The New York Times Magazine Crossword
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19
INITIAL TURN
By Francis Heaney and Brendan Emmett Quigley / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
Answers on Page 22
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ACROSS
Home of Garden State Plaza, one of the
largest shopping centers in the U.S.
One staying in a lot?
Greenish blue
High in calories
The Rebels
Org. with suits and cases
Rights grp.
Morales of “Criminal Minds”
Two things on Ronald Reagan’s mind?
Cousin of pow! or wham!
One in your corner
Really small
Negotiation failure
“We’ll tell you what soda we’re serving
later”?
Brute working on the Human Genome
Project?
1900s, e.g.: Abbr.
20-Across members: Abbr.
Completely
Like
Tuna that’s often served seared
Planted
Rhein rejection
Soggy computer brain?
H&R Block employee’s biceps?
Upbeat
Renaissance-fair instruments
Hartsfield-Jackson airport code
“Game of Thrones” actress Dormer
Bleed (through)
____ speak
Theodore who directed “St. Vincent,”
2014
Refuses to settle?
Onetime Iranian leader
Origami BlackBerry, e.g.?
Amusing baseball scoring play?
Boehner’s successor
Weight
76 Ingredient in a Spanish omelet
77 “Without ____” (1990 live Grateful
Dead album)
80 Place of control
83 Last king of Spain before Juan Carlos
86 Tourette’s symptom
87 “Friendship is like ____, easier made
than kept”: Samuel Butler
89 Narrow-minded views
91 Drink in an old Pontiac?
93 “An A/C measure? Are you kidding me?”?
95 Patriotic men’s org.
96 Crafty e-tailer
97 Scottish John
98 Quality of beef
99 Basic vocabulary level in Common Core
programs
101 Place for plugs
103 VW head?
104 Sign in a restaurant that doesn’t serve
white bread?
108 Chef who explains in detail how
sausages are made?
110 Star employee
113 Now, in Nogales
114 Hat-tipping word
115 Opening in a schedule
117 Financial-aid plan for a school in Provo?
120 Get the pot started
121 Bird with a two-pointed tail
122 Rule of crime?
123 “The Silence of the Lambs” heroine
124 “Bill ____ History of the United
States” (1894 humor book)
125 Arcade giant
126 Visibly embarrassed
127 Not an original
DOWN
1 Asked
2 John of the Plymouth Colony
3 Royal in un palacio
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Piling up
Quorum for Jewish worship
EUR competitor
Tax ID
One that might reach a tipping point
Opening of a kid’s song
Country singer Collin
Bounces around a restaurant
Prefix with terrorism or tourism
Loads
Lower back pain
Flinch, say
Stands by
Daily schedule for filming
“Hello there”
Billiard player’s calculation
Malfunction
Playwright Fugard
One making a U turn?
Most wanted
Free, as banking
More sore
Secret collectors
Turmoil
“That ____ last year”
Rogue
Chose, with “for”
When doubled, a Washington city,
county or river
Actress Eliza of “Buffy the Vampire
Slayer”
Make one
Lead
Creature formed from Medusa’s blood
Follower of upsilon
Strengths
Sound of sternutation
Oom-____ (polka rhythm)
Weakness
Pony Express riders, e.g.
Pals 4 life
“What was ____ do?”
Audition for ‘The Great Gatsby’ in Tillamook
TILLAMOOK — Tillamook
Association for the Perform-
ing Arts announces open au-
ditions for the popular play
“The Great Gatsby,” written
by F. Scott Fitzgerald, adapt-
ed for the stage by Simon
Levy, and directed by Steele
Fleisher.
Fitzgerald’s classic story
is a trip back to prohibition
America, the roaring 1920s
and the shallowness of the
nouveau-rich. The stage ver-
sion faithfully follows the
well-known novel, about the
young and mysterious mil-
lionaire Jay Gatsby and his
quixotic passion and obses-
sion for the beautiful, rich
former debutante Daisy Bu-
chanan. Her cousin, Nick, is
drawn into the captivating
world of the wealthy, bears
witness to their deceits, and
pens the audience a tale of
impossible love, dreams and
tragedy.
TAPA is looking for up to
nine men and four women,
ranging in age from mid-20s
to mid-40s. No previous ex-
perience is necessary.
Auditions will be held at
Tillamook United Methodist
Church, located at 3808 12th
St., at 2 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday, Jan. 30 and 31. Perfor-
mances will run May 6 to 21.
Auditions packets are
available at www.tillamook-
theater.com, at the Tillamook
County Library, or by email-
ing info@tillamooktheater.
com.
7$3$ LV D QRQSUR¿W FRP-
munity theater dedicated to
providing performing arts ex-
periences through entertain-
ment, education and commu-
nity participation.
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“____ Go” (hit song from “Frozen”)
Pandora’s box contents
Trainer in “Creed”
Acclaims
Both: Prefix
Fewer
Not mumble
Fête des Lumières city
View from the Gulf of Catania
Marsh of mystery
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85 Toss around
88 Mello ____ (soft drink)
90 Poseur
92 “Cabaret” song with a German title
94 Shares on Tumblr, say
95 Commercial prefix with foam
100 Greatly enjoy, as a joke
102 Maxima
104 Tied up
105 Smith who wrote “The Hundred and
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One Dalmatians”
106 Writer Jong
107 Like businesses on Yelp
108 Tax-fraud detector, informally
109 Artist Paul
111 Construction piece
112 Newcastle’s river
116 URL ending
118 Big A.T.M. maker
119 The Browns, on a ticker
String players wanted for local symphony
North Oregon Coast Symphony rehearses Tuesday evenings
CANNON BEACH — Do you
play violin, viola, cello or
bass? The North Oregon
Coast Symphony is looking
for string players to join the
musical group.
The symphony is a local
nonprofit organization of
volunteer musicians dedicat-
ed to providing live classical
music to the North Coast.
Musicians come from a
100-mile span of the North
Oregon and southwest Wash-
ington coast to rehearse and
create live classical music
for the community.
The age range is from
high school to adult, and
members’ ability ranges
from proficient to profes-
sional.
A new concert season
is now underway, and re-
hearsals began Jan. 26.
They are held from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays at
Cannon Beach Community
Church, located at 132 E.
Washington St.
Rehearsals take place in a
friendly and supportive en-
vironment, with an emphasis
on enjoying the process of
creating music.
To learn more about the
symphony, contact conduc-
tor Cory Pederson at 503-
836-2198 or email nocsco-
ry@gmail.com, or visit
www.northoregoncoastsym-
phony.org
January 28, 2016 | coastweekend.com | 9