The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, February 07, 2019, Page 6, Image 16

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    6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
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EJECTION LETTERS
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By Natan Last / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz
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Answers on Page 19
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ACROSS
1 Patron of the high seas
7 Metric in digital journalism
13 Some marble works
18 Den mother
19 Make less stuffy
20 Opening
21 Reason for an ejection in the M.L.B.
22 Reason for an ejection in the N.B.A.
24 Bank takebacks, for short
25 Snug as a bug in a rug
27 Make mention of
28 N.F.L. star ejected from 102-Across
29 “Right on!”
30 Actress/singer Janelle
31 Rudimentary
32 Treats, as a sprain
33 Reason for an ejection in FIFA
37 The Bronx Bombers, on scoreboards
38 Intent
39 Soon
40 Student taking Torts or Property
43 Snowshoe-hare predator
44 Brian with the album “Before and After
Science”
45 Shorten
48 N.B.A. star ejected from 105-Across
51 Sound heard in Georgia?
53 Musician’s skill
54 Onetime Sprint competitor
56 Burn a perfume stick in
57 Meursault’s love in Camus’s “The Stranger”
58 Reason for an ejection in the N.F.L.
61 “Love, when we met, ____ like two
planets meeting”: Ella Wheeler Wilcox
62 Sepals of a flower
63 Rolls up
64 M.L.B. star ejected from 87-Across
65 Belief in one’s role as a savior
67 Anatomical lashes
68 Drum held between the knees
69 On fire
70 ____ milk
71 English dialect in which “food shopping” is
“makin’ groceries”
72 Aries and Taurus
73 Result of a judicial conflict of interest
76 Kabuki sash
77 Bloke
79 Polish up, in a way
80 “Actually, come to think of it …”
83 Skill
84 Part of a “fence” in the game Red Rover
87 Seeming opposite of “Ignorance is bliss”
92 Pollyannaish
95 Mends, in a way
96 Some flaws in logic
97 Plays charades, say
98 Tweeter’s “Then again …”
99 Set down
100 Fruity soda brand
101 A Musketeer
102 Entry fee
105 Stew that’s decidedly not very spicy
107 Durkheim who helped found the field
of sociology
108 Browned at high heat
109 Hit from behind
110 Array in a cockpit
111 Butterfly-attracting flowers
112 Actress Jean who played Joan of Arc in
“Saint Joan”
DOWN
1 Well formed
2 “Receiving poorly,” in CB lingo
3 Retreats
4 Grazing land
5 Organization of Afro-American Unity
founder
6 1960s group with a fabric-related name,
with “the”
7 Joe can provide it
8 Bell-shaped flower
9 Writer/critic ____ Madison III
10 Hebrew “shalom” to Arabic “salaam,” e.g.
11 “Seven Samurai” director
12 Unchanging
13 Pinch
14 Drop from one’s Facebook circle
15 Poker-faced
16 Armistice
17 They may hit the ground running
18 Respectable
21 Genius
23 Head turner?
26 It gained independence from France in
1960
30 Principal
31 Discombobulate
34 King of morning TV
35 Poet who invented the terza rima rhyme
scheme
36 Bay of Biscay feeder
41 Easter activity
42 “Move on already!”
43 Rodeo ring?
46 Politico Abzug
47 Members of the flock
48 Of base 8
49 One getting onboarded
50 Made into law
51 Bargain hunter’s delight
52 Margaret Atwood’s “____ and Crake”
A very musical Valentine’s Day
Boston-based guitar vir-
tuoso Aaron Larget-Ca-
plan returns to the Colum-
bia-Pacific for two concerts
celebrating romantic music
for the season and his lat-
est album, “John. Cage.
Guitar.”
At 7 p.m., Thursday,
Feb. 14, Larget-Caplan
performs “Dances, Sere-
nades & Meditations” in
the beautiful Grace Epis-
copal Church, 1545 Frank-
lin Ave.
The program will repeat
on the Washington Pen-
insula at 4 p.m. Sunday,
Feb. 17, at an Oysterville
residence.
Larget-Caplan has
designed a lush Valen-
tine’s Day program full of
romantic serenades and
dances by Franz Schubert,
Spanish composers Isaac
Albéniz, Francisco Tar-
rega, Pascual Marquina
and Cuban composer Leo
Brouwer, alongside the
music of J.S. Bach and
the American icon John
Cage. He is a musical sto-
ryteller and guides audi-
ences on the musical jour-
ney of love, nostalgia and
excitement.
Tickets for the Astoria
concert are $20 for adults,
$10 for anyone under 18.
Attendees are encouraged
to reserve their seats online
via Brown Paper Tickets
(https://alcguitar.bpt.me)
or purchase tickets at the
door.
Seats for Oysterville are
$20 and must be reserved
by contacting Sydney Ste-
vens at sydneyofoyster-
ville@gmail.com.
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55 Standard of living?
57 Country south of Sicily
58 Amazon Prime competitor
59 Ireland, to poets
60 “Rainbow” fish
62 Tax pros, for short
63 They’re located between Samoa and
Vanuatu
66 Entrance to a cave
67 Revolutionary group
68 Language family that includes Xhosa
and Zulu
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71 Monastery garb
74 Metonym for local government
75 They’re only a few stories
77 Noted Belle Epoque locale
78 Psyche’s beloved
81 Suggests
82 Typical summer intern
84 Forming an upward curve
85 Like oral history
86 FIFA star ejected from 65-Across
88 Choice of cheese
89 ____ Stark, Oona Chaplin’s “Game of
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Thrones” role
90 Russian ethnic group
91 Church title
92 Partitioned, with “off”
93 People of south-central Mexico
94 Director Coppola
100 Author Jonathan Safran ____
101 Land parcel
103 ____ Moines
104 Pique
106 Literary fairy queen
Cello-wielding activist plays Sou’wester
SEAVIEW, Wash. — Anna Fritz and
David Waingarten play the Sou’wester
Lodge 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9. The show is
free and open to the public.
Fritz is a cello-wielding activist folk
singer based in Portland. Her songs dig into
themes of colonization, climate change,
racial justice, gender, spirituality and connec-
tion to the natural world. A founding mem-
ber of the Portland Cello Project, Anna has
released three albums of original songs and
can also be heard on albums by My Morning
Jacket, Band of Horses, The Decemberists,
case/lang/veirs and First Aid Kit.
Waingarten’s songs are about healing, liv-
ing in your car, longing to be found, grat-
itude, riding subways, finding silence and
Sou’wester Lodge
David Waingarten, left (photo by Vanessa
Patchett), and Anna Fritz, right (photo by
Noah Kleiman).
stumbling along your path.
The lodge is at 3728 J Place, Seaview,
Wash.