Los Angeles Times - 13.11.2019

(Wang) #1

E8 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2019 LATIMES.COM/CALENDAR


ACROSS
1 Big name in wax
museums
8 Surpasses
14 Worldwide law
enforcement group
16 Eradicate
17 *Place for an eruption
in Hawaii
18 Supreme Egyptian god
19 *Place for memorabilia
about the 44th
President
21 Eight British kings
24 Disney doe
25 Middling mark
26 Cries of pain
27 Lab work
30 Sondheim’s
“Sweeney __”
31 “Robinson Crusoe”
novelist
34 Shooting star
36 Money ... and, in three
parts, a hint to the
answers to starred clues
39 Like some dress shirts
40 Digital video files
43 Part of P.R.
46 Dix plus dix
48 Agua, across the
Pyrenees
49 Smart-whip link
50 Saigon New Year
51 Badger at the comedy
club
54 *Place on “Desperate
Housewives”
58 Put in a pyramid
59 *Place for a space cadet
63 Treeless tract
64 Monty Python member
65 Like many a salad
66 Record collection?

DOWN
1 Allen of TV’s “Last Man
Standing”
2 Spanish “a”
3 Name spelled with an
alphabet sequence
4 Tijuana title
5 Sheikdom of song
6 Batting ninth
7 Ruination
8 Compact cars?
9 Latin dance

10 Car service app
11 Mediterranean
gambling mecca
12 Sounded content
13 Hung around
15 A.L. West team, on
scoreboards
20 Allowing
21 Mortar carrier
22 Wool coat wearer
23 Brief warning
accompanying a link
28 Academic retirees
29 Stitch into place
30 Mouth, in slang
32 Cry of woe
33 Fair-hiring abbr.
35 Omega, to an electrician
37 Area between banks
38 Vichyssoise veggie
41 “Wonder Woman”
actress Gadot
42 Seek damages
43 Least refined
44 Has a passion for
45 Social strata
47 Name shared by
a Grace and a Muse

50 Phoenix neighbor
52 Put on the books
53 Salsa singer Cruz
55 Surpasses
56 Smithwick’s brew
57 Fat used in baking
60 Free-app interrupters
61 Div. won by the Braves
in 2019
62 City of Lions
and Tigers:
Abbr.

ANSWER TO
PREVIOUS PUZZLE

11/13/19

11/13/19

SUDOKU


BLISS By Harry Bliss

KENKEN


Every box will contain a number; numbers depend on the size of the grid. For a 6x6
puzzle, use Nos. 1-6. Do not repeat a number in any row or column. The numbers in each
heavily outlined set of squares must combine to produce the target number found in the
top left corner of the cage using the mathematical operation indicated. A number can be
repeated within a cage as long as it is not in the same row or column.

FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketcham

ARGYLE SWEATER By Scott Hilburn MARMADUKE By Brad & Paul Anderson

CROSSWORD


By Gary Larson © 2019 Tribune Content Agency

Edited By Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

SPEED BUMP By Dave Coverly

COMICS


Aries(March 21-April 19):
You’re not sure how a thing
is going to come together,
and that’s half the fun. You
can trust yourself — you
really can.
Taurus (April 20-May
20): Everything you say and
do has influence. It’s easy to
note the first few ripples
caused by an action. Today’s
ripples are extremely far-
reaching.
Gemini(May 21-June 21):
Instead of hoping for the
best, take more control of
the situation. You’ll antici-
pate, prevent and succeed.
Cancer(June 22-July 22):
You’ll do the work of a pas-
sionate individual, one who
is consumed with the whole
impact of a cycle of meaning-
ful, purposeful contribution.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22):
You’ll share what you do and
who you are in a way that
gets people talking.
Virgo(Aug. 23-Sept. 22):


There are things to start up
and things to shut down.
The time has come to start
looking at the entire picture
and deciding which is which.
Libra(Sept. 23-Oct. 23):
When you enter a room full of
people, what do you see? Get
your mindset aligned with
the outcome you’re hoping
for.
Scorpio(Oct. 24-Nov. 21):
The very nature of a support
system is that the help is not
all coming from one source.
Couldn’t you use a few more
beams and pressure absorb-
ers?
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Curiosity elevates
life from ordinary to extraor-
dinary. Keep bringing atten-
tion back to the current mo-
ment.
Capricorn(Dec. 22-Jan.
19): You’ll be dealing with a
thing that requires your con-
stant attention. It will feel as
though you are riding this —
steering it with all parts of
your being, every inch of the
way.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): If you like how you feel
around a person, you’ll want
to be with that person.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March
20): The theme of today’s tu-
torial is fear. You’ll think
about what you might be
afraid of, overcoming that,
and how you might comfort
and allay the fears of others.
Today’s birthday(Nov.
13): Your gifts are like a bag
of cookies. Once you open up
and present them, you’ll
have many takers. Excellent
mentorship aids you in busi-
ness and financial manage-
ment and flow. You’ll cross
great distances for rewards
of the heart. Keeping excel-
lent records now will con-
tribute to your future legacy.
Cancer and Gemini adore
you. Your lucky numbers
are: 1, 18, 24, 28 and 31.

Holiday Mathis writes her
column for Creators
Syndicate Inc. The
horoscope should be read
for entertainment.

