Q1)The Millau Viaduct was inaugurated: on 14th December, 2004. It’s where: Southern France, Northern Germany or Eastern Spain?
Q2)A mass shooting took place at the Sandy Hook Elementary School: on 12th December, 2012. School, and shooting, were where: Connecticut, Massachusetts or New York State?
Q3)Alabama joined the USA: on 14th December, 1819. Alabama’s state flag is a red cross on what colour background?
Q4)Roald Amundsen’s team became the first people to reach the South Pole. On 14th December of which year: 1910, 1911 or 1912
Q5)Finally … ? 14th December, 1955, saw Albania, Austria, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Ceylon, Finland, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Jordan, Laos, Libya, Nepal, Portugal, Romania and Spain, all joined what: the UN, EU or AU?
Q4)1942 saw Malta award what: the Victoria Cross, George Cross, Nobel Peace Prize or the Légion d’honneur?
A4)The GeorgeCross. (The Cross is the UK’s highest for gallantry not on the field of battle. It’s one of only three collective awards. The others were to the Royal Ulster Constabulary, and the National Health Service. The RUC had an iffy reputation: so I don’t know if their getting a GC sits well with me.)
Q5)Finally … ? Angelo Muscat was a Maltese born actor. He played the Butler in which 60s series?
Orange in colas are definitely worth a go: it’s a far better compliment, I think. Oh, and lime goes well with tonic: even it you’re not having gin with it§.
Youth Without Youth looks interesting, Olga: but I have to ask … is it as odd as Possession … ?
‡ I take your point, Debbi! Like I said, socialism be damned!
§ Supposedly, Olga, people in the UK put lime in gin and tonic: up until World War Two. Apparently, limes were rations, lemons weren’t …
Q5) the UN I suspect Youth Without Youth is not quite as weird. The plot is weird, but the film looks beautiful (well, it is a Francis Ford Coppola film after all, so you would expect that), and I enjoyed it, although I haven't watched it since I saw it at the cinema. Somehow in my mind it reminds me of Only Lovers Left Alive by Jim Jarmusch (another very beautiful film), but that's my brain and its connections. Sometimes you watch a movie at a particular time in life and you enjoy it but wonder if you would if you watched it again. (The Graduate was a weird one for me. I watched it when I was quite young for the first time and I sympathise with the Dustin Hoffman character, but when I watched it many years later, I felt very sorry for the Anne Bancroft character and I felt it was quite a cruel film from that perspective). Limes have a very different taste to lemons but they don't usually have as many peeps (that I find very annoying in some lemons, as you end up with more peeps than juice). Oh, we had Sants 3 Ràdio Chrismas dinner yesterday, and I was chatting to one of the collaborators, Eduard Rebull, a poet who lived in Miami for many years, and he was telling me that he had just come back from a visit to Miami and things were terrible there. He isn't a big fan of Trump, evidently, but I am surprised by how many people seem to support him now...
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1 France
ReplyDelete2 Conneticut
3 White
4 1911
5 UN
Q1) Southern France
ReplyDeleteQ2) Connecticut
Q3) White
Q4) 1911
Q5) the UN
I suspect Youth Without Youth is not quite as weird. The plot is weird, but the film looks beautiful (well, it is a Francis Ford Coppola film after all, so you would expect that), and I enjoyed it, although I haven't watched it since I saw it at the cinema. Somehow in my mind it reminds me of Only Lovers Left Alive by Jim Jarmusch (another very beautiful film), but that's my brain and its connections. Sometimes you watch a movie at a particular time in life and you enjoy it but wonder if you would if you watched it again. (The Graduate was a weird one for me. I watched it when I was quite young for the first time and I sympathise with the Dustin Hoffman character, but when I watched it many years later, I felt very sorry for the Anne Bancroft character and I felt it was quite a cruel film from that perspective).
Limes have a very different taste to lemons but they don't usually have as many peeps (that I find very annoying in some lemons, as you end up with more peeps than juice).
Oh, we had Sants 3 Ràdio Chrismas dinner yesterday, and I was chatting to one of the collaborators, Eduard Rebull, a poet who lived in Miami for many years, and he was telling me that he had just come back from a visit to Miami and things were terrible there. He isn't a big fan of Trump, evidently, but I am surprised by how many people seem to support him now...
Back when I waited tables, people usually ordered gin and tonic with lime. Probably picked up the habit during the war. Maybe. :)
ReplyDelete1. Southern France
2. Connecticut
3. white
4. 1911
5. the UN
I understand rationing of various foods and other consumer goods were in effect here during WWII. Not that I was around for that. :)