12.31.14 — PRNDL


Wednesday, December 31, 2014 — New Year’s Eve 

Puzzle by David Woolf / Edited by Will Shortz

PRNDL (68A. Quintet representing the ends of the answers to the five starred clues), along with PARK, REVERSE, NEUTRAL, DRIVE and LOW found in five answers constitutes the main feature of this Wednesday crossword:

THEME PARK (18A. *Legoland, for one)
DOUBLE REVERSE (29A. *Tricky football play)
GENDER NEUTRAL (34A. *Like you or me?)
INTERNAL DRIVE (44A. *Essential feature of a PC)
SWEET’N LOW (57A. *Equal rival)

Other — ARRAN (12D. Firth of Clyde Island), EVER and ONCE (26A. Next-to-last word in a fairy tale; 32A. First word in a fairy tale), EYES ON ME (36D. “Look this way”), EYRA (41A. South American wildcat), IDLERS (44D. Do-nothings), LIMA PERU (9D. Home of the oldest continuously functioning university in the Americas), NAWAB (50D. Muslim princely title), RACE DAY (22A. Busy time at Speedway or Churchill Downs), STICK (1A. Manual).

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12.30.14 — Loop-the-Loop



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Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Puzzle by Jeffrey Wechsler / Edited by Will Shortz

LOOP DE LOOP DE LOOP (41A. Maneuver for slot car racers or stunt pilots, as suggested by this puzzle’s circled letters), along with eight 2×2 boxes containing circled squares that spell out LOOP with the “loop” going two full times if the 2×2 boxes are followed around the grid, constitutes the main feature of this agreeable Tuesday crossword.


Other — CANOODLE (9D. Kiss and cuddle), DIET PLAN (42D. Schedule for take-off?), HERAT (51D. Western Afghan city), HMONG (69A. Ethnic group of Southeast Asia), IRONIST (45A. Jonathan Swift, for one), LAB ROOMS (43D. Parts of chemistry buildings), MICE (3D. Victims of the farmer’s wife), ORBITS (48A. Goes around), POMPOMS (24A. Cheerleaders’ handfuls), POOL PUMP (4D. Certain water circulator), RED TOP (32D. Common grass variety named for its color), RUMPLE (10D. Dishevel, as bed linen), TARHEEL (34A. North Carolinian).

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12.29.14 — Spell It Out



Monday, December 29, 2014

Puzzle by Peter A. Collins / Edited by Will Shortz

SPELL IT OUT (64A. Leave no room for misinterpretation … or what the first words of the answers to the five starred clues do, literally), along with EYE, TEE, OH, YOU and TEE, constitutes the interrelated group of this pleasant Monday crossword:

EYE CONTACT (17A. *What a good speaker maintains with the audience)
TEE TIMES (25A. *Golfers’ bookings)
OH BROTHER (30A. *”Man!”)
YOU LOST ME (45A. *”Wait, wait … go back”)
TEA CHEST (51A. *Bit of Boston Harbor debris n 1773)

Other — BOB MARLEY (32D. “One Love” singer), LITCHI nut (Chinese fruit), LOW-IMPACT (11D. Not joint-pounding, as aerobics), MOUSE (57D. One just squeaking by?), U. S. S. NIMITZ (aircraft carrier named for a former admiral), OUTLINE (46D. Writer’s plan), RIO LOBO (5D. 1970 John Wayne film), SOPPY (53D. Maudlin), STYMIES (10D. Thwarts), TICKETS (43D. Lottery buys) ZERO G (39A. Weightless state, informally).

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12.28.14 — Words, Words, Words — the Acrostic


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Sunday, December 28, 2014

ACROSTIC, Puzzle by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon
Edited by Will Shortz

This Sunday’s acrostic draws a quotation from Word Spy: The Word Lover’s Guide to Modern Culture by Paul McFedries.

Language wears many hats, but its most important job is to help us name or describe what's in the world. Words define us, our actions, even our existence. And just when you think that you have all the words you need, you discover new ones, hear new uses for old ones or see them mutate right before your eyes—a neologism is born.

