Sticky situations

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Sticky situations.
it’s A 17 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: SPOTS, JAMS, WEBS, BINDS, QUAGMIRES.

Last seen on: –Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Oct 29 2019
NY Times Crossword 5 Oct 19, Saturday

Random information on the term “JAMS”:

JAMS, formerly known as Judicial Arbitration and Mediation Services, Inc. is a United States-based for-profit organization of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) services, including mediation and arbitration.:297 H. Warren Knight, a former California Superior Court judge, founded JAMS in 1979 in Santa Ana, California. A 1994 merger with Endispute of Washington, D.C. made JAMS into the largest private arbitration and mediation service in the country. It is one of the major arbitration administration organizations in the United States.[nb 1] As of 2014, JAMS has 28 resolution centers, including its headquarters in Irvine, California and centers in Toronto and London.

JAMS administers a few hundred consumer arbitration cases per year.:99 JAMS’s Consumer Minimum Standards have been the subject of scholarly commentary.:1407–08:305–06 A policy promulgated by JAMS in 2004 that would have allowed for class arbitrations, even if the arbitration agreement did not allow them, and the subsequent retraction of that policy, were also the subject of controversy.

JAMS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “WEBS”:

A spider web, spiderweb, spider’s web, or cobweb (from the archaic word coppe, meaning “spider”) is a device created by a spider out of proteinaceous spider silk extruded from its spinnerets, generally meant to catch its prey.

Spider webs have existed for at least 100 million years, as witnessed in a rare find of Early Cretaceous amber from Sussex, southern England. Insects can get trapped in spider webs, providing nutrition to the spider; however, not all spiders build webs to catch prey, and some do not build webs at all. “Spider web” is typically used to refer to a web that is apparently still in use (i.e. clean), whereas “cobweb” refers to abandoned (i.e. dusty) webs. However, “cobweb” is used to describe the tangled three-dimensional web of some spiders of the theridiidae family. While this large family is also known as the tangle-web spiders, cobweb spiders and comb-footed spiders, they actually have a huge range of web architectures.

When spiders moved from the water to the land in the Early Devonian period, they started making silk to protect their bodies and their eggs. Spiders gradually started using silk for hunting purposes, first as guide lines and signal lines, then as ground or bush webs, and eventually as the aerial webs that are familiar today.

WEBS on Wikipedia