7 days 7 questions
It’s the Magazine’s 7 days 7 questions weekly quiz – a chance to find out how much news from the past week you’ve read, heard and watched… and how much has stayed lodged in the old grey matter.
Info
A tearful Peggy Mitchell surveys the charred remains of her domain, the Queen Vic pub, in her final EastