| ACROSS
1. A workplace for the conduct of scientific research.
4. From the kapok tree.
9. A town in north central Oklahoma.
13. A health resort near a spring or at the seaside.
16. Title for a civil or military leader (especially in Turkey).
17. A feeling of self-respect and personal worth.
18. An informal term for a father.
19. An accidental happening.
20. A young woman making her debut into society.
21. A bag used for carrying money and small personal items or accessories (especially by women).
23. A region of northeastern France famous for its wines.
25. Not only so, but.
27. Tropical plants.
29. Essential oil or perfume obtained from flowers.
30. (Greek mythology) Greek god of war.
32. Permitting little if any light to pass through because of denseness of matter.
34. The large trunk artery that carries blood from the left ventricle of the heart to branch arteries.
39. Grandson of Amaterasu and first ruler of Japan.
42. Capital of modern Macedonia.
43. Armor plate that protects the hip and thigh.
47. An organization of independent states to promote international peace and security.
48. A narrow headband or strip of ribbon worn as a headband.
52. A colorless explosive liquid that is volatile and poisonous and foul-smelling.
53. Compelling immediate action.
55. A newt in its terrestrial stage of development.
58. A colorless odorless inert gaseous element occurring in the earth's atmosphere in trace amounts.
60. (Irish) The sea personified.
61. Something or someone that causes trouble.
67. A small island.
68. Yellowish edible agaric that usually turns red when touched.
71. United States designer noted for an innovative series of chairs (1907-1978).
72. An association of nations dedicated to economic and political cooperation in southeastern Asia.
74. Any of various small plant-sucking insects.
76. Small arctic whale the male having a long spiral ivory tusk.
82. Lean end of the neck.
85. Occupy in an agreeable, entertaining or pleasant fashion.
87. A member of the Siouan people formerly living in Missouri in the valleys of the Missouri and Osage rivers.
88. A member of a seafaring group of North American Indians who lived on the Pacific coast of British Columbia and southwestern Alaska.
90. United States photographer remembered for her portraits of rural workers during the Depression (1895-1965).
91. An anticipated outcome that is intended or that guides your planned actions.
92. Apple trees.
94. A Chadic language spoken south of Lake Chad.
96. A vessel (usually cylindrical) with a wide mouth and without handles.
97. A nucleic acid consisting of large molecules shaped like a double helix.
98. Of or relating to or characteristic of Ireland or its people.
99. (old-fashioned) At or from or to a great distance.
100. A unit of surface area equal to 100 square meters.
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DOWN
1. A polite name for any woman.
2. American novelist (1909-1955).
3. A small cake leavened with yeast.
4. The ratio of the distance traveled (in kilometers) to the time spent traveling (in hours).
5. An edilbe seaweed with a mild flavor.
6. Type genus of the Pinaceae.
7. The probability of a specified outcome.
8. Cubes of meat marinated and cooked on a skewer usually with vegetables.
9. Having a specified kind of border or edge.
10. A silvery soft waxy metallic element of the alkali metal group.
11. An agency of the United Nations affiliated with the World Bank.
12. The basic unit of money in Gambia.
13. Title for the former hereditary monarch of Iran.
14. Large burrowing rodent of South and Central America.
15. Someone who copies the words or behavior of another.
22. A silvery ductile metallic element found primarily in bauxite.
24. Any member of the genus Stentor.
26. A long sturdy pin used by women to secure a hat to their hair.
28. A toxic nonmetallic element related to sulfur and tellurium.
31. A Hindu prince or king in India.
33. The compass point that is midway between north and northeast.
35. German naturalist whose speculations that plants and animals are made up of tiny living `infusoria' led to the cell theory (1779-1851).
36. A Chadic language spoken in northern Nigeria.
37. Male red deer.
38. English writer of stories for children (1882-1956).
40. A purine base found in DNA and RNA.
41. Internal organs collectively (especially those in the abdominal cavity).
44. Genus of Eurasian spiny shrubs.
45. A broad flat muscle on either side of the back.
46. A gonadotropic hormone that is secreted by the anterior pituitary.
49. A city in southwestern Poland on the Oder.
50. English scientist who formulated the law of elasticity and proposed a wave theory of light and formulated a theory of planetary motion and proposed the inverse square law of gravitational attraction and discovered the cellular structure of cork and introduced the term `cell' into biology and invented a balance spring for watches (1635-1703).
51. A member of a formerly tribal people now living in south central India.
54. Counting the number of white and red blood cells and the number of platelets in 1 cubic millimeter of blood.
56. A flat thin rectangular slab (as of fired clay or rubber or linoleum) used to cover surfaces.
57. An official prosecutor for a judicial district.
59. A river in north central Switzerland that runs northeast into the Rhine.
62. The upper house of the parliament of the Republic of Ireland.
63. A soft gray ductile metallic element used in alloys.
64. A genus of Icteridae.
65. A piece of furniture that provides a place to sleep.
66. The dialect of Malay used as the national language of the Republic of Indonesia or of Malaysia.
69. (Assyrian and Babylonian) The chief sun god.
70. (anatomy) A depression or fissure where vessels or nerves or ducts enter a bodily organ.
73. Shrub bearing oval-fruited kumquats.
75. A white metallic element that burns with a brilliant light.
77. Coffee with the caffeine removed.
78. Designating a solution containing 1 mole of solute per 1000 grams of solvent.
79. A strong-smelling plant from whose dried leaves a number of euphoriant and hallucinogenic drugs are prepared.
80. Moth having nonfunctional mouthparts as adults.
81. United States industrialist who manufactured plows suitable for working the prairie soil (1804-1886).
83. (Old Testament) Cain and Abel were the first children of Adam and Eve born after the Fall of Man.
84. A narrow elongated opening or fissure between two symmetrical parts.
86. Large genus of tropical subshrubs or herbs some of which yield fibers of mucilaginous substances.
89. American prizefighter who won the world heavyweight championship three times (born in 1942).
93. A colorless and odorless inert gas.
95. A soft silvery metallic element of the alkali earth group.
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