| "If __ a Million Dollars" (Barenaked Ladies hit) | 58 |
| "Monday __ Friday on my mind": 1967 song lyric | 56 |
| "___ a dream . . . ": Martin Luther King Jr. | 54 |
| ''___ a dream'' (Martin Luther King) | 52 |
| "__ the train a-comin'": Johnny Cash lyric | 56 |
| Title words before "Music" and "You Knocking" | 65 |
| "___ the train a-comin' " (Johnny Cash song opener) | 65 |
| "___ a Symphony" (1965 hit for the Supremes) | 54 |
| "Come hungry. Leave happy." restaurant chain | 54 |
| Where you're urged to "start stacking up rewards" | 63 |
| Restaurant that offers a Rooty Tooty Fresh 'N Fruity breakfast | 66 |
| Restaurant chain with syrup dispensers on every table | 53 |
| Restaurant chain that started in Toluca Lake, Calif. | 52 |
| Chain that serves over 1.5 million gallons of syrup per year | 60 |
| Breakfast chain with a Rooty Tooty Fresh 'N Fruity | 54 |
| Breakfast chain that doesn't serve real maple syrup | 55 |
| Bac 'n' Cheddar Waffullicious Waffle restaurant | 55 |
| "Rooty Tooty Fresh & Fruity Breakfast" company | 60 |
| "Come hungry. Leave happy." breakfast chain | 53 |
| "Come Hungry, Leave Happy" breakfast chain | 52 |
| Lee Ann Womack title track "___ You Dance" | 52 |
| Ultracreepy "Superman" installment with Richard Pryor | 63 |
| Follower of "Rocky" or "Superman" | 53 |
| First Super Bowl to be officially called "Super Bowl" | 63 |
| First Super Bowl that was actually called a Super Bowl | 54 |
| ''Halloween ___: Season of the Witch'' | 54 |
| Sue Grafton's ''___ for Innocent'' | 54 |
| "___ for Innocent" (Kinsey Millhone mystery) | 54 |
| Nickname of a Chicago expressway, with “The” | 52 |
| Laurence, in "What's Love Got to Do With It" | 58 |
| Horse voiced by Robert Redford in "Charlotte's Web" | 65 |
| Dollar coin figure before Susan B. Anthony, familiarly | 54 |
| "They Like ___" (song from "Call Me Madam") | 63 |
| ___ Skelton, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee | 59 |
| Company whose products often come with Allen wrenches | 53 |
| Furniture company named partly for its founder Ingvar Kamprad | 61 |
| Company name that begins with its founder's initials | 56 |
| Swedish chain that sells meatballs, among other things | 54 |
| Store whose biggest seller is a bookcase called Billy | 53 |
| Source of furniture you'll throw out in three years | 55 |
| Retailer with a "Democratic Design" philosophy | 56 |
| Retailer that shares logo colors with the Swedish flag | 54 |
| Retailer that recently admitted to using forced labor | 53 |
| Retail giant whose logo has blue letters in a yellow oval | 57 |
| Its product names have a lot of umlauts and slashed o's | 59 |
| Its logo includes its name in blue letters in a yellow oval | 59 |
| Its first store opened in Älmhult, Sweden, in 1958 | 54 |
| Its first store opened in 1958 in Älmhult, Sweden | 53 |
| Furniture company with an Online Assistant named Anna | 53 |
| Company said to use about 1% of the world's wood supply | 59 |
| "___ it!" ("Didn't fool me!") | 53 |
| "___ me down to rest me" (old prayer start) | 53 |
| Suffix with "infant" or "percent" | 53 |
| Suffix with ''miss'' or ''mob'' | 63 |
| ___ de la Cité (where Notre Dame de Paris stands) | 52 |
| Relating to the last division of the small intestine | 52 |
| "Where Is the Life That Late __?": Cole Porter song | 61 |
| "___ My Sugar Standing in the Rain" (1920s hit) | 57 |
| "___ My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen" (1942 hit) | 61 |
| Beckerman who wrote "Love, Loss and What I Wore" | 58 |
| ___ Chaiken, creator and writer of "The L Word" | 57 |
| ___ Chaiken, co-creator/writer of "The L Word" | 56 |
| Robert who plays Tony's son on "The Sopranos" | 59 |
| Robert who played the son on "The Sopranos" | 53 |
| Robert who played Jamie-Lynn Sigler's TV brother | 52 |
| Gandolfini and Falco's son, on "The Sopranos" | 59 |
| Actor Robert in the final scene of "The Sopranos" | 59 |
| "How Could ___ You Down" (Jessica Simpson song) | 57 |
| Labor gp. whose song asked us to look for their label | 53 |
| Literary source for Broadway's "The Golden Apple" | 63 |
| It starts "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son..." | 68 |
| It begins "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son ..." | 69 |
| It begins "Sing, goddess, the wrath of ..." | 53 |
| International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee the same year as Guillermo | 69 |
| French Open champ the year before Björn's first win | 58 |
| First name of the #1 player when ATP rankings started in 1973 | 61 |
| "Lo, here ___, / Never to rise again": "Hamlet" | 67 |
| "In a cowslip's bell ___": "The Tempest" | 64 |
| Declaration that may be followed by "So sue me" | 57 |
| "Said I Loved You ... But ___" Michael Bolton | 55 |
| She was Sylvia in Broadway's "The Women" | 54 |
| Word with "equipped" or "mannered" | 54 |
| Word with "mannered" or "equipped" | 54 |
| Word with "equipped" or "prepared" | 54 |
| "___ stop the world and melt with you" (song lyric) | 61 |
| "___ Know," song from "Guys and Dolls" | 58 |
| Dinner's guest's offer, regarding the dishes | 52 |
| "Winnie __ Pu": Latin version of a Milne work | 55 |
| Urbana-Champaign's "fighting" footballers | 55 |
| Birthplace of Hillary Rodham Clinton and Michelle Obama | 55 |
| Meat Loaf: "A remedy for all your ___ ..." | 52 |
| " . . . to hastening ___ a prey": Goldsmith | 53 |
| " . . . rather bear those ___ we have . . . " | 55 |
| " . . . bear those ___ we have . . . ": Hamlet | 56 |
| Movie effects co. for the "Star Wars" series | 54 |
| U.N. agcy. for workers that won the 1969 Nobel Peace Prize | 58 |
| Actress Massey of "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" | 61 |
| Massey of "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" | 53 |
| Lon's "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" co-star | 61 |
| "How can ___?" ("A victory is certain") | 59 |