Those neologisms are actually one of the best ways of keeping tabs on the way our world and culture are changing. One of the people who's been keeping tabs is Paul McFedries, the president of Logophilia Limited (logophilia is Greek for "the love of words"). His scorecard is Word Spy, a daily newsletter that has been reporting from the neological frontier since 1998 and that has more than 100,000 visitors a month and more than 12 million page views. In Word Spy, McFedries demonstrates how new words both reflect and illuminate not only the subcultures that coin them but also the larger culture in which these groups exist. ~ Amazon/com Book Description 

The quotation:  [N]EOLOGISMS ARE OFTEN JUST… FUN.  WHAT’S NOT TO LIKE ABOUT A WORD SUCH AS ZITCOM, A TELEVISION SITCOM AIMED AT OR FEATURING TEENAGERS?  OR CONSIDER THE TORPEDO, AN INEPT EMPLOYEE WHO QUITS TO GO WORK FOR A RIVAL COMPANY.

The author’s name and the title of the work:  PAUL MCFEDRIES, “WORD SPY”

A. On he case ahead of time, PROACTIVE
B. Buzzing, as a social media?, ATWITTER
C. Most unusual (a word actually in the Scrabble dictionary), UNIQUEST
D. Nanosecond’s rough equivalent (hyph.), LIGHT-FOOT
E. 1988 Michael Jackson autobiography, MOONWALK
F. Get animated (2 wds.), COME ALIVE
G. Comrades in arms; exhibition soccer matches, FRIENDLIES
H. Endorsement for a paperless office (hyph.), E-SIGNATURE
I. Guy trained in the use of T-squares and compasses, DRAFTSMAN
J. Zapper for a couch potato, REMOTE
K. Confrontational, provocative (hyph.), IN-YOUR-FACE
L. Major source of income for Nepal and Ecuador, ECOTOURISM
M. Item that may be Photoshopped, SNAPSHOT
N. Gender-neutral server, WAITRON
O. Person who’s easy to grok (2 wds.), OPEN BOOK
P. Spent nuke materials, RADWASTE
Q. Prominent part of a vampire, DOGTOOTH
R. Decide against staycation, say, SOJOURN
S. Certain white-collar crime (2 wds.), PONZI SCHEME
T. Hybrid mind/body fitness regimen, YOGALATES

The full paragraph of the quotation:  The universal appeal of new words is leavened by he happy fact that neologisms are often just plain fun.  What’s not to like about a word such as “zitcom“, a television sitcom aimed at or featuring teenagers?  Or consider the “torpedo“, an inept employee who quits to go work for a rival company.~ “Word Spy”

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12.28.14 — Fill-In-The-Blanks


Sunday, December 28, 2014

“Fill-In-The-Blanks” Puzzle by Jo Krozel
Edited by Will Shortz

Eight answer/clues with the second word of the answer resulting in a new full word when inserted in its clue constitutes the interrelated group of this Sunday crossword:

MISSING PERSON (26A. Su___ic), supersonic
DELETED SCENE (32A. Ob___ly), obscenely
UNUSED MINUTES (50A. ___t), minutest
DROPPED CALL (71A. Lo___y), locally
FORFEITED GAME (91A. Li___nt), ligament
STRIPPED BARE (105A. Ca___t), cabaret
ABANDON SHIP (114A. Wor___er), worshiper
STOLEN ART (46D. E___hen), Earthen

Other — ACID ROCK (38D. Jefferson Airplane genre), ALOE VERA (20A. Modern juice ingredient), APP STORE (86D. Modern place to buy games), BOB IN (57A. Arrive casually, informally), EATEN RAW (122A. Like oysters as an appetizer, often), HANGMAN (35D. Fill-in-the-blanks activity),  IPOD NANO (17D. Apple picker‘s pick?), OLDIE (5D. Song on a reunion tour, maybe), PLANE RIDE (6D. Virgin offering), TEN SPOTS (4D. Sawbucks, maybe), THE TOP (1A. Where it‘s lonely at, it‘s said).

