powys. p. 37.
  2. ^ab"Tales from a cryptic crossworder", BBC News, 7 November 2002
  3. ^"Why you buy a particular paper (9)",The Independent, 4 December 2006
  4. ^(Pat-Ella)"Crossword setter hits puzzling landmark", Richard Savill,Daily Telegraph, 15 May 2007
  5. ^"Ace’s two millionth brainteaser",Shropshire Star, 1 October 2007
  6. ^"Editor’s tribute to cryptic king Roger", Toby Neal, Shropshire Star, 23 December 2008
  7. ^"Clued up", Steven Hastings, Times Educational Supplement, 1 December 2000
  8. ^"Mensa FAQ "Have you got any famous members?"". Mensa. 22 July 2014. Archived fromthe original on 22 July 2014. Retrieved13 August 2014.Other celebrities reported to have qualified for membership include... Guinness World Record crossword compiler Roger Squires
  9. ^"Interview: Roger Squires", Shuchismita Upadhyay, Crossword Unclued, 9 November 2011
  10. ^Crossword roundup: going back to the beginning
  11. ^"Roger Squires – RIP".Fifteen Squared. 10 June 2023. Retrieved11 June 2023.
  12. ^"Prize crossword No 29,093" The Guardian
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