SEPTEMBER 1, 2016 // 17
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
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THE FIRST SHALL BE LAST
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By Paolo Pasco / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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Answers on Page 21
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Soft drink favored by the Marines?
Stephen of “Interview With the Vampire”
Sticky spots?
Cathedral feature
Blazing successes
“Oh, you’re funny-y-y-y …”
Indian wear
Super ____
Setting for the beginning of “The Book of
Mormon”
79 Church response that’s taken as a given?
83 Lead-in to Pablo or Carlos
84 Like Navy SEALs
85 “Old MacDonald Had a Farm” sounds
86 “Got it”
87 Newspaper essay on why not to go
outdoors?
89 Skit show, for short
90 E-cigarette output
91 Frat-boy types
92 Assn.
93 Top of the agenda
95 Fastener with a ring-shaped head
97 Cries of approval
101 Tennis’s King of Clay
102 Cry from comic-book civilians
105 Futile
107 Meadow
108 Woody playing a medieval baron?
110 Books written entirely in chat rooms?
113 Robert of “Airplane!”
114 Singer LaBelle
115 TLC and Destiny’s Child
116 Most “Doctor Who” characters, for
short
117 “What if …,” informally
118 ____ cone
119 On edge
DOWN
1 Walk with pride
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Crosswords in 1924-25, e.g.
Home inspector’s concern
“Selma” director DuVernay
Locks in place for a while?
What the “1” of “1/2” represents
Intellectual
Litigate
Home-remedy drink
Bill of “Trainwreck”
Aladdin, e.g.
“Ratatouille” rat
Embroiled (in)
Biological pouch
Los Angeles Lakers’ home until 1999
Assent to a married mujer
89-Across character played by Adam Sandler
“Tao Te Ching” philosopher
Mailed
“Howdy”
“____, verily”
Gray, say
Mythical father of Harmonia, strangely
enough
Southern chain
Took in
America’s Cup, e.g.
Rostand protagonist ____ de Bergerac
Sunday delivery
Bush labor secretary Chao
Sips
Puts under
Bits of truth
Name on many a college hall, informally
One easily bowled over?
Laugh-illed broadcast
Racer’s brand
More see-through
Noted tea locale
The Titanic, e.g.
Gucci competitor
Bit of expert advice
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Fill with gas
Like pageant contestants, typically
“Full speed ahead!”
Push-up muscle, informally
“That means …”
Passing remarks?
Showed over
Nisan observances
Green spirit
Something felt at Christmas
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ACROSS
Ditch
See-through clothing material
Listens to Shakespeare?
Taiping Rebellion general
Tourist’s report
Ring or sphere
Mail
Reason to scream, “Why won’t this damn
thing locate airplanes?!”?
Honorary title in Wisconsin?
____ Aduba of “Orange Is the New
Black”
Insect that shorted out an early comput-
er, spawning the term “computer bug”
“Ciao”
Surmise
Hamiltons
Domain of “Hamilton”
City with 500 attractions?
Takes in
Bay ____
Section of “Aida,” e.g.
Letters after CD
“Hey, let’s gather 100 people to enact
laws and ratify treaties”?
Fired (up)
Glow
Get by
Super ____
Listen to violinist Itzhak’s music?
Like blue moons
Norm: Abbr.
California missionary Junípero ____
“Ready to relieve ’em of a ____ or two”
(“Les Misérables” lyric)
Stamp incorrectly, in a way
Group that appeared in the movie
“Grease”
Oscars grp.
Out of gas, informally
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Post-Christmas events
Hit upside the head, in slang
Snoot
Eternally, to poets
Words of concession
Liable to spoil?
Cousin of a lemming
Sch. whose honor code includes chastity
Stafs
Start of a few choice words?
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96 Big dipper
98 Native of Alaska
99 Goes, “Ow, ow, ow!”
100 Like the response “Talk to the hand!”
103 Adele, voicewise
104 Spot checkers?
106 One of Asta’s masters
109 College-level H.S. courses
111 “Dios ____!”
112 The “V” of fashion’s “DVF”
Learn to create intricate paper artwork Hear roots county at the Sou’Wester
MANZANITA — The Hoff-
man Center for the Arts will
host a one-day Multilayer
Papercutting Class from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 10.
Led by award-winning
artist David Friedman of
Portland, students will use
papercutting tools to create
delicate and intricate art.
Tuition for the class will
be $55, with an additional
$35 materials fee.
“Papercuts as an art form
have a long tradition. Ger-
man, Jewish, Japanese and
SUBMITTED PHOTO
“Cofee Cup” by David Fried-
man.
Chinese traditions all have
their styles,” said Friedman.
“My work brings papercuts
into a contemporary format.
Many are multilayered and
dimensional.”
Interested persons can
register for Multilayer Pa-
percutting online at hoff-
manblog.org. The cut-off
date is Sept. 6. The class is
limited to 12 participants,
and requires using sharp
knives and utensils.
For questions, email
friedart@gmail.com. His
website is friedart.com
SEAVIEW, Wash. — Come to
the Sou’Wester Lodge at 8
p.m. Saturday, Sept. 3 for
some good old-fashioned
country music from Jenny
Don’t & the Spurs.
This Portland quartet has
been making its own brand
of roots country music since
early 2012. The core mem-
bers of the group — Jenny
Don’t, Sam Henry, Kelly
Halliburton and JT Halmilst
— bring something from
their own extensive musical
backgrounds to the table to
create a rich musical tableau.
Following in the wake
of its two vinyl singles,
the band’s debut self-titled
album continues in the
tradition of its signature
sound, evoking the spirit of
lonely desert roads, longing
hearts, and star-illed skies
over sweeping Western
landscapes. While the sound
of the group is original and
draws from deep wells of
personal experience, the
band pays stylistic homage
to the greats of the genre:
Patsy Cline, Ernest Tubb,
Hank Williams, Loretta
Lynne and all the rest of the
real players from the 1940s
and ’50s —an era where the
lines between rock ‘n’ roll
and country were blurred,
where the likes of Elvis
Presley, Johnny Cash, and
Carl Perkins could tour
together and nobody would
bat an eye.
The Sou’Wester Lodge is
located at 3728 J Place. For
more information, call 360-
642-2542.