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Thursday, June 13, 2019
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

CENTRAL CAMPUS, FURNISHED 
rooms for students, shared kitch, 
laundry, bath, internet, rent from $700 
and up. Call 734­276­0886.

SMG GROUP HAS sold WF­
HD­LPTV in Ann Arbor, MI., to 
Max Henry & Associates. This deal 
is awaiting FCC approval along with 
Max Henry & Associates’ petition to 
modify the 
outlet from a low power translator 
station to a Class A TV outlet. All 
comments regard 
ing the sale or the 
upgrade can be sent to Max Henry & 
Associates, 500 Temple­6M, Detroit, 
MI. 48201­2659

By C.C. Burnikel
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
06/13/19

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

06/13/19

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Release Date: Thursday, June 13, 2019

ACROSS
1 Story trajectories
5 Wild pig
9 Pulitzer columnist 
Maureen
13 Winter expense
14 Soothing 
botanical
15 Great Lake 
bordering four 
states
16 Data-entering 
devices
19 Brouhahas
20 Semi unit
21 Document 
to protect 
confidential info: 
Abbr.
22 “Really?”
24 Like bread knives
26 Sinful habit
27 Chin-up targets, 
for short
29 Brontë heroine
30 Creative writing 
deg.
31 [I’m shocked!]
32 Dim sum go-with
34 August Wilhelmj’s 
arrangement 
of a movement 
from Bach’s 
“Orchestral Suite 
No. 3”
40 Scheduled to 
arrive
41 “Really”
42 Pigeon sound
43 Prefix meaning 
“god”
46 Einsteinhaus 
locale
47 Zebra’s mother
48 Part of the Texas/
Oklahoma border
51 Concert venues
53 “__ the Walrus”
54 Peeples of “Pretty 
Little Liars”
55 Horse-and-buggy 
group
56 Layered lunch 
orders ... or a hint 
to 16-, 24-, 34- 
and 48-Across
60 Sicily’s tallest 
mountain
61 Word with fishing 
or party
62 Con’s room
63 Many profs
64 Usually choppy 
expanses
65 Guessing game

DOWN
1 Tuna at sushi 
bars
2 Enterprise 
enterprise
3 “Breakfast at 
Tiffany’s” author
4 Virile dudes
5 Night fliers
6 “Bravo!”
7 Main arteries
8 Do more lawn 
work
9 Scout group
10 Like a bad spray 
tan
11 Not as tame
12 Marquis of note
17 “You missed it”
18 Suffix with 
elephant
22 “Homeland” 
rating
23 Old audio 
system
24 Pearly gates 
greeter
25 Sweetie
28 Cigar remnants
31 Serengeti 
antelope
32 Word on an 
“evacuation 
route” sign

33 Sorbonne 
summer
35 Trash barge 
emanation
36 Boxer’s warning
37 “Let me give you 
a hand”
38 Screenwriter 
Ephron
39 “Here __ nothing”
43 __ dips: upper-
arm workout
44 Toast topic

45 Mountaineer 
Hillary
46 Head-hugging 
brimless cap
47 Blends well
49 Seat winners
50 Lab containers
52 “Now and Then” 
actress
55 Bowls over
57 __-relief
58 Genetic letters
59 Underhanded

have 
fun 
doing 
the 
sudoku.

xoxo

FOR RENT

ANNOUNCEMENT

STATE OF MICHIGAN

PROBATE COURT

COUNTY OF WASHTENAW

PUBLICATION OF NOTICE OF HEARING

FILE NO. 19-942-NC

In the matter of the name change of Robert Michael Mansuetti

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS including:

whose address(es) is/are unknown and whose interest in

the matter may be barred or affected by the following:

TAKE NOTICE: A hearing will be held on July 10,

2019 at 1:30 PM at the Washtenaw County Trial

Court before Judge Conlin, P56333 for the

following purpose: the name change of Robert

Michael Mansuetti to Cassandra Dawn Mansuetti.

Date: June 13, 2019

Robert Michael Mansuetti (petitioner)

411 E. Washington Street, Apt. 509B-1

Ann Arbor, MI 48104

(248) 504-8314

Not many former childhood 
stars are willing to embrace 
their pasts. Just look at Miley 
Cyrus and Demi Lovato, who 
are still trying to live down 
their Disney Channel perso-
nas and establish themselves 
as more than puppets con-
trolled by a major TV network. 
Moreover, not many bands find 
their way back together after a 
breakup, especially when the 
breakup provides 
an 
opportunity 
for 
individual 
experimentation 
and success. 
Despite all the 
factors 
working 
against them, the 
Jonas 
Brothers 
defied the odds 
with their new 
album, Happiness 
Begins. 
Their 
first in ten years, 
Happiness Begins 
pleasantly docu-
ments the power 
of familial ties 
and how the concept of fam-
ily has changed for the three 
brothers. 
The album starts out with 
“Sucker,” which already soared 
on the charts back in April. 
With a blend of electronic dance 
elements 
from 
Joe’s 
career 
with the pop band DNCE and 
the sexy, raspy vocals of Nick’s 
solo work, “Sucker” provides a 
modern twist on the traditional 
Jonas sound. 
“Sucker,” 
along 
with 
the 
album’s other single, “Cool,” 
have already proven successful 
on the radio, and songs such as 
“Only Human” and “I Believe” 
have followed suit as they con-
tinue to pick up streams on Spo-
tify. While each song maintains 
its own unique subject matter 
and sound, a common theme is a 
mellow, laid-back vibe, whether 
it be found lyrically or musi-
cally. “Only Human” takes on 
a modern reggae style with its 
unhurried tempo and promi-

nent synthesizers, while “Cool” 
lyrically paints a picture of a 
couple friends just hanging out 
and feeling confident in them-
selves. 
Happiness Begins includes a 
lot of radio-friendly nuggets, 
but buried in the mix is also a 
collection of deeper, emotion-
driven tracks. Songs like “Love 
Her” and “Trust” dive into the 
ways love takes over a person’s 
everything and often leaves 
them feeling out of control. 
“Hesitate” is a ballad about lay-
ing down everything to be there 
for the person you love.
But the album 
isn’t 
all 
sappy 
love songs and 
radio hits. “Roll-
ercoaster” 
is 
an upbeat tune 
about life, cel-
ebrating 
the 
adventure of love 
for all its twists 
and turns. Hid-
den within the 
song’s lyrics are 
the words “hap-
piness 
begins,” 
which brings the 
themes of renew-
al and letting go 
back in, full circle. 
The most notable aspect of 
the album is the way it holds 
onto the old while still intro-
ducing something new. Instead 
of trying to brush their old 
image away and start fresh, the 
Jonas Brothers gladly revisit 
their past work, whether it be 
recreating old YouTube videos 
or performing their old music 
at live shows. Happiness Begins 
exemplifies this contrast of old 
versus new in how the band was 
able to hold onto their roots 
while presenting their audi-
ences with more relevant and 
mature subject matter. While 
the new album doesn’t sound 
much like the garage boy band 
the Jonas Brothers used to be, 
they were able to hold onto 
some crucial elements, like 
Nick’s vocal riffs and the band’s 
sing-songy harmonies. 

Jo Bros defy odds 
with new album

KAITLYN FOX 
Daily Arts Writer

Happiness Begins

The Jonas Brothers

Republic Records

ALBUM REVIEW

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