| "Gentlemen, start your ___!" | 38 |
| "Oh, to be in _____": Browning | 40 |
| Member of our country club (1966) | 33 |
| Its highest point is Scafell Pike | 33 |
| Hundred Years' War participant | 34 |
| "____ Swings" (1965 Roger Miller hit) | 47 |
| It's mellow and has a pear-shaped bell | 42 |
| Norton Anthology focus, for short | 33 |
| Emma Watson's major at Brown | 32 |
| College major with lots of reading | 34 |
| Casey Jones' occupation, briefly | 36 |
| One with a degree from a technical inst., often | 47 |
| Typical Georgia Tech grad (abbr.) | 33 |
| One with a degree from a technical inst., perhaps | 49 |
| Mechanically inclined one (Abbr.) | 33 |
| Many a Lockheed Martin employee: Abbr. | 38 |
| Casey Jones' was one (Abbr.) | 32 |
| Bridge or tunnel designer: Abbr. | 32 |
| Personalize, at the jeweler's | 33 |
| Capture all of one's attention | 34 |
| Consumes all of one's attention | 35 |
| Surround, as with a circle of light | 35 |
| Surround with light, as in paintings of heaven | 46 |
| "Giant Brain" unveiled in 1946 | 40 |
| "Giant Brain" in 1946 headlines | 41 |
| World's first large-scale computer | 38 |
| Technological achievement of 1946 | 33 |
| Subject of the 1973 Honeywell v. Sperry Rand case | 49 |
| So-called "Giant Brain" of 1946 | 41 |
| Room-size computer unveiled in 1946 | 35 |
| Rival of the Small-Scale Experimental Machine | 45 |
| Penn's "Giant Brain" | 34 |
| High-tech marvel decommissioned in 1955 | 39 |
| Granddaddy of all modern computers | 34 |
| First all-purpose digital computer | 34 |
| Early computer that weighed 30 tons | 35 |
| Computer with 18,000 vacuum tubes | 33 |
| Computer that had 17,468 vacuum tubes | 37 |
| Computer that contained 17,468 vacuum tubes | 43 |
| Calculating 30-ton monster of the '40s | 42 |
| Ancestor of today's computers | 33 |
| Ancestor of the modern digital computer | 39 |
| 1946's "Giant Brain" | 34 |
| 1946 University of Pennsylvania invention | 41 |
| "Giant Brain" that debuted in 1946 | 44 |
| "Giant Brain" of the 1940s | 36 |
| "Giant Brain" of the '40s | 39 |
| '40s "Giant Brain" | 32 |
| "National Velvet" author Bagnold | 42 |
| "Idylls of the King" character | 40 |
| "Idylls of the King" lady | 35 |
| Wife of Geraint, in Arthurian lore | 34 |
| Tennyson's "Geraint and ___" | 42 |
| "National Velvet" writer Bagnold | 42 |
| The wife of Geraint in Arthurian lore | 37 |
| "Idylls of the King" woman | 36 |
| ''Idylls of the King'' character | 48 |
| Wife of Geraint in Arthurian lore | 33 |
| Site of Oklahoma's Vance Air Force Base | 43 |
| Seat of Oklahoma's Garfield County | 38 |
| British children's author Blyton | 36 |
| Oklahoma's "Wheat Capital" | 40 |
| Seat of Garfield County, Oklahoma | 33 |
| Robert John Godfrey band, with "The" | 46 |
| Patient wife of Arthurian legend | 32 |
| Oklahoma city named for a Tennyson character | 44 |
| Markey who played Tarzan's Jane | 35 |
| "The Chalk Garden" playwright Bagnold | 47 |
| "National Velvet" novelist Bagnold | 44 |
| ''Idylls of the King'' lady | 43 |
| Thora Birch's "Ghost World" role | 46 |
| Oklahoma city on the Chisholm Trail | 35 |
| Oklahoma city near Vance Air Force Base | 39 |
| Lady of "Idylls of the King" | 38 |
| Geraint's wife, in Arthurian legend | 39 |
| Geraint's love, in Arthurian legend | 39 |
| City roughly 100 miles west of Tulsa | 36 |
| British children's author ___ Blyton | 40 |
| Blyton, writer of children's books | 38 |
| "Idylls of the King" figure | 37 |
| U.S. city named for a Tennyson character | 40 |
| The Church Lady's first name | 32 |
| Tennyson's "Geraint and _____" | 44 |
| Tennyson woman called "the Fair" | 42 |
| Symphonic '70s rockers, with "The" | 48 |
| So-called "Wheat Capital of Oklahoma" | 47 |
| Sir Geraint's wife, in Arthurian legend | 43 |
| Sir Geraint's extremely patient wife | 40 |
| She's a paradigm of patience | 32 |
| Setting of the Chisholm Trail Expo Center | 41 |
| Personification of purity, in literature | 40 |
| Patient lady of Arthurian legend | 32 |
| Oklahoma’s “Wheat Capital” | 38 |
| Oklahoma city with an active Tea Party | 38 |
| Oklahoma city on the Cherokee Strip | 35 |
| Oklahoma city north-northwest of Oklahoma City | 46 |
| Oklahoma city near Oklahoma City | 32 |
| Oklahoma city named after a Tennyson character | 46 |
| National Velvet novelist Bagnold | 35 |
| National Velvet author Bagnold | 33 |