Tuesday 5 October 2010

The Daily Teaser …

Oh, don’t you just hate that, when that happens … ?

Waking up in the morning and finding your ears blocked … ?

I know I do: I’ve just had to get going with the eardrops.

Which wasn’t particularly nice.

It never is, is it?

Lets get moving on, shall we … ? Before I bore you to tears with gruesome details about dissolving earwax …

After all, I’d rather be telling you about something else …

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Yesterday’s Teaser saw Trevor and a returning Mr Strict putting in their answers: it saw Trevor scoring 7 out of 7, and Mr S bagging 5 out of 7.

Saying that, Mr Strict did manage to dig up an interesting answer, by mentioning the Bradshaw timetables as his answer for yesterday’s Q5.

Let’s see how they — and you — do with today’s questions, shall we? Here they are, along with the ‘How To’ and License
Q1) 5th October, 1962, saw the release of the first Eon Productions James Bond film: which one was it … ?


Q2) More to the point, who played not James Bond — that was Sean Connery — but the title character of the film … ?

Q3) Equally too the point, this film saw Peter Burton’s only appearance as which character … ?

Q4) Moving on, 5th October, 1968 saw a Civil rights march in Northern Ireland broken up by police using water cannon: in which town … ?

Q5) 5th October, 1813, saw the death of which Shawnee leader … ?

Q6) October 5th, 1986, saw the death of producer, Hal B. Wallis: which Edward G Robinson film did he — along with Darryl F. Zanuck — produce? (Uncredited, I should add.)

Q7) And finally … 5th October, 1918, saw the death of French air ace, Roland Garros: in which French city is the tennis stadium that bears his name … ?
And here’s yesterday’s questions and answers …
Q1) 4th October, 1883, saw the first run of the Orient Express: which city was its original French terminal?

A1) Paris.

Q2) More to the point, which Turkish city was at the other end … ?
A2) Istanbul. (Not Constantinople …)

Q3) While we’re on train transport … 4th October, 1976, saw British Rail launch its High Speed Train service: what was that train known as … ?
A3) The Intercity 125.

Q4) Equally to the point, that 1976 train’s kitchen had a state of the art … what … … ?
A4) Microwave oven. (They were really pushing the boat out … !)

Q5) While we’re at it, which company publishes — in the UK — the ABC Railway Guides … ?
A5) Ian Allen. (Who, apparently, do a range of books for Freemasons, and compost made from organic seaweed. I want the mock bananas back … )

Q6) 4th October, 1985, saw the foundation of the Free Software Foundation: in which US state?
A6) Massachusetts.

Q7) And finally … 4th October is the feast day of Saint Francis of Assissi: the order of monks he founded — the Order of Friars Minor — is also known as what … ?
A7) The Franciscans.
Enjoy those, everyone: now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to grab some tissue …



3 comments:

Kaiju said...

1. Dr. No
2. Joseph Wiseman
3. Major Geoffrey Boothroyd
4. Derry
5. Tecumseh
6. Little Caesar
7. Paris

Anonymous said...

Q1 Dr. No.
Q2 Joseph Wiseman
Q3 Major Boothroyd
Q4 Derry or Londonderry
Q5 Tecumseh
Q6 Little Caesar
Q7 Paris

Trevor

“Anyone who takes himself too seriously always runs the risk of looking ridiculous; anyone who can consistently laugh at himself does not.”

“Drama assumes an order. If only so that it might have - by disrupting that order - a way of surprising.”

“I think theatre should always be somewhat suspect.”

“Lying can never save us from another lie.”

“Sometimes I wonder if suicides aren't in fact sad guardians of the meaning of life.”

“When a truth is not given complete freedom, freedom is not complete.”

“Without free, self-respecting, and autonomous citizens there can be no free and independent nations. Without internal peace, that is, peace among citizens and between the citizens and the state, there can be no guarantee of external peace.”

Quotes by Václav Havel (Czech playwright & President) born 5 October 1936.

Nik Nak said...

Kept us waiting, there, Trevor! :D