15th January, 2024: Ivor Novello.
It’s Monday, again.
You know that as well as I do: you’ve got a calendar, as well!
At any rate: it’s Monday, and I’m up early, again.
As I’m off to my usual weight management class.
Hopefully, I’ll’ve lost some more weight!
~≈ß≈~
You — possibly — aware of the Post Office Horizon scandal, here in the UK.
To summarise?
A host of former sub-postmasters — the people who run post office branches in local shops — have been wrongfully convicted of various shades of fraud: as a result of faulty software and hardware.
Software and hardware supplied by Japanese company, Fujitsu.
It’s a scandal that’s been boiling for many years.
The reason I mention this?
Is that news has emerged: that tells us Government insiders tried to stop Fujitsu getting any more government contracts, back in the 2010s.
Going by the article I’ve linked to?
The company’s been awarded government contracts, since then.
Personally?
I think this is a story that’s going to both cause a stink.
And keep running.
Let’s move on, shall we?
Yesterday’s Teaser saw Olga*, Mum† and Debbi‡ putting in their answers: with everybody scoring five out of five.
Let’s see how everyone does with today’s questions, shall we?
Q1) Ivor Novello was born on 15th January, 1893. The awards named after him are awarded for what: sheep shearing, songwriting or physics?Q2) Ivor was from where: England, Northern Ireland, Wales or Scotland?Q3) Ivor appeared in The Lodger and Downhill, in 1927. Both were directed by whom: David Lean, Alfred Hitchcock or Charlie Chaplin?Q4) Ivor played the main character in the first London version of Liliom. Liliom was the inspiration for which musical: Oklahoma!, Carousel or The Sound of Music?Q5) Finally … ? Ivor co-composed “Keep the Home Fires Burning”. It was a hit during what: the Boer War, First World War or Falklands War?
Q1) 14th January is World Logic Day. It was first marked in which year: 2018, 2019 or 2020?A1) 2019.Q2) It’s marked by which UN agency: UNESCO, UNHCR or the WHO?A2) The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO.Q3) According to Wikipedia, logic is the study of what: reasoning, explanations or behaviour?A3) Reasoning. (As a piece of pointless trivia? Rastafari meetings are called ‘reasoning sessions’.)Q4) If you study logic, you’re a what: logician, logarithm or logger?A4) A logician.Q5) Finally … ? Some forms of logic use deductive, inductive or adductive what: arguments, elephants or underwear?A5) Arguments. (If I’ve got it right? In the statements, “All hedgehogs are blue”, “Sonic is a hedgehog”, “Sonic is therefore blue”, the first two statements are arguments: the third is a conclusion. Don’t quote me on that, though!)
Here’s a thought …
“Things which do not require effort of some sort are seldom worth having.”Ivor Novello.
And a song …
Today’s questions will be answered in tomorrow’s Teaser.
Decisions about scores are final.
Thank you for coming: have a good day.
* You know, I could never get the hang of audiobooks, Olga? Podcasts, neither! But? I’ve got Radio 4 on, in the background! So it goes!
Oh, was it you that mentioned Devs to me, once upon a time? I caught the first episode, last night: it looks interestingly twisty …
† Hello, Mum!
‡ You know, old-fashioned bell-ringing could help, there, Debbi! (Oh, did Olga mention a series called Devs, Debbi? I caught the first episode, last night: some of the scenery is gorgeous!)
3 comments:
Q1) Songwriting
Q2) Wales
Q3) Ivor appeared in The Lodger and Downhill, in 1927. Both were directed by whom: David Lean, Alfred Hitchcock or Charlie Chaplin? Alfred Hitchcock (We watched The Lodger in one of the courses I was teaching assistant at the university, and it is rather good. I recommend it if you’ve never watched. It’s a silent movie).
Q4) Carousel
Q5) First World War
I rarely listen to audiobooks as such. I use the Text-to-speech feature from the old Kindle I have. It is an automated reading, so it doesn't "perform", it just reads (a bit robotic, but not too bad), and I find it doesn't distract me as much as listening to an audiobook, and I pay more attention to the actual book than to the performances (as I tend to read in order to review later). You know I follow some YouTube videos for exercising and that means I have to watch the screen, but I have the sound off and it is not a bad way to do two things at the same time (more or less).
Did I mention Devs? I'm not sure.
1 Songwriting
2 Wales
3 Alfred Hitchcock
4 Carousel
5 WW1
Ah, nothing like old-fashioned bell ringing. :)
1. songwriting
2. Wales
3. Alfred Hitchcock
4. Carousel
5. First World War
BTW, what's all this about "bi-generation"? Hmm ..?! :)
The one where Doctor David turns into an ordinary Englishman. :) Kinda. lol
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