Game #195: Discography

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jarnon
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#26 Post by jarnon » Tue Sep 10, 2019 11:20 am

carl reiner wrote:Missed tweeting and all of pleasures of life by being under the weather for the past few days, Hope to get back to eating and non-fitful sleeping tonight,
After he was a wrong answer in a Tangredi game. Frank, be careful with our national treasures!
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#27 Post by franktangredi » Thu Sep 12, 2019 8:05 pm

Did I finally come up with an ungettable game?

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#28 Post by mrkelley23 » Fri Sep 13, 2019 7:03 am

franktangredi wrote:Did I finally come up with an ungettable game?
Perhaps, but you've caught me, anyway, at an incredibly busy time. I hope to take a closer look this weekend.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#29 Post by littlebeast13 » Fri Sep 13, 2019 9:18 am

mrkelley23 wrote:
franktangredi wrote:Did I finally come up with an ungettable game?
Perhaps, but you've caught me, anyway, at an incredibly busy time. I hope to take a closer look this weekend.

Still a lot of blanks in the consolidation.... especially in the lyrics, which are usually relatively complete by this point in a game's life. It seems like too many to just start looking them up...

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#30 Post by kroxquo » Fri Sep 13, 2019 10:24 am

B-31. This director’s filmography include a movie set in the Paleolithic era, a movie set in a medieval monastery, and a movie set in war-torn Stalingrad.

I was thinking Name of the Rose so I looked this up -

Jean Jacques Annaud
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#31 Post by kroxquo » Fri Sep 13, 2019 10:31 am

B-52. During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, he coined the term “Vietnamization”

I'm pretty sure this John Foster Dulles
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#32 Post by jarnon » Fri Sep 13, 2019 10:41 am

kroxquo wrote:B-52. During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, he coined the term “Vietnamization”

I'm pretty sure this John Foster Dulles
Sorry, but Dulles (Princeton '08) was Secretary of State. Also, Vietnamization was a policy in the '60s, when Dulles was no longer with us.
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#33 Post by mrkelley23 » Sun Sep 15, 2019 6:10 am

A-40 is the wrong song. It's Selfie, by the Chainsmokers
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Re: Game #195: Discography New Consolidation

#34 Post by mrkelley23 » Sun Sep 15, 2019 6:37 am

Incorporated all the answers given since the last consolidation, removed questions marks where appropriate, and added a few answers. Still a long way to go, though.

Game #195: Discography

Identify the 45 songs in List A and the 100 people in List B. Then, match each song to two people, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Five songs will be used twice.

LIST A: SONGS

A-1. Rise up, gather round,
Rock this place to the ground,
Burn it up, let's go for broke,
Watch the night go up in smoke.

Rock of Ages – Def Leppard

A-2. You lying so low in the weeds,
I bet you gonna ambush me.
You'd have me down, down, down on my knees.

Barracuda -- Heart

A-3. Yesterday and days before,
Sun is cold and rain is hard.
I know been that way for all my time.
'Til forever, on it goes
Through the circle, fast and slow,
I know it can't stop, I wonder.

Have You Ever Seen the Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival

A-4. He left no time to regret,
Kept his d**k wet
With his same old safe bet.
Me and my head high
And my tears dry,
Get on without my guy.

Back to Black – Amy Winehouse

A-5. You lead us along,
My love and me, as we sing
Our early morning singing song.

Good Morning Starshine -- Oliver

A-6. You let me violate you,
You let me desecrate you,
You let me penetrate you,
You let me complicate you.

Closer – Nine Inch Nails

A-7. When some sweet hog mama with a face like a gent
Said my get up and go must've got up and went,
Well, I got good news, she's a real good liar
'Cause the backstage boogie sets your pants on fire.

Sweet Emotion -- Aerosmith

A-8. Chillin'; cooler den a squeak; kickin' dirt on my sneakers.
Suckers on the corner lookin' down at their beepers.
They couldn't get a job or a nice home,
So they want to stay and wait for the pay-phone.

Playground – Another Bad Creation

A-9. I cry each night my tears for you.
My tears are all in vain.
I'll hope and I'll pray that maybe someday
You'll be back in my arms once again.

Puppy Love – Paul Anka or Donny Osmond

A-10. It's the way you love me,
It's a feeling like this,
It's centrifugal motion,
It's perpetual bliss.

This Kiss – Faith Hill

A-11. You told me that you loved me.
Now, girl, show me.
'Cause I can't believe it's true
By the things you do.

A-12. I've got a secret I've been hiding under my skin,
My heart is human, my blood is boiling, my brain I.B.M.
So if you see me acting strangely, don't be surprised.
I'm just a man who needed someone, and somewhere to hide.

Mr. Roboto -- Styx

A-13. I was told when I got older all my fears would shrink,
But now I'm insecure and I care what people think.

Stressed Out – Twenty-one Pilots

A-14. And even though the moment passed me by
I still can't turn away,
'Cause all the dreams you never thought you'd lose
Got tossed along the way
And letters that you never meant to send
Get lost or thrown away.

Name – Goo Goo Dolls


A-15. But when we leave this year, we won't be coming back,
No more hanging out 'cause we're on a different track.

Graduation Song – Vitamin C

A-16. My man put me up for the share, one-fourth of a square,
Headed for Delaware with one change of gear.
Nothin’ on my mind but the dime sack we blazed
With the glaze in my eye, that we find when we crave.

A-17. Hold me,
I'll give that you need,
Wrap your love around me,
You're so excited I can feel you getting hotter.

Jump (for my Love) – The Pointer Sisters

A-18. If you want my future, forget my past,
If you wanna get with me, better make it fast.
Now don't go wasting my precious time,
Get your act together, we could be just fine.

Wannabe – Spice Girls

A-19. I know you know that I made those mistakes maybe once or twice –
By once or twice I mean maybe a couple of hundred times.
So let me, oh, let me redeem, oh, redeem myself tonight
'Cause I just need one more shot at second chances.

Sorry – Justin Bieber

A-20. Why in the world would anybody put chains on me?
I've paid my dues to make it.
Everybody wants me to be what they want me to be.
I'm not happy when I try to fake it.

Easy – The Commodores

A-21. First time that I saw you, girl, I knew that I just had to make you mine,
But it's so hard to talk to you with fellas hanging 'round you all the time.

