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December 01, 2008

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KipEsquire

The first question (which I could not answer) is ironic, because on Thanksgiving Friday with my parents (73 and 67), I was having open-face leftover sandwiches when I remarked, "How did they ever perpetrate white bread on people?"

My father shot back like a flash, "They said it was 'enriched' and everyone started buying it. Nobody cared that it had no flavor -- it was 'enriched' and if you wanted your kids to be healthy then you bought it."

Yay for capitalism (?)...

Acad Ronin

20/20, which says something about my age, the power of advertising jingles, and that my long-term memory has not gone to zero (short-term memory is another story).

William Polley

19/20 (missed #15, and that was the only one I guessed on--the rest were easy)

Of course this means that I need to be really careful about what pop culture references I use in class.

I have visions of someday making a reference to Burma-Shave signs and having the students wonder what planet I'm from.

Peter K.

I got all of them right, but whoever wrote the answers didn't.

Bob Dylan never said never to "trust anyone over 30." That was a guy named Mario Savio (actually it was "Don't trust anyone over 30"), of the Berkeley so-called "Free Speech Movement". (He later became some kind of official or functionary in Communist Part USA.)

Dylan may have said words to the effect of "never trust anyone with a briefcase", but c'mon: Would Dylan EVER say anything so stupid as "Don't trust anyone over 30"? Who has the necessary lack of foresight and insight, Bob Dylan or a college Communist?

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