But let’s get moving on, shall we?
Q1) 1st May is May Day. Traditionally, many will celebrate by dancing around a what?
Q2) May Day celebrations were banned by Great Britain’s Lord Protector: during England’s Civil War period. Who WAS the Lord Protector?
Q3) May Day Celebrations were restored in 1660: when which king assumed the throne: James 1st, Charles 1st or Charles 2nd?
Q4) Many parts of the UK celebrate with a festival that features Jack in the … what?
Q5) A famous Jack features in the Sweeps Festival. In which Kent town: Rochester, Rainham or Strood?
Q6) May Day is also International Workers Day. The day was first International Workers Day was proposed in which year: 1889, 1890 or 1891?
Q7) May Day Parades in the Soviet Union saw the country’s leaders watch military parades in Moscow. Those leaders would stand on whose tomb?
Q8) International Workers Day has been celebrated in South Africa: since which year of the 1990s?
Q9) Many devout Catholics will celebrate a noted female figure, on May 1st. Which figure?
Q10) Finally … The town of Padstow celebrates May Day, with a ’Obby ’Oss parade†. Padstow is in which English county?
Q1) 30th April saw President Richard M. Nixon take responsibility for — and deny being part of — the Watergate Affair. In which year of the 1970s?A1) 1973.
Q2) During his speech on the 3rd, he famously said “There will be no …” what, “… at the Whitehouse”?A2) White wash.
Q3) Nixon announced his resignation in which year?A3) 1974.
Q4) By the time of his resignation, President Nixon had made a famous diplomatic visit — in 1972 — to which Communist country?A4) China.
Q5) What did the ‘M’ stand for in Richard M. Nixon’s name?A5) Milhous.
Q6) The Watergate complex, itself, was in which US city?A6) Washington DC.
Q7) The Scandal started when members of Nixon’s re-election campaign were implicated in a break-in at the complex: a break-in at offices run by which US political party?A7) The Democrats.
Q8) Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward of the ‘Washington Post’ wrote what’s considered the THE book on the Scandal: what was it called?A8) ‘All The President’s Men’.
Q9) Nixon once said “Oh, when the President does it, that means that it is not illegal.” Which British journalist and TV personality did he say this to?A9) The late Sir David Frost.
Q10) Finally, which of Nixon’s successors issued a Presidential Pardon for him, in 1974?A10) President Gerald Ford.
“At Bealltainn, or May Day, every effort was made to scare away the fairies, who were particularly dreaded at this season.”
Lewis Spence, British Fairy Origins.
Let's see how I do. I'll be going kind of offline for a while. I need a break. :)
ReplyDelete1. maypole
2. Oliver Cromwell
3. Charles II
4. Green
5. Rochester
6. 1889
7. Lenin's
8. 1994
9. the Virgin Mary
10. Cornwall