Dizzy – Tommy Roe

A-22. Just a young gun with a quick fuse,
I was uptight, wanna let loose,
I was dreaming of bigger things
And wanna leave my own life behind.

Thunder – Imagine Dragons

A-23. She's winding them down on her clock machine
And she won't give up 'cause she's seventeen.
She's a frozen fire,
She's my one desire.

Let’s Go – The Cars

A-24. Lying here with you, listening to the rain,
Smiling just to see the smile upon your face.
These are the moments I thank God that I'm alive,
These are the moments I'll remember all my life.

I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain

A-25. I know you miss your mom
And I know you miss your dad when I'm gone,
But I'm trying to give you the life that I never had.
I can see you're sad.

A-26. Joggin' in the mornings – go, man go!
Workouts in the health spa, muscles grow.

Macho Man – Village People

A-27. You changed my life
With just the wave of your smile,
Soothed my doubt
And eased my worried mind.

A-28. You don't listen to her
You don't care how it hurts
Until you lose the one you wanted
'Cause you've taken her for granted
And everything you had got destroyed.

If I were a Boy -- Beyonce

A-29. I guess I should've kept my mouth shut
When I start to brag about my car,
But I can't back down now because
I pushed the other guys too far.

Don’t Worry Baby – The Beach Boys

A-30. This perfect romance that I've created in my mind,
I'd live a thousand lives
Each one with you right by my side,
But yet we find ourselves in a less than perfect circumstance
And so it seems like we'll never have the chance.

A-31. Why drink the water from my hand,
Contagious as you think I am?
Just tilt my sun towards your domain.
Your cup runneth over again.

December – Collective Soul

A-32. I can't stand this indecision
Married with a lack of vision.

Everybody Wants to Rule the World – Tears for Fears

A-33. How could you be so cold as the winter wind when it breeze, yo?
Just remember that you talkin' to me though.
You know need to watch the way you talkin' to me, yo,
I mean after all the things that we've been through,
I mean after all the things we got into.

A-34. You're digging for gold
Yet throwing away
A fortune in feelings
But someday you'll pay.

Cold As Ice -- Foreigner

A-35. So close no matter how far,
Couldn't be much more from the heart.
Forever trust in who we are.

Nothing Else Matters -- Metallica

A-36. And I don't wanna come between you and your man,
Even tho I know I'll treat you better than he can.

A-37. They took a ride so, baby, I went too,
Stopped at the record hop, I had to be a sport.
We jumped and we did the slop,
Then you walked in and I was caught.

Don’t Hang Up – The Orlons

A-38. Girl, I can buy your ass the world with my pay stub.
Ooh, that p**sy good, won't you sit it on my taste buds?
I get way too petty once you let me do the extras.
Pull up on your block, then break it down, we playing Tetris.

A-39. I wanna see y'all, who wanna plan with me?
Wave your hands across the land if we family.

A-40. So, like what do you think?
Did you think that girl was pretty?
How did that girl even get in here?
Did you see her?
She's so short and that dress is so tacky,
Who wears cheetah?

Selfie – The Chainsmokers

A-41. Carried your books from school,
Playin' make believe you're married to me.
You were fifth grade, I was sixth
When we came to be.

My Eyes Adored You – Frankie Valli

A-42. The heart of the city street was beating,
Light from the neons turned the dark to day,
We were too hot to think of sleeping,
We had to get out before the magic got away.

Running with the Night – Lionel Richie

A-43. A local boy kicked me in the butt last week.
I just smiled at him and turned the other cheek.
I really don't care, in fact I wish him well,
'Cause I'll be laughing my head off when he's burning in hell.

Amish Paradise – Weird Al Yankovic

A-44. I can turn a river into a raging fire.
I can live forever if I so desire.

I Can’t Get Next To You – The Temptations

A-45. I been movin' calm, don't start no trouble with me.
Tryna keep it peaceful is a struggle for me.
Don't pull up at 6 AM to cuddle with me,
You know how I like it when you lovin' on me.

LIST B: PEOPLE

B-1. Among this composer’s more scatological compositions was “Lick me in the arse,” a canon for six voices.

Wolfgang A. Mozart

B-2. He had the longest tenure of any President who didn’t complete his first term in office.

John F. Kennedy

B-3. Although he was not the first to isolate it, the bacteria that is the causative agent of chicken cholera is named after this scientist.

Louis Pasteur

B-4. His most famous novel ends, “Which of us is happy in this world? Which of us has his desire? Or, having it, is satisfied? – Come, children, let us sht up the box and the puppets, for out play is played out.”

William Makepeace Thackeray

B-5. Though some critics at the time held him responsible for the Ludlow Massacre, he is honored today for his philanthropy, having given away over $500 million to various causes – more than twice what he passed on to his own family.

John D. Rockefeller, Jr.

B-6. His most popular painting depicts a group of his friends relaxing on the balcony of a restaurant overlooking the Seine.

Renoir

B-7. Only three men have won more Olympic gold medals in swimming than he has, and no male swimmer has ever won more bronze.

Ryan Lochte

B-8. He won the Oscar on the second of his three consecutive nominations for Best Actor – and hasn’t been nominated in the almost two decades since.

Russell Crowe

B-9. The last words of this legendary labor activist were reportedly, “Fire! Go on and fire!”

Joe Hill

B-10. DJMQ: Deemed too tall to cast in classical ballet, she found a home with a pioneering New York dance company in 1965 … premiered her signature solo for them in 1971 … and took over the role of artistic director in 1989.
Another DJMQ appears at #60

Judith Jamison

B-11. Though best known as the hero of his own country’s liberation, this general was also honored on the Uruguayan ten peso for his defense of Montevideo during that country’s civil war.

Simon Bolivar

B-12. This minister of the Reformed Church wrote, “Every problem has in it the seeds of its own solution. If you don’t have any problems, you don’t get any seeds.”

Norman Vincent Peale

B-13. She was the first African American woman to represent a state on the West Coast in Congress.

Yvonne Braithwaite Burke

B-14. He was the co-founder and lead singer of the glam rock band that hit the Top Ten in Britain with their self-titled debut album in 1972.

Bryan Ferry

B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

B-16. He debuted in 1938, made his radio debut in 1940, his film debut in 1941, his television debut in 1951 – and he’s still going strong.

