6th July, 2024.
Right, then … Saturday …
And … ?
I saw a movie, on Thursday.
Dune: Part Two, so you know.
Hopefully?
I’ll have the review finished, tonight!
~≈∑≈~
A few weeks ago?
I put in a complaint to my landlords: about last year’s service charges.
I felt they were too high.
And asked that — if that were correct? — if I could be refunded.
I finally got a reply, yesterday.
Apparently?
The charges were correct, and covered pest control: so I’m not due a refund.
Hmmm …
Let’s move on, shall we?
Yesterday’s Teaser saw Mum*, Olga† and Debbi‡ putting in their answers: with Olga scoring five out of five, Debbi on four, and Mum on three.
Let’s see how everyone does with today’s questions, shall we?
Q1) 6th July is Independence Day in Malawi. It marks the country’s independence from where: the UK, France or Germany?Q2) It became independent in which year of the 1960s?Q3) What was the country called until independence: Rhodesia, Nyasaland or Kenya?Q4) What’s Malawi’s currency: the Schilling, Kwacha or Thaler … ?Q5) Finally … ? Hastings Banda was Malawi’s first what: archbishop, president or King?
Here’s yesterday’s questions and answers …
Q1) 5th July saw the first daily news bulletin broadcast by the BBC. On what: TV or radio?A1) TV.Q2) The broadcast was in which year of the 1950s?A2) 1954.Q3) Who was that first news reader: Richard Baker, Robert Dougall or Kenneth Kendall?A3) Richard Baker.Q4) Currently? Clive Myrie, Fiona Bruce, Reeta Chakrabarti and Sophie Rayworth are the main presenters of the BBC News at what: One, Six or Ten?A4) Six.Q5) And finally? How long did the bulletin last for: ten minutes, twenty minutes or thirty minutes?A5) Twenty minutes.
Here’s a thought …
“Malawi [ … ] is a landlocked country in Southeastern Africa.”From the Wikipedia entry on Malawi.
A national anthem …
And an earworm …
Or two …
Today’s questions will be answered in tomorrow’s Teaser.
Decisions about scores are final.
Thank you for coming: have a good day.
* Hello, Mum!
† Lack of common sense … ? I think, Olga, they’re usually the ones that end up in power!
Personally, I’m giving the new government a week …
‡ It already IS the future, Debbi. I mean … we’re sitting here, in front of telescreens!
2 comments:
1 UK
2 1964
3 Nyasaland
4 Kwacha
5 President
Yes! Exactly! :)
Oy ... doesn't help that I just recently watched The Conversation with Gene Hackman and Harrison Ford being really creepy. :)
1. the UK
2. 1964
3. Nyasaland
4. the Kwacha
5. president
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