| It provided tires for Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis | 57 |
| It might read "Home: Who cares; Away: Whatever" | 57 |
| It's recommended for wiping off electronic components | 57 |
| Indian yogurt/cucumber dish that even a child could make? | 57 |
| Impossibility of reconciling what is and what ought to be | 57 |
| Item you wouldn't touch things with, after inflation? | 57 |
| It opened its first store in Winston-Salem, N.C., in 1937 | 57 |
| It's billed as "the national beer of Texas" | 57 |
| It functioned as the main trade port of the French Empire | 57 |
| Iranian city that's the birthplace of Omar Khayyám | 57 |
| It suggests the vowel pattern in the five starred answers | 57 |
| It employs many video game pioneers, with "The" | 57 |
| Identify exactly ... or a hint to this puzzle's theme | 57 |
| It ends with "Twilight of the Gods," familiarly | 57 |
| Iroquois tribe for which one of the Finger Lakes is named | 57 |
| Instrument on the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" | 57 |
| It was shipwrecked in 1964 somewhere in the South Pacific | 57 |
| It precedes "fast" and follows "home" | 57 |
| It's near Mount Mansfield, Vermont's highest peak | 57 |
| It's usually written in white letters on a green sign | 57 |
| In a ___, there's plenty of sweet ___ to be harvested | 57 |
| It forms part of the border of UCLA's Westwood campus | 57 |
| Innovator in computer science and artificial intelligence | 57 |
| Its motto is Latin for "Always prepared": Abbr. | 57 |
| Its state quarter says "Crossroads of the West" | 57 |
| Instrument maker with a logo of interlocking tuning forks | 57 |
| It's nice when prize winnings come with lots of these | 57 |
| Its national anthem is "The Great Charlemagne" | 56 |
| It starts and ends in inverno in the Northern Hemisphere | 56 |
| It was "lost" in 1981's top-grossing movie | 56 |
| Imperial Walker from "The Empire Strikes Back" | 56 |
| It's widely hailed as a convenient way to get around | 56 |
| Its first awards ceremony was co-hosted by Bobbie Gentry | 56 |
| In the comic strip "Blondie," Lou's is one | 56 |
| If Homer stubs his toe, he goes ''___!'' | 56 |
| Ian Dury "Sex & ___ & Rock & Roll" | 56 |
| Island featured in "The Count of Monte Cristo" | 56 |
| Inspiration for the "Avenue Q" character Nicky | 56 |
| It can follow "Ab" or precede "Four" | 56 |
| Indian state where an electronic music genre was created | 56 |
| Its motto is ''Look Sharp + Live Smart'' | 56 |
| It was "really lookin' fine" in a 1964 hit | 56 |
| Its slogan is "Where America's Day Begins" | 56 |
| It was "The American Tribal Love Rock Musical" | 56 |
| It begins "corner," but not "circle" | 56 |
| I Can't Believe ___ Not Butter! (bread spread brand) | 56 |
| It's best cured one day per time zone, it's said | 56 |
| Instrument honored in a Beaufort, South Carolina, museum | 56 |
| It's "too short for chess": Henry J. Byron | 56 |
| It tells the tale of the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815 | 56 |
| Initial hurdles for those who want to join the Supremes? | 56 |
| It's written by "the usual gang of idiots" | 56 |
| Intended assassination victim of the Pisonian Conspiracy | 56 |
| It was redesigned in 2004 for the first time in 66 years | 56 |
| Instrument whose name derives from "high wood" | 56 |
| Item fit for "Ripley's Believe It or Not!" | 56 |
| Its "Concise" version has more than 1,700 pgs. | 56 |
| Ian Dury & the Blockheads "Fly in the ___" | 56 |
| It was published four years before "Moby-Dick" | 56 |
| It may carry the words ''Rey de Espana'' | 56 |
| Irritate [solve the celeb puzzle series at avxwords.com] | 56 |
| Its slogan was once "We'll open your eyes" | 56 |
| It was split into two parts by the 1899 Treaty of Berlin | 56 |
| Indian outfit typically worn with a petticoat and blouse | 56 |
| It was dubbed "The Eighth Wonder of the World" | 56 |
| Igneous rock on which the Code of Hammurabi is inscribed | 56 |
| In golf, ahead by as many holes as are left to be played | 56 |
| Its motto is "Adventures in lifelong learning" | 56 |
| It's brought out by Emeril's "Essence" | 56 |
| In modern lingo, a vegetarian who occasionally eats meat | 56 |
| Indigenous people that Paraguay named its currency after | 56 |
| Its slogan was once "More bounce to the ounce" | 56 |
| Island that's home to the world's largest lizard | 56 |
| It'll "do ya," according to a Brylcreem ad | 56 |
| Instruments for measuring minute differences in pressure | 56 |
| Its slogan was once "Not a cough in a carload" | 56 |
| IBM's failed 1980s attempt at an inexpensive desktop | 56 |
| In art, an underlying image that's been painted over | 56 |
| Its ads have featured Britney Spears and Michael Jackson | 56 |
| In a ___, there's a volume of ___ that keeps it firm | 56 |
| It's said when introducing Mr. Calhoun to Ms. Bening | 56 |
| It ends ''. . . shall not be infringed'' | 56 |
| Its HQ was once destroyed as the result of an earthquake | 56 |
| Items in a Victoria's Secret marketing presentation? | 56 |
| Its flag consists of one white star on a blue background | 56 |
| It had the earliest parliament on the European continent | 56 |
| Indian-themed Atlantic City casino, with "The" | 56 |
| Interrupt (whose initials spell "honk a horn") | 56 |
| Its motto is "Agriculture and Commerce": Abbr. | 56 |
| Item of apparel created by Mary Phelps Jacob (1891-1970) | 56 |
| It's something an anti-monopolist might want to bust | 56 |
| Its full name means "jumping flea" in Hawaiian | 56 |
| Instrument Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs plays, for short | 56 |
| Israeli weapon named after its inventor's first name | 56 |
| Italian scientist after whom an electrical unit is named | 56 |
| Insurance giant represented by a "spokesduck" | 55 |
| It has roughly 15% of the world's population: Abbr. | 55 |
| It may be represented by "XXX" in the funnies | 55 |
| Its headquarters are in Union Station, Washington, D.C. | 55 |
| It may be described as ''6 rms riv vu'' | 55 |