Superman/Clark Kent

B-17. Published in six volumes from 1776 to 1789, this historian’s magnum opus traced the history of Western civilization from A.D. 98 through the fall of Byzantium.

Edward Gibbon

B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)

Who else was in both movies? Jonathan Winters?

B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.

B-20. He was the first manager of partial Asian descent to win a World Series.

Dave Roberts

B-21. This journalist’s 1904 study of municipal corruption made him one of the leading muckrakers of his day.

Lincoln Steffens

B-22. This polymath’s 1905 work “On Denoting” has been called a “paradigm of philosophy.”

Bertrand Russell

B-23. The mission commanded by this man was the first to accomplish ….

Neil Armstrong

B-24. … what the mission commanded by this man failed to accomplish ten months later.

James Lovell

B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

B-26. Archie Bunker thought that this bandleader’s initials were “E.C.” – and refused to accept what his initials actually were.

Xavier Cugat

B-27. The third winner of the lifetime achievement award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America, his clients included Brooke Astor, Jessye Norman, Gloria Vanderbilt, and the daughter-in-law of the man in Clue B-5.

Bill Blass

B-28. This activist was awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom – and, in a way, an Oscar – more than 30 years after his death

Harvey Milk

B-29. This English engineer invented the wick carburetor, built the first English motorboat, and formulated a theory of flight that led to the development of the airfoil.

B-30. In 1939, this novelist wrote what became the single best- selling murder mystery of all time – but no one would dare publish it today under its original title.

Agatha Christie

B-31. This director’s filmography include a movie set in the Paleolithic era, a movie set in a medieval monastery, and a movie set in war-torn Stalingrad.

Jean-Jacques Annaud

B-32. With seven medals, she is the most decorated American gymnast in the history of the Olympic games.

Shannon Miller

B-33. While on leave from his work for the Farm Security Administration, this photographer collaborated on a book with a notable novelist/ screenwriter/poet/film critic.

Walker Evans

B-34. The most renowned – and controversial – model produced by his company was the H-4 Hercules.

Howard Hughes

B-35. On March 14, 1964, he was sentenced to death – and, though granted a new trial on appeal, he died in prison before the date could be set.

Jack Ruby

B-36. This saxophonist received many honors – including a posthumous Pulitzer Prize – but perhaps the most unique was being canonized by the African Orthodox Church.

B-37. He died in the Ludlow Street Jail after being convicted of stealing between $25-45 million dollars from taxpayers – an estimate that many believe was far too low.

Boss Tweed

B-38. This physicist won the Nobel Prize for his “"fundamental research in quantum mechanics, especially in the statistical interpretation of the wave function

Max Born

B-39. Although he never made Cardinal – probably through the machinations of Eamon de Valera – this Dublin archbishop was the most influential clergyman in Ireland for more than 30 years.

B-40. He was one of Germany’s leading stage stars – until that unfortunate “Nazi state actor” thing – but his most enduring contribution to the arts was playing the title role in the film that launched the expressionist movement.

Werner Krauss

B-41. As a playwright, he had his greatest success with a romantic comedy about political corruption that ran on Broadway from February 1946 to December 1949.

Garson Kanin

B-42. This psychologist spent a lot of his time fabricating rhesus monkeys out of wire and cloth.

Harry Harlow

B-43. He spent more weeks ranked at Number One than any other English golfer.

Nick Faldo

B-44. He may be #7, but he ranks #1 as the youngest person for whom I have ever written a clue.

Prince Archie Mountbatten-Windsor

B-45. A hero of the Franco-PrussianWar, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.

B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.

B-47. This guitarist won a Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Performance for the theme to a 1986 hit movie starring Tom Cruise.

Steve Stevens

B-48. She won Emmy awards for her leading role on two different sitcoms – a feat also achieved by Lucille Ball, Mary Tyler Moore, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Bea Arthur

B-49. This researcher first gained recognition for successfully achieving in vitro fertilization in rabbits, but the work for which he is best remembered began when he met Margaret Sanger.

Gregory Pincus

B-50. This novelist is remembered chiefly for an 1873 novel – written in collaboration with a soon-to-be more famous writer – that gave an epithet to an entire period of American history.

Charles Dudley Warner

B-51. In 2008, the international airport in Birmingham, Alabama, was renamed in honor of this civil rights leader who helped organize the 1963 Birmingham Campaign for the SCLC.

Fred Shuttlesworth

B-52. During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, he coined the term “Vietnamization”

Melvin Laird

B-53. She once told an interviewer, ”I have no use for people who exhibit manners” – and when asked which fork to use, she replied, “The cleanest.”

Amy Vanderbilt

B-54. A two-time All Star during his seven seasons with the Hornets, this point guard also played for the Warriors, Clippers, Cavaliers, and Knicks before he retired.

Baron Davis

B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.

B-56. He “was dead: to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that. The register of his burial was signed by the clergyman, the clerk, the undertaker, and the chief mourner…. [He] was dead as a doornail.”

Jacob Marley

B-57. The name of this late actor is inextricably linked with that of another actor – who has since asserted that both of them were sexually abused as children in Hollywood.

Corey Haim

B-58. His celebrated clients included an osteopath, a U.S. Army captain, and a football player.

B-59. Her 1970 hit was her only record to cross over onto the pop charts, but it was big enough to make her the first female country singer to appear as a guest of Johnny Carson.

Lynn Anderson

B-60. DJMQ: The only dance team to jointly receive the Kennedy Center Honors, they were pioneers in the acrobatic “flash dancing” technique that evolved in the 1930s.

The Nicholas Brothers

B-61. Responding to widespread criticism, he has stated, “I am indeed the 'Grim Reaper' when it comes to the socialist agenda that they have been ginning up over the House.”

Moscow Mitch McConnell

B-62. This Austrian economist developed the concept of “creative destruction” to describe the dynamic, constant process of destroying old economic structures to make way for new ones.

B-63. Honors received by this scientist include the Croix de Guerre, the Legion of Honour, the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom, and induction into the Television Hall of Fame.

B-64. This writer’s works included a hit play about a fictional race for the U.S. Presidency and a best-selling novel about a real-life U.S. Vice President.

Gore Vidal

B-65. In 1979, he became the first NHL goaltender credited with scoring a goal.

Billy Smith

B-66. This future four-star general commanded one mission designed to starve an enemy and another mission designed to feed a former enemy.

