West Coast sch. that offers a "Physics of Surfing" seminar | 68 |
Janeane's co-star in "The Truth About Cats & Dogs" | 68 |
Miyoshi ___, Best Supporting Actress winner for "Sayonara" | 68 |
State after being coldcocked (and a clue to this puzzle's theme) | 68 |
They're seen (if you're not careful) just above the beltline | 68 |
Serge Gainsbourg's "___ Petite Tasse d'Anxieté" | 68 |
Prime minister who wrote the play "The People Win Through" | 68 |
Place with an extremely strong expectation of staring straight ahead | 68 |
State in which Obama didn't even think about campaigning in 2012 | 68 |
One of several Brooklyn avenues named after an upstate New York city | 68 |
Filmmaker Boll who boxed (and defeated) five of his harshest critics | 68 |
Ones responsible for what's missing from certain puzzle answers? | 68 |
Sampling of different vintages of the same wine from the same winery | 68 |
Any "season" in Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons" | 68 |
Word that goes in both blanks of "___ early and ___ often" | 68 |
What Elmer Fudd said after getting the thing he's always wanted? | 68 |
Ray of "My Favorite Martian" and "Picket Fences" | 68 |
1970 hit that asks about its title, "What is it good for?" | 68 |
Program on which pundits deride the power of the federal government? | 68 |
Tiny Alaska city whose girls basketball team was state champ in 1982 | 68 |
River phenomena (or what literally happens six times in this puzzle) | 68 |
Athlete with the all-time best-selling jersey in Premiership history | 68 |
Poet who wrote "Things fall apart; the center cannot hold" | 68 |
"___ all frail": Angelo in "Measure for Measure" | 68 |
Jimmy who wrote "Galveston" and "MacArthur Park" | 68 |
1965 song with the lyric "Think of what you're saying" | 68 |
Photographer William who's known for his pictures of Weimaraners | 68 |
The first words of the answers to asterisked clues are types of them | 68 |
Nathanael and Jack's travel guide about Heathrow's environs? | 68 |
New Jersey home of America's first movie studio, the Black Maria | 68 |
D.C. PBS station that produces Jim Lehrer's "NewsHour" | 68 |
Glen Campbell hit, the last word of which is this puzzle's theme | 68 |
So-called "tennis elbow" from playing too many video games | 68 |
1971 hit movie based on the novel "Ratman's Notebooks" | 68 |
Music legend busted for having pot on his tour bus in September 2006 | 68 |
Film for which Jennifer Lawrence received her first Oscar nomination | 68 |
It originated from the General Call made with a boatswain's pipe | 68 |
"What, ___ thou have a serpent sting thee twice?": Shylock | 68 |
Struck out, as one letter in each of this puzzle's theme answers | 68 |
Defunct sports org. that replaced the opening coin toss with a scrum | 68 |
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" director David | 68 |
Word Meg Ryan repeated over a dozen times in Katz's Delicatessen | 68 |
Singer who appeared with Charlton in "Secret of the Incas" | 68 |
"... the dew of __ high eastward hill": "Hamlet" | 68 |
"___ knight doth sit too melancholy": "Pericles" | 68 |
Appalled question from Bob Barker on "The Price Is Right"? | 68 |
"Hello, ___ Lovers" (song from "The King and I") | 68 |
Site of the 1974 fight known as "The Rumble in the Jungle" | 68 |
Actor Billy who played the villain in 1997's "Titanic" | 68 |
"The quality goes in before the name goes on" manufacturer | 68 |
"The Protocols of the Elders of ___" (antisemitic forgery) | 68 |
The IJsselmeer was part of it before construction of the Afsluitdijk | 68 |
"Sacred cows make the tastiest hamburger" quipper Hoffman | 67 |
1970 hit with the lyric "That's how easy love can be" | 67 |
#1 hit between "Let It Be" and "American Woman" | 67 |
Real estate magnate Hirschfeld who often wore crossword puzzle ties | 67 |
Place to live, one of which starts the three longest puzzle answers | 67 |
"Take ___" (1994 Madonna hit that was #1 for seven weeks) | 67 |
"The last thing I would accuse __ of is innocence": Paley | 67 |
When Hamlet says “The lady doth protest too much, methinks” | 67 |
Section of "Romeo and Juliet" when Juliet fakes her death | 67 |
He "gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air" | 67 |
Sarah McLachlan hit with the lyric "We are born innocent" | 67 |
"Is he ___ or is he a speck?" (They Might Be Giants line) | 67 |
Hairstyle on the cover of Funkadelic's "Maggot Brain" | 67 |
Sports star who wrote 2009's "Open: An Autobiography" | 67 |
"A very high price to pay for maturity," per Tom Stoppard | 67 |
Word with "press," "double" or "free" | 67 |
'The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men gang aft --' | 67 |
Fifth word of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" | 67 |
"... ___ our fathers brought forth on this continent ..." | 67 |
''It was twenty years ___ today ...'' (The Beatles) | 67 |
"Take On Me" band playing their final shows this December | 67 |
Captain with the "overbearing dignity of some mighty woe" | 67 |
"The Man Who Mistook His Wife for ___" (1985 best seller) | 67 |
"What's Going ___" (creatively spelled Big Star song) | 67 |
"Idol" runner-up with fans known as "Claymates" | 67 |
Word that can precede either part of each starred clue's answer | 67 |
Band who created the soundtrack for "The Virgin Suicides" | 67 |
Beginning for ''carte'' or ''king'' | 67 |
Old hippie who plays an even older hippie in "Wanderlust" | 67 |
One of the 30 companies comprising the Dow Jones Industrial Average | 67 |
___ Trevelyan, villain in the James Bond film "GoldenEye" | 67 |
"I'll take "Potent Potables" for $200, ___" | 67 |
Bachelor in Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" | 67 |
Subject matter, with Cosell, of the book "Sound and Fury" | 67 |
MacGraw of "Goodbye, Columbus" and "Love Story" | 67 |
Kristofferson's costar in the TV movie "Freedom Road" | 67 |
Boxer who won a gold medal at the 1960 Summer Games as Cassius Clay | 67 |
"To the moon, ___!" ("The Honeymooners" phrase) | 67 |
"___ Things Considered" (NPR's flagship news program) | 67 |
"And There Will Your Heart Be ___" Fields of the Nephilim | 67 |
___ B. Parker, Theodore Roosevelt's 1904 opponent for president | 67 |
Blu-ray with the featurette "The Plane Behind the Legend" | 67 |
"I don't need ___" (restaurant regular's comment) | 67 |
"I Am ___ (And So Can You!)" (Stephen Colbert bestseller) | 67 |
"Jock-___" (inspiration for the song "Iko Iko") | 67 |
Leftist philosophy often poorly represented by high school students | 67 |
"There is no greater evil than ___": "Antigone" | 67 |
What the 1939 50,000-word novel "Gadsby" completely lacks | 67 |