It ends with "Twilight of the Gods," familiarly | 57 |
It ends with chalypsography, in the Oxford English Dictionary | 61 |
It ends with something found four times in this puzzle | 54 |
It establishes that there can be no religious test for public office | 68 |
It extends from the Bering Strait to the Strait of Magellan | 59 |
It falls between 3760 and 3761 on the Jewish calendar | 53 |
It features a statue of a Scottie next to his master | 52 |
It figures heavily in the Mediterranean Diet, for short | 55 |
It flows across the border of New Mexico and Arizona | 52 |
It follows ''inter'' or ''et'' | 62 |
It follows ''Purple'' in a song title | 53 |
It follows "four" but not "five" | 52 |
It follows Casca's "Speak, hands for me!" | 55 |
It forms part of the border of UCLA's Westwood campus | 57 |
It functioned as the main trade port of the French Empire | 57 |
It gives Congress the power to declare war / Cyclist's stunt | 64 |
It goes "oom" but not "pah, pah" | 52 |
It goes in one ear, gets flipped, then into the other | 53 |
It had "three deuces and a four-speed and a 389," in song | 67 |
It had "well-kept acres," in a classic novel | 54 |
It had the earliest parliament on the European continent | 56 |
It hangs above the door of someone who has completed a hajj | 59 |
It has "amble" and "ramble" inside | 54 |
It has "batch" and "patch" commands | 55 |
It has "county" and "city" inside | 53 |
It has a bit part in "Antony and Cleopatra" | 53 |
It has a separate men's store opposite its main store in Chicago | 68 |
It has about 60 percent of the earth's population | 53 |
It has both Hebrew and English letters on its planes | 52 |
It has headquarters at N.Y.C.'s Time Warner Center | 54 |
It has more museums per capita than any other country: Abbr. | 60 |
It has roughly 15% of the world's population: Abbr. | 55 |
It helps keep a Persian's home from smelling bad | 52 |
It includes "Love Gun" and "Destroyer" | 58 |
It includes "The True North strong and free!" | 55 |
It includes provision for the admission of new states | 53 |
It includes the line "The True North strong and free!" | 64 |
It is "resistless in battle," wrote Sophocles | 55 |
It is disqualified from dog shows if it has blue eyes | 53 |
It is said they will inherit the Earth, with "the" | 60 |
It knocked "Bridge Over Troubled Water" out of the #1 spot | 68 |
It last was celebrated in Vietnam on February 14, 2010 | 54 |
It looks like a large comma followed by a small colon | 53 |
It lost out to "A Little Night Music" for Best Musical | 64 |
It lost out to "Biloxi Blues" for Best Play | 53 |
It lost out to "Braveheart" for Best Picture | 54 |
It lost out to "From Here to Eternity" for Best Picture | 65 |
It lost out to "Million Dollar Baby" for Best Picture | 63 |
It lost out to "Ordinary People" for Best Picture | 59 |
It lost out to "The English Patient" for Best Picture | 63 |
It lost out to "The Phantom of the Opera" for Best Musical | 68 |
It lost to "Born Free" for Best Song of 1966 | 54 |
It lost to "Moon River" for a Best Song Oscar | 55 |
It lost to VHS in part because the porn industry didn't adopt it | 68 |
It made John Denver happy when it was on his shoulders | 54 |
It made many touchdowns in the late '60s and early '70s | 63 |
It makes "cent" sound like "scent" | 54 |
It marked the beginning of the "Lost Generation" | 58 |
It may be admissible when the original is unavailable | 53 |
It may be described as ''6 rms riv vu'' | 55 |
It may be forecast for the start of the second quarter? | 55 |
It may be involved in tallying the four theme answers | 53 |
It may be marked with a line terminating in a five-pointed star | 63 |
It may be represented by "XXX" in the funnies | 55 |
It may be said after kissing the tips of one's fingers | 58 |
It may be used to find out if you have good contacts | 52 |
It may carry the words ''Rey de Espana'' | 56 |
It may have Braille markings, even on a drive-thru version | 58 |
It may precede ''boy!'' or ''girl!'' | 68 |
It may precede "Don't let anyone hear!" | 53 |
It may precede "I didn't see you there" | 53 |
It may precede "You're in trouble now!" | 53 |
It may range from beach castles to Buddhist mandalas | 52 |
It means "place without water" in Mongolian | 53 |
It meets adjacent to Paris's Jardin du Luxembourg | 53 |
It might be called a "two-up two-down" by a Brit | 58 |
It might be charged by one enforcing the payment of a debt | 58 |
It might be found, appropriately, in a newspaper morgue | 55 |
It might be given to a waiter or a police investigator | 54 |
It might be said when your folks go on about their sex lives | 60 |
It might come from the lips of someone who's all thumbs | 59 |
It might include a 10, jack, queen and king of hearts | 53 |
It might include all nine of Beethoven's symphonies | 55 |
It might mean "hello" or "goodbye" to a driver | 66 |
It might put you head and shoulders above everyone else | 55 |
It might read "Home: Who cares; Away: Whatever" | 57 |
It might read "Lose 20 pounds in 3 weeks!!!" | 54 |
It might say ''Maryland'' in Atlantic City | 58 |
It might say "New Jersey" in Atlantic City | 52 |
It might say "Who the Hell is Brendan Emmett Quigley?" | 64 |
It occupies 25 pages in the Oxford English Dictionary | 53 |
It occurs a little over six weeks after Groundhog Day | 53 |
It offers radio programming in eight aboriginal languages | 57 |
It once billed itself "The most trusted name in television" | 69 |
It once had a "30 minutes or it's free" policy | 60 |
It opened its first store in Winston-Salem, N.C., in 1937 | 57 |
It opens with thunder and lightning, in "Macbeth" | 59 |
It originated at Zurich's Cabaret Voltaire in the 1910s | 59 |
It originated from the General Call made with a boatswain's pipe | 68 |
It precedes ''carte'' or ''mode'' | 65 |