| European politician whose last name means "cabbage" | 61 |
| Exams with a "Logic Games" section, for some reason | 61 |
| Eugene O'Neill's daughter who married Charlie Chaplin | 61 |
| Each of this puzzle's long Across answers sounds like one | 61 |
| Expressed an opinion on "The Dan Patrick Show," say | 61 |
| Episodes of "Friends" and "Seinfeld," now | 61 |
| Event that is very difficult for new fathers, let me just say | 61 |
| Economic European carrier named after its founder Christopher | 61 |
| Electric car company named after an Serbian-American inventor | 61 |
| Era referred to in the United Kingdom as "naughty"? | 61 |
| Exams for students of '60s and '70s military history? | 61 |
| Ending for ''peek'' or ''bug'' | 62 |
| Economist Smith who coined the term "invisible hand" | 62 |
| Edward James Olmos's "Battlestar Galactica" role | 62 |
| Ed who won the 2001 Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award | 62 |
| Eddie ___ (cop who inspired "The French Connection") | 62 |
| Emilio who played Coach Bombay in "The Mighty Ducks" | 62 |
| Explode, and words needed to complete the four starred answers | 62 |
| English king who was the youngest son of William the Conqueror | 62 |
| Egyptian goddess worshiped as the archetypical wife and mother | 62 |
| English county whose flag is a white horse on a red background | 62 |
| Erstwhile heartthrob, to his erstwhile legion of swooning fans | 62 |
| E. S. ___, game company that popularized Yahtzee and Scribbage | 62 |
| Each of this puzzle's four longest answers begins with one | 62 |
| Elton John's "Don't Let the Sun Go Down ___" | 62 |
| Ending for ''sea'' or ''land'' | 62 |
| Ethan Hawke film that was made over the course of eleven years | 62 |
| Easy way of pulling in ... and a hint to the six circled words | 62 |
| Elvis Presley song with "Hound Dog" on its flip side | 62 |
| English jurist who wrote "De laudibus legum Angliae" | 62 |
| Element name derived from the Latin for "Copenhagen" | 62 |
| Element named for its discoverer's Scandinavian brithplace | 62 |
| Early 17th-century year in which Shakespeare's father died | 62 |
| Ellington standard whose title is Spanish for "lost" | 62 |
| Encounter shared by the four celebrity couples in this puzzle? | 62 |
| Eastern time slot for first-run "NYPD Blue" episodes | 62 |
| Entry in an annual international sports competition since 1851 | 62 |
| Eric who played the villain in 2009's "Star Trek" | 63 |
| English novelist Canetti who wrote "Crowds and Power" | 63 |
| Energy company known for, well, everything but providing energy | 63 |
| Ending for ''mock'' or ''cook'' | 63 |
| Ending for ''coal'' or ''opal'' | 63 |
| Edward's adoptive mother in the "Twilight" series | 63 |
| Eighth or ninth word in the "Star Wars" opening crawl | 63 |
| Electrical conductance unit (that's another unit backwards) | 63 |
| Emmy-winning role for Sally on “Brothers & Sisters” | 63 |
| Ending for ''ball'' or ''bass'' | 63 |
| Eight-time "Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade" cohost | 63 |
| Extinct carnivore whose name means "different lizard" | 63 |
| Emmy-winning supporting actor from "Boardwalk Empire" | 63 |
| Esmeralda's goat in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" | 63 |
| Extended Director's Cut Special Edition Gift Set purchasers | 63 |
| Evergreen shrub that's Spanish for "little apple" | 63 |
| Elizabeth's plaint after always losing to her royal sister? | 63 |
| Evergreen tree has critical condition that's contagious (7) | 63 |
| Energy source that may be 2 trillion times as bright as the sun | 63 |
| Eighth-most-common word, according to the Oxford English Corpus | 63 |
| Every month's 13th day, except March, May, July and October | 63 |
| Economist who wrote "The Theory of the Leisure Class" | 63 |
| Edward who wrote the play "The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia" | 64 |
| Emirate whose national flag has red, green, white and black bars | 64 |
| European city whose name sounds like two letters of the alphabet | 64 |
| Entertainer who was a Congressional Gold Medal recipient in 1962 | 64 |
| Ending for ''cash'' or ''front'' | 64 |
| Elton John "___ little bit funny, this feeling inside" | 64 |
| Elvis Presley song on the flip side of "Treat Me Nice" | 64 |
| Eric Clapton classic whose main riff was written by Duane Allman | 64 |
| Either sister starring in 2004's "New York Minute" | 64 |
| English artist John who's buried at St. Paul's Cathedral | 64 |
| Edwin's fiancée in "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" | 64 |
| Emile Hirsch film about the best place to load and unload boats? | 64 |
| Element whose chemical symbol is used in this puzzle's theme | 64 |
| Entertainer who holds the Guinness World Record for broken bones | 64 |
| Everett ___, player of Mr. Bernstein in "Citizen Kane" | 64 |
| Emma's director for ''Sense and Sensibility'' | 65 |
| Ending with ''buck'' or ''stink'' | 65 |
| Event that could be seen as far away as Las Vegas in the '50s | 65 |
| Ewing whose ex-wife dreamt an entire season of "Dallas" | 65 |
| Engineer Brian who published "Oblique Strategies" cards | 65 |
| Ecological character voiced by Danny DeVito, with "The" | 65 |
| Evil-___ (the only female villain in The Masters of the Universe) | 65 |
| Eight-time All-Star Tony of the '60s-'70s Minnesota Twins | 65 |
| End of the riddle whose answer is "When it's ajar." | 65 |
| Enola Gay, e.g. (and a hint to this puzzle's unusual feature) | 65 |
| Extraterrestrial factor in creating much of Earth's carbon-14 | 65 |
| Eating record #5 (set at the Baltimore Waterfront Festival, 2006) | 65 |
| English martyr Sir John, the model for Shakespeare's Falstaff | 65 |
| Easy-to-follow sewing instructions already printed on the fabric? | 65 |
| Ending for ''glass'' or ''metal'' | 65 |
| Entertainer who was the first man to be married at Caesars Palace | 65 |
| Earhart who was the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic | 66 |
| Earhart who served as aviation editor for "Cosmopolitan" | 66 |
| Ending for ''heir'' or ''steward'' | 66 |
| Easternmost town on Maui, on one end of 52 miles of twisty highway | 66 |
| Element whose symbol comes from the Latin word "plumbum" | 66 |
| Element between platino and mercurio in the Spanish periodic table | 66 |
| Exposé about the tawdry relations of a 16th-century theologian? | 66 |
| Environment-related, like the lyrics to "Mercy Mercy Me" | 66 |
| Eric who was #46 on ESPN's Top 50 Athletes of the 20th Century | 66 |
| Esquire's "Sexiest Woman Alive" in 2013, in tabloids | 66 |