Curtis LeMay

B-67. The pharmacy he opened in 1962 has expanded into the largest drugstore chain on the East Coast and the third largest overall in the U.S.

B-68. He became a news anchor for NBC just in time to serve as point man for their award-winning coverage of Hurricane Katrina.

Brian Williams

B-69. She was the longest-serving president of the National Organization for Women.

B-70. He was the first American chef to receive simultaneous three Michelin stars for each of two different restaurants – his flagship restaurant in the Napa Valley and a newer restaurant in Manhattan.

Thomas Keller

B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.

B-72. In the 1950s, he co-founded the first experimental theatre company in the United States. (One NY critic, clearly not sympathetic to the avant-garde, famously complained that the theatre “should drop dead.”)

B-73. A rainy summer at Lake Geneva and a challenge from Lord Byron gave rise to this author’s most famous work.

Mary Shelley

B-74. Though he only served one term as Secretary of State, he was instrumental in getting the U.S. involved in one war and helped nudge the nation on the long road toward another war.

B-75. A 1992 music video by this American band featured an iconic – and notorious – performance by nine year-old Heather DeLoach.

Blind Melon

B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.

Jan Oort

B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.

B-78. He was the hero of a popular 1873 novel – and of an Oscar-winning Best Picture eight decades later.

Phineas Fogg

B-79. She is the only woman not married to a U.S. President who is considered an official First Lady by the First Ladies’ Library.

Harriet Lane

B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."

B-81. This general got his nickname for his role in suppressing a rebellion against the Qing dynasty, but he failed to repeat such success on another continent.

B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.

B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.

B-84. The two films that he made with Bette Davis were, in their own way, every bit as violent as the three films he made with Lee Marvin.

B-85. In 2011, readers of [/i]Rolling Stone[/i] voted him the greatest lead singer of all time – coming in just ahead of Freddie Mercury.

Robert Plant

B-86. He was the longest-reigning monarch of the neo-Babylonian empire.

Nebuchadnezzar

B-87. One of the few baseball players to have his number retired by more than one team, he was also the second relief pitcher inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Rollie Fingers

B-88. His 1948 paper “A Mathematical Theory of Communication” is considered the foundational work of modern information theory.

Claude Shannon

B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.

B-90. Students of this influential German-American anthropologist included Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, and Ashley Montagu.

Franz Boas

B-91. In an official report submitted to her state legislature in 1843, she described patients “confined within this Commonwealth, n cages, stalls, pens! Chained, naked, beaten with rods, and lashed into obedience."

Dorothea Dix

B-92. The identification of this Catholic saint with a sinner introduced in Luke 7:36-50 began with Pope Gregory I in 581, but was officially refuted by Pope Paul VI in 1969. (Many people still haven’t gotten the message.)

Mary Magdalene

B-93. The major source of information about the fate of this explorer was a narrative written by his navigator, Abacuk Pricket.

Henry Hudson

B-94. This actress posthumously received her fourth Emmy nomination as producer of a 2009 documentary about her fight against the cancer that killed her.

Farrah Fawcett

B-95. The 1913 premiere of a ballet by this composer caused a sensation – but not, as legend would have it, a riot.

Igor Stravinsky

B-96. A complete edition of this poet’s nearly 1800 verses was not published – very posthumously – until 1955.

Emily Dickinson

B-97. Innovations credited to this football coach include the reverse play, the huddle, the Statue of Liberty, the lateral pass, and the use of uniform numbers and padded goal posts.

Amos Alonzo Stagg

B-98. He was by far the highest ranking figure to get doused as a result of the Ice Bucket Challenge.

George W. Bush

B-99. The four-word phrase most associated with Charles Darwin was actually coined by this philosopher.

Herbert Spencer

B-100. Although he never completed college himself, this inventor received eight honorary LLDs, two honorary PhDs – including one from Gallaudet College – and an honorary MD.

Alexander Graham Bell
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#35 Post by littlebeast13 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 7:19 am

I have been looking at this every so often as well to see if anything clicks. So far, the only thing I'm fairly confident of is that the artists of the songs will probably not be relevant.... my reasoning being that it seems like, based on the rules, that the songs are all going to be used for the same capacity... and since there's at least one song identified already that can be strongly associated with more than one artist, it doesn't seem like that would work (Unless it's part of why five of the songs will be used twice).

lb13
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#36 Post by franktangredi » Mon Sep 16, 2019 8:10 am

There are two wrong answers in the latest consolidation.

I apologize, I didn't realize how hard this one was going to be.

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#37 Post by franktangredi » Mon Sep 16, 2019 8:11 am

littlebeast13 wrote:I have been looking at this every so often as well to see if anything clicks. So far, the only thing I'm fairly confident of is that the artists of the songs will probably not be relevant.... my reasoning being that it seems like, based on the rules, that the songs are all going to be used for the same capacity... and since there's at least one song identified already that can be strongly associated with more than one artist, it doesn't seem like that would work (Unless it's part of why five of the songs will be used twice).

lb13
I probably should have picked a different song.

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#38 Post by silvercamaro » Mon Sep 16, 2019 8:17 am

Amazingly enough, I know another answer.
B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.
STANFORD WHITE
Now generating the White Hot Glare of Righteousness on behalf of BBs everywhere.

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#39 Post by mrkelley23 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 10:41 am

So one of the things that's been bothering me since the clue was identified was how in the world something was going to be tied to Nebuchadnezzar. Then I discovered that one of the artists was Amy Winehouse. A nebuchadnezzar is one of the measurements of wine volume, along with methuselah, jereboam, and others, i.e., a wine house. I can'tfind any others to make it fit, but maybe there are more here.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#40 Post by mrkelley23 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 11:13 am

Other things I have noticed about the puzzle: Many, but not all, of the song titles are one word. Frank rarely uses one word song titles in lyrics games, because the titles are usually tied to the theme, and require two or more words to make the connection.

Frank says there are two wrong answers in this consolidation, so unless there's a wrong song in here somewhere, that means one of the answers I added since the last consolidation in the B-list is wrong.

He also says, in response to lb's comment, that he should have used a different song. Presumably that means that at least the artist is significant, if not the title as well.

Some interesting names on List B -- Fingers, Born, Crowe, Ferry, Milk, Ruby, Tweed, Baron, Plant, Boas, Stagg, Bush, Bell

I just think we're going to have to look up a few more names and song lyrics before we can crack the tangredi.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#41 Post by Appa23 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 11:55 am

As an attorney, I am ashamed that I did not look at this puzzle sooner and in greater detail.

