Lou Gossett Jr. played one in "An Officer and a Gentleman" | 68 |
High-speed letters seen in this puzzle's "connections" | 68 |
"La ci darem la mano" of "Don Giovanni," for one | 68 |
''___, Shoots and Leaves'' (Lynne Truss best-seller) | 68 |
His last blog post ended, "I'll see you at the movies" | 68 |
Cheese tested as ammunition on an episode of "Mythbusters" | 68 |
Paul Newman's boss in ''Fort Apache: The Bronx'' | 68 |
His first patent was for an "Electrographic Vote Recorder" | 68 |
His orchestra once included Hoagy Carmichael and the Dorsey brothers | 68 |
"I should ___ die with pity, / To see another thus": Shak. | 68 |
"A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius" memoirist Dave | 68 |
"The immediate dictate of human consciousness": Max Planck | 68 |
Ones with "a case of mistaken nonentity": Barbara Stanwyck | 68 |
Manhattan eatery referenced in Billy Joel's "Big Shot" | 68 |
"Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice ___ Agin)" (#1 hit of 1970) | 68 |
1980s "NBC News Overnight" anchor / Feared insect [merger] | 68 |
Stately thing in Browning's "Oh, to be in England ..." | 68 |
"I am six. I am a city child. I live at the Plaza" speaker | 68 |
"Everything Louder Than Everyone ___" (Motörhead album) | 68 |
Key of the last movement of Mendelssohn's Op. 64 violin concerto | 68 |
1996 film with the tagline "Cupid is armed and dangerous!" | 68 |
"___ Love" (1994 hit for Luther Vandross and Mariah Carey) | 68 |
He was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Grammy the same year as Arturo | 68 |
2005 documentary subtitled "The Smartest Guys in the Room" | 68 |
Subject of the documentary "The Smartest Guys in the Room" | 68 |
Suffix with ''differ'' or ''insist'' | 68 |
Recording artist made famous by the BBC series "The Celts" | 68 |
"You've Got Mail" director, producer, and screenwriter | 68 |
"The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring" for on | 68 |
Word with ''Big Band'' or ''Reagan'' | 68 |
Player of Det. Eames on "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" | 68 |
"We'll teach you to drink deep ___ you depart": Hamlet | 68 |
"But I heard him exclaim, ___ he drove out of sight . . ." | 68 |
''And look before you ___ you leap'' (Samuel Butler) | 68 |
"I'll speak a prophecy --- go" ("King Lear") | 68 |
"All Quiet on the Western Front" writer ___ Maria Remarque | 68 |
"All Quiet on the Western Front" author ___ Maria Remarque | 68 |
Double A baseball team in the Eastern League's Southern Division | 68 |
Bombeck who said, "God created man, but I could do better" | 68 |
Ballplayer Banks with the catchphrase "Let's play two" | 68 |
"__ Turannos": E.A. Robinson poem about a complex marriage | 68 |
"___ no me gusta" ("I don't like that": Sp.) | 68 |
"¿Dónde ___ Waldo?" (translated children's book) | 68 |
Interior Secretary Hitchcock who served under McKinley and Roosevelt | 68 |
Furniture industry name, with a chain of stores across North America | 68 |
School called "the chief nurse of England's statesmen" | 68 |
Caesar's words after "Doth not Brutus bootless kneel?" | 68 |
Oprah's role in 2009's "The Princess and the Frog" | 68 |
__ Varner, Lee Remick's role in "The Long, Hot Summer" | 68 |
California setting for the National Puzzlers' League convention? | 68 |
Currency whose name caused several linguistic problems for its users | 68 |
Winner of at least one Grand Slam event every year from 1974 to 1986 | 68 |
Water brand that's an insult to the buyer when spelled backwards | 68 |
Word with ''eagle'' and ''electric'' | 68 |
Main character in the video game "Assassin's Creed II" | 68 |
Disney movie that bored me to death as a kid because it had no words | 68 |
___ González, longest-serving democratically elected Spanish P.M. | 68 |
Cartoon character that was one of the first images transmitted on TV | 68 |
"Having the ___ wants, I am nearest to the gods": Socrates | 68 |
"When You Got It, ___ It" ("The Producers" song) | 68 |
One of the Mudville players on base when the mighty Casey struck out | 68 |
He often wears a brown porkpie and a red-and-white polka-dot necktie | 68 |
___ Blücher (forbidding "Young Frankenstein" character) | 68 |
He coined the phrase "The Canadian genius for compromise " | 68 |
Word with ''mustard'' or ''natural'' | 68 |
''Let it go!'' (and hint to this puzzle's theme) | 68 |
Country that eliminated the United States at the last two World Cups | 68 |
"Fountain of the Four Rivers" sculptor ___ Lorenzo Bernini | 68 |
Movie for which Demi Moore won her second Worst Actress Razzie Award | 68 |
The Smashing Pumpkins' debut album, named for a silent film star | 68 |
TV.com's #1 pick for "Coolest Cast on Campus" for 2009 | 68 |
"As they shouted out with ___" ("Rudolph" lyric) | 68 |
"The ___ Show" (radio program that featured Peter Sellers) | 68 |
Subject of interest in the question "Who are you wearing?" | 68 |
"Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise" poet | 68 |
Car that "really drives 'em wi-i-ild," in a 1960s song | 68 |
Territory whose slogan is "Where America's Day Begins" | 68 |
Phone caller's "Bet you don't recognize my voice!" | 68 |
"Did ___ and gimble in the wabe" ("Jabberwocky") | 68 |
"It remains to be seen" or "Wait till next year" | 68 |
''Bali __'' (''South Pacific'' tune) | 68 |
Bears owner/coach who won eight NFL titles in four different decades | 68 |
Do a tricky surfing maneuver (and a hint to this puzzle's theme) | 68 |
''Cherish those hearts that ___ thee'' (Shakespeare) | 68 |
Start for ''cuisine'' or ''couture'' | 68 |
It "has its reasons which reason knows nothing of": Pascal | 68 |
Woman's name derived from an Old Norse word for "holy" | 68 |
1965 movie with the working title "Eight Arms to Hold You" | 68 |
Hockey Hall of Famer Richard nicknamed "The Pocket Rocket" | 68 |
''. . . give me liberty, or give me death!'' speaker | 68 |
"I Saw ___ Again" (1966 hit for the Mamas & the Papas) | 68 |
Ming's 7'6" and Bryant's 6'6", e.g.: Abbr. | 68 |
Like the identified car models inside this puzzle's long answers | 68 |
Language from which "bungalow" and "jungle" come | 68 |
Congressman Martin ___, who lost his seat to Dennis Kucinich in 1996 | 68 |
Big hit for the club members, and what might elicit the shaded words | 68 |
“Lost ___” (novel that coined the term “Shangri-La”) | 68 |
"Einstein on the Beach Trying to Score Some Heroin," e.g.? | 68 |
Film based on the Larry McMurtry novel "Horseman, Pass By" | 68 |
Prefix for ''electric'' or ''plane'' | 68 |