NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
Across
1 Bear whose bed was too hard for Goldilocks 5 With 15- Across,
“Don’t delay!” 8 First coat for a
painter 14 At any point in
history 15 See 5- Across 16 Chest of drawers 17 Repeated word before “pants on fire” 18 Queen’s place 20 Mexican dish
served in a shell 21 Villain’s
vanquisher 22 On edge 23 Queens’ place 26 Loser to the
tortoise, in fable 27 Lovey- dovey
sound 28 “Let’s Get Loud” singer, affectionately 31 People often caution against reinventing it 34 “The ___, the Proud, the Marines” 35 Oafish sort 36 Queens’ place 40 In 41 Broadcast 42 Broadcast part 43 Muscle toned from push- ups, informally 44 Comic strip sound from a drunkard 45 Make bread 47 With 57- Across,
Queen’s place 51 Many a Donald Trump announcement 54 Snowman in
“Frozen” 55 Common street
name 57 See 47- Across 59 Off- roaders, for
short 60 Debonair 61 Fish eggs 62 Place divers
explore 63 Hung around 64 Title for two Clue
characters 65 Annual Austin
festival, for short
Down
1 Animal hide 2 Bird- related 3 “Seeya” 4 Pointy stone used in early Native American weaponry 5 TV news
deliverer 6 Hold together 7 Shake one’s
booty 8 “Masterpiece
Theatre” network 9 In a relaxed rhythm, musically 10 Twisted humor 11 Heart of the
matter 12 Prominent
Dumbo features 13 1993 football movie starring Sean Astin 19 World Cup sport 24 Asian river whose name is one letter away from an Ivy League college 25 Site of the firstinthe- nation caucuses 28 “The Grapes of
Wrath” surname 29 Central points 30 Cookie that’s often pulled apart 31 “That’s a ___!” 32 David ___, philosopher influenced by Locke 33 Grander than
grand 34 Four- term prez 35 2014 Super Bowl
performer 37 Secular 38 So done with 39 Teri who played Phoebe’s mother on “Friends” 44 Scorcher 45 Inflame with
love 46 Charges for some Madison Avenue firms 47 Track- and- field
event 48 Bedside buzzer 49 Condom
material 50 A cat is said to have nine of them 51 “Ergo…” 52 Blemish 53 First place where Napoleon was exiled 56 Warning initials above an Internet link 58 Interest rate
setter, with “the”