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"Lost and Found"
The unclued diagonal entry is METAL DETECTOR. "Lost" items are the symbols for various metals, and "found" items are the names of those metals. Across. 1. ma(i)l + let 3. rip + snor(t)ing 10. up(bea[k])t (put anag.) 11. faulkner (anag.) 13. idea (hidden) 14. to + ss 15. w(e)ary 17. con(t)e 18. anti + gua (Aug rev.) 19. d(i) + d 21. loom (double def.) 22. b + leep (peel rev.) 24. evil (rev.) 27. pr + one 28. b(l)an + c 31. s + a + rum 33. r + ancor (acorn anag.) 35. septuplets (anag.) 36. crowe (homophone) 37. en(d)result (ten rules anag.) 38. con(i)fer Down. 2. eaten (homophone) 3. run(t) 4. p(ass)e 5. o(utsi)de (suit anag.) 6. cur + lew 7. in + cans 8. (u)nearthing 9. gr + oz + ny 12. neoteric (anag.) 16. s(now + lad)en 20. sleazier (anag.) 23. la + undries 25. mar + a(u)d 26. tun + a 29. b(ant)u 30. int(r)o 31. sase (anag.) 32. mule (double def.) 34. tot (double def.)
National Portrait Gallery
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The Civil War
President Obama reflects on what Lincoln means to him and to America, in an introduction to our special issue. Read more › |
James Fallows on Obama's first term, Raymond Bonner on the death penalty, Christopher Hitchens on G.K. Chesterton, and more
Browse back issues of The Atlantic that have appeared on the Web. From September 1995 to the present, the archive is essentially complete, with the exception of a few articles, the online rights to which are held exclusively by the authors.
See All Back Issues: September 1995
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