HOROSCOPE


By Holiday Mathis


“My partner is so apt to
find fault,” a club player said,
“that I finally said I was fin-
ing him a quarter every time
he said something critical.”
“Did he agree to that?” I
asked.
“When we sat down to
play today, he gave me $5
and said he was setting up
an account.”
My long-suffering friend
was East, and West led a
high diamond against four
spades: nine, jack, ace.
South took the A-K of
hearts, pitching a diamond,
and led a trump.
“I took the ace,” East
said, “and tried to cash a dia-
mond. Declarer ruffed, drew
trumps and started the
clubs. He lost two clubs but
made his game, and my

partner expended 50 cents
of his credit.”
I abhor criticism of part-
ner, but East misdefended. If
South had a second losing
diamond, he would have
pitched it on dummy’s jack
of hearts. Moreover, South’s
pattern was then marked as
6-1-2-4. When East takes the
ace of trumps, he must lead a
low club. West can win, re-
turn a club and ruff a third
club for down one.
Question: You hold: ♠A 5
♥10 9 6 ♦K Q J 5 ♣A 6 5 2.
Your partner opens one
spade, and the next player
passes. What do you say?
Answer: A response of
2NT (even if treated as natu-
ral and forcing) would prom-
ise a heart stopper. Bid two
clubs, leaving room for part-
ner to try two diamonds if he
has length in that suit. A
case exists, however, for a re-

sponse of two diamonds:
Your four-card suit is so
strong that a high diamond
contract on a 4-3 fit is con-
ceivable.
East dealer
Both sides vulnerable

NORTH
♠K Q 7
♥A K J 3
♦10 9 6
♣Q 7 3
WEST EAST
♠8 4 ♠A 5
♥8 7 5 4 2 ♥10 9 6
♦8 7 4 3 ♦K Q J 5
♣K 8 ♣A 6 5 2
SOUTH
♠J 10 9 6 3 2
♥Q
♦A 2
♣J 10 9 4
EAST SOUTH WEST NORTH
1 ♦ 2 ♠ Pass 4♠
All Pass

Opening lead — ♦ 8

Tribune Media Services

BRIDGE


By Frank Stewart

Dear Amy:My friend is an
alcoholic and seems to be
addicted to an abusive rela-
tionship.
When she is with the
man, he verbally and phys-
ically abuses her, and she
calls friends and parents for
help, apparently truly fright-
ened for her life.
He has threatened her
family too. He is a scary guy.
If someone steps up to
rescue her, she plays with
getting sober, may or may
not find work, etc. Then the
guy calls her, threatens to
have her arrested on ridicu-
lous charges, and “forces”
her to return to him.
Do we continue to “res-
cue”? Do we leave her with
him, knowing she could end
up dead?
Longtime, Worried
Friend

Dear Worried Friend:
You cannot physically re-
move your friend from this
abusive relationship, and so
your task is to love her as
much and as well as you can
— patiently and without
judgment.
Enabling can sometimes
feel like rescue, and you
should learn the difference.
But yes, when she reaches
out for “rescue,” you should
do your best to respond.
Tell her you are worried
about her. Tell her you are

there for her. Tell her this
doesn’t change the way you
feel about her. Ask her if she
is ready to get professional
help, and then have the ad-
dress and number for the
Domestic Violence Hotline
on hand: thehotline.org (or
call 800-799-7233).

Dear Amy: My daughter is


  1. She and my son-in-law
    tied the knot recently after
    six years together.
    He was diagnosed with
    stage 4 colon cancer last
    year. He is doing well with his
    treatments and is progress-
    ing better than expected.
    I am sure my daughter
    being present and support-
    ive is a huge part of his medi-
    cal success. She didn’t work
    before he was diagnosed —
    and still doesn’t.
    People often ask me what
    she “does.” Does she work
    outside the home? No. She
    works in her home; she’s a
    housewife. She takes care of
    the house, her husband,
    their animals, etc.
    I find myself being dumb-
    founded by the responses I
    get when I tell people that.
    Where is it written that a
    woman has to work outside
    the home to be valuable?
    I am becoming defensive.
    What’s wrong with being a
    housewife or a stay-at-home
    mom?
    Stumped in Alabama


Dear Stumped: Many
moons ago (pre-child), I in-
terrupted my career for a pe-
riod where I spent my time
taking care of myself, hus-
band, hearth and home.
When asked what I did for
a living, I would respond
that I was a “housewife,”
which seemed to annoy peo-
ple.
I think the term “house-
wife” is loaded for some peo-
ple because it describes
someone who is defining
herself through an inani-
mate object (house) and an-
other person (wife). But I
liked the term, partly be-
cause I liked the life. When
my “housewife” descriptor
bugged people, I would
correct it and say, “Sorry,
I mean ‘domestic engi-
neer.’ ”
It is NOT written any-
where that a person must
define their value only out-
side the home.
You cannot change the
way people react to the way
you describe your daugh-
ter’s life.
The point is that no one
who likes her honest, pro-
ductive and fulfilling life
should feel the need to apol-
ogize for it.
Nor should you.

Send questions to Amy
Dickinson by email to ask
[email protected].

ASK AMY


How best to help a friend

Free download pdf