Starting Miami quarterback in three straight '70s Super Bowls | 65 |
Start of a quote by Rep. Mo Udall, 1990, regarding the Presidency | 65 |
Stated overreaction to disliking "The Gift of the Magi" | 65 |
Secret society in Dan Brown's "Angels & Demons" | 65 |
Speculator's reply to "Where's all your money?" | 65 |
Subject of the 1989 musical monologue "Bon Appétit!" | 65 |
Subtitle for "Star Wars Episode IV," with "A" | 65 |
Sajak, after a radioactive run-in gives him superhuman abilities? | 65 |
Study in ethics that states happiness must be acquired indirectly | 65 |
Swiss watch that's the official timekeeper of the French Open | 65 |
She won three Grammys for her 1989 album "Nick of Time" | 65 |
Social networking site for those who enjoy softly tossing stones? | 65 |
Start of second phrase meaning "approximately unequal"? | 65 |
Science that focuses on the sadness and romance of living things? | 65 |
Silverstein who wrote and illustrated "The Giving Tree" | 65 |
Sketch show that hasn't had a black female regular since 2007 | 65 |
Second book of Pearl S. Buck's "Good Earth" trilogy | 65 |
Starter for ''fast'' or ''sayer'' | 65 |
Song with the lyric "It breaks my heart to see us part" | 65 |
Starter for ''star'' or ''power'' | 65 |
Street weapon ... or a hint to the circled letters in this puzzle | 65 |
Skill not displayed by asking "Have you put on weight?" | 65 |
Sophomoric grade found in this puzzle's three longest entries | 65 |
Spellbinding "Batman" villainess played by Joan Collins | 65 |
Subjects in the Hemingway book "Death in the Afternoon" | 65 |
Star of "Captains Courageous" and "Boys Town" | 65 |
Snack brand represented by Sterling Cooper on "Mad Men" | 65 |
Ship created by Rudyard Kipling for “Captains Courageous” | 65 |
Start of a befuddled question from Chester to Mr. Dillon, perhaps | 65 |
Show where Tony Danza played a housekeeper named (surprise!) Tony | 65 |
Source of "It is more blessed to give than to receive" | 64 |
Song with the lyric "I know this world is killing you" | 64 |
Suffix with ''prop'' or ''meth'' | 64 |
Singer Guthrie who starred in "Alice's Restaurant" | 64 |
Singer during the 2012 centennial celebrations for Woody Guthrie | 64 |
Science fiction writer who formulated the Three Laws of Robotics | 64 |
Start with ''boy!'' or ''girl!'' | 64 |
Scott who played the lead in 1976's "Bugsy Malone" | 64 |
Source of the words "mamba" and "chimpanzee" | 64 |
Street magician "Frozen in Time" in late November 2000 | 64 |
Subs ... or a feature of the answers to the 17 asterisked clues? | 64 |
Sanders who's played in both the World Series and Super Bowl | 64 |
Shout that might follow "Look what the cat dragged in" | 64 |
Six Flags coaster whose name is Spanish for "The Bull" | 64 |
Soundtrack to a misunderstood mall rat's miserable existence | 64 |
Singer with the 2008 gold record "And Winter Came ..." | 64 |
Spinoza treatise modeled after Euclid's "Elements" | 64 |
Suffix with ''Rock'' or ''disk'' | 64 |
She won the 1976, 1977, and 1978 U.S. Opens without losing a set | 64 |
Sci-fi creature who sings the song nicknamed "Yub Nub" | 64 |
Substitute acquired by about half a million people a year: Abbr. | 64 |
Symbol of absence to whom "Waiting for Guffman" refers | 64 |
Seat of the World Court in the Netherlands, with "The" | 64 |
Show subtitled "The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical" | 64 |
Susy ___ (Audrey Hepburn's "Wait Until Dark" role) | 64 |
Stones "I'm so ___ for her, and she's so cold" | 64 |
Singer Thomas known as the "Soul Queen of New Orleans" | 64 |
Shakespearean character who "had a tongue with a tang" | 64 |
Sacha Baron Cohen voiced one in the "Madagascar" films | 64 |
She played Kate's niece in "Suddenly, Last Summer" | 64 |
She quipped "I've been in more laps than a napkin" | 64 |
Setting of the sci-fi story "Out of the Silent Planet" | 64 |
Sandwich promoted with the phrase "Saucy love is back" | 64 |
Saudi Arabian city that's the setting of Muhammad's tomb | 64 |
Studio subject of the miniseries "When the Lion Roars" | 64 |
Secretary in both Clinton's and George W. Bush's cabinet | 64 |
Site of Mt. Mitchell, highest U.S. point east of the Mississippi | 64 |
She covered "The End" by her former lover Jim Morrison | 64 |
Station on which Will Shortz appears as "Puzzlemaster" | 64 |
Song that ends "Protégera nos foyers et nos droits" | 64 |
Singer called "the Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" | 64 |
Swiss watch brand sported since '95 by film's James Bond | 64 |
Suffix with ''ball'' or ''buff'' | 64 |
Spartan cheerleader portrayer on "Saturday Night Live" | 64 |
Score the winning point in a cribbage game, with "out" | 64 |
Stevie Wonder "Journey Through the Secret Life of ___" | 64 |
School gp. that sometimes has an "S" added to its name | 64 |
Song with the lyric "she really shows you all she can" | 64 |
Subject of the 2008 biography "The Man Who Made Lists" | 64 |
Sch. that awarded the first civil engineering degree in the U.S. | 64 |
Subj. of the “traveling salesman” problem in mathematics | 64 |
Stand-up comic famous for carrying a rolled-up newspaper onstage | 64 |
Senegalese rapper on Young Jeezy's "Soul Survivor" | 64 |
Something that's tough to eat, but filled with antioxidants? | 64 |
Song with the line "Oh, baby, that's what I like!" | 64 |
Senator Tom who wants to stage another constitutional convention | 64 |
Singer of the Gallic version of "Who's Sorry Now"? | 64 |
Sinatra song with many lines starting with "this time" | 64 |
Sandburg's "___ Are Different to Different People" | 64 |
Song introduced by Ginger Rogers in "Girl Crazy": 1930 | 64 |
Sitcom with the theme song "I'll Be There for You" | 64 |
Star of a biopic about the designer of Guggenheim Museum Bilbao? | 64 |
Shoe additions, and what this puzzle's theme answers contain | 64 |
Start of first phrase meaning "approximately unequal"? | 64 |
Song that knocked "Good Vibrations" out of the #1 spot | 64 |
Stalling phrase from a player who might be attacking from Japan? | 64 |
Spanish saint who wrote the encyclopedic "Etymologiae" | 64 |
Star of 1950s TV's "The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin" | 64 |
Sugarland album with the #1 country hit "Already Gone" | 64 |
Square, in 1950s slang, indicated visually by a two-hand gesture | 64 |