Question

Here you will find all Crosswords Clues.

TextLength
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