The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, August 18, 2016, Page 17, Image 26

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    AUGUST 18, 2016 // 17
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
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MORAL THINKING
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By Ian Livengood / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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Answers on Page 23
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ACROSS
Southwestern clif dwellers
Means of going down a 36-Down
Have a hole in one’s heart
Meatheads
A Swiss army knife has a lot of them
Cream of the crop
Heads for Britain?
Thick-skinned grazer
Actress Streep playing a centenarian?
News-show group
Soup accompaniers, often
Like the settings of typical Grant Wood
paintings
Unruled
____ the top
Risky business for a compiler of quota-
tions?
Good shot?
Counterparts of iles
Smart
Not obvious to most
Evident worrywart
Done quickly
Protested from the stands
____ Kitchen (frozen- food brand)
Not wandering, say
Attorney general’s investigation
target
Like funk, now
Low-____
Alaskan beer container?
Beat the tar out of
Honoriic for a colleague
Vetoes
Lies ahead
Co. captains?
Typographical no-no
SiriusXM star
Some ine wool
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68 Some True Value purchases
71 Bad way to go?
72 Promote singer Crow’s music?
75 P pronounced like an R
76 Pequod’s co-owner
78 Meets with
79 James who sang “Good Rockin’ Daddy”
80 Throat part
81 Shade in
83 Layers
85 Wilderness Road trailblazer
86 Fitness grp.
89 Nat ____ (channel)
90 Self-righteous types
91 Hung out
92 Debt for comedian Will?
96 Poet
97 Celsius of the Celsius scale
98 Safe place
99 “Hamilton” and “1776”
103 Beat
104 “I can’t help you, but the Brady Bunch
mom will be happy to assist”?
106 ____Durkheim, so-called “father of
sociology”
107 Nervous people are on it
108 Who wrote, “A great lame follows a
little spark”
109 Part of some small buildings
110 Gulf cash
111 Charges
112 Monopoly holding
113 Like a headlining act, typically
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DOWN
Preceder of snaps
Dept. of Labor branch
Lose a tan, say
Uranium 238 and strontium 90
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Original “S.N.L.” cast member
Rags-to-riches writer
January detritus
Body-image grp.
Sirens, e.g.
Pinkish orange
According to ____ (by the rules)
Subj. for an au pair, maybe
Product possibly named after a real
physician
One stop on Chicago’s Blue Line
Greasy spoons
Common soccer score
100%
Caligula, e.g.
Gallbladder neighbor
Like dirty water
Ruckus
“Enough!” to a Roman
____ park
“____ me!”
Focus of onomastics
Frost-covered biochemical solid?
See 5-Across
Hell of a location?
Banana Republic competitor
Good listeners
Big name in Scotch
“Love Actually,” e.g.
Battle of Hastings participants
Like actor Flynn post-dieting?
A good thing to get out of
Black ____
Gung-ho
Cutting costs?
Bathroom ixture
One of the Jacksons
Banished
“I’m still waiting …?”
Roused
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Gets ready to do a load, say
Driving aid
65-Across producer, maybe
Plains dwellers
Arrondissement heads?
Macduf, for one
Disseminated
Request from
Katherine who co-starred in “27 Dresses”
It stops talking
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Telemarketer’s action
Notable whistle blowers
Green shampoo
Sang gracefully
____ acid
Died down
Little ingers or toes
Buzz in space
Tut-tutters
Attacked, with “out”
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93 One-eyed female on “Futurama”
94 Shake
95 The Cascades, e.g.
96 Monument Valley sighting
99 “Gimme!”
100 Common calculus calculation
101 Signs (on)
102 Booking time
104 Bunny boss
105 Small lump of tobacco
CHIP-in, clean up the Astoria Riverwalk
Sample ‘A Cornucopia of Wines’
ASTORIA — Astoria Parks and
Recreation’s Citizen’s Helping
Improve Parks (CHIP-in) pro-
gram will host its next cleanup
on the Astoria Riverwalk.
Volunteers should meet on
the Riverwalk at 39th Street
from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday,
Aug. 20. Volunteers will pick
up trash and cut back over-
grown brush along the River-
walk east of 39th Street and
along the LaPlante Loop into
the Alderbrook neighborhood.
For this event, CHIP-in
is partnering with Columbia
Riverkeeper, an environmental
SKAMOKAWA, Wash. — The
Friends of Skamokawa will
host their annual fundraiser,
“A Cornucopia of Wines,”
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sept.
10 at Skamokawa Grange.
This special event will
feature wines and beers to
sample along with small-
plate treats prepared by
caterers Ginger Schmitz and
Jake Collins of Sharon’s
Pizza and More. Non-alco-
holic beverages will also be
available. Live music will
entertain patrons.
There will be a silent
advocacy group, in its third
annual Love Your Columbia
event.
Love Your Columbia is a
one-day statewide event orga-
nized by Columbia Riverkeep-
er that features community riv-
er cleanups, invasive species
eradication, and restoration
projects in local communities
along the Columbia River and
its watershed, including in
Astoria, Portland and Hood
River.
The Columbia River is
the largest river in the Paciic
Northwest and the fourth
largest in the United States.
The purpose of Love Your
Columbia is to highlight the
issues surrounding the river by
increasing public awareness,
working to restore its health
and encouraging stewardship
along the river.
Volunteers are asked to
bring work gloves, weed
whackers and hand pruners if
they have them. Dress for the
work and the weather.
For more information, visit
Astoria Parks & Rec’s Face-
book page or contact Randy
Bohrer at call 971-704-4812.
and a live auction, featuring
items such as bed-and-
breakfast stays, kayaking
lessons, paintings, blown
glass art, ceramics, gift
baskets and more. Brian
McClain will preside over
the live auction.
All funds raised will be
directed to the maintenance
and operation of the River
Life Interpretive Center at
Redmen Hall. There will
be a special “paddle raise”
during the evening to help
fund the building’s painting.
Advance tickets are $15
each or $25 for two and can
be purchased at Redmen Hall,
Cathlamet Bank of the Paciic
and the Skamokawa Store.
Tickets sold at the door will
be $20 each or $30 for two.
The Skamokawa Grange
is located at the fairgrounds
entrance off Middle Valley
Road in Skamokawa.
If you have an item to
donate for the auction, drop
it off at Redmen Hall during
open hours: noon to 4 p.m.
Thursday to Sunday. For
more information, call 360-
795-3007.