Star |
Salmon |
ETV fare |
Air ____ |
New star |
Bossa __ |
Big star |
PBS show |
New: Lat. |
Pop star? |
Sky light |
Sky sight |
Old Chevy |
Super star |
Dying star |
PBS airing |
PBS staple |
Star burst |
PBS series |
Deli order |
TV offering |
___ Scotia. |
Lox variety |
Space sight |
Hubble find |
Kind of lox |
PBS classic |
Brunch item |
PBS program |
Chevy model |
Bright star |
Super" sight |
Blazing star |
Intense star |
GM nameplate |
PBS offering |
Rising star? |
Sort of star |
Type of star |
Bygone Chevy |
Certain star |
Kind of star |
Cured salmon |
Flaring star |
Bagel topper |
Night light? |
Chevy of yore |
Exciting star |
Flashing star |
Salmon choice |
Sky spectacle |
Luminous star |
Sagan subject |
Stellar sight |
Bursting star |
Bagel stuffer |
Unstable star |
Space heater? |
Variable star |
Deli purchase |
Smoked salmon |
A Star Is Born |
Burst in space |
Explosive star |
Gas explosion? |
Popular salmon |
Resurging star |
Science series |
Star explosion |
Two-star event |
Temporary star |
___ Scotia lox |
Brilliant star |
Astral flareup |
Heavenly sight |
Schmear topper |
Salmon variety |
Exploding star |
Pacific salmon |
A smoked salmon |
Astral flare-up |
Bossa __: dance |
Bright new star |
Phenomenal star |
PBS Emmy winner |
TV science show |
Night sky sight |
Celestial event |
Old Chevy model |
Telescope sight |
Celestial blowup |
Distant flare-up |
Milky Way sphere |
Observatory find |
Popular PBS show |
Short-lived star |
1960s-'80s Chevy |
Celestial blazer |
Salmon at a deli |
Stellar sighting |
Sudden superstar |
Brightening star |
Cosmic explosion |
Spectacular star |
PBS science show |
Astronomical find |
Big bang in space |
Celestial flareup |
Cosmic phenomenon |
Massive explosion |
Star or TV series |
Stellar spectacle |
Sudden super star |
Chevy of the '70s |
Old Chevy compact |
Stellar explosion |
Extra-bright star |
TV science series |
Astronomer's find |
Bagel shop request |
Big gas explosion? |
Celestial flare-up |
Chevy model of old |
Cold-smoked salmon |
Explosion in space |
Galactic explosion |
Guitarist Aldo ___ |
Impala alternative |
Overly bright star |
Smoky bagel topper |
Star or TV program |
Astronomer's study |
Astronomical flash |
Celestial exploder |
Popular PBS series |
Bygone Chevy model |
Halifax, __ Scotia |
TV science program |
Astronomical event |
___ Scotia, Canada |
Fish for breakfast |
Stellar phenomenon |
PBS science series |
A 1941 Louis victim |
Astronomical wonder |
PBS show since 1974 |
Popular PBS program |
Star with potential |
Celestial explosion |
Stellar spectacular |
PBS science program |
Astronomical figure? |
Bagel store delicacy |
Bright spot in space |
Bygone Chevy compact |
Cured Pacific salmon |
Show in outer space? |
Loser to Louis: 1941 |
Observatory sighting |
Temporary superstar? |
Temporary super star |
Celestial phenomenon |
Suddenly bright star |
Explosion in a vacuum |
Certain variable star |
Long-running PBS show |
White-dwarf explosion |
Astronomical flare-up |
Cataclysmic explosion |
Intensely bright star |
PBS staple since 1974 |
Astronomical sighting |
Astronomer's sighting |
PBS series since 1974 |
Bright spot in the sky |
Science program on PBS |
Science-based PBS show |
Source for an outburst |
Astronomical discovery |
Astronomical explosion |
Cured and smoked salmon |
Everything bagel topper |
Long-running PBS series |
Observatory observation |
Astronomical phenomenon |
Brilliant star, at times |
Explosion in outer space |
Loser to Joe Louis: 1941 |
Louis KO'ed him in 1941. |
Onetime Chevy muscle car |
Rapidly brightening star |
Result of runaway fusion |
Variety of smoked salmon |
Robert Palmer "Heavy ___ |
Ephemeral heavenly blaze |
Spectacular space heater? |
It's super when exploding |
Science series since 1974 |
Blame it on the Bossa ___ |
A loser to Joe Louis: 1941 |
Award-winning science show |
Brazilian dance, bossa ... |
Popular PBS science series |
Bossa ___ (Brazilian dance) |
Long-running science series |
PBS science show since 1974 |
Star of changing brightness |
Life is just a fantasy" Aldo |
Star that brightens suddenly |
Cataclysmic nuclear explosion |
Result of uncontrolled fusion |
Source of a stellar explosion |
Star of inconstant brightness |
Star that brightens and fades |
Sudden light in the night sky |
PBS science series since 1974 |
Long-running PBS science show |
___ scienceNOW" (PBS spin-off) |
Blaze of Glory" guitarist Aldo |
Astronomer's sighting, perhaps |
Loser to Louis: Sept. 29, 1941 |
___ Scotia (Canadian province) |
Hubble Space Telescope sighting |
Long-running PBS science series |
Nuclear explosion result, maybe |
Star that brightens, then fades |
Lou ___, boxing star of the past |
Observatory observation, perhaps |
PBS science show or an old Chevy |
PBS show that focuses on science |
Astronomer's sighting, sometimes |
Highest-rated science series on TV |
Star that brightens and then fades |
Bossa ___ (type of Brazilian music) |
PBS science series introduced in 1974 |
Terra ___ (old name for Newfoundland) |
___ Caesarea, original name of New Jersey |
PBS show named after a stellar spectacular |
Series with a "Secrets of the Sun" episode |
Star that suddenly increases in brightness |
Blast from the past, astronomically speaking? |
Car model whose name translates to "Doesn't go |
PBS science series named after an exploding star |
Milky Way phenomenon believed to occur almost weekly |
In 2010, Dylan played ___ Southeastern University in FL |
___ Prime (Glenn Close's role in "Guardians of the Galaxy") |
PBS show with episodes about tornadoes and catacombs and the like |
The first recorded one was noted by the Greek scientist Hipparchus in 134 B.C. |