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1A:
Rattle on
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7A:
Harbors, maybe
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12A:
“The White Lotus” network
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15A:
Typical sweat lodge shape
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19A:
Make a claim
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20A:
Enduring, as a rough patch
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22A:
Monopoly token retired in 2013
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23A:
Biblical garment that’s the focus of an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical
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25A:
Toward l’Arctique
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26A:
NBA MVP before LeBron
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27A:
God of love
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28A:
Perp chasers
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29A:
Rattles off
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30A:
Company with a spokesduck
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32A:
Attorney general Bondi
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33A:
“A Walk to Wachusett” essayist
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35A:
Shoemaker Blahnik
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39A:
Appetizer often made with shrimp and lemongrass
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42A:
Song popularized by Elvis in “Blue Hawaii”
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44A:
Sushi fish
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45A:
Golf course halves
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46A:
Skirt length
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47A:
1960s psychedelic
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49A:
Promotes heavily
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51A:
Start, slangily
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56A:
In the very near future
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60A:
Not this
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61A:
Groundskeeper’s purchase
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62A:
Scathingly disparage
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63A:
Accept, as terms
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66A:
Home to Nebraska’s largest airport
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70A:
Material for a screened porch’s screens
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72A:
Attorney, at times
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73A:
British nobles
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76A:
Rhetorical question, often
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77A:
Bob Dylan or Dylan Thomas
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78A:
1979 documentary subtitled “Isaac Stern in China”
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85A:
Throat malady
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87A:
Got off the fence
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88A:
Hoppy brew
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89A:
Logical start?
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|
90A:
Oscar-nominated soundtrack composer Mosseri
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93A:
Hush-hush grp.
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|
95A:
Rondeau trio
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97A:
Flowers whose stark whiteness is due to complete lack of chlorophyll
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103A:
Motown baseballers
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104A:
Totally loses it
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105A:
Part of 88-Across
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106A:
Galleria dell’Accademia statue
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108A:
Pal
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109A:
Analogy words
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|
111A:
Existed
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112A:
Cooler brand
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116A:
“Knives Out” writer/director Johnson
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117A:
Scientific feat first accomplished in 1932, as well as seven times in this puzzle
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121A:
Literature Nobelist Tokarczuk
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122A:
Like some vacation cottages
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123A:
Gofer’s work
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124A:
Bit of drudgery
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125A:
USN bigwig
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126A:
Drawn-out tales
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127A:
Fill-in-the-blanks story
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1D:
Tool in a trunk
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2D:
Curry potato
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3D:
Spill the beans
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4D:
___ noire
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5D:
Sense of self
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|
6D:
One calling the shots
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|
7D:
Noted debarking spot
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|
8D:
“Chocolat” star Juliette
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9D:
Brand whose apostrophe is an ice cream cone
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|
10D:
Spasm
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|
11D:
Ski resort transport
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|
12D:
Something to jump through
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|
13D:
Ellen with an Oscar
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15D:
Kuwaiti cash
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|
16D:
Start of Juliet’s monologue
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17D:
Doctor in an H.G. Wells novel
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|
18D:
Brings to a conclusion
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21D:
Grab hold of
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24D:
Singer Tormé
|
|
29D:
Indication on a Chinese menu
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|
30D:
In the style of
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|
31D:
“Good one! I believed you!”
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|
32D:
Plane figures
|
|
34D:
Shade
|
|
35D:
Cry from a crib
|
|
36D:
Set down gently
|
|
37D:
Endorsements
|
|
38D:
Brutus Buckeye’s school
|
|
40D:
CVS Health subsidiary
|
|
41D:
Soybean paste
|
|
43D:
Telepath’s claim
|
|
48D:
Acts in the past?
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|
50D:
Show to a seat, slangily
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|
52D:
Not taking the standard deduction
|
|
53D:
Quaker’s pronoun
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|
54D:
Heaters
|
|
55D:
“Alternatively,” in a text
|
|
57D:
Spirit
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|
58D:
Investment that may be rolled over
|
|
59D:
D.C. baseballer
|
|
64D:
Paul of “The Holdovers”
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|
65D:
Dallas quarterback Tony
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|
66D:
Omar of “House”
|
|
67D:
Tons
|
|
68D:
Future expert
|
|
69D:
Pound sound
|
|
70D:
Oslo Accords signer
|
|
71D:
European wine region
|
|
73D:
911 responder
|
|
74D:
Don of “Trading Places”
|
|
75D:
Circle spokes
|
|
79D:
Caramel candy
|
|
80D:
Extravagantly theatrical
|
|
81D:
Word with black or special
|
|
82D:
Wood-shaping tool
|
|
83D:
Bring up
|
|
84D:
Fling
|
|
86D:
Chain that offers grooming services
|
|
91D:
Pasture sound
|
|
92D:
“What a day!”
|
|
94D:
Book extras
|
|
96D:
Assistance
|
|
97D:
Lighthouse that was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
|
|
98D:
Co-star of Ford and Fisher
|
|
99D:
Strong-flavored cheese
|
|
100D:
“Enough, I get it already!”
|
|
101D:
Dust collectors
|
|
102D:
Three-stripers
|
|
107D:
Check out
|
|
110D:
Close in anger
|
|
111D:
Kristen of “The Martian”
|
|
112D:
Site for some sales
|
|
113D:
Abbr. that cuts things short
|
|
114D:
“Beloved” writer Morrison
|
|
115D:
Site for casts, briefly
|
|
117D:
Mom-and-pop lending agcy.
|
|
118D:
JFK group
|
|
119D:
Take up
|
|
120D:
Notable period
|