The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, March 16, 2017, Page 6, Image 16

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    6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
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By Alan Arbesfeld / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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ACROSS
Chest protectors
The 2000s, with “the”
Camry competitor
Fisher of fashion
Coming up
1943 conference site
“Put that Southern state on next month’s
agenda”?
Like some wedding cakes and stadiums
Sulk
Pooh’s pal
New York : The Big Apple :: ____ : The
Big Guava
Pain in the neck
Go off course
What a male babysitter may sport?
Panama, e.g.: Abbr.
Numbskull
Minuscule, informally
Romantic liaison
Shared with, as a story
Ending with chick
Spoils, in a way
Playing a fifth N.F.L. period, say
Romanian currency
Capital of Yemen
Race pace
____ volente (God willing)
Like a fired Broadway star?
Small handful
Comedian Smirnoff
Auric Goldfinger, to James Bond
Leave thunderstruck
Color in “America the Beautiful”
Do to do
A.A.A. and B.B.B.
Jai ____
One in a crowd at a bookstore?
Total
Billiards feature
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South American greeting
Eskimo-____ languages
Winter hrs. in Vail
Sweaty, irritable rabbit?
Suffix with nod-
Follow
Really bother
Grp. in the Oscar-winning documentary
“Citizenfour”
88 Kunis of “Black Swan”
89 Stuck
92 Bit of bar food
94 Real hoot
96 Commotions
97 Setting for many Stephen King
novels
99 “The Persistence of Memory” artist
100 “Pencils down!”
101 What’ll feed everyone at a tailgate
party?
104 “What else could it be?!”
107 Road to the Forum, e.g.
108 “Lovergirl” singer ____ Marie
109 Christmas-song contraction
110 Broadway star Rivera
112 Supermodel Bündchen
114 Reformed barbarian?
118 Start of a marital spat?
119 2000s TV hit set in Baltimore
120 Guinness entry
121 Vocal quavers
122 A cross might be given for it
123 Invites across the threshold
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DOWN
Held in reserve
Queen topper
Jostle
Move, informally
Is unobliged to
Soldier, for one
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Curtain fabric
Ticked off
Wear and tear
Some sporty cars
Popular landscaping plants
Compact
Dreaded comment on a returned exam
Lead-in to boy or girl
Island chain?
1993 film that garnered Best Actress and
Best Supporting Actress Oscars
Turnaround too tempting to pass
up?
Wand wielder
“What happened next?”
Puzzle inventor Rubik
Brandy fruit
Unpopular baby name
Formation fliers
Hour in the graveyard shift
Target of a 1972 ban
It’s inescapable
“Shoot!”
Nice piece of change
Plays without a break
“Check out the Argentine soccer star!”?
500, e.g.
Exercitation
Grp. that might have a launch party
Where kids get creative in school
Diving equipment co-invented by
Jacques Cousteau
Shout from an arm waver
Exodus
They may have many chapters
Part of the brain that controls involun-
tary functions
Reds, Blues or Browns
World Cup chant
Start to practice?
Schedule position
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TAKING THE FIFTH
Answers on Page 9
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91 Tivoli’s Villa d’____
93 Attractions for bees
95 They’re always tired
97 French ice cream flavorer
98 Lessener
99 Gossip
102 Moor
103 “____ where they ain’t”
104 Natural-history-museum exhibits, for
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Baltic Sea feeder
2005 horror sequel
Undercover operation
Stuffy-sounding
Heavenly
Picture of health, in brief?
Tense
First African-American to win a Best
Actor Oscar
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short
105 Centers of early development
106 Composer who taught Beethoven
108 “Bill & ____ Excellent Adventure”
111 Pawn
113 Short, for short
115 1945 battle site, informally
116 2018 Super Bowl number
117 Internet ____ (what we live in)
Clatsop County 4-H hosts 5K color run Audition for ‘She Loves Me’ musical
HAMMOND — On April
23, the Clatsop County
4-H program will host a
Color Me Green 5K Run/
Walk at Fort Stevens State
Park.
The Color Me Green
Run/Walk is a 5K or 3.1-
mile run or walk designed
to encourage youth and
community members to
increase their physical
activity while also having
fun. During the run/walk,
participants are showered
with green dye as they pass
through each marker point.
It is an opportunity for
communities to come to-
gether to help support the
local 4-H youth develop-
ment program, celebrate
healthy living and be
physically active.
4-H has addressed
national issues including
nutrition, fitness and safe-
ty in its programs, as well
as social and emotional
well-being.
The Color Me Green
event will take place at 2
p.m. and begin at the Bat-
tery Russell parking lot in
Fort Stevens State Park.
There are no harmful
chemicals in the color
dye, which is made up of a
cornstarch with food-grade
coloring.
Registration costs $25
for adults, $15 for youth
and $50 for a family of the
same household. Get the
entry form at extension.or-
egonstate.edu/clatsop/4-h-
color-me-green-5k-runwalk
For more information,
call the Clatsop County
4-H office at 503-325-
8573.
CHINOOK, Wash. — Call-
ing all theater enthusiasts!
Actors, builders, singers,
painters, makeup artists
and more: The Peninsula
Association of Performing
Artists announces auditions
for its summer musical, “She
Loves Me.”
The show will be directed
by local legend and 30-plus-
year professor of voice and
opera Barbara Poulshock.
Auditions will be held
from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Satur-
day and Sunday, March 18
and 19 at the Fort Columbia
Theater in Chinook’s Fort
Columbia State Park. No
Discover Pass is required to
park at the state park.
“She Loves Me” re-
volves around George,
Amalia and their humorous
gang of co-workers in a
1930s perfumery. “She
Loves Me” is based on the
play “Parfumerie” by Hun-
garian playwright Miklos
Laszlo; the play is also
the source material for the
movies “The Shop Around
the Corner” and “You’ve
Got Mail.”
With a score from the
composers of “Fiddler on
the Roof,” this recent Broad-
way revival hit has capti-
vated audiences and thrilled
actors for decades. It was
first produced as a Broad-
way musical in 1963.
If you have a love for
storytelling and building up
your community, come join
the Peninsula Association of
Performing Artists team; any
skill level is welcome.
For more information,
visit papatheater.com, or call
360-244-1454.