| '07 They Might Be Giants disc: "The ___" | 54 |
| '07 They Might Be Giants disc "The ___" | 53 |
| ''When all ___ fails, read the directions'' | 59 |
| "Someone ___ Dream" (Faith Hill country hit) | 54 |
| "Jumping Someone ___ Train" (1979 single by The Cure) | 63 |
| ___ Janis, star of Broadway's "Puzzles of 1925" | 61 |
| Jack's beloved in "The Yeomen of the Guard" | 57 |
| Girl's name that sounds like two letters of the alphabet | 60 |
| Dairy spokes-cow who has an honorary Doctorate of Bovinity | 58 |
| Actress Fisher who voices Agnes in "Despicable Me" | 60 |
| "___ Venner" (Oliver Wendell Holmes novel) | 52 |
| "Gentlemen, you are welcome to ___": Hamlet | 53 |
| John who sang "Levon" and "Daniel" | 54 |
| ''Candle in the Wind'' performer John | 53 |
| Said "later!" to "Yellow Brick Road" | 56 |
| Mr. ___, Emma's unwelcome suitor in "Emma" | 56 |
| LeAnn's singing partner on "Written in the Stars" | 63 |
| John who sang "Daniel" and "Levon" | 54 |
| Friend of Dionne in pop music's Dionne & Friends | 56 |
| First name of ''Lestat'''s composer | 55 |
| "That's What Friends Are For" first name | 54 |
| "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting" singer John | 65 |
| ''That's What Friends Are For'' voice | 57 |
| He did the #4 hit of 1974 "The Bitch Is Back" | 55 |
| Tequila brand that's Spanish for 'the bull' | 55 |
| Six Flags Great Adventure roller coaster with a Spanish name | 60 |
| Six Flags coaster whose name is Spanish for "The Bull" | 64 |
| Fearsome wooden roller coaster at Six Flags Great Adventure | 59 |
| California air station where Nixon landed after resigning in 1974 | 65 |
| "Fooled Around and Fell in Love" songwriter | 53 |
| "Fooled Around and Fell in Love" singer, 1976 | 55 |
| Cassandra Peterson's "Mistress of the Dark" | 57 |
| Quarterback John once thought to be Eric Cartman's father | 61 |
| His Super Bowl MVP performance was his last NFL game | 52 |
| Broncos quarterback who led "The Drive," 1986 | 55 |
| Robin Hood portrayer in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights" | 61 |
| Jack __, lead singer for the Kingsmen in "Louie Louie" | 64 |
| "The Bridge World" magazine founder Culbertson | 56 |
| Mom on the air after Clair on NBC Thursdays in the 1980s | 56 |
| ___ Knox, co-star of Lon Chaney in "The Mummy's Tomb" | 67 |
| Type of communication that's always "monitored"? | 62 |
| Letter to the editor that might be received immediately | 55 |
| What Bruckner's Symphony No. 7 is written in: Abbr. | 55 |
| Key of the last movement of Mendelssohn's Op. 64 violin concerto | 68 |
| Key of Haydn's "Symphony No. 12": Abbr. | 53 |
| Key of Billy Joel's "Uptown Girl": Abbr. | 54 |
| Key of Billy Joel's "Uptown Girl," e.g. | 53 |
| "Kill ___" (Metallica's triple-platinum debut album) | 66 |
| Name from a Hebrew word for "God is with us" | 54 |
| "Westbound Number Nine" band The Flaming ___ | 54 |
| Billy Crystal or Whoopi Goldberg for the Oscars, often | 54 |
| "The Dead ___ Scrolls: The Lost Teachings of Hip-Hop" | 63 |
| "Let's meet today's contestants" sayer | 56 |
| First act of the ballet "Jewels," by George | 53 |
| One of his catchphrases is "kick it up a notch" | 57 |
| He's known for shouting ''Bam!'' | 52 |
| Chef with the cookbook "Louisiana Real and Rustic" | 60 |
| Chef with a "Louisiana Real and Rustic" cookbook | 58 |
| Transcendentalist author of "Self-Reliance" | 53 |
| ''Shot heard round the world'' originator | 57 |
| British band with the 1991 #1 hit "Unbelievable" | 58 |
| Techno-funk band with the 1991 hit "Unbelievable" | 59 |
| Techno-funk band with the 1991 #1 hit "Unbelievable" | 62 |
| Techno-funk band with the #1 hit "Unbelievable" | 57 |
| Band with the 1991 hit album "Schubert Dip" | 53 |
| One of the Big Four record labels, until it became the Big Three | 64 |
| Co. that released Elvis's "All Shook Up" in the UK | 64 |
| 1977 Sex Pistols song ... or their first record label | 53 |
| "___ and the Detectives" (1964 Disney film) | 53 |
| Thespian Jannings (first Oscar winner for Best Actor) | 53 |
| Posthumous Pierre de Coubertin medal winner Zátopek | 54 |
| Children's book "___ and the Detectives" | 54 |
| Actor Sitka who appeared in numerous Three Stooges films | 56 |
| Actor Jannings, winner of the first Best Actor Oscar | 52 |
| 1948 and 1952 Olympic track gold medalist ___ Zátopek | 56 |
| "___ and the Detectives" (Old children's book) | 60 |
| "___ and the Detectives" (kiddie lit classic) | 55 |
| ___ Zátopek, four-time Olympic track gold medalist | 53 |
| ___ Sinclair (protagonist of Hesse's "Demian") | 60 |
| __ Ludwig, biographer of Stalin, Napoleon, Goethe, and others | 61 |
| Rousseau work that led to his banishment from France | 52 |
| Rémy's older brother in "Ratatouille" | 54 |
| Musical character who sings "Some Enchanted Evening" | 62 |
| Musical character singing "Some Enchanted Evening" | 60 |
| "Rules of the Sociological Method" sociologist Durkheim | 65 |
| Tennis player Sanchez who was the #1 doubles player in 1989 | 59 |
| Simon & Garfunkel "For ___, Whenever I May Find Her" | 66 |
| ___ Thorne (heroine of TV's "Revenge") | 52 |
| __ Litella: Gilda Radner's "Never mind!" character | 64 |
| Key of A. Dvorák's "New World Symphony" | 56 |
| 2002 Oscar winner for the song "Lose Yourself" | 56 |
| Winner of the 2002 Academy Award for Best Original Song | 55 |
| Tori Amos covered his "'97 Bonnie and Clyde" | 58 |
| Record of the Year Grammy nominee for "Lose Yourself" | 63 |
| Rapper with the autobiography "The Way I Am" | 54 |
| First rapper to win the Best Original Song Academy Award | 56 |
| Artist with the 2002 #1 hit "Lose Yourself" | 53 |
| "The ___ Show" (best-selling album of 2002) | 53 |
| Key of Dvorák's "New World Symphony" | 53 |
| "Little" girl in "David Copperfield" | 56 |