Judicial Follies: Riding the Subway ...Middle East

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The late television producer Allan Sherman had a brief career in the early 1960s as a musician. He took songs, mostly folk songs and those in the public domain, such as “Frere Jacques” or “Greensleeves” and put satirical lyrics to the familiar tunes. His most memorable, and his one big hit, used Amilcare Ponchielli’s “Dance of the Hours” as the tune for “Camp Granada” about a boy begging his parents to “rescue” him from summer camp. Another of Sherman’s ditties was written to the old Scottish folk tune that Robert Burns used for his poem, “Comin Thro’ the Rye.” Sherman’s version: “Do not make stingy sandwich,/“Pile the cold cuts high./“Customers should see salami/“Comin’ through the rye.” Bu

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