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12.27.14 — Enter Sandman

Mariano Rivera taking the field
to Metallica's "Enter Sandman"

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Saturday, December 27, 2014

Puzzle by David Phillips / Edited by Will Shortz

Across — 1. Clichéd sequel catchphrase, HE’S BACK; 8. Economist who wrote “An Essay on the Principle of Population,” 1798, MALTHUS; 15. Like Rome, supposedly, ETERNAL; 16. How one might play a love ballad, AMOROSO; 17. 19-season Yankee MARIANO Rivera; 18. Batting targets, PIÑATAS; 19. Batting targets, PITCHES; 20. Go on foot, LEG IT; 21. Assuage, SLAKE; 22. Any miss, SHE; 24. Manchester man, BLOKE; 27. With 46-Down, common canvas coater, OIL; 29. Red three-year-old of TV, ELMO; 31. “Verily”, ‘TIS; 32. Event with the categories Best Kiss and Best Fight, MTV MOVIE AWARDS; 36. Raced, TORE; 37. Savage, FERAL; 38. Ninny, DODO; 39. With 42-Across, 2001 video game set in Liberty City, GRAND THEFT AUTO; 42. See 39-Across, III; 43. Senate majority group, maybe?, AYES; 44. Ascension Isl. Setting, ATL; 45. Quite like, FANCY; 47. Slush for eds. to wade through, MSS; 49. They can get excited, ATOMS; 53. “Damn Yankees” Tony Winner, FOSSE; 55. “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” novelist, LARSSON; 57. Dressing type, ITALIAN; 59. Popular pop-up preventer, AD-AWARE; 60. Ninnylike, MORONIC; 61. Above all others, MAXIMAL; 62. Without even cracking a smile, say, STERNLY; 63. Big name in air circulation?, SKYMALL.

Down — 1. Some rope, HEMPS; 2. Net sales, E-TAIL; 3. Comfortaire competitor, SERTA; 4. Place for a Neapolitan pizza, BRICK OVEN; 5. Home to “The Happiest Place on Earth”, ANAHEIM; 6. Quaint stage dancing accessory, CANE; 7. Supermodel Karlie KLOSS; 8. 11-pointed national symbol, MAPLE LEAF; 9. Mon AMIE; 10. It may be drawn in a forest, LONGBOW; 11. A dog may pick one up, TRAIL; 12. Turned on, HOT TO TROT; 13. Its seal has an olive branch, USA; 14. Sign of trouble, SOS; 23. Brooke Astor, e.g., HEIRESS; 25. Bud, KIDDO; 26. Standard offshoot, ESSO; 28. Like many ideals, LOFTY; 30. Its one-euro coin depicts a cross, MALTA; 32. Elaborate underground complex in “The Lord  of the Rings”, MORIA; 33. Limited expense?, TRAIN FARE; 34. Fire, VEHEMENCY; 35. Sister of Cartoon Network, ADULT SWIM; 36 Office whoop, TGIF; 40. “The best value under the sun” sloganeer, DAYS INN; 41. Serene calmness, ATARAXY; 46. See 27-Across, COLOR; 48. Comes to a sudden close?, SLAMS; 50. First name of a 10-year manhunt, OSAMA; 51. MORAL support; 52. Tackle box accessory, SNELL; 54. Junk mover, SAIL; 56. Alaskan island or its principal town, ADAK; 57. Pre-texts?, IMS; 58. Playskool product tester, TOT.

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12.26.14 — The Friday Crossword



Friday, December 26, 2014

Puzzle by Patrick Berry / Edited by Will Shortz

Across — 1. Take measures, ACT; 4. Deeply offended, STUNG; 9. Did a little housekeeping, SWEPT; 14. One who gets upset twice?, SORE LOSER; 16. Thick smoke, CIGAR; 17. Ladylove, INAMORATA; 18. Love ballad from the 1973 album “Goats Head Soup”, ANGIE; 19. Way to bear arms, AKIMBO; 20. Frank Capra title character, MR DEEDS; 22. Oscar nominee Rowlands, GENA; 23. They’re often underfoot, SHOES; 25. Bobs, e.g., DOS; 26. Some slurry stuff, ORE; 27. Vessels of the Napoleonic Wars, SLOOPS; 29. Silent “ick”, MOUE; 30. Based on instinct and guesswork, SEAT OF THE PANTS; 33. Letter’s capital?, RENT MONEY; 34. Thrift, SAVINGS AND LOAN; 39. Page with many views, OP ED; 40. Most treacherous for driving, maybe, ICIEST; 41. Trendy, NOW; 43. Fitting, APT; 44. Hides, VEILS; 45. Maximum on a hurricane wind scale, FIVE; 46. Detail-oriented, PRECISE; 48. Caduceus carrier, HERMES; 50. Soft white mineral, BORAX; 51. Operation Neptune Spear, NAVY SEALS; 54. Like aspen leaves, OVATE; 55. Stand-up guy Dave CHAPPELLE; 56. First inert gas made into a compound, XENON; 57. In the pit of one’s stomach?, EATEN; 58. Instrument in Glen Miller’s “Pennsylvania 6-5000”, SAX.

