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1A:
Drink with a straw
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6A:
Some forensic evidence
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9A:
Core muscles
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12A:
Manhandles
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18A:
Alternative to French, Italian or Russian
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19A:
British rule in colonial India
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20A:
D.C. baseballer
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21A:
Electrical accessory
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23A:
Hindenburg disaster cry, ending “Hey!”
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26A:
Where one shouldn’t drive
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27A:
At capacity, briefly
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28A:
Crèche trio
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29A:
Former owner of Capitol Records
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30A:
Look through a window from outdoors
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31A:
Advantage
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33A:
Starting a conversation, concluding “Gee!”
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38A:
Orchestra group
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42A:
Celebrates, as the New Year
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43A:
Heavy reading? Completing all the words? “Eek!”
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46A:
Absorbed, as a cost
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49A:
Has a go
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50A:
Bygone biscuit brand
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51A:
Erich who wrote “Emil and the Detectives”
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55A:
Bit in a horse’s mouth
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56A:
Go out of business
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57A:
“...away go troubles down the drain” advertiser
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60A:
“Dream on!”
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63A:
Weimaraner warnings
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64A:
“Time is money” and “Love is blind”
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65A:
Reagan era “voodoo” policy? Ultimately, “Yes!”
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71A:
Son of William the Conqueror
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72A:
1974 Gould/Sutherland CIA spoof
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73A:
“Little Shop of Horrors” dentist
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74A:
Choose from the menu
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76A:
Calf-length skirt
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79A:
Kissing on the street, briefly
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82A:
Exercise control
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83A:
Key of Ralph Vaughan Williams’s String Quartet No. 2
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85A:
It means “ocean” in Mongolian
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87A:
Attention
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|
88A:
Finding after a long search, stopping with “God!”
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|
92A:
Yarn coils
|
|
95A:
___ Paulo
|
|
96A:
It lights up Las Vegas
|
|
97A:
Colonial protest winds up: “Nay!”
|
|
102A:
Big galoots
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|
103A:
Flips one’s lid?
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|
104A:
Citrus drink suffix
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105A:
100-cent currency
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|
107A:
Platform for Siri
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110A:
Arctic youngster
|
|
112A:
“End of discussion!” (or a description of this puzzle’s theme)
|
|
115A:
Chatterboxes
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|
116A:
Tiny
|
|
117A:
Country with the most stars on its flag: Abbr.
|
|
118A:
Nickname of jazz great Earl Hines
|
|
119A:
“You Don’t Own Me” singer Gore
|
|
120A:
Acid
|
|
121A:
Last of a long series
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122A:
Pig part
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|
1D:
Big dos
|
|
2D:
Co-star of Bolger and Haley
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|
3D:
Dealing with the situation
|
|
4D:
Essen exclamation
|
|
5D:
Daughters of Mnemosyne
|
|
6D:
Prescription product
|
|
7D:
Coastal desert of Southern Africa
|
|
8D:
1977 double-platinum Steely Dan album
|
|
9D:
Bouncy
|
|
10D:
Dyeing art
|
|
11D:
Pig place
|
|
12D:
Cry of disbelief
|
|
13D:
Embraces
|
|
14D:
Greet with a gesture
|
|
15D:
Ire
|
|
16D:
Asteroids source
|
|
17D:
Bar mixer
|
|
22D:
Surrealism’s Magritte
|
|
24D:
Dispatch
|
|
25D:
Teasingly provoked
|
|
32D:
Long sentence
|
|
34D:
Eschew conformity
|
|
35D:
Prefix akin to equi-
|
|
36D:
“The Matrix” hero
|
|
37D:
Douglas’s “Wall Street” role
|
|
38D:
Eight, to Augustus
|
|
39D:
Repeated, a Polynesian island
|
|
40D:
Rigidly old-fashioned
|
|
44D:
“I take it that’s ___”
|
|
45D:
Rail in a studio
|
|
46D:
Bit of high jinks
|
|
47D:
Abounds
|
|
48D:
Blows it
|
|
52D:
Mail, e.g.
|
|
53D:
“Me too!”
|
|
54D:
Deadly agent
|
|
58D:
Servant of Sauron
|
|
59D:
Chinese food general
|
|
60D:
Following, in France
|
|
61D:
“Heidi” author Johanna
|
|
62D:
Troy story
|
|
63D:
Some appliances
|
|
65D:
California mission founder Junípero
|
|
66D:
Ready for surgery, perhaps
|
|
67D:
Atlanta-to-Miami dir.
|
|
68D:
Bitter brew
|
|
69D:
Literature Nobelist with 11 Grammys
|
|
70D:
Wrinkle-resistant, as a shirt
|
|
71D:
Defeatist’s lack
|
|
75D:
Excellence
|
|
76D:
Muezzin’s place
|
|
77D:
Bullion unit
|
|
78D:
URL component
|
|
79D:
Gets power from
|
|
80D:
Swimmer Vollmer with five Olympic gold medals
|
|
81D:
Pitches in
|
|
84D:
Got a wrong number?
|
|
85D:
Declines in quality
|
|
86D:
Bang-up
|
|
89D:
Arles article
|
|
90D:
Code-cracking org.
|
|
91D:
Clockwork, mostly
|
|
92D:
Pursues
|
|
93D:
“Nightline” newsman
|
|
94D:
Make certain
|
|
97D:
Boom alternative
|
|
98D:
First pick in the 1992 NBA draft
|
|
99D:
Bathroom item
|
|
100D:
Glazier’s pieces
|
|
101D:
Bakery staple
|
|
106D:
Its motto is “Industry”
|
|
108D:
Lanikai Beach setting
|
|
109D:
Thin board
|
|
111D:
“Gangnam Style” rapper
|
|
112D:
Cobbler’s tool
|
|
113D:
Warring nomad
|
|
114D:
McKellen of film
|