B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Horace Gray

B-58. His celebrated clients included an osteopath, a U.S. Army captain, and a football player.

F. Lee Bailey

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#42 Post by Appa23 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 12:16 pm

B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.

I thought that this was about the ban against Ulysses, but it never made it to the Supreme Court. If it is, then it is Random House. (I do not know if it still does, but it used to print Ulysses with a copy of the federal trial court opinion, making it the most published court opinion.)

B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.

I think that this is Edward Albee.

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#43 Post by franktangredi » Mon Sep 16, 2019 12:49 pm

Appa23 wrote:B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.

I thought that this was about the ban against Ulysses, but it never made it to the Supreme Court. If it is, then it is Random House. (I do not know if it still does, but it used to print Ulysses with a copy of the federal trial court opinion, making it the most published court opinion.)
Mistake on my part there. I was referring to the Ulysses case. But I'm looking for an individual.

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#44 Post by mellytu74 » Mon Sep 16, 2019 5:31 pm

franktangredi wrote:
Appa23 wrote:B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.

I thought that this was about the ban against Ulysses, but it never made it to the Supreme Court. If it is, then it is Random House. (I do not know if it still does, but it used to print Ulysses with a copy of the federal trial court opinion, making it the most published court opinion.)
Mistake on my part there. I was referring to the Ulysses case. But I'm looking for an individual.
Random House in the mid-1930s?

Holy Dorothy Kilgallen! Are we talking about ...

BENNETT CERF?

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Re: Game #195: Discography

#45 Post by T_Bone0806 » Thu Sep 19, 2019 9:02 am

Missed this the first time around.

B-36. This saxophonist received many honors – including a posthumous Pulitzer Prize – but perhaps the most unique was being canonized by the African Orthodox Church.

JOHN COLTRANE
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Re: Game #195: Discography New Consolidation

#46 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu Sep 19, 2019 8:05 pm

I added some lookups, and put them in all caps so people can easily find them. I still haven't figured out where the two wrong ones are, so if anyone could chime in, it'd be welcome.
mrkelley23 wrote:Incorporated all the answers given since the last consolidation, removed questions marks where appropriate, and added a few answers. Still a long way to go, though.

Game #195: Discography

Identify the 45 songs in List A and the 100 people in List B. Then, match each song to two people, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Five songs will be used twice.

LIST A: SONGS

A-1. Rise up, gather round,
Rock this place to the ground,
Burn it up, let's go for broke,
Watch the night go up in smoke.

Rock of Ages – Def Leppard

A-2. You lying so low in the weeds,
I bet you gonna ambush me.
You'd have me down, down, down on my knees.

Barracuda -- Heart

A-3. Yesterday and days before,
Sun is cold and rain is hard.
I know been that way for all my time.
'Til forever, on it goes
Through the circle, fast and slow,
I know it can't stop, I wonder.

Have You Ever Seen the Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival

A-4. He left no time to regret,
Kept his d**k wet
With his same old safe bet.
Me and my head high
And my tears dry,
Get on without my guy.

Back to Black – Amy Winehouse

A-5. You lead us along,
My love and me, as we sing
Our early morning singing song.

Good Morning Starshine -- Oliver

A-6. You let me violate you,
You let me desecrate you,
You let me penetrate you,
You let me complicate you.

Closer – Nine Inch Nails

A-7. When some sweet hog mama with a face like a gent
Said my get up and go must've got up and went,
Well, I got good news, she's a real good liar
'Cause the backstage boogie sets your pants on fire.

Sweet Emotion -- Aerosmith

A-8. Chillin'; cooler den a squeak; kickin' dirt on my sneakers.
Suckers on the corner lookin' down at their beepers.
They couldn't get a job or a nice home,
So they want to stay and wait for the pay-phone.

Playground – Another Bad Creation

A-9. I cry each night my tears for you.
My tears are all in vain.
I'll hope and I'll pray that maybe someday
You'll be back in my arms once again.

Puppy Love – Paul Anka or Donny Osmond

A-10. It's the way you love me,
It's a feeling like this,
It's centrifugal motion,
It's perpetual bliss.

This Kiss – Faith Hill

A-11. You told me that you loved me.
Now, girl, show me.
'Cause I can't believe it's true
By the things you do.

I LIKE IT -- DINO

A-12. I've got a secret I've been hiding under my skin,
My heart is human, my blood is boiling, my brain I.B.M.
So if you see me acting strangely, don't be surprised.
I'm just a man who needed someone, and somewhere to hide.

Mr. Roboto -- Styx

A-13. I was told when I got older all my fears would shrink,
But now I'm insecure and I care what people think.

Stressed Out – Twenty-one Pilots

A-14. And even though the moment passed me by
I still can't turn away,
'Cause all the dreams you never thought you'd lose
Got tossed along the way
And letters that you never meant to send
Get lost or thrown away.

Name – Goo Goo Dolls


A-15. But when we leave this year, we won't be coming back,
No more hanging out 'cause we're on a different track.

Graduation Song – Vitamin C

A-16. My man put me up for the share, one-fourth of a square,
Headed for Delaware with one change of gear.
Nothin’ on my mind but the dime sack we blazed
With the glaze in my eye, that we find when we crave.

STREET DREAMS -- NAS

A-17. Hold me,
I'll give that you need,
Wrap your love around me,
You're so excited I can feel you getting hotter.

Jump (for my Love) – The Pointer Sisters

A-18. If you want my future, forget my past,
If you wanna get with me, better make it fast.
Now don't go wasting my precious time,
Get your act together, we could be just fine.

Wannabe – Spice Girls

A-19. I know you know that I made those mistakes maybe once or twice –
By once or twice I mean maybe a couple of hundred times.
So let me, oh, let me redeem, oh, redeem myself tonight
'Cause I just need one more shot at second chances.

Sorry – Justin Bieber

A-20. Why in the world would anybody put chains on me?
I've paid my dues to make it.
Everybody wants me to be what they want me to be.
I'm not happy when I try to fake it.

Easy – The Commodores

A-21. First time that I saw you, girl, I knew that I just had to make you mine,
But it's so hard to talk to you with fellas hanging 'round you all the time.

