| She signed off with the words "until we meet again" | 61 |
| Sarah who recently signed a multi-year contract with Fox News | 61 |
| Samuel Richardson novel subtitled "Virtue Rewarded" | 61 |
| Stanger a.k.a. Bravo's "Millionaire Matchmaker" | 61 |
| She's behind Biden in the presidential line of succession | 61 |
| She wrote "Dying / Is an art, like everything else" | 61 |
| Saying "Please" and "How do you do?," say | 61 |
| Sweets named for a French soldier whose cook was the inventor | 61 |
| Seinfeld called him "the Picasso of our profession" | 61 |
| Studio behind "Suspicion" and "Notorious" | 61 |
| Sunday dinner that's "mixed up" in four answers | 61 |
| Son in the "National Lampoon's Vacation" series | 61 |
| Store whose shoe department has its own ZIP code (10022-SHOE) | 61 |
| Service station in a "Curb Your Enthusiasm" episode | 61 |
| Southern Christian Leadership Conference president after King | 61 |
| Senegalese-American rapper nominated for four Grammys in 2008 | 61 |
| Subject of the 2008 book "How to Break a Terrorist" | 61 |
| Streisand born in Williamsburg, Brooklyn (before it was cool) | 61 |
| Sitcom in which the lead male actor magically changed in 1969 | 61 |
| Steve Irwin wildlife documentary series, with "The" | 61 |
| Single for Julie London in 1955 and Justin Timberlake in 2002 | 61 |
| Start of instructions for what to do when this puzzle is done | 61 |
| She wrote "The Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands" | 61 |
| Soft drink with the classic slogan "Good for life!" | 61 |
| Sixth-century year when the Kingdom of East Anglia was formed | 61 |
| Step Three: Your Step Two result is the letter count for ...! | 61 |
| She played Leslie Howard's wife in "Intermezzo" | 61 |
| Sniggler's version of the end of a Napoleonic palindrome? | 61 |
| Simon & Garfunkel refrain ... and this puzzle's theme | 61 |
| Short-lived pests ... or an alternative title for this puzzle | 61 |
| Samuel L. Jackson's character in "Pulp Fiction" | 61 |
| Sci-fi character whose name is an anagram of CAROLINA ISLANDS | 61 |
| Song with the lyric "When you kiss me heaven sighs" | 61 |
| Sportscaster who lent his name to a popular video game series | 61 |
| Subject of Edmond Rostand's play "L'Aiglon" | 61 |
| Sentence fragments often beginning with "wh-" words | 61 |
| She worked for Grant on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" | 61 |
| Show that debuted with Gilda Radner and John Belushi, briefly | 61 |
| Sacrifice bunt with a runner on third and fewer than two outs | 61 |
| Song about going a little too far to get a crime-scene photo? | 61 |
| Say ''Maine'' or ''Montana''? | 61 |
| Second baseman in both of the Dodgers' 1980s World Series | 61 |
| Soul's Lattisaw who sang "Let Me Be Your Angel" | 61 |
| Sweet group that did the score for "Risky Business" | 61 |
| Some of the knights in Wagner's "Tannhäuser" | 61 |
| Something to "Blame It On," in a Milli Vanilli song | 61 |
| Shoe aimed at an alley feline? (or cyclotron missing a piece) | 61 |
| Snack item named after the inventor's 6-year-old daughter | 61 |
| Singer who once sang a song to Kramer on "Seinfeld" | 61 |
| Stanley who appears in the "Hunger Games" franchise | 61 |
| State in which the first transcontinental railroad was joined | 61 |
| Sch. whose football team plays its home games at the Sun Bowl | 61 |
| She asked The (N.Y.) Sun: "Is there a Santa Claus?" | 61 |
| Song that references Sputnik and "Wheel of Fortune" | 61 |
| Soft-Coated ___ Terrier (breed named for its grainlike color) | 61 |
| Sixth Greek letter, though it seems like it might be the last | 61 |
| Singer with the hit albums "19" and "21" | 60 |
| Source of the line "Each of us bears his own Hell" | 60 |
| Stephen Colbert's "I Am ___ (And So Can You!)" | 60 |
| Singer DiFranco with the album "Up Up Up Up Up Up" | 60 |
| Source of the maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad" | 60 |
| Source of the words "zenith" and "nadir" | 60 |
| Setting for van Gogh's "Cafe Terrace at Night" | 60 |
| Senator Vinick's first name on "The West Wing" | 60 |
| Subject of a historic 1919 sports deal, with "The" | 60 |
| Setting of Steinbeck's "The Pearl," familiarly | 60 |
| Singer who kissed Madonna at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards | 60 |
| Singer Marc with the 1991 hit "Walking in Memphis" | 60 |
| Setting of Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" | 60 |
| Steve McQueen's nickname in "The Great Escape" | 60 |
| Spoken word that's a sound trademark of 20th Century Fox | 60 |
| Structure of this puzzle's theme, hidden in five answers | 60 |
| Source for Wagner's "The Ring of the Nibelung" | 60 |
| Six Flags Great Adventure roller coaster with a Spanish name | 60 |
| Sonny Shroyer's role on "The Dukes of Hazzard" | 60 |
| Shaffer play currently on Broadway starring Daniel Radcliffe | 60 |
| Subj. of psychological experiments with inconclusive results | 60 |
| Swiss math great who solved the Königsberg bridge problem | 60 |
| Steve Holt's mother, on "Arrested Development" | 60 |
| Subj. of the 2008 biography "Traitor to His Class" | 60 |
| Setting for Verdi's ''Simon Boccanegra'' | 60 |
| Sport that's been called "a good walk spoiled" | 60 |
| Stephen Jay ___, author of "The Panda's Thumb" | 60 |
| Sci-fi character who says "Never tell me the odds" | 60 |
| Song syllables before "It's off to work we go" | 60 |
| Supermarket chain with the slogan "Hometown Proud" | 60 |
| Something you always have with you that can be hard to find? | 60 |
| Strategy used against Barry Bonds a record 120 times in 2004 | 60 |
| Subject of Gary Sick's ''All Fall Down'' | 60 |
| Singer/actress with an Oscar, two Grammys and a Golden Globe | 60 |
| Ship that brought the Statue of Liberty to the United States | 60 |
| Silver medalist behind Yamaguchi at the Albertville Olympics | 60 |
| Shakespearean shrew who "had a tongue with a tang" | 60 |
| Something under the counter that puts people under the table | 60 |
| Singer with the #1 country album "80's Ladies" | 60 |
| Song on Ashlee Simpson's "Autobiography" album | 60 |
| Schifrin who wrote the "Mission: Impossible" theme | 60 |
| So-called "Gateway to the Pacific Rim," informally | 60 |
| Schreiber who won a Tony for "Glengarry Glen Ross" | 60 |
| Selma Bouvier's adopted baby on "The Simpsons" | 60 |