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PAGE 6
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2014
KANSAN PUZZLES
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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1 Suspend
5 "The Chew"
airer
8 Elite alternative
12 Press
13 Paid player
14 Paradise
15 Funnel-shaped flowers
17 Bivouac structure
18 Away from NNW
19 In addition
20 Give a speech
21 Glutton
22 Pair
23 Insurgent
26 Big number
30 Send forth
31 Upper surface
32 Sea eagle
33 Iowa city
35 Microwaved, slangily
36 Super-
man foe
Luthor
37 Not well
lit
38 Place
41 That
man's
42 Fuel stat
45 Sacred
song
46 Solicit
48 Grand
tale
49 Joan
of —
50 Gumbo
ingredien
51 Strike
from the
text
52 Homer's
interjec-
ction
53 Encoun-
ter
DOWN
DOWN
1 Rose fruits
2 War god
3 Memorandum
4 Wildebeest
5 Mimicry
6 Actor Pitt
7 Romaine lettuce
8 Oil
9 Thought
10 Penny
11 Initial stake
16 Hammer's target
20 Barn bird
21 Peevishness
22 Gratuity
23 Scarlet
24 Ostrich's cousin
25 Clothing protector
26 A Stooge?
27 Annoy
28 Indivisible
29 Actor Beatty
31 Monkey "suit"
34 Post-proof abbr.
35 Pending, as decree
37 Discard uncer-emoniously
38 Lean-to
39 Kind
40 Painter Nolde
41 Villain's enemy
42 Karaoke need
43 Ponder (over)
44 Summer-time pest
46 Tablet
47 Huck's pal
SUDOKU
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Difficulty Level ★★
CRYPTOQUIP
9/09
Today's Cryptoquip Clue: O equals S
X'K PXNF EC HCBRK OCVF WZUOOPXNF VUZOL HPUREO XREC ELF WZCBRK, OC X'PP BOF U OFKWF-LUVVFZ.
To mark Prince George's first birthday, Britain's Prince William and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, took the Prince to the Sensational Butteries exhibition at the Natural History Museum in London. The Duchess of Cambridge, wife of Prince William, is expecting her second child, royal officials said yesterday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Prince William and Duchess of Cambridge expecting child
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON — Prince George is not going to be an only child for long — the toddler will soon have a baby sister or brother to share his fancy digs at Kensington Palace.
British royal officials said Monday that Prince William and the duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, are expecting their second child.
Once again, Kate is being treated for acute morning sickness in the early phases of her pregnancy. The first time she was so ill she required hospitalization.
Now she is being treated by doctors at her residence in Kensington Palace. She canceled a planned engagement in Oxford to rest and receive medical care.
Prince William told well
wishers in Oxford that Kate should be over the worst of her symptoms in a few weeks. He repeatedly thanked people for congratulating him and said Kate was disappointed she could not travel.
"She wishes she could be here," he said.
"She's feeling okay, thanks. It's been a tricky few days — week or so — but obviously we're basically thrilled, it's great news, and early days. We're hoping things settle down and she feels a bit better."
The new baby, boy or girl, will become fourth in line to the throne, pushing Prince Harry to fifth. George, who is 13 months old, is third and likely to become Britain's monarch one day. William is second in line, while his father, Prince Charles, is first.
before George's birth so that the couple's first born would be in line for the throne regardless of its sex. Before the change, a girl would have lost her place in line if a boy was born later.
Britain had changed its laws
William and Kate have often expressed an interest in having a larger family.
The royal couple and their families are "delighted" with the baby news, said officials at Clarence House, the couple's office. The announcement follows months of speculation in the glossy British and American press about a possible baby brother or sister for George.
After hospital treatment for severe morning sickness, hyperemesis gravidarum, Kate recovered and gave birth to George in July 2013 without further complications.
The current illness means
the 32-year-old duchess may need extra hydration, medication and nutrients.
Britain's Press Association news agency reported that Kate's pregnancy hasn't passed the 12-week stage, which is when she became ill in her first pregnancy.
Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "delighted by the happy news that they're expecting another baby."
Royal officials said it wasn't clear if the duchess will be able to carry out planned official engagements, including a trip to Malta on Sept. 20 and 21 that would mark her first overseas solo trip.
Decisions on events would be made on a "case-by-case" basis, officials said.
Quality may be casualy of film fest war
TORONTO — Has TIFF, North America's largest film festival, become the middlebrow blob that ate cinema?
It's ungracious, I suppose, to ask. But has the blob known as the Toronto International Film Festival, North America's largest and most popular cinema gathering with attendance inching toward the 500,000 mark, lost its way in 2014 among a forest of expectations and contradictions?
This year, somewhere around the third or fourth screening of a routine Hollywood studio product with inflated Oscar hopes ("The Judge") or no awards hopes of any kind ("The Equalizer"), the festival felt like it needed a compass. Or simply some better high-profile movies.
Like many visitors I caught the first five days of TIFF, which concludes Sunday and may well be holding its best stuff for later. Any film festival of a certain gargantuan size — TIFF runs on an annual budget of just under $40 million — provokes speculation about its programming mission, and how well it serves and challenges a bewildering, overlapping series of audiences.
Some come to Toronto to catch up on the hottest international festival circuit titles, many of which premiered earlier in the calendar year at Cannes, Venice or Toronto's Mountain Daylight time zone frenemy, Telluride. (More on that in a minute.) Others want stars in movies coming out in a week or two or a month or two: Bill Murray in "St. Vincent," Denzel Washington in "The Equalizer." And there are a dozen more scenarios in between these two extremes.
Of the bona fide world premiers here this week, "While We're Young" (Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts coping with middle age and tragic wannabe hipsterdom) was a worthy if disappointing Toronto return for Noah Baumbach. The writer-director's previous work, the beguiling "Frances Ha," sustained its premise and its interests throughout; this one begins wonderfully but sputters around the midpoint.
McClatchy-Tribune
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