Dizzy – Tommy Roe

A-22. Just a young gun with a quick fuse,
I was uptight, wanna let loose,
I was dreaming of bigger things
And wanna leave my own life behind.

Thunder – Imagine Dragons

A-23. She's winding them down on her clock machine
And she won't give up 'cause she's seventeen.
She's a frozen fire,
She's my one desire.

Let’s Go – The Cars

A-24. Lying here with you, listening to the rain,
Smiling just to see the smile upon your face.
These are the moments I thank God that I'm alive,
These are the moments I'll remember all my life.

I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain

A-25. I know you miss your mom
And I know you miss your dad when I'm gone,
But I'm trying to give you the life that I never had.
I can see you're sad.

MOCKINGBIRD -- EMINEM

A-26. Joggin' in the mornings – go, man go!
Workouts in the health spa, muscles grow.

Macho Man – Village People

A-27. You changed my life
With just the wave of your smile,
Soothed my doubt
And eased my worried mind.

Atlanta Lady -- Marty Balin

A-28. You don't listen to her
You don't care how it hurts
Until you lose the one you wanted
'Cause you've taken her for granted
And everything you had got destroyed.

If I were a Boy -- Beyonce

A-29. I guess I should've kept my mouth shut
When I start to brag about my car,
But I can't back down now because
I pushed the other guys too far.

Don’t Worry Baby – The Beach Boys

A-30. This perfect romance that I've created in my mind,
I'd live a thousand lives
Each one with you right by my side,
But yet we find ourselves in a less than perfect circumstance
And so it seems like we'll never have the chance.

Ain't it Funny -- Jennifer Lopez

A-31. Why drink the water from my hand,
Contagious as you think I am?
Just tilt my sun towards your domain.
Your cup runneth over again.

December – Collective Soul

A-32. I can't stand this indecision
Married with a lack of vision.

Everybody Wants to Rule the World – Tears for Fears

A-33. How could you be so cold as the winter wind when it breeze, yo?
Just remember that you talkin' to me though.
You know need to watch the way you talkin' to me, yo,
I mean after all the things that we've been through,
I mean after all the things we got into.

HEARTLESS -- KANYE WEST

A-34. You're digging for gold
Yet throwing away
A fortune in feelings
But someday you'll pay.

Cold As Ice -- Foreigner

A-35. So close no matter how far,
Couldn't be much more from the heart.
Forever trust in who we are.

Nothing Else Matters -- Metallica

A-36. And I don't wanna come between you and your man,
Even tho I know I'll treat you better than he can.

CAN'T HELP BUT WAIT -- TREY SONGZ

A-37. They took a ride so, baby, I went too,
Stopped at the record hop, I had to be a sport.
We jumped and we did the slop,
Then you walked in and I was caught.

Don’t Hang Up – The Orlons

A-38. Girl, I can buy your ass the world with my pay stub.
Ooh, that p**sy good, won't you sit it on my taste buds?
I get way too petty once you let me do the extras.
Pull up on your block, then break it down, we playing Tetris.

HUMBLE -- KENDRICK LAMAR

A-39. I wanna see y'all, who wanna plan with me?
Wave your hands across the land if we family.

JAMBOREE -- NAUGHTY BY NATURE

A-40. So, like what do you think?
Did you think that girl was pretty?
How did that girl even get in here?
Did you see her?
She's so short and that dress is so tacky,
Who wears cheetah?

Selfie – The Chainsmokers

A-41. Carried your books from school,
Playin' make believe you're married to me.
You were fifth grade, I was sixth
When we came to be.

My Eyes Adored You – Frankie Valli

A-42. The heart of the city street was beating,
Light from the neons turned the dark to day,
We were too hot to think of sleeping,
We had to get out before the magic got away.

Running with the Night – Lionel Richie

A-43. A local boy kicked me in the butt last week.
I just smiled at him and turned the other cheek.
I really don't care, in fact I wish him well,
'Cause I'll be laughing my head off when he's burning in hell.

Amish Paradise – Weird Al Yankovic

A-44. I can turn a river into a raging fire.
I can live forever if I so desire.

I Can’t Get Next To You – The Temptations

A-45. I been movin' calm, don't start no trouble with me.
Tryna keep it peaceful is a struggle for me.
Don't pull up at 6 AM to cuddle with me,
You know how I like it when you lovin' on me.

GOD'S PLAN -- DRAKE

LIST B: PEOPLE

B-1. Among this composer’s more scatological compositions was “Lick me in the arse,” a canon for six voices.

Wolfgang A. Mozart

B-2. He had the longest tenure of any President who didn’t complete his first term in office.

John F. Kennedy

B-3. Although he was not the first to isolate it, the bacteria that is the causative agent of chicken cholera is named after this scientist.

Louis Pasteur

B-4. His most famous novel ends, “Which of us is happy in this world? Which of us has his desire? Or, having it, is satisfied? – Come, children, let us sht up the box and the puppets, for out play is played out.”

William Makepeace Thackeray

B-5. Though some critics at the time held him responsible for the Ludlow Massacre, he is honored today for his philanthropy, having given away over $500 million to various causes – more than twice what he passed on to his own family.

John D. Rockefeller, Jr.

B-6. His most popular painting depicts a group of his friends relaxing on the balcony of a restaurant overlooking the Seine.

Renoir

B-7. Only three men have won more Olympic gold medals in swimming than he has, and no male swimmer has ever won more bronze.

Ryan Lochte

B-8. He won the Oscar on the second of his three consecutive nominations for Best Actor – and hasn’t been nominated in the almost two decades since.

Russell Crowe

B-9. The last words of this legendary labor activist were reportedly, “Fire! Go on and fire!”

Joe Hill

B-10. DJMQ: Deemed too tall to cast in classical ballet, she found a home with a pioneering New York dance company in 1965 … premiered her signature solo for them in 1971 … and took over the role of artistic director in 1989.
Another DJMQ appears at #60

Judith Jamison

B-11. Though best known as the hero of his own country’s liberation, this general was also honored on the Uruguayan ten peso for his defense of Montevideo during that country’s civil war.

Simon Bolivar

B-12. This minister of the Reformed Church wrote, “Every problem has in it the seeds of its own solution. If you don’t have any problems, you don’t get any seeds.”

Norman Vincent Peale

B-13. She was the first African American woman to represent a state on the West Coast in Congress.

