Tool in forestry to measure slope, vertical angles and tree heights | 67 |
Team tennis competition whose current champs are the Czech Republic | 67 |
Today's theme, which will help answer the six capitalized clues | 67 |
Tiny bugs that often live in pillows, but try not to think about it | 67 |
Title woman of a story from James Joyce's "Dubliners" | 67 |
They might hear: "Take a picture; it'll last longer!" | 67 |
Two words before "a conclusion" or "the rescue" | 67 |
Term used in taste-testing for a product's texture and reaction | 67 |
Tennessee Williams's "27 Wagons Full of Cotton," e.g. | 67 |
The 1999 comedy "She's All That" is based on his work | 67 |
Those who put a lot of effort into social climbing, in modern lingo | 67 |
Time magazine called him "The Texan Who Conquered Russia" | 67 |
Timbuk 3 "The Future's So Bright, I Gotta ___ Shades" | 67 |
Title orphan surnamed Shirley in a series of L.M. Montgomery books | 66 |
TV great who said "I live to laugh, and I laugh to live" | 66 |
TV series that, like its two spinoffs, has a theme song by The Who | 66 |
The Crow's first name in the comic series "The Crow" | 66 |
The family in the 2009 best seller "This Family of Mine" | 66 |
Telltale sound after "I haven't had a drop to drink" | 66 |
Type who wears tight-fitting jeans and thick-rimmed glasses, maybe | 66 |
To whom Rick said "The Germans wore gray. You wore blue" | 66 |
The U.S. tied them in the first round of the 2006 World Cup: Abbr. | 66 |
TV character who got notes signed "Epstein's Mother" | 66 |
The Supreme Court session starts on the first one of these in Oct. | 66 |
TV character who said "K.O." instead of "O.K." | 66 |
They're contraindicated for people with certain metal implants | 66 |
The "doll" in Ibsen's "A Doll's House" | 66 |
They're "born, not made," according to an old saying | 66 |
Ted Kluszewski's team when he won the 1954 N.L. home run title | 66 |
The statue "David" on open-air display in Florence, e.g. | 66 |
Tropical crocodile whose name sounds like a Caribbean island group | 66 |
TV spot for a black tie event featuring the music of James Taylor? | 66 |
The 1st Viscount of St. Alban and author of “New Atlantis” | 66 |
The last wardrobe element left on after doing this puzzle, perhaps | 66 |
Telling non-P.C. jokes in public, for example, in the wrong sense? | 66 |
They may not even sell the (mostly) obsolete product in their name | 66 |
Three-time Indy winner Wilbur ___, who introduced the crash helmet | 66 |
Transpositions like "It is kisstomary to cuss the bride" | 66 |
They're "at work" when talking about public projects | 66 |
Toon, familiarly, who debuted in "Devil May Hare" (1954) | 66 |
Thomas Hardy book about a taxpayer's deductions for groceries? | 66 |
Turner who covered Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" | 66 |
Two things seen in the toros' tavern after a grueling corrida? | 66 |
That Suzanne Vega song with the "doo doo doo doo" chorus | 66 |
Trip-hop group with the song "Rabbit in Your Headlights" | 66 |
Theme of this puzzle, whose members are hidden throughout the grid | 66 |
Top-five Sarah McLachlan hit from the album "Surfacing" | 65 |
TV character who played bouillabaseball on his home planet Melmac | 65 |
Thoreau's "___ on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers" | 65 |
Toulouse-Lautrec's "Au ___ du Moulin de la Galette" | 65 |
They're found at the end of this puzzle's longest answers | 65 |
Tyra Banks, vis-Ã -vis "America's Next Top Model" | 65 |
Test that involves sticking sensors on a person's head: Abbr. | 65 |
The first complete navigation of the Amazon was in search of this | 65 |
The impact energy of a small mosquito flying into a wall, roughly | 65 |
The Seneca Chief was the first vessel to travel its entire length | 65 |
The featherduster in Disney's "Beauty andthe Beast" | 65 |
Tony-winning musical with the song "Politics and Poker" | 65 |
TV character who literally jumped the shark, with "the" | 65 |
Tribe whose reservation is entirely within the Navajo Reservation | 65 |
Their fight song proclaims: "There goes old Georgetown" | 65 |
Title words before "Music" and "You Knocking" | 65 |
To whom Rick said "We both know you belong with Victor" | 65 |
The "kid" of "Here's looking at you, kid" | 65 |
The "kid" in "Here's looking at you, kid" | 65 |
Timothy who preached the message found in this puzzle's theme | 65 |
The Who's "Live at ___," 1970 double-platinum album | 65 |
The Beatles' "Rubber Soul" and "Revolver" | 65 |
Troy who appeared in "Lead Paint: Delicious but Deadly" | 65 |
The part of a gift horse you shouldn't inspect, it's said | 65 |
Title guy asked to "play a song for me," in a Byrds hit | 65 |
Torino Olympics mascot whose name is Italian for "snow" | 65 |
The digits in all but one of its two-digit multiples add up to it | 65 |
Talk show host with a self-named show on "The Simpsons" | 65 |
The ___ (Marvel supervillain whose helmet looks like a giant eye) | 65 |
Three-time Grand National champion whose name is a kind of liquor | 65 |
These could be "Yellow Brick" or "Copperhead" | 65 |
They're given in the "Wheel of Fortune" bonus round | 65 |
Thriller with the tagline "Every puzzle has its pieces" | 65 |
Tempo for Mozart's so-called "Elvira Madigan" music | 65 |
The act of working out a national budget with new fried desserts? | 65 |
There may not be one "in the house" during a tearjerker | 65 |
Thanksgiving? (Happy New Year to President-elect George W. Bush!) | 65 |
TV title sung after "Ain't we lucky we got 'em" | 65 |
Third baseman's domain, and a hint to this puzzle's theme | 65 |
Tone Loc single released just after "Funky Cold Medina" | 65 |
Thing bestowed by a constitution or, with a comma, "OK" | 65 |
The eight longest answers in this puzzle each have 13 unique ones | 65 |
Thurston's honey on ''Gilligan's Island'' | 65 |
The tendency of tennis players to play better the older they get? | 65 |
Title subject of a 1922 documentary in the National Film Registry | 65 |
They love sunsets, candlelit dinners, and long walks on the beach | 65 |
Thurston of "Gilligan's Island" moving to Missouri? | 65 |
Trite answer to "What's up?" (with "The") | 65 |
TV star who wrote the novel "A Shore Thing," informally | 65 |
They may have "II" or "III" after their names | 65 |
The first one was founded in 1824 Eng. to protect carriage horses | 65 |
Tintoretto's "The Miracle of ___ Freeing the Slave" | 65 |
The Rolling Stones' "___ Satanic Majesties Request" | 65 |
The score for "Symphonie fantastique" has a part for it | 65 |