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Thursday, July 18, 2019
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

Classifieds

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

By John-Clark Levin and Jeff Chen
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
07/18/19

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

07/18/19

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Release Date: Thursday, July 18, 2019

ACROSS
1 Like challah bread
5 Obligations
10 Pistons’ org.
13 Broadway 
seductress
14 Threepio’s pal
15 Take the show on 
the road
16 *Goof off
18 Stunt legend 
Knievel
19 Suit parts
20 Gross sales, 
on an income 
statement
22 Juices up
24 *Mecca for sci-fi 
and superhero 
fans
25 Jessica of the 
“Fantastic Four” 
films
26 Mysterious power
28 Votes against
29 *Trace-amount 
precipitation
33 Burden
34 Co-star/co-creator 
Issa __ of HBO’s 
“Insecure”
35 Prefix with -gram
36 Quick drink
39 *Object of 
Jason’s quest
42 Oil cartel
44 Commotion
45 __ Stefani, 
returning coach 
on “The Voice”
46 *Make flashy 
modifications to
49 Puts on 
Facebook
50 Alerts on the road
51 Often-dystopian 
conflict
53 “Er, I’d rather not”
54 Freelance for 
extra income 
... and a hint to 
the answers to 
starred clues
58 Start of D-Day?
59 Like Navy SEALs
60 Run like heck
61 Nursery roll
62 Intuit
63 Watson who 
played Hermione 
in Harry Potter 
films

DOWN
1 Sprite
2 Muck
3 Car storage spot

4 Sonia 
Sotomayor’s 
alma mater
5 Pub flier
6 Greek Cupid
7 Approx. 1,055 
joules
8 Depp’s “Lone 
Ranger” role
9 Genesis city of 
sin
10 Beginner
11 __ Aires
12 “Over the 
Rainbow” 
composer
15 AT&T and 
Verizon
17 Pack animal
21 __ gland: 
organ that 
secretes 
melatonin
22 Extreme diet
23 Forearm bone
24 Life-saving 
proc.
26 Mideast airline
27 Took to court
30 Monastic 
garments
31 South African 
capital
32 Recon target
36 One may trend 
on Twitter

37 “Law & Order: 
SVU” actor
38 Pilot products
39 Sticky-toed 
lizards
40 Wear (away)
41 Chanel 
fragrance for 
men
42 Words that begin 
the line before 
“Deny thy father 
and refuse thy 
name”

43 Determined 
precisely, with 
“down”
46 Dull sounds
47 Caravan stops
48 Functional
49 More, on a 
score
51 Dampens
52 Roller coaster 
cry
55 Racket
56 Quick flight
57 Eventful chapter

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READING
THE
MICHIGAN 
DAILY!

Hundreds 
of 
community 
members gathered at the Federal 
Building on Friday night for the 
Ann Arbor: Lights for Liberty 
vigil, joining more than seven 

hundred events planned around 
the world to bring awareness to 
and demand an end to conditions 
at immigration detention centers 
along the southern U.S. border.
Waving homemade signs and 
candles, protesters filled Liberty 
Street from Fourth Street to Fifth 
Street, which was closed off for 

the event. The mission statement 
on the official Lights for Liberty 
website 
said 
the 
events 
are 
planned to call out the “inhumane 
conditions faced by migrants.”
“We are a coalition of people, 
many of whom are mothers, 
dedicated to human rights, and 
the fundamental principle behind 

democracy that all human beings 
have a right to life, liberty and 
dignity,” the website reads. 
As migrant families fleeing 
violence 
and 
poverty 
from 
Central America continue to be 
apprehended on the southern 
border 
in 
record-breaking 
numbers, 
an 
independent 
watchdog of the Department of 
Homeland 
Security 
reported 
“dangerous 
overcrowding” 
in 
migrant holding facilities. 
Held 
for 
days, 
weeks 
or 
sometimes months past the 72 hour 
limit for short-term detention, 
migrants awaiting processing live 
in “squalid” conditions and often 
without necessary medical care. 
Twenty-four 
immigrants 
have 
died in U.S. Immigration and 
Customs Enforcement care thus 
far, including seven children. 
In late June, Congress approved 
a $4.6 billion aid package for 
these detention facilities, passing 
a less restrictive Senate bill in 
a compromise by the House of 
Representatives. On Wednesday, 
the House Oversight and Reform 
Committee conducted a hearing 
on detention conditions. 
Discovery of a secret Border 
Patrol Facebook group in which 
former 
and 
current 
agents 
joked about migrant deaths and 
threatened Latinx legislators has 
also provoked further outrage 
and an investigation into the 
group. 
The vigils come ahead of 
ICE plans to begin arrests and 

deportations of undocumented 
individuals in 10 major cities this 
coming Sunday. Ann Arbor Lights 
for 
Liberty 
organizer 
Corky 
Wattles reminded the audience of 
this fact as she began the event. 
Wattles led the audience in 
chants of “Don’t look away” 
before her opening remarks and 
explained the latter half of the 
event would be “solemn” and “in 
mourning” of border conditions. 
In her speech, she particularly 
urged 
young 
people 
in 
the 
audience to vote and become 
involved in activist efforts.
“Kids, 
hear 
me 
now: 
if 
everyone gets involved we can 
take our country back, the land 
of 
liberty 
and 
compassion,” 
Wattles said. “Not voting is never 
an option… Doing nothing is no 
longer an option.”
Earlier in the night, Wattles 
told the audience the event staff 
was collecting donations for 
several organizations. Rebeca 
Ontiveros-Chavez, an attorney 
at one of those organizations, 
the 
Michigan 
Immigrants 
Rights Center, spoke about her 
work representing hundreds of 
children in immigration court 
for deportation proceedings and 
other immigration matters.
“I want to make absolutely 
clear that it is not unlawful 
to seek asylum in the United 
States,” Ontiveros-Chavez said. 

Read more at michigandaily.com

Hundreds protest detention camps downtown

Coalition rallies to end inhumane coditions’ at United States-Mexico border at Friday night ‘Lights for Liberty’ rally

CLAIRE HAO
Daily Staff Reporter

COURTESY OF CLAIRE HAO 
Individuals gather for the AnnArbor: Lights for Liberty vigil at the Federal Building Friday. 