Down — 1. Often-grated cheese, ASIAGO; 2. Game played by British, CONKERS; 3. Recent staff addition, TRAINEE; 4. Home wrecker?, SLOB; 5. John Deere rival, TORO; 6. Ryder Cup side, USA; 7. URL ending, NET; 8. Record holders of old, GRAMOPHONES; 9. A whole bunch, SCADS; 10. “It makes a man mistake words for thoughts,” per Samuel Johnson, WINE; 11. Given encouragement, EGGED ON; 12. Disbursed, PAID OUT; 13. Head set?, TRESSES; 15. Miss Woodhouse of Highbury, EMMA; 21. Forwards, RESENDS; 23. Psychology or sociology, SOFT SCIENCE; 24. Web-based service succeeded by Outlook in 2013, HOT MAIL; 27. Acronymic weapon name, STEN; 28. Winter underwear, informally, LONGIES; 29. Ingredient in Marie Rose sauce, MAYO; 31. Uninteresting, ARID; 32. Hide, PELT; 34. Something to express views on, SOAP BOX; 35. O.K., APPROVE; 36. Longtime, VETERAN; 37. Fabled characters?, ANIMALS; 38. Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men,”, e.g., NOVELLA; 42. Alfred the Great’s kingdom, WESSEX; 44. Yuletide team member, VIXEN; 45. Not occupied, FREE; 47. Punic War agitator, CATO; 48. Talk up, HYPE; 49. “Outside the Lines” broadcaster, ESPN; 52. Sound of a light going on?, AHA; 53. Tanyard sight, VAT.

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12.25.14 — NUTS



Thursday, December 25, 2014 — Christmas Day 

Puzzle by Xan Vongsathorn / Edited by Will Shortz

MIXED [NUT]S (56A. Party snack … or a hint to the six squares in this puzzle), along with the word NUT mixed as TNU, UNT, UTN, TUN, NTU and NUT, constitutes the interrelated group of this Thursday crossword:

OU[TNU]MBER  with WE[T NU]RSE 
       (19A. Be bigger than, in a way; 9D. Milk maid?)
G[UN-T]OTING with AMO[UNT] 
      (20A. Packing; 2D. Come to)
CH[UTN]EY with SP[UTN]IK
      (37A. Samosa topping; 26D. Startling newsmaker of 10/4/1957)
PE[TUN]IA with RO[TUN]DA
     (40A. Flowery girl’s name; 31D. Feature of Rome‘s Pantheon)
TARA[NTU]LA with DOW[NTU]RN
     (60A. Hairy menace; 45D. Economic slump)
MIXED [NUT]S with [NUT]MEG
     (56A. Party snack, etc.; 58D. Apple pie seasoning)

Other — DEVIL RAY (4D. Aquarium giant), GOT EVEN 17A. Settled a score), GO VIRAL (43D. Really take off, in a way), HAR and HAIR and HA-HAS, NES (66A. Duck Hunt console, for short), OPEN PIT (5D. Like some mining and barbeques), OREGANO and ORIGAMI (15A. Sprinkle at a pizzeria; 61A. Artwork from a folder), PEROXIDE (40D. Blonde‘s secret), RIP UP 27A. Break down in tears?), SURREAL (23D. Like an out-of-body experience), TAP WATER (34A. Drink that’s a freebie).\

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12.24.14 — Sounds

Shukhov Tower, Crimea; Ukraine
Photo, Crimea Tourism

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Wednesday, December 24, 2014 — Christmas Eve

Puzzle by Adam G. Perl / Edited by Will Shortz

Three pairs of sound-alike answers constitutes the main feature of this Wednesday crossword:

CRY ME A RIVER (17A. 1955 Julie London hit)
CRIMEA RIVER (62A. Certain waterway to the Black Sea?)
PARASAIL (21A. Glide, in a way)
PARIS ALE (55A. Left Bank quaff?)
GO BETWEEN (33A. Intermediary)
GOBI TWEEN (44A. 11- or 12-year-old Mongolian desert dweller?)

