| ACROSS
1. An associate degree in applied science.
4. Exhibiting self-importance.
10. A doctor's degree in dental surgery.
13. A chronic skin disease occurring primarily in women between the ages of 20 and 40.
14. United States lyricist who collaborated on musicals with Frederick Loewe (1918-1986).
15. Take in solid food.
16. A condition (mostly in boys) characterized by behavioral and learning disorders.
17. With the mouth wide open as in wonder or awe.
19. A prosthesis that replaces a missing leg.
21. New Zealand timber tree resembling the cypress.
23. A particular geographical region of indefinite boundary (usually serving some special purpose or distinguished by its people or culture or geography).
24. How long something has existed.
27. Designating a solution containing 1 mole of solute per 1000 grams of solvent.
28. A Hindu disciple of a swami.
30. Australian shrubs and small trees with evergreen usually spiny leaves and dense clusters of showy flowers.
37. (Old Testament) Adam's wife in Judeo-Christian mythology.
38. A three-year law degree.
41. Any plant or flower of the genus Lobelia.
44. A piece of furniture that provides a place to sleep.
46. The cry made by sheep.
47. Someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike.
54. An association of countries in the western hemisphere.
57. Large burrowing rodent of South and Central America.
59. The law enforcement agency in the Justice Department.
60. A river in Germany.
62. A workplace for the conduct of scientific research.
63. Gone by.
64. The world's largest desert (3,500,000 square miles) in North Africa.
65. (Irish) Mother of the ancient Irish gods.
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DOWN
1. (Babylonian) A demigod or first man.
2. Wood of any of various alder trees.
3. Grasslike or rushlike plant growing in wet places having solid stems, narrow grasslike leaves and spikelets of inconspicuous flowers.
4. (Scottish) Bluish-black or gray-blue.
5. Popular music originating in the West Indies.
6. A constellation in the southern hemisphere near Telescopium and Norma.
7. Former measure of the US economy.
8. A person with an unusual or odd personality.
9. A period of time containing 365 (or 366) days.
10. A design fixed to some surface or a paper bearing the design to be transferred to the surface.
11. The capital and largest city of Bangladesh.
12. An advantageous purchase.
18. Absent without permission.
20. A cord that is drawn through eyelets or around hooks in order to draw together two edges (as of a shoe or garment).
22. Before noon.
25. Fleshy spore-bearing inner mass of e.g. a puffball or stinkhorn.
26. (Akkadian) God of wisdom.
29. A city in the Saxony region of Germany on the Saale River.
31. 100 avos equal 1 pataca.
32. God of the earth.
33. A radioactive element of the actinide series.
34. Title for a civil or military leader (especially in Turkey).
35. An undergarment worn by women to support their breasts.
36. Airtight sealed metal container for food or drink or paint etc..
39. Either of two folds of skin that can be moved to cover or open the eye.
40. Title for a civil or military leader (especially in Turkey).
42. A gradual decline (in size or strength or power or number).
43. A loose sleeveless outer garment made from aba cloth.
45. A coffee cake flavored with orange rind and raisins and almonds.
48. Open-heart surgery in which the rib cage is opened and a section of a blood vessel is grafted from the aorta to the coronary artery to bypass the blocked section of the coronary artery and improve the blood supply to the heart.
49. A genus of European owls.
50. Austrian physicist and philosopher who introduced the Mach number and who founded logical positivism (1838-1916).
51. A flat-bottomed volcanic crater that was formed by an explosion.
52. The act of scanning.
53. A small cake leavened with yeast.
55. The part of the nervous system of vertebrates that controls involuntary actions of the smooth muscles and heart and glands.
56. Large brownish-green New Zealand parrot.
58. A flat wing-shaped process or winglike part of an organism.
61. An intensely radioactive metallic element that occurs in minute amounts in uranium ores.
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