Yvonne Braithwaite Burke

B-14. He was the co-founder and lead singer of the glam rock band that hit the Top Ten in Britain with their self-titled debut album in 1972.

Bryan Ferry

B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

B-16. He debuted in 1938, made his radio debut in 1940, his film debut in 1941, his television debut in 1951 – and he’s still going strong.

Superman/Clark Kent

B-17. Published in six volumes from 1776 to 1789, this historian’s magnum opus traced the history of Western civilization from A.D. 98 through the fall of Byzantium.

Edward Gibbon

B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)

Who else was in both movies? Jonathan Winters?

B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.

B-20. He was the first manager of partial Asian descent to win a World Series.

Dave Roberts

B-21. This journalist’s 1904 study of municipal corruption made him one of the leading muckrakers of his day.

Lincoln Steffens

B-22. This polymath’s 1905 work “On Denoting” has been called a “paradigm of philosophy.”

Bertrand Russell

B-23. The mission commanded by this man was the first to accomplish ….

Neil Armstrong

B-24. … what the mission commanded by this man failed to accomplish ten months later.

James Lovell

B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

B-26. Archie Bunker thought that this bandleader’s initials were “E.C.” – and refused to accept what his initials actually were.

Xavier Cugat

B-27. The third winner of the lifetime achievement award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America, his clients included Brooke Astor, Jessye Norman, Gloria Vanderbilt, and the daughter-in-law of the man in Clue B-5.

Bill Blass

B-28. This activist was awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom – and, in a way, an Oscar – more than 30 years after his death

Harvey Milk

B-29. This English engineer invented the wick carburetor, built the first English motorboat, and formulated a theory of flight that led to the development of the airfoil.

FREDERICK WILLIAM LANCHESTER

B-30. In 1939, this novelist wrote what became the single best- selling murder mystery of all time – but no one would dare publish it today under its original title.

Agatha Christie

B-31. This director’s filmography include a movie set in the Paleolithic era, a movie set in a medieval monastery, and a movie set in war-torn Stalingrad.

Jean-Jacques Annaud

B-32. With seven medals, she is the most decorated American gymnast in the history of the Olympic games.

Shannon Miller

B-33. While on leave from his work for the Farm Security Administration, this photographer collaborated on a book with a notable novelist/ screenwriter/poet/film critic.

Walker Evans

B-34. The most renowned – and controversial – model produced by his company was the H-4 Hercules.

Howard Hughes

B-35. On March 14, 1964, he was sentenced to death – and, though granted a new trial on appeal, he died in prison before the date could be set.

Jack Ruby

B-36. This saxophonist received many honors – including a posthumous Pulitzer Prize – but perhaps the most unique was being canonized by the African Orthodox Church.

JOHN COLTRANE

B-37. He died in the Ludlow Street Jail after being convicted of stealing between $25-45 million dollars from taxpayers – an estimate that many believe was far too low.

Boss Tweed

B-38. This physicist won the Nobel Prize for his “"fundamental research in quantum mechanics, especially in the statistical interpretation of the wave function

Max Born

B-39. Although he never made Cardinal – probably through the machinations of Eamon de Valera – this Dublin archbishop was the most influential clergyman in Ireland for more than 30 years.

B-40. He was one of Germany’s leading stage stars – until that unfortunate “Nazi state actor” thing – but his most enduring contribution to the arts was playing the title role in the film that launched the expressionist movement.

Werner Krauss

B-41. As a playwright, he had his greatest success with a romantic comedy about political corruption that ran on Broadway from February 1946 to December 1949.

Garson Kanin

B-42. This psychologist spent a lot of his time fabricating rhesus monkeys out of wire and cloth.

Harry Harlow

B-43. He spent more weeks ranked at Number One than any other English golfer.

Nick Faldo

B-44. He may be #7, but he ranks #1 as the youngest person for whom I have ever written a clue.

Prince Archie Mountbatten-Windsor

B-45. A hero of the Franco-PrussianWar, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.

B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.

B-47. This guitarist won a Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Performance for the theme to a 1986 hit movie starring Tom Cruise.

Steve Stevens

B-48. She won Emmy awards for her leading role on two different sitcoms – a feat also achieved by Lucille Ball, Mary Tyler Moore, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Bea Arthur

B-49. This researcher first gained recognition for successfully achieving in vitro fertilization in rabbits, but the work for which he is best remembered began when he met Margaret Sanger.

Gregory Pincus

B-50. This novelist is remembered chiefly for an 1873 novel – written in collaboration with a soon-to-be more famous writer – that gave an epithet to an entire period of American history.

Charles Dudley Warner

B-51. In 2008, the international airport in Birmingham, Alabama, was renamed in honor of this civil rights leader who helped organize the 1963 Birmingham Campaign for the SCLC.

Fred Shuttlesworth

B-52. During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, he coined the term “Vietnamization”

Melvin Laird

B-53. She once told an interviewer, ”I have no use for people who exhibit manners” – and when asked which fork to use, she replied, “The cleanest.”

Amy Vanderbilt

B-54. A two-time All Star during his seven seasons with the Hornets, this point guard also played for the Warriors, Clippers, Cavaliers, and Knicks before he retired.

Baron Davis

B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.

B-56. He “was dead: to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that. The register of his burial was signed by the clergyman, the clerk, the undertaker, and the chief mourner…. [He] was dead as a doornail.”

Jacob Marley

B-57. The name of this late actor is inextricably linked with that of another actor – who has since asserted that both of them were sexually abused as children in Hollywood.

Corey Haim

B-58. His celebrated clients included an osteopath, a U.S. Army captain, and a football player.

B-59. Her 1970 hit was her only record to cross over onto the pop charts, but it was big enough to make her the first female country singer to appear as a guest of Johnny Carson.

Lynn Anderson

B-60. DJMQ: The only dance team to jointly receive the Kennedy Center Honors, they were pioneers in the acrobatic “flash dancing” technique that evolved in the 1930s.

The Nicholas Brothers

B-61. Responding to widespread criticism, he has stated, “I am indeed the 'Grim Reaper' when it comes to the socialist agenda that they have been ginning up over the House.”

Moscow Mitch McConnell

B-62. This Austrian economist developed the concept of “creative destruction” to describe the dynamic, constant process of destroying old economic structures to make way for new ones.

