Star of "The Invisible Man" | 37 |
Something politicians are loath to do | 37 |
Source of sodium for college students | 37 |
Something you don't see every day | 37 |
Sweeney Todd's "friend" | 37 |
Stephen of "V for Vendetta" | 37 |
She might be called "Becky" | 37 |
Scout's info-gathering assignment | 37 |
Singer of "I Am Woman" fame | 37 |
Sofer of "General Hospital" | 37 |
She plays Carla on "Cheers" | 37 |
Strasbourg's river, in Strasbourg | 37 |
Salt's place on a margarita glass | 37 |
South American cruise stop, for short | 37 |
Start a massive urban renewal project | 37 |
She played Gilda in "Gilda" | 37 |
Second Oscar/Tony/Emmy/Grammy actress | 37 |
Single-stranded cell substance, often | 37 |
Some call-button respondents, briefly | 37 |
Start of many Hope/Crosby film titles | 37 |
Sound heard after scoring a touchdown | 37 |
Speaker at Kennedy's inauguration | 37 |
Sitcom that starred Charles S. Dutton | 37 |
Soldier guarding a demilitarized zone | 37 |
Sci-fi race with a gray-colored heart | 37 |
Santa's "landing strip" | 37 |
Switch-hitter known as Charlie Hustle | 37 |
Sally Rogers portrayer of '60s TV | 37 |
Something for "a blue lady" | 37 |
Smithereens "Blood and ___" | 37 |
Schoolboy ___, former Detroit pitcher | 37 |
Sch. in New York's Liberty League | 37 |
Something heard through the grapevine | 37 |
Sentence that should be two sentences | 37 |
Sci-fi drama set at an island factory | 37 |
Seacrest of "American Idol" | 37 |
Swedish company famous for its design | 37 |
Subject of a May 2005 underwear photo | 37 |
She sang 'The Sweetest Taboo' | 37 |
She wrote "A Certain Smile" | 37 |
Sportscaster Craig with nutty jackets | 37 |
Small, arboreal, bushy-tailed monkeys | 37 |
Steinbeck's California birthplace | 37 |
Seger's "Still The ___" | 37 |
Something Pedro and Pablo might have? | 37 |
Sister in a Clint Eastwood film title | 37 |
Scores on them range from 600 to 2400 | 37 |
Shrimp preparation with garlic butter | 37 |
Scraped together, with "up" | 37 |
Skylight insulation material, perhaps | 37 |
Schwarzenegger's energy solution? | 37 |
Start of a quotation by Harvey Penick | 37 |
Sufferer of a crushing defeat in 1936 | 37 |
Start of a quote from Emily Dickinson | 37 |
Seven-time Grammy-winning jazz singer | 37 |
Start of Dumas's trio's motto | 37 |
Salt used as a photographic developer | 37 |
Soldiers' org. formed during WWII | 37 |
Seward's Alaska deal, 2 cents ___ | 37 |
Spiritual interpretation of Scripture | 37 |
Spoof about the soul of a fraternity? | 37 |
Synonymous with, with "for" | 37 |
Storage medium for Middle Easterners? | 37 |
Switchfoot "We ___ Tonight" | 37 |
Subdivision at the mannequin factory? | 37 |
Singer of "Hit Parade" fame | 37 |
Squire carrying the armor of a knight | 37 |
Strong liquor made from fermented sap | 37 |
Sandy Koufax taking painting classes? | 37 |
Start of a quotation by Pablo Picasso | 37 |
Schoolroom for painting and sculpting | 37 |
Stringed instrument of ancient Israel | 37 |
Sit in on classes, but not for credit | 37 |
Song heard on "I Love Lucy" | 37 |
Sci-fi series set in the 23rd century | 37 |
Sink outlet in a Persian Gulf nation? | 37 |
Seasoning from an Indiana university? | 37 |
Sir Samuel Cunard and Sir Henry Royce | 37 |
Sluggers' cholesterol medication? | 37 |
Segues in a '50s-'60s sitcom? | 37 |
Stretch of highway surrounding a city | 37 |
Spanish city with a Guggenheim Museum | 37 |
Sarandon and Anton after a fistfight? | 37 |
Scandalous 1919 Chicago baseball team | 37 |
SOUTH AFRICANS ARE UNEXCITED BY SWINE | 37 |
Songbird with a long winter migration | 37 |
Site of a 1911 visit by King George V | 37 |
Seiji Ozawa led it for nearly 30 yrs. | 37 |
Soft, yellowish suede leather | 37 |
Social organization for a browbeater? | 37 |
Steve of "Boardwalk Empire" | 37 |
Suffix meaning "procession" | 37 |
Sweet guy Sammy Davis Jr. sang about? | 37 |
Salinger novel (with "The") | 37 |
Savings instrument, to ancient Romans | 37 |
Style Council "My Ever ___" | 37 |
System of measuring cereal by weight? | 37 |
Small fruit that's sort of funny? | 37 |
Someone likely to use their third eye | 37 |
She wrote "The Women": 1937 | 37 |