38 Part II: Tackling the Puzzles
Across
- Type of carved pole
- Juvenile salamanders
- March through mud
- Giraffe cousin
- Handlebar feature
- Public art show, for
example - “An apple a day.. .”
is one - Stare open-mouthed
- Baloney producer
- It opens with a click
- Place for sweaters
- Fa follower
- ___ on a Grecian Urn
- Countdown of top tunes
- Bridge locales
- Curved arch
- African plains grazer
- Clog
- Horse with a
graysprinkled coat - Heart chambers
- Sorvino of Mighty
Aphrodite - Florentine, for example
- Rhea relative
- Mice, to owls
- Mrs. Peel’s partner
- Cost increase
- “Who ___ to judge?”
52. Cowboy Ritter
53. Wee bit
54. Best Actor of 1931 and
1946
60. Miner’s strike
61. School talent show
staple
62. Studio stand
66. Kelp, for example
67. Model Macpherson
68. Stockholm native
69. Sharp-witted
70. Cincinnati sluggers
71. Emulate Sonja Henie
Down
- Aunt Polly’s nephew, in
a Twain classic - Volga tributary
- Uncle Sam collects it
- Gone with the Wind,
for one - Bloody Mary alternative
- Ratatouille requirement
- Haus wife
- Move with stealth
- The going rate?
- Word with “taught” or
“effacing” - 62, in old Rome
- Stone with color flashes
- Pierce with a tusk, for
example
21. Railroad tycoon J.P.
22. Monthly payment, for
many
23. Summer attire
24. Engorge oneself
25. “Relax, soldiers!”
29. Coins for Sherlock
Holmes
30. German engraver
Albrecht
32. Pizazz
33. The ___ of St. Louis
34. “What a great
discovery!”
35. Incapable of littering
38. Chinaware piece
41. Copies
44. Jewish month before
Nisan
48. Deli dill
49. Overindulgence
51. Tight-fisted type
54. Strong criticism
55. Auditioner’s quest
56. Upper hand
57. Faculty boss
58. Gentle
59. Atlanta basketball pro
63. Kind of lion or horse
64. Summer hrs. in N.Y.C.
65. Enter the Dragon star
Puzzle 6: Hut, Two, Three, Four
Easy