JOSEPH SCHUMPETER

B-63. Honors received by this scientist include the Croix de Guerre, the Legion of Honour, the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom, and induction into the Television Hall of Fame.

JACQUES COUSTEAU

B-64. This writer’s works included a hit play about a fictional race for the U.S. Presidency and a best-selling novel about a real-life U.S. Vice President.

Gore Vidal

B-65. In 1979, he became the first NHL goaltender credited with scoring a goal.

Billy Smith

B-66. This future four-star general commanded one mission designed to starve an enemy and another mission designed to feed a former enemy.

Curtis LeMay

B-67. The pharmacy he opened in 1962 has expanded into the largest drugstore chain on the East Coast and the third largest overall in the U.S.

ALEX GRASS

B-68. He became a news anchor for NBC just in time to serve as point man for their award-winning coverage of Hurricane Katrina.

Brian Williams

B-69. She was the longest-serving president of the National Organization for Women.

PATRICIA IRELAND by the wording of the clue, although it looks like Terry O'Neill will soon break that record, if she hasn't already.

B-70. He was the first American chef to receive simultaneous three Michelin stars for each of two different restaurants – his flagship restaurant in the Napa Valley and a newer restaurant in Manhattan.

Thomas Keller

B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.

B-72. In the 1950s, he co-founded the first experimental theatre company in the United States. (One NY critic, clearly not sympathetic to the avant-garde, famously complained that the theatre “should drop dead.”)

B-73. A rainy summer at Lake Geneva and a challenge from Lord Byron gave rise to this author’s most famous work.

Mary Shelley

B-74. Though he only served one term as Secretary of State, he was instrumental in getting the U.S. involved in one war and helped nudge the nation on the long road toward another war.

B-75. A 1992 music video by this American band featured an iconic – and notorious – performance by nine year-old Heather DeLoach.

Blind Melon

B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.

Jan Oort

B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.

B-78. He was the hero of a popular 1873 novel – and of an Oscar-winning Best Picture eight decades later.

Phineas Fogg

B-79. She is the only woman not married to a U.S. President who is considered an official First Lady by the First Ladies’ Library.

Harriet Lane

B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."

B-81. This general got his nickname for his role in suppressing a rebellion against the Qing dynasty, but he failed to repeat such success on another continent.

B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.

B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.

B-84. The two films that he made with Bette Davis were, in their own way, every bit as violent as the three films he made with Lee Marvin.

B-85. In 2011, readers of [/i]Rolling Stone[/i] voted him the greatest lead singer of all time – coming in just ahead of Freddie Mercury.

Robert Plant

B-86. He was the longest-reigning monarch of the neo-Babylonian empire.

Nebuchadnezzar

B-87. One of the few baseball players to have his number retired by more than one team, he was also the second relief pitcher inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Rollie Fingers

B-88. His 1948 paper “A Mathematical Theory of Communication” is considered the foundational work of modern information theory.

Claude Shannon

B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.

B-90. Students of this influential German-American anthropologist included Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, and Ashley Montagu.

Franz Boas

B-91. In an official report submitted to her state legislature in 1843, she described patients “confined within this Commonwealth, n cages, stalls, pens! Chained, naked, beaten with rods, and lashed into obedience."

Dorothea Dix

B-92. The identification of this Catholic saint with a sinner introduced in Luke 7:36-50 began with Pope Gregory I in 581, but was officially refuted by Pope Paul VI in 1969. (Many people still haven’t gotten the message.)

Mary Magdalene

B-93. The major source of information about the fate of this explorer was a narrative written by his navigator, Abacuk Pricket.

Henry Hudson

B-94. This actress posthumously received her fourth Emmy nomination as producer of a 2009 documentary about her fight against the cancer that killed her.

Farrah Fawcett

B-95. The 1913 premiere of a ballet by this composer caused a sensation – but not, as legend would have it, a riot.

Igor Stravinsky

B-96. A complete edition of this poet’s nearly 1800 verses was not published – very posthumously – until 1955.

Emily Dickinson

B-97. Innovations credited to this football coach include the reverse play, the huddle, the Statue of Liberty, the lateral pass, and the use of uniform numbers and padded goal posts.

Amos Alonzo Stagg

B-98. He was by far the highest ranking figure to get doused as a result of the Ice Bucket Challenge.

George W. Bush

B-99. The four-word phrase most associated with Charles Darwin was actually coined by this philosopher.

Herbert Spencer

B-100. Although he never completed college himself, this inventor received eight honorary LLDs, two honorary PhDs – including one from Gallaudet College – and an honorary MD.

Alexander Graham Bell
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#47 Post by franktangredi » Thu Sep 19, 2019 8:44 pm

The two that were wrong before are still wrong, and they're the only ones that are wrong. But you've now added a few people who I think will steer you toward the Tangredi. One or two in particular.

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ToLiveIsToFly
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#48 Post by ToLiveIsToFly » Mon Sep 23, 2019 5:16 pm

franktangredi wrote:The two that were wrong before are still wrong, and they're the only ones that are wrong. But you've now added a few people who I think will steer you toward the Tangredi. One or two in particular.
I think I found one:

B-11. Though best known as the hero of his own country’s liberation, this general was also honored on the Uruguayan ten peso for his defense of Montevideo during that country’s civil war.

Simon Bolivar

LOOKS LIKE THIS IS GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI

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franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#49 Post by franktangredi » Tue Sep 24, 2019 7:51 am

If you can figure out what other person on the list Giuseppe Garibaldi might match up with, you can probably figure out the Tangredi.
ToLiveIsToFly wrote:
franktangredi wrote:The two that were wrong before are still wrong, and they're the only ones that are wrong. But you've now added a few people who I think will steer you toward the Tangredi. One or two in particular.
I think I found one:

B-11. Though best known as the hero of his own country’s liberation, this general was also honored on the Uruguayan ten peso for his defense of Montevideo during that country’s civil war.

Simon Bolivar

LOOKS LIKE THIS IS GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI

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mellytu74
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Re: Game #195: Discography

#50 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Sep 26, 2019 9:43 am

B-39. Although he never made Cardinal – probably through the machinations of Eamon de Valera – this Dublin archbishop was the most influential clergyman in Ireland for more than 30 years.

Could this be WILLIAM WALSH?

Looked up some Irish stuff while watching Parnell (and Clark and Myrna were right, it really IS an awful movie) and came across his name.

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