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  | PARODY SONGS ON SESAME STREET |  
   
 
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    | The Nov. 23, 1864 Daily Chattanooga Rebel: "Every man will rally in the path of" this Gen. "ere he reaches the seacoast" | 
    Sherman
 
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    | Someone dubbed a "White Rabbit" or a "10 o'clock scholar" must be chronically this | 
    late
 
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    | Cheers to this actor who found himself in a good place in 2018 with his 16th Emmy nomination | 
    (Ted) Danson
 
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    | The student body at West Point is known as this Corps | 
    (Ian: What is Army?)
  Cadet
 
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    | Canter was shortened from this city--it was the pace pilgrims used to visit the shrine of Thomas  à Becket | 
    Canterbury
 
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    | Norah Jones performed a song called "Don't Know" this letter of the alphabet | 
    Y
 
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    | The Helena Weekly Herald, July 20, 1876: "Curley says" this man "remained alive through the greater part of the engagement" | 
    Custer
 
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    | Though never in the Olympics, Atalanta & Pheidippides are both often alluded to because of this quality of theirs | 
    swiftness (they were fast)
 
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    | The youngest of 9 kids, he was born into a political dynasty February 22, 1932 in Boston | 
    Ted Kennedy
 
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    | Georgia's NBA team | 
    the Atlanta Hawks
 
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    | This therapeutic process involving back & joint manipulation is partly from the Greek for "hand" | 
    chiropractic
 
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    | "Sesame Street" parodied Fine Young Cannibals with a song called this letter "Drives Me Crazy" | 
    C
 
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    | The New York Daily News, Nov. 1, 1929: "The storm has passed, leaving" this institution "on an even keel once more" | 
    (Karen: What is the Federal Reserve?)
  the New York Stock Exchange
 
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    | Shadowed by Big Brother in "1984", this oppressive state is equated with totalitarianism | 
    Oceania
 
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    | In September 1960 in his last at-bat, he hit his 521st home run | 
    (Ted) Williams
 
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    | Majority ethnic group of Rwanda | 
    Hutu
 
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    | Leather chaps are named for this thorny southwest brush they are designed to protect you from | 
    chaparral
 
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    | A version of "Despacito" was called "El Patito", Spanish for little this fowl--sung by Ernie, of course | 
    a duck
 
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    | The St. Paul Backbone, Jan. 1897: this "party is alive and well. It was not born to die till the last saloon dies" | 
    Prohibition
 
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    | The fabled Flying Dutchman & this novelist's Siddhartha both can be used as allusions for wandering | 
    (Hermann) Hesse
 
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    | On the morning of January 24, 1989 he was put to death in the electric chair at a Florida state prison | 
    (Ted) Bundy
 
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    | Male fans of Rainbow Dash & the rest of the Mane 6 | 
    Bronies
 
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    | Partly from the Greek for "eating", this type of coffin was made of stone ancients thought was able to eat bodies | 
    sarcophagus
 
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    | The parody of this musical starts, "Look down, look down, no cookies anywhere, look down, look down, me tummy in despair" | 
    Les Misérables
 
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    | The National Intelligencer, July 23, 1804: this man "disavows all motives of predetermined hostility" | 
    (Jason: Who is... Napoleon?)
  Aaron Burr
 
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    | Like the Phoenix, this wounded "King" of Arthurian myth is associated with resurrection | 
    the Fisher King
 
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    | As Poet Laureate of England, he penned a poem to mark the funeral of Princess Diana | 
    (Ted) Hughes
 
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    | Angry, alliterative 1860s coal miners | 
    Molly Maguires
 
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    | Partly from the Latin for "stones", this adjective for a building that is falling apart means it is missing stones | 
    (Karen: What is decrepit?)
  dilapidated
 
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    | This blind Italian tenor tucked Elmo in with "Time to Say Goodnight" | 
    (Andrea) Bocelli
 
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