E-mail from a Nigerian with $10 million to give you, e.g. | 57 |
E. B. White's "The Trumpet of the ___" | 52 |
E. S. ___, game company that popularized Yahtzee and Scribbage | 62 |
E. S. ___, old game company famous for Yahtzee and Bingo | 56 |
E.H. tale re a visit to the Vatican? (with "The") | 59 |
E.M. Forster book whose title came from "Leaves of Grass" | 67 |
E.T.'s ability to use the lower part of a keyboard? | 55 |
Each animal has one in "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" | 59 |
Each of the four longest puzzle answers has two pairs of them | 61 |
Each of the titles in this puzzle's theme answers, e.g. | 59 |
Each of this puzzle's four longest answers begins with one | 62 |
Each of this puzzle's long Across answers sounds like one | 61 |
Eagles song on the album "One of These Nights" | 56 |
Earhart who served as aviation editor for "Cosmopolitan" | 66 |
Earhart who was the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic | 66 |
Earl ___, first African-American to play in the N.B.A. | 54 |
Earlier flight hidden in the seven longest puzzle answers | 57 |
Earliest pope to receive the title "the Great" | 56 |
Early '80s laugh "___! (Enjoy What You Do)" | 57 |
Early '90s Michael Jackson single "Who ___" | 57 |
Early 17th-century year in which Shakespeare's father died | 62 |
Early 19th-century invention named after a Scottish engineer | 60 |
Early 2012 U.S. disasters (in a legit but unusual spelling) | 59 |
Early Athenian who laid the groundwork for democracy | 52 |
Early aviator Richard who led expeditions to Antarctica | 55 |
Early Carolina governor for whom a county and city are named | 60 |
Early dropout in the 2000 presidential race, politely | 53 |
Early Eagles coach Earle, nicknamed "Greasy" | 54 |
Early film star who wore lipstick in the shape of a heart | 57 |
Early Greek biographer of "Parallel Lives" | 52 |
Early hip-hop group with "Strictly Business" | 54 |
Early host of "Mystery Science Theater 3000" | 54 |
Early page in a children's 3-D book of the presidents? | 58 |
Early rules for it were developed at McGill University in the 1870s | 67 |
Early TV news commentator famous for doing Timex ads | 52 |
Early TV star with a biography titled "Schnozzola" | 60 |
Early U.S. actress who starred in "Peter Pan" | 55 |
Early vehicle for Marisa Tomei, as an extra in a health club | 60 |
Early withdrawal from it might cause you to be penalized | 56 |
Earn the right to say ''My mistake'' | 52 |
Earth dwellers of the 8,028th century in a 19th-century book | 60 |
Earthmoving machine, and hopefully not the one driving it | 57 |
Easily forgotten information for a rarely checked account | 57 |
Eastern Canadian province grouping, with "the" | 56 |
Eastern Catholic who recognizes the pope's authority | 56 |
Eastern creature sought in episodes of "Finding Bigfoot" | 66 |
Eastern religion meaning "way of the gods" | 52 |
Eastern time slot for first-run "NYPD Blue" episodes | 62 |
Easternmost town on Maui, on one end of 52 miles of twisty highway | 66 |
Eastwood's "In the Line of Fire" costar | 53 |
Easy A (or where to learn about this puzzle's theme?) | 57 |
Easy way of pulling in ... and a hint to the six circled words | 62 |
Easy, and what this puzzle's theme answers literally are | 60 |
Easy-to-follow sewing instructions already printed on the fabric? | 65 |
Easy-to-recognize word in speech recognition programs | 53 |
Eat some cole slaw or potato salad with an advocate? | 52 |
Eatery "just a half a mile from the railroad track" | 61 |
Eatery where "you can get anything you want" | 54 |
Eatery with the slogan "It's Good Mood Food" | 58 |
Eating record #1 (four 32-ounce bowls in eight minutes) | 55 |
Eating record #5 (set at the Baltimore Waterfront Festival, 2006) | 65 |
Eating record #6 (21 baseball-sized ones in five minutes) | 57 |
Ebenezer's partner in "A Christmas Carol" | 55 |
Eccentric in the soap parody "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" | 67 |
Ecological character voiced by Danny DeVito, with "The" | 65 |
Economic European carrier named after its founder Christopher | 61 |
Economics has a "law" of these market forces | 54 |
Economics prefix relating to the study of large systems | 55 |
Economist Smith who coined the term "invisible hand" | 62 |
Economist who wrote "The Theory of the Leisure Class" | 63 |
Ecuadorean currency replaced by the U.S. dollar in 2000 | 55 |
Ed Sullivan's ''really big ___'' | 52 |
Ed who won the 2001 Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award | 62 |
Ed with the 1967 hit "My Cup Runneth Over" | 52 |
Ed __, runner-up in the first Masters sudden death playoff | 58 |
Ed ___ ("Ferris Bueller's Day Off" principal) | 59 |
Eda who wrote "When Your Child Drives You Crazy" | 58 |
Eddie Murphy's role in "Coming to America" | 56 |
Eddie who inspired "The French Connection" | 52 |
Eddie who pitched on five World Series-winning teams | 52 |
Eddie ___ (cop who inspired "The French Connection") | 62 |
Eddie's character in "Beverly Hills Cop" | 54 |
Eddy Arnold won its first Entertainer of the Yr. award | 54 |
Edited 1977 horror film about both ends of a pencil? | 52 |
Edited 1977 horror movie about part of a citrus fruit? | 54 |
Edited 1987 horror film about a volunteer organizer? | 52 |
Edited 2004 chiller about a bunch of Seattle musicians? | 55 |
Edith Piaf's signature song, "La Vie ___" | 55 |
Edith Wharton's "The ___ of Innocence" | 52 |
Editor Carmichael of Deadspin, Gawker, and the Hairpin | 54 |
Editor who "looked like a dishonest Abe Lincoln" | 58 |
Editor's order to the sheep tender at the daily paper? | 58 |
Edmond O'Brien comedy of 1950, with "The" | 55 |
Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Love ___ All" | 54 |
Education-policy acronym for the four fields featured in this puzzle | 68 |
Edvard Munch painting (with ''The'') | 52 |
Edward Cullen's adopted mother in "Twilight" | 58 |
Edward Cullen's adoptive mother in "Twilight" | 59 |
Edward G. Robinson's "Little Caesar" gangster | 59 |
Edward G. Robinson's role in "Little Caesar" | 58 |