The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, May 10, 2018, Page 17, Image 16

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    MAY 10, 2018 // 17
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
LET’S PLAY TWO!
By Brendan Emmett Quigley / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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ACROSS
Perpendicular to the ship’s middle
“Let’s do this!”
Larger of Mars’s two moons
Proof of purchase for some contests
Maines of the Dixie Chicks
Out of date?
Underwater mine?
Some end-of-season announcements
____ Plus (grooming brand)
“Insecure” star Issa
Comparison middle
Peaceful protest
Get a copy of a 1965 #1 Beatles hit?
South America’s ____ Picchu
Left-winger
U.N. worker protection agcy.
“____ Music’s golden tongue / Flatter’d
to tears this aged man …”: Keats
Actor Milo
Minute Maid Park player, informally
Formed for a particular purpose
Sultan Qaboos’s land
Something to be defended
Rather poor ambassador’s skill?
School in development?
Hat, informally
Bomb with the audience
Brand with an arrow through its logo
Grp. getting a pay cut?
“Roll Tide!” school, for short
Rolled ____
Prefix with warrior
Formerly known as
Reason a computer program wouldn’t
open?
Some touchdown scorers, for short
Zippo
“Am ____ sensitive?”
75 Existed
76 Thanksgiving serving
77 Things folded in the kitchen
80 “Cinderella” mouse
82 Big-eared animal
84 Past
85 Incredibly hard puzzle?
90 One with a confession to make
92 Consume
93 Responds wistfully
94 First name in fashion
96 Impressive hole
97 “____ reconsidered”
98 Padre’s hermano
99 Prefix with pressure
100 “Eww!”
101 Link a quartet of supermarket
employees?
109 Aid for a tracking shot
110 Jumpy sort, for short?
111 Vehicle that often rolls over, in brief
112 ____ mater
115 Angry Shakespearean cry
117 Something you’re not allowed to do in
math?
121 Mistakes
122 Bit of nonsense in a No. 1 Ella
Fitzgerald hit
123 Not ruling out
124 Gadget for lemons
125 Goes back and forth (with)
126 A cylinder has two
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Continued from Page 5
Sunday Afternoon Live
2 p.m., Raymond Theatre, 323 Third
St., Raymond, Wash., 360-836-4419,
$15. Sunday Afternoon Live presents a
Mother’s Day special concert with jazz
great Gail Pettis.
Maggie & the Katz
5:30 p.m., The Bistro, 263 Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661. Maggie
& the Katz play world-class blues music,
Creole, jazz, funk and rhythm-n-blues
and soul.
DOWN
Band with a symmetrical logo
Bath toy
Pizzeria order
Some lawyers’ cases
Kind of biol.
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Edmund Wayne
8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-
2311, no cover. Edmund Wayne plays
instrumental Americana, alternative
folk and indie roots music.
Monday, May 14
Skadi Freyer
6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin
St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover.
Skadi Freyer plays jazz compositions
on piano.
Burgers & Jam
6:30 p.m., American Legion, 1216 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2973.
The legion offers good burgers and
good music.
Adams & Costello
Edmund Wayne
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Tuesday, May 15
Edmund Wayne
8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-
2311, no cover. Edmund Wayne plays
instrumental Americana, alternative
folk and indie roots music.
Wednesday, May 16
Thistle & Rose
5 p.m., The Bistro, 263 Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661. Thistle
and Rose play folk, Americana and
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8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-
2311, no cover. Edmund Wayne plays
instrumental Americana, alternative
folk and indie roots music.
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68 Teaching positions can be part of their
work
69 Chest protector
70 “La La Land” actor
71 Rolls out of bed in the morning?
72 Messy treats
73 Fluorine’s atomic number
77 “Way to go!”
78 Purple flowers
79 Longtime Walter Berndt comic strip
81 Spot for wallowing
83 All-out attack
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Picks up later in life?
Red ____ (sushi fish)
Irish icon, for short
Ankle bones
Relating to the pelvis
Prefix with communication
Hair-raising cry
Pigtail, e.g.
Many a “… For Dummies” book
Transmitting
Comic who acted in “Ocean’s Eleven”
Smelling of mothballs
Part of O.S.: Abbr.
Original home of Paddington Bear
Moves effortlessly (through)
Streetside hangouts
Draw back in fear
River that rises in the Cantabrian
Mountains
Player-coach Jason of the N.B.A.
K-12
Constellation between Ursa Major and
Ursa Minor
Kids’ rhyme starter
Big name in pain relief
Onto land
Code on a bag to Chicago
Annually
Like a space cadet
1847 novel of the sea
“Finlandia” composer
Rollickingly funny
“Time was … ”
Feature of a millpond
“You couldn’t possibly mean me!?”
Oil field?
Kind of job
____ Bird, 10-time W.N.B.A. All-Star
Bite-size, say
7:30 p.m., Seaside Brewing Co., 851
Broadway, Seaside, 503-717-5451, no
cover. Julie Adams and Michael Costello
play a visceral blend of original music
and soulful covers.
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Answers on Page 23
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85 Stylish
86 Cry at a happy hour, maybe
87 Cry of excitement
88 “Well, Did You ____?”
89 Gate
91 Did some documentary work
95 Bolivian capital
102 0%, in the dairy aisle
103 Highest-level
104 Nice forecast
105 Population classification
106 Settle down for the night
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107 Sam who sang “Twistin’ the Night
Away”
108 Corn syrup brand
113 Tiny bit
114 They always come with mayo
115 Flat-topped hat
116 Heat
117 Keyboard key
118 ____ minimum
119 Anthem contraction
120 One rampaging in 2018’s “Rampage”
bluegrass music from the 70s and 80s,
and original tunes.
cover. The Astoria Senior Center offers
string band, bluegrass and country.
The Horsenecks
7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-
2311, no cover. The Horsenecks play
traditional and innovative old time
music with a bluegrass edge.
Community Concert
7 p.m., Cannon Beach History Center,
1387 Spruce St., Cannon Beach, 503-
436-9301. “Where Words and Music
Meet” is a multimedia program, poetry
music concert featuring jazz duo Chris
Lee and Colleen O’Brien.
Thursday, May 17
Basin Street NW
6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St.,
Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Dave
Drury on guitar, Todd Pederson on bass
and friends perform mainstream jazz
classics.
Senior Center Jam
6:30 p.m., Astoria Senior Center, 1111
Exchange St., Astoria, 503-468-0390, no
Floating Glass Balls
7 p.m., Bill’s Tavern, 188 Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, 503-436-2202, no cover.
Floating Glass Balls plays bluegrass,
Caribbean, folk, swing and country.
The Horsenecks
7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-
2311, no cover. The Horsenecks play
traditional and innovative old time
music with a bluegrass edge.