AMERICA SINGER FEELS GUILTY ABOUT BAD GRAMMAR

AMERICA SINGER FEELS GUILTY ABOUT BAD GRAMMAR

LOS ANGELES (Wireless Flash) -- America singer Dewey Bunnell is carrying a heavy load of guilt because of his bad grammar. Bunnell -- who wrote hits like "Horse With No Name" and "Tin Man" -- admits he still cringes at some of his lyrics, which drove high school English teachers nuts. "Horse With No Name" contains grammatical blunders such as: "'Cause there ain't no one for to give you no pain..." and "Tin Min" is filled with double negatives as in "Oz never did give nothing to the Tin Man/ That he didn't/ Didn't already have." Bunnell says in real life he speaks correctly and he doesn't know why his English skills slip during songwriting, but he pleads guilty on the grounds of "poetic license." America's latest recording is the 3-CD anthology, "30 Years Of America."