| Leachman who won an Oscar for "The Last Picture Show" | 63 |
| Labor-management problem, or an alternate title for this puzzle | 63 |
| Like someone who randomly likes an old profile picture of yours | 63 |
| Last National League pitcher to win 30 games in a season (1934) | 63 |
| Linguistics term coined in 1973, and made controversial in 1996 | 63 |
| Longtime New York literary figure and this puzzle's honoree | 63 |
| Longtime UCLA coach known as the "Wizard of Westwood" | 63 |
| Lawyer Davis who served in the Clinton and Bush administrations | 63 |
| Lord of the Dance star's nickname after letting himself go? | 63 |
| Lift that works many of the same muscles as a handstand push-up | 63 |
| Like food needing salt. Or pepper. Or any kind of spice at all. | 63 |
| Like a kid's face after both cheeks are tweaked by grandma? | 63 |
| Like snakes, in many people's imaginations (but not really) | 63 |
| Like the characters in Christie's "The Mousetrap" | 63 |
| Like many a crossword clue for the word OREO, or like old Oreos | 63 |
| Late Unification Church leader who visited the astronomy class? | 63 |
| Long jumper Igor ___-Ovanesyan (recordholder before Bob Beamon) | 63 |
| Language that gave us "flummery" and "crag" | 63 |
| Last book in Robertson Davies' "Deptford Trilogy" | 63 |
| Less polite way of saying "no thanks" to offered food | 63 |
| Lovelace who was called "The Enchantress of Numbers" | 62 |
| Lilian Jackson Braun's "The Cat Who Smelled ___" | 62 |
| Lion king in "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" | 62 |
| Lion in C. S. Lewis's "The Chronicles of Narnia" | 62 |
| Lead-in to ''boy'' or ''girl'' | 62 |
| Language that gives us "banjo" and "gumbo" | 62 |
| Leslie's love interest on "Parks and Recreation" | 62 |
| Less than ideal place to be if you need to leave town quickly? | 62 |
| Leon who won both a Pulitzer and a National Book Award in 1963 | 62 |
| Lawyer in both "Civil Wars" and "L.A. Law" | 62 |
| Laura Nyro album "___ and the Thirteenth Confession" | 62 |
| Language in which "pandit" means "teacher" | 62 |
| Literary character whose first word is "'Sblood" | 62 |
| Last Supper response to "One of you shall betray me" | 62 |
| Led Zep "When the ___ breaks, mama, you got to move" | 62 |
| Leopold's celebrated murder co-defendant of the 1920's | 62 |
| Loughlin who played Jesse's wife on "Full House" | 62 |
| Led Zep "Living Loving ___ (She's Just a Woman)" | 62 |
| Leader whose autobiography is "Long Walk to Freedom" | 62 |
| Leader who said "All reactionaries are paper tigers" | 62 |
| LaDuke was his vice presidential running mate in 1996 and 2000 | 62 |
| Like contestants at the start of "The Biggest Loser" | 62 |
| Lord's Prayer words following "Thy will be done" | 62 |
| Lord's Prayer phrase before "as it is in heaven" | 62 |
| Last of Kieslowski's "Three Colors" film trilogy | 62 |
| Like the words "hoagie" and "kitty-corner" | 62 |
| Language that favors "sedans" to "saloons" | 62 |
| Lenape advocate of Indian unity and resistance, ca. 1760's | 62 |
| Lieutenant LaForge on 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' | 62 |
| Lose consciousness after downing some hallucinogenic beverage? | 62 |
| Lurid headline about religious figures and a piece of body art | 62 |
| Like penthouse suites vis-Ã -vis other apartments, typically | 62 |
| Leslie Nielsen comedy of 1995 (I don't remember it either) | 62 |
| Lavish "60 Minutes" reporter Lesley with gifts, say? | 62 |
| Lady's feline tormentors in "Lady and the Tramp" | 62 |
| Like Bill Murray in a memorable "Ghostbusters" scene | 62 |
| Lewis Carroll's ''The Hunting of the ___'' | 62 |
| Look accompanying the comment "Is that all you got?" | 62 |
| Letters on Enos Slaughter's cap on his Hall of Fame plaque | 62 |
| Last song on Led Zeppelin's "Houses of The Holy" | 62 |
| Lucentio's servant, in "The Taming of the Shrew" | 62 |
| Like "stewardess" and "housewife," briefly | 62 |
| Language from which the word "cummerbund" is derived | 62 |
| Leader of the Connecticut Yankees in 1920's-40's music | 62 |
| Language known to native speakers as "gjuho shqipe" | 61 |
| Lawrence Welk's "one"/"two" connector | 61 |
| Like the house this puzzle's subject couldn't destroy | 61 |
| Leading name on the "From Here to Eternity" credits | 61 |
| Last name of the "No Country for Old Men" directors | 61 |
| Lana's role in "The Postman Always Rings Twice" | 61 |
| Line of riders staggered for maximum protection from the wind | 61 |
| Like an insufferable, privileged sophomore who hates everyone | 61 |
| Language which gives us "clan" and "bard" | 61 |
| Leader who said "There is no god higher than truth" | 61 |
| Language that gave us "guru" and "pundit" | 61 |
| Land follower, to sailors + hospital areas + coastal bird = ? | 61 |
| Last words of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" | 61 |
| Led Zep "We come from the land of the ___ and snow" | 61 |
| Lon's "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" co-star | 61 |
| Like none of the scenarios in a certain Alanis Morissette hit | 61 |
| Legends of Hollywood stamp honoree between Edward G. and Cary | 61 |
| Lagerlöf's "The Wonderful Adventures of ___" | 61 |
| Lead-in to "di" or "da" in a Beatles song | 61 |
| Like Millvina Dean, the last living survivor from the Titanic | 61 |
| Limbaugh said she was "George McGovern on hormones" | 61 |
| Like days when you forget to take an umbrella, all too often? | 61 |
| Letters before Speedwagon (the band) or Speed Wagon (the car) | 61 |
| Loser to King in tennis's "Battle of the Sexes" | 61 |
| Like Hotspur's horse in "King Henry IV, Part I" | 61 |
| Letters granted automatically on "Wheel of Fortune" | 61 |
| Leader of the band with the 1962 hit "Green Onions" | 61 |
| Look to normal people for trends, in modern business parlance | 61 |
| Leering comedian who moonlights on the South American pampas? | 61 |
| Like the word "curiae" in "amicus curiae" | 61 |
| Lead singer in No Doubt's hit "Don't Speak" | 61 |
| Language spoken in parts of Afghanistan and northern Pakistan | 61 |
| Legendary group of ancient Israelites exiled by the Assyrians | 61 |
| Latin for "holding a grudge for a long, long time"? | 61 |
| Lead-in to "the above" or "your business" | 61 |
| Lovers embrace passionately in public place; ref declares ... | 61 |