| Flanders who said, "Boys, get the alcohol-free alcohol" | 65 |
| Actor Paul's daughter who cofounded Newman's Own Organics | 65 |
| Pitcher Robb whose final game was Game 6 of the 2002 World Series | 65 |
| Missouri town near the George Washington Carver National Monument | 65 |
| Soft stuff found in this puzzle's four longest Across entries | 65 |
| Torino Olympics mascot whose name is Italian for "snow" | 65 |
| Mike who directed "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" | 65 |
| The digits in all but one of its two-digit multiples add up to it | 65 |
| Beethoven's "Choral" Symphony, with "the" | 65 |
| Beethoven's "Choral Symphony," with "The" | 65 |
| "Explosive" roller coaster at Six Flags Great Adventure | 65 |
| "__ won't be afraid": "Stand By Me" lyric | 65 |
| "I won't let you choke on the ___ around your neck" | 65 |
| Birthplace of Trygvie Lie, the U.N.'s first Secretary-General | 65 |
| It "isn't what it used to be," said Simone Signoret | 65 |
| PBS show with episodes about tornadoes and catacombs and the like | 65 |
| Like "that moss-covered bucket which hangs in the well" | 65 |
| Sounder of the tuning note at the start of an orchestra rehearsal | 65 |
| "Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH" author Robert C. ___ | 65 |
| ''L'___ del Cairo'' (unfinished Mozart opera) | 65 |
| Florida city nicknamed the "Horse Capital of the World" | 65 |
| It contains the lyric "The True North strong and free!" | 65 |
| Anthem with the lyric "The True North strong and free!" | 65 |
| Billy Bragg's "I Dreamed I Saw Phil ___ Last Night" | 65 |
| "The Wizard of ___" (short-lived Alex Trebek game show) | 65 |
| Milton's "___ the Morning of Christ's Nativity" | 65 |
| Classic song that's the official anthem of the European Union | 65 |
| Author of "Golden Boy" and "The Country Girl" | 65 |
| It starts "Tell me, muse, of the man of many resources" | 65 |
| Words after ''court'' or ''rule'' | 65 |
| "Think ___" ("The Phantom of the Opera" song) | 65 |
| “The Galvanic Current Investigated Mathematically” author | 65 |
| Meat Puppets song covered by Nirvana on "MTV Unplugged" | 65 |
| "___, I'm Falling in Love Again" (Dee Mullins tune) | 65 |
| Van Gogh's "L'Église d'Auvers-sur- ___" | 65 |
| Fighting ___ (unofficial mascot of Mississippi's Delta State) | 65 |
| Words repeated in Buster Poindexter's "Hot Hot Hot" | 65 |
| Food additive that was included in Time's 50 Worst Inventions | 65 |
| Eight-time All-Star Tony of the '60s-'70s Minnesota Twins | 65 |
| Name not to be used with "twins," as they now prefer it | 65 |
| ''Present'' and ''potent'' leader | 65 |
| First word of "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" | 65 |
| Word with ''square'' or ''loved'' | 65 |
| Buck ___, first black coach in Major League Baseball (Cubs, 1962) | 65 |
| "You're___ a million, yeah that's what you are" | 65 |
| Words with ''a kind'' or ''many'' | 65 |
| Singer with the album "Approximately Infinite Universe" | 65 |
| Musician whose first name is Japanese for "ocean child" | 65 |
| Artist who lives across from Central Park's Strawberry Fields | 65 |
| Word after "roll," "walk," or "add" | 65 |
| Possible reply to a dentist's "Where does it hurt?" | 65 |
| "I'm ___ you!" ("You don't fool me!") | 65 |
| "Thinking ___ in the final throes" (Amy Winehouse line) | 65 |
| Start of a "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" song | 65 |
| Talk show host with a self-named show on "The Simpsons" | 65 |
| Birthstones whose name starts with the same letter as their month | 65 |
| "... thus wide I'll __ my arms": "Hamlet" | 65 |
| Words before "interpretation" or "the public" | 65 |
| Naughty by Nature "You down with ___, yeah you know me" | 65 |
| "Che ___ è?" ("What time is it?" in Italy) | 65 |
| Word with ''exam'' or ''history'' | 65 |
| The ___ (Marvel supervillain whose helmet looks like a giant eye) | 65 |
| Food brand whose name is a combination of two state abbreviations | 65 |
| First name of Sports Illustrated's 1988 Sportsman of the Year | 65 |
| Cookie with a disgusting-sounding, limited-time watermelon flavor | 65 |
| ___ Dream Extreme Cheesecake (offering at the Cheesecake Factory) | 65 |
| "... thunder, lightning, __ rain?": "Macbeth" | 65 |
| "___ en paz, fierro en guerra" (motto of San Francisco) | 65 |
| Skynyrd song about "outlaws, renegades, rebels" (Abbr.) | 65 |
| "Catch-22" character who shoves crabapples in his mouth | 65 |
| "The Pearl of ___ Island" (Harriet Beecher Stowe novel) | 65 |
| Michael who starred in TV's "It's a Great Life" | 65 |
| "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine" suffix | 65 |
| Modern-day name of the city where "Peer Gynt" premiered | 65 |
| "Animal House" band "___ Day and the Knights" | 65 |
| He's third behind Bonds and Morgan for most walks among NLers | 65 |
| "The Simpsons" character always shown wearing a walkman | 65 |
| "This is ___ Country" (controversial Chevy ad campaign) | 65 |
| "___ Mutual Friend" (Dickens's last finished novel) | 65 |
| "Break," "make," or "take" follower | 65 |
| Word with ''active'' or ''drive'' | 65 |
| Animal who took three licks to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop | 65 |
| Word with ''zinc'' or ''nitrous'' | 65 |
| Gloria Estefan hit whose title is Spanish for "Listen!" | 65 |
| ''Les Demoiselles d'Avignon'' painter Picasso | 65 |
| Colbert's is called Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow | 65 |
| ''Legal'' or ''normal'' beginning | 65 |
| "Qué ___?" ("What's the matter?"): Sp. | 65 |
| "It Ain't All About the Cookin'" memoirist Deen | 65 |
| Word with ''shooter'' or ''soup'' | 65 |
| "The man who invented casual," according to Bing Crosby | 65 |
| "Dough" found in this puzzle's four longest answers | 65 |
| Basil-based sauce (though you can also use peas or garlic scapes) | 65 |
| He played President Merkin Muffley in "Dr. Strangelove" | 65 |
| Letter that resembles the "y" of Disney's signature | 65 |
| City where "Silver Linings Playbook" takes place: Abbr. | 65 |
| Michelangelo sculpture famously vandalized in 1972 by Laszlo Toth | 65 |
| “___ is for the living, Envy is for the dead”: Mark Twain | 65 |
| "Antony and Cleopatra" and "Romeo and Juliet" | 65 |
| "The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" author | 65 |