Other — ATOMS (65A. Subject of elementary education?), FERRARI (27D. Maserati competitor), ELEVE crossing LEVEE (66A. French pupil; 52D. Bank security feature), MRI SCAN (43D. Scary experience for a claustrophobe), QE II (11D. Royal who’s notably a crossword fan, for short), RATED R crossing RED HOT (20A. For mature audiences; 14D. In high demand), SEA COWS (22D. Manatees).

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12.23.14 — Fee-fi-fo-fum!

Jack and the Beanstalk by Arthur Rackman, 1910

Fee-fi-fo-fum!
I smell the blood of an Englishman,
Be he live, or be he dead,
I'll grind his bones to make my bread.

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Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Puzzle by Bruce Haight / Edited by Will Shortz

BEANSTALK (21D. Storied locale for the circled letters in 8- and 65-Across), along with GIANT, JACK, FEE, FI, FO and FUM in the circled letters constitutes the main feature of this very friendly Tuesday crossword.

Other — ALGERIA (15A. Largest country in Africa since the breakup of Sudan in 2011), BAD SEED (38A. Wayward offspring, informally), COFFEES (1A. Espresso and cappuccino), ESCALLOP (39D. Bake in a sauce), GERARDO (63A. Rapper with the 1991 hit “Rico Suave”), HI-JACK (65A. Commandeer), LA SCALA (61A. Milan opera house), OCEANUS (64A. Greek personification of the outer sea), OXIDIZE (14A. Become rusted), PERFUME (66A. Clichéd gift on Mother’s Day), Puppeteer Tony SARG.

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12.22.14 — Xing


Monday, December 22, 2014

Puzzle by Lynn Lempel / Edited by Will Shortz

PED XING (39A. Something often seen on a street corner, briefly … or, literally something seen in each corner of this puzzle) along with PED crossing PED in the four corners as mentioned constitutes the interrelated group of this clever Monday crossword:

SHARP EDGE and PEDRO (17A. What a whetstone gives a knife; 15D. Martinez with three Cy Young Awards)
SPED AWAY and IMPEDIMENT (19A. Hurriedly left by car; 3D. Roadblock)
STAMPEDE and BRAKE PEDAL (58A. Panicky onrush; 30D. It may bring you to a screeching halt)
PIPE DREAM and HOPED (62A. Wishful fantasy; 47D. Had aspirations)

Other — DUE DATE (4D. What a pregnant woman or a library book has), ELECTRIC (40D. Thrilling), Dadaist Max ERNST, Dame JUDI Dench, MEDIAN (21A. Highway divider), ORCS (51A. Ugly Middle-earth creatures), PARMESAN (9D. Cheese to sprinkle on spaghetti), SCAMP (67A. Rapscallion), SERPICO (45D. Title cop played by Al Pacino in 1973), SNIT (24A. Pique performance?).

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12.21.14 — Season's Greetings

“Santa Claus” by William Holbrook Beard 

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Sunday, December 21, 2014 — Winter Solstice 

Season’s Greetings — Puzzle by Joel Fagliano / Edited by Will Shortz

Seven common phrases changed by the interjection of "HO" to become uncommon ones constitutes the interrelated group of this fine Sunday crossword:

HO HUMDINGER (22A. Homer that leaves people yawning?)
HOKEY WORD (24A. “Shucks!” or “Pshaw!“?)
BLACK-EYED HOPIS (42A. Southwest tribe after a fistfight?)
DESPICABLE HOMIE (67A. Backstabbing pal?)
NO MONEY HOEDOWN (91A. Barn dance that’s free to attend?)
CROSS HOBO (114A. Vagrant after getting kicked off a train, say?)
HOKUM TO PAPA (117A. Stuff your dad finds ridiculous?)

