Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (April 6, 2017)
6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 19 Initial Description 23 By Jerry Miccolis / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz 26 Answers on Page 18 1 7 12 19 20 22 23 26 27 28 29 31 33 34 43 44 45 46 47 49 51 55 60 63 64 65 66 67 69 71 73 74 75 76 78 84 85 86 87 91 Squealed 93 Really bothers 96 Drew useful material from 97 OKAY 101 Fiery end? 103 ____ es Salaam 104 Of a heart chamber 105 Direct 108 Stop, in sailor’s lingo 112 Shudder of emotion 117 WASP 120 Opening letters? 121 One of the Wahlbergs 122 One way to pay 123 Introversion 124 Idol worshiper 125 Yoga poses 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 21 24 DOWN Musical Mama Cut Something delivered by a diva Droopy Capital of Uganda Nearly out? Gullet Second first lady Foolish oldsters K thru 12 King who spoke at Kennedy’s inaugural ball Lugs Samuel Adams, e.g. Rich supply Natl. Guard counterpart Small, as Beanie Babies 1961 title role for Charlton Heston A comic called Wanda Burglar frightener ____ Nui (Easter Island) 25 30 32 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 47 48 50 52 53 54 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 68 69 70 71 72 74 75 77 79 80 81 82 83 Mooers’ mouthfuls Muse of lyric poetry Flight of fancy Publisher’s pile: Abbr. ____ Park, Ill. Commercial lead-in to Caps “____ Boom-De-Ay” Certain house … or house dressing Land next to Peru: Abbr. Obligation Drop a line, say Raise Banned insecticide Desdemona’s husband, in opera Candidate’s goal Bobby of the Black Panthers Stephenie whowrote the “Twilight” series Periodic table figs. Actor Holm Where cultures thrive? Horse bit Wonder Woman is one City, but not county, leader? Yale of Yale University La ____ (notre planète) Neuter Med. scan Poetic time Stop: Abbr. That life evolves, to Darwin Pressed Apothegm Global sports org. German for “first” Cole Porter’s “Well, Did You ____?” Actress Anderson They may match presidential adminis- trations Train 10 11 12 21 24 13 35 36 31 38 39 55 60 61 49 57 62 67 73 58 79 68 80 69 81 92 97 101 105 117 71 76 82 107 72 77 86 93 94 95 87 88 89 90 113 114 115 116 96 99 103 106 54 83 98 102 52 65 70 85 91 51 59 75 84 53 42 64 74 78 18 33 41 50 63 66 17 45 48 56 32 40 44 47 16 28 37 46 15 25 30 43 14 22 27 34 100 104 108 109 110 118 120 123 88 89 90 92 94 95 96 97 9 20 29 ACROSS Ascribes, with “up” Title film character played by Tyler Perry Hails Showy gymnastics maneuver Togalike Roman cloak In an attentive manner SWAN Crunchy green vegetable Profitable Sportscaster Johnson Show up Wet blanket? They contain libidos MARS Largest city of Yemen French region now part of the Grand Est Ally (with) Hershey product similar to a Heath bar Part of a domain name Gists Foreboding atmosphere ATLAS Fixed fee Spa sound “Once in Love With ____” Objectivist Rand Fat-substitute brand Pride-parade letters Self-referential Fifth-century pope dubbed “the Great” An evergreen Martinique, par exemple Exist Musical instruments that lie flat TRIO Jose ____ (tequila brand) ____ the Explorer Chapel Hill sch. It’s a long story 8 Nonspecific amount Mild exclamation Supplemental work for actors Golden ____ (General Mills cereal) Winter Olympics activity Willa Cather’s “My ____” Bad-mouths Writer who coined the term “banana republic” (1904) 111 112 119 121 122 124 98 Drab songbird 99 Airport amenity 100 Realm chronicled by C. S. Lewis 101 ____ expected (predictably) 102 1991 Wimbledon champ Michael 106 Ghostbuster Spengler 107 ____ Préval, two-time president of Haiti 109 Say further 125 110 Brandy grade, briefly 111 Volcano at the meeting point of the African and Eurasian plates 113 Pet-protection agcy. 114 White House spokesman Spicer 115 Greek peak 116 Some degrees 118 Bad start? 119 Col.’s superior Discover the magic of writing at Sou’Wester workshop SEAVIEW, WASH. — Writing is Magic at the Sou’Wester, 3728 J Place, in April. Two workshops highlight the magic of language with Nick Jaina and Olivia Pep- per on Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., April 8 and 15. This class will be an exploration of the magic of writing. They will intersperse short lectures on the hidden truths in the etymology of language with writing exer- cises that unlock what most are afraid to write about. The purpose is to explore the reverential nature of writing, as a form of therapy, understanding, and commu- nication. Jaina and Pepper will focus on inspiration, build- ing meaningful stories, and connecting to the parts of ourselves that are atavistic, that have always existed. Students are encouraged to take both classes, but are also welcome to attend just one. The content of each class will be different. The focus April 8 will be on story structure, focusing on mythology and the roots of storytelling to inform on how we can structure a story to provide a satisfying progression for the character and themes. The focus April 15 will be on mechanics, looking at subtext, dialogue and other ways of packing as much emotion and depth into ev- ery line of our writing. Nick Jaina is a writer and musician from Portland. His memoir “Get It While You Can” was a finalist for the 2016 Oregon Book Award. Olivia Pepper is a healer and mystic from Austin, Texas. The classes cost $50 and participants should bring pen and paper or a laptop, and a sack lunch and/or snack (hot tea and coffee provided). Space is limited to 12 stu- dents who are 14 and older. RSVP to souwesterfront- desk@gmail.com or 360- 642-2542 Nick Jaina and Olivia Pepper