Frazz by Jef Mallett for October 18, 2012

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    Agent54  over 11 years ago

    Mrs. O was into hard Rock not Peter Paul and Mary. Probably has some tats hidden somewhere.

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    runar  over 11 years ago

    42 (In any number base).

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    Stray  over 11 years ago

    You’ve already called him a man…so the answer is 0.

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    KasparV  over 11 years ago

    Peter Paul and Mary had the first commercial success with the song. I’ve still got the album.

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    chazandru  over 11 years ago

    Mrs. Olson reminds me of an aunt who loved Perry Como, Andy Williams, and when she felt….frisky….Tom Jones and Englebert Humperdink.Tho…with a name like Olsen, she might prefer, POLKA!!!!!Blowing In The Wind still asks relevant questions.C.(knew an Olsen family and they were heavily into Polka and Garrison Keillor’s fictional Olsen’s have some polka love.)

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    Snoopy_Fan  over 11 years ago

    What? He doesn’t have a car???

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    Winchworra  over 11 years ago

    Hello Cousin Jeff, from Your Dad’s first cousin Richard Worra Sr.

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    YatInExile  over 11 years ago

    If Mrs. O was a hippie? She’s a hippie now. Look at those hips!

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    Piksea Premium Member over 11 years ago

    I think the answer to that is a big “Nope.”

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    catzilla23  over 11 years ago

    According to Ookla the Mok http://www.songlyrics.com/ookla-the-mok/math-lyrics/ “The answer my friend is 17.4”

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    bobdingus  over 11 years ago

    Of course Dylan wrote it. It was first published in Broadside magazine in May, 1962. The Chad Mitchell Trio were the very first to record it, but their idiot record company delayed releasing it because the song contains the word “death”. PPM released the hit #1 version in July, 1963

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    bobdingus  over 11 years ago

    BTW…I like Dylan’s version best of all…sounds a lot more soulful and earthy than the others: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A006XhYG7co

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    JavaJim  over 11 years ago

    Actually, “Blowin’ in the Wind” was first released on Dylan’s “Free Wheelin’” album in May of ’63. The Beatles “Please Please Me” album was released in March of ’63.

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    EdFenster Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Actually, she is still quite hippy.

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    NCTom Premium Member over 11 years ago

    The answer, my friend, is determined by your age….

    “is blowin’ in the wind”, Dylan lyrics, even released by Dylan first, and most popularly done by P,P, and M…if you are old enough to know that folk came first, then came hippies.

    42, if by coincidence you are, say 42 or thereabout, or have read what your 42 yr old parents have suggested.

    or, the aforementioned, “what, he doesn’t have a car”, if you are too young to know what the other comments have any relation to.

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    cbrsarah  over 11 years ago

    Who cares? You don’t have to be a hippie to appreciate a good song.

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    fritzoid Premium Member over 11 years ago

    If Mrs. Olson HAD been a hippie, she’d still have known the song well, so her NOT recognizing it is sufficient to provide Caulfield the information he was after.

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    llong65  over 11 years ago

    this was alson done when he asked a male teacher the same question as the teacher was sitting on a woppie coushion. last frame the kid in the laundry room with Fraz washing his pants and the kid saying he laughed so hard he peed his pants.

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    beaver48612  over 11 years ago

    You don’t have to be hippie to know Bob Dylan!!!

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    Konabill  over 11 years ago

    The 50s was the best time to be a teenager. Music made it great.

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    ambr95012  over 11 years ago

    42 is a generic answer.- TO EVERYTHING. This is a specific question.

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    hippogriff  over 11 years ago

    Oak Ridge Boy 61: Generally yes, but Peter Yarrow’s “Puff, the Magic Dragon” did quite well.

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