Other — ANKARA (12D. World capital once conquered by Augustus), BAR SCENE  (11A. Likely feature of a college town), EBOLA VIRUS (16D. Cause for a quarantine), EFGH (8D. I will follow it), GOES GREEN (56A. Starts recycling, say), HOLLIES (46D. Some Christmas decorations), HONEY LOCUST (69D. Tree whose pods have sweet pulp), INFOTECH (50D. Computerdom, informally), KID GLOVES (120A. Gentle treatment, metaphorically), NANCY PELOSI (7D. House speaker after Dennis Hastert), OOH OOH (35A. “Pick me, pick me!”), ORANGE SODA (72D. Crush, e.g.), O-TOWN (76D. Nickname for Orlando), POT SHOP (90D.Joint business venture?), SMETANA (55D. Composer whose name s an anagram of SANTA + ME), SOY LATTE (87D. Trendy coffee order), STATE PEN (123A. “The Shawshank Redemption” setting), TAUREG (122A.Saharan nomad), TIM COOK (5D. Steve Jobs’s successor at Apple), WINE LABEL (21A. Red or white sticker?), YOGA POSE (43D. Warrior or downward dog).

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12.20.14 — The Saturday Crossword

Reggie Rockstone ... pioneer of hiplife,
Africa's homemade take on hip-hop

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Saturday, December 20, 2014

Puzzle by Kevin G. Der and Ian Livengood
Edited by Will Shortz

Across — 1. Where much grass grows, POT FARMS; 9. Moolah, WAMPUM; 15. Jazz/funk fusion genre, AFROBEAT; 16. Creature with a crest, IGUANA; 17. Enterprise headquarters, STAR BASE: 18. Tap, CALL ON; 19. Place for a sucker, TENTACLE; 20. Faiths, CREEDS; 21. Rosetta Stone symbol, ANKH; 22. Betty’s sister on “Ugly Betty”, HILDA; 24. One ferried by Charon, SOUL; 25. Plato portrayer in “Rebel Without a Cause”, MINEO: 26. Org. seeking to catch 11-Down, DEA; 27. Cork’s place, maybe, POPGUN; 31. Tameness, DOCILITY; 35. In abundance, APLENTY; 37. “Le Bourgeois Gentlhomme” playwright, MOLIERE; 38. Positive response to “How ya doin’?”, REAL GOOD; 40. Sherlock Holmes cover-up?, ULSTER; 41. Rugby four-pointer, TRY; 41. Flying female fighters in W.W. II, WASPS;44. Orange side dish, YAMS; 46. Hip, with “in”, CLUED; 47. Lolcats, e.g., MEME; 51. Kind of bullet, TRACER; 53. Before making one’s debut?, PRENATAL; 55. Photoshop command, ROTATE; 56. Cross words?, HATE MAIL; 57. Tip-offs, maybe, ALERTS; 58. Nexus 7 rival, IPAD MINI; 59. “No doubt!”, YES YES; 60. Important figure in business, NET SALES.

Down — 1. Tagliatelle, e.g., PASTA; 2. A lot, OFTEN; 3. One delivering a knockout, informally, TRANK; 4. Into the open, FORTH; 5. Ones repeating “ do” in 1976?, ABBA; 6. Access, as a pocket, REACH INTO; 7. Literary/film critic Janet MASLIN; 8. Girded, STEELED; 9. Practice with the Book of Shadows, WICCA; 10. Stabilizing kitchen supply, AGAR; 11. See 26-Across, MULES; 12. Faddish food regimen, PALEO DIET; 13. Italian count?, UNO DUE TRE; 14. Murderer, MANSLAYER; 23. Dr. DOOM (archenemy of the Fantastic Four); 25. MUNG bean; 27. Caterer’s preparation, PARTY TRAY; 28. Figaro, e.g., OPERA ROLE; 29. Ones with recess appointments?, PLAYMATES; 30. What keeps a part apart?, GEL; 32. Power outage?, COUP D’ETAT; 33. Shangri-la’s lack, ILLS; 34. Symbol of purity, in Lille, LIS; 36. Caterwaul, YOWL; 39. Heir apparent to a French king, DAUPHIN; 43. Wear for Clint Eastwood in “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”, SERAPE; 45. Blood-curdling, SCARY; 46. Garden CRESS; 47. Her “little baby love clambake,” in a 1967 Elvis song, MAMMA; 48. Cyber Monday activity, ET AL; 49. Home for Deer Isle and Moosehead Lake, MAINE; 50. Dock ELLIS, Pirate who claimed to have thrown a no-hitter on LSD; 52. Novel’s end?, ETTE; 54. “NEDS Declassified” (old Nickelodeon show).

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