Location that prompted Thoreau to write "Civil Disobedience" | 70 |
Locale in Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard" | 70 |
Lesson #3: Russian leader played by Geoffrey Rush in "Frida" | 70 |
Like "Captain Phillips" or "Argo," according to me | 70 |
Liam who will play Abraham Lincoln in the upcoming "Lincoln" | 70 |
Local retailer, and an apt description of eight entries in this puzzle | 70 |
Like "Fritz the Cat," vis-Ã -vis "Felix the Cat" | 70 |
Lyric sung three times in a row in the Beatles’ “Michelle” | 70 |
Line from 1999's "The Sixth Essen" about visiting Miami? | 70 |
Legal maneuver ... with a hint to answering seven clues in this puzzle | 70 |
Last night at the party, everyone was so drunk, the garbageman was ___ | 70 |
Literary source of "Bless us and splash us, my precioussss!" | 70 |
Language in which the "Voice of Lahore" newspaper is written | 70 |
London arena that Pelé dubbed "the cathedral of football" | 70 |
Late advice-columnist Pauline Esther Friedman Phillips, more commonly | 69 |
Lad's breed in Albert Payson Terhune's "Lad: A Dog" | 69 |
Lady ___ Hillcrest (character in "The Mystery of Irma Vep") | 69 |
Longoria with a $40 million "Desperate Housewives" contract | 69 |
Les Savy ___ (band that's much better live than on records, IMHO) | 69 |
Last name of the deacon played by Sherman Hemsley on "Amen" | 69 |
Letters within the theme entries that are, literally, next to nothing | 69 |
Language that gave us the words "tiki" and "kiwi" | 69 |
Long whose voice was formerly heard on "The Cleveland Show" | 69 |
Leonard and Sheldon's neighbor on "The Big Bang Theory" | 69 |
Luxury hotel along Manhattan's Central Park, with "the" | 69 |
Leader who babbled incoherently to the U.N. for 96 minutes on 9/23/09 | 69 |
Lou who sang "You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine" | 69 |
Like the figure formed by the three circled letters in the upper left | 69 |
Like rescues depicted in Kevin Costner's "The Guardian" | 69 |
Like a lot of politicians until they actually start voting on budgets | 69 |
Location of the first state-chartered university in the United States | 69 |
Losing World Series manager of the 1933 Senators and the 1946 Red Sox | 69 |
L.A. rapper whose father is South Africa's National Poet Laureate | 69 |
Longest number when spelled out in words that has no repeated letters | 69 |
La ___, Dominican Republic (first Spanish settlement in the Americas) | 69 |
Lisa Kudrow, just pretending to be her "Friends" character? | 69 |
Like George Clooney in ''O Brother, Where Art Thou?'' | 69 |
LPGA star who is the youngest living World Golf Hall of Fame inductee | 69 |
Lawyer Gerry who authored "How to Argue and Win Every Time" | 69 |
Lady Macbeth's last words, or an alternate title for this puzzle? | 69 |
Lawyer hired by McKenzie Brackman to meet ethnic quota (107 episodes) | 69 |
Literary character who debuted in "The Curse of Capistrano" | 69 |
Like the northern Lesser Antilles, vis-Ã -vis the Windward Islands | 68 |
Language in which "kemosabe" means "white shirt" | 68 |
Liam Neeson voiced him in "The Chronicles of Narnia" films | 68 |
Lawn area called a "devil's strip" only in Akron, Ohio | 68 |
Lou Gossett Jr. played one in "An Officer and a Gentleman" | 68 |
Like the identified car models inside this puzzle's long answers | 68 |
Language from which "bungalow" and "jungle" come | 68 |
Language that gave us the words "mako" and "moa" | 68 |
Like a contestant auditioning to be on "The Biggest Loser" | 68 |
Line from ''Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas'' | 68 |
Literature Nobelist who wrote "Waiting for the Barbarians" | 68 |
Lyric repeated by Lennon before "my love will turn you on" | 68 |
Longtime host of PBS's "Championship Ballroom Dancing" | 68 |
Lead a law-abiding life as a former criminal, in British slang (1,8) | 68 |
Look for bargains (and a hint that explains this puzzle's theme) | 68 |
Like the perfect working relationship of lazy, lusty, greedy people? | 68 |
Like locks that can't be opened in a certain Florida city? (#33) | 68 |
Line from ''Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!'' | 68 |
Leftist philosophy often poorly represented by high school students | 67 |
Like the main character of "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" | 67 |
Last word of the title that begins "For Colored Girls..." | 67 |
Language that gave us "jungle" and "Juggernaut" | 67 |
Louis Sachar children's book made into a 2003 Shia LaBeouf film | 67 |
Language from which "sky" and "egg" are derived | 67 |
Luise Rainer's Oscar-winning role in "The Good Earth" | 67 |
Leader of the "descamisados" ("shirtless ones") | 67 |
Like the magic pebble in "Sylvester and the Magic Pebble" | 67 |
Like each starred answer's first letter, when used as a numeral | 67 |
Legendary jazz pianist who worked with Tiny Grimes and Slam Stewart | 67 |
Land of ___ (destination in "The Pilgrim's Progress") | 67 |
Like someone butting in about unlikely but necessary hypotheticals? | 67 |
Legendary avant-garde guitarist who wears a KFC container for a hat | 67 |
Leachman of "Young Frankenstein" and "Beerfest" | 67 |
Local convenience ... or a hint to the words in the circled squares | 67 |
Leaving a room just before people realize you've made it stink? | 67 |
Like ultra-colorful paintings of mushrooms and butterflies, perhaps | 67 |
Literary monogram found in the answers to the nine asterisked clues | 67 |
Last name of brothers in the International Motorsports Hall of Fame | 67 |
Lyric segment with the same melody as "Twinkle, twinkle" | 66 |
Lesson sung to the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" | 66 |
Luxembourg grand duke in whose name an annual art prize is awarded | 66 |
Language quintet comprising the only elements in the circled boxes | 66 |
Like the philosophy "Out with the old, in with the new"? | 66 |
Language featured in ''The Passion of the Christ'' | 66 |
Leonardo's role in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape" | 66 |
Lion voiced by Liam Neeson in "The Chronicles of Narnia" | 66 |
Lead-in for ''loss'' or ''glance'' | 66 |
Like "banjo," "bongo," and "marimba" | 66 |
Last name of the brothers who directed "The Ladykillers" | 66 |
Like fall days that aren't unseasonably hot or sad and drizzly | 66 |
Like Moore County, Tennessee, home of Jack Daniel's distillery | 66 |
Like a computer that could put Reagan into office, I see. You see? | 66 |
Landmark Los Angeles theater whose name means "the king" | 66 |
Legis. introduced into every session of Congress from 1923 to 1970 | 66 |
Language where the number of words for "snow" is debated | 66 |
Last part of the last name of a ''Dallas'' actress | 66 |
Language that gives us "cheetah" and "chutney" | 66 |
Lena who played Glinda in the movie version of "The Wiz" | 66 |