U.K. indie band named for a Soviet space dog | 44 |
U.K. indie band ___ & the Whale | 35 |
U.K. indie-electro band Reverend and the ___ | 44 |
U.K. network, with "the" | 34 |
U.K. news source, with "the" | 38 |
U.K. tabloid, with "The" | 34 |
U.K. Triple Crown racecourse site | 33 |
U.K. university where Daniel Libeskind trained | 46 |
U.N. agcy. awarded the 1969 Nobel Peace Prize | 45 |
U.N. agcy. concerned with working conditions | 44 |
U.N. agcy. promoting social justice | 35 |
U.N. agcy. that won a Nobel Peace Prize | 39 |
U.N. agcy. that won the 1969 Nobel Peace Prize | 46 |
U.N. agency concerned with working conditions | 45 |
U.N. agency for workers' issues | 35 |
U.N. agency for workplace improvements | 38 |
U.N. Ambassador of Friendship since 1998 | 40 |
U.N. arm headquartered in Switzerland | 37 |
U.N. beachhead during the Korean War | 36 |
U.N. body dealing with worker's rights | 42 |
U.N. body dealing with workers' rights | 42 |
U.N. co-founder Charles or baseballer Eddie | 43 |
U.N. member as of Sept. 20, 1960 | 32 |
U.N. Messenger of Peace appointee in 1998 | 41 |
U.N. observer starting in '74 | 33 |
U.N. secretary general from Ghana | 33 |
U.N. Secretary General Perez de ___ | 35 |
U.N. Secretary General succeeded by Annan | 41 |
U.N. Secretary General: 1953–61 | 38 |
U.N. Secretary General: 1962–71 | 38 |
U.N. Secretary General: 1972–81 | 38 |
U.N. Secretary-General Hammarskjold | 35 |
U.N. successor of Dag Hammarskjöld | 37 |
U.N. system monitoring global environment | 41 |
U.N.'s main deliberative body | 33 |
U.N.'s main deliberative organ | 34 |
U.N.C. Charlotte's athletic conf. | 37 |
U.P.S. driver assignments: Abbr. | 32 |
U.S. ''Star Wars'' plan | 39 |
U.S. "Big Brother" host | 33 |
U.S. agency with a "CryptoKids" program | 49 |
U.S. ally in the American Revolution | 36 |
U.S. and French Open winner Nastase | 35 |
U.S. anthropologist: 1901–78 | 35 |
U.S. area where industry once thrived | 37 |
U.S. Army Chief of Staff: 1972–74 | 40 |
U.S. Army training center in Va. | 32 |
U.S. Army's helicopter assault division | 43 |
U.S. artist and telegraphy pioneer | 34 |
U.S. artist Reginald: 1898–1954 | 38 |
U.S. Attorney General from 1961-1964 | 36 |
U.S. author born on Apr. 26, 1914 | 33 |
U.S. bank established in 1934, informally | 41 |
U.S. banker-philanthropist: 1867-1933 | 37 |
U.S. banking system, with “the” | 39 |
U.S. broadcaster in 40+ languages | 33 |
U.S. broadcaster overseas: Abbr. | 32 |
U.S. capital nearest the Arctic Circle | 38 |
U.S. capital whose last two letters are its state | 49 |
U.S. cartoonist: 1840–1902 | 33 |
U.S. central bank system, with "the" | 46 |
U.S. chemist who discovered deuterium | 37 |
U.S. citizen living near the Panama Canal, once | 47 |
U.S. city in sight of two volcanoes | 35 |
U.S. city known to some locals as Siqnazuaq | 43 |
U.S. city named for a Tennyson character | 40 |
U.S. city that's a girl's name | 38 |
U.S. city with tons of expensive bars | 37 |
U.S. clergyman-author: 1663-1728 | 32 |
U.S. commodore in Japan, 1853-54 | 32 |
U.S. composer associated with Copland | 37 |
U.S. composer of "Concord" | 36 |
U.S. composer who's on his toes? | 36 |
U.S. Constitution's first article | 37 |
U.S. dept. concerned with meat inspection | 41 |
U.S. dept. concerned with radioactive waste | 43 |
U.S. dept. with a lightning bolt on its seal | 44 |
U.S. dept. with a Race to the Top reform prog. | 46 |
U.S. dept. with a sun on its seal | 33 |
U.S. dept. with a windmill on its seal | 38 |
U.S. electrical scientist: 1850–1936 | 43 |
U.S. equivalent of Britain's MI6 | 36 |
U.S. facility in Cuba, for short | 32 |
U.S. financier-philanthropist: 1795–1873 | 47 |
U.S. four-dollar coin issued in 1879 | 36 |
U.S. funder of biomedical research | 34 |
U.S. Gold Bullion Depository site | 33 |
U.S. government document producer | 33 |
U.S. Green Building Council rating system | 41 |
U.S. humorist-journalist: 1833-88 | 33 |
U.S. illustrator: 1877–1960 | 34 |
U.S. island called "The Gathering Isle" | 49 |
U.S. island occupied by Japan during W.W. II | 44 |
U.S. journalist, born in Denmark | 32 |
U.S. journalist: 1889–1974 | 33 |
U.S. labor leader: 1887–1946 | 35 |
U.S. landscape painter: 1825–94 | 38 |
U.S. leader acquitted of treason | 32 |
U.S. legislator with a six-yr. term | 35 |
U.S. lexicographer-educator: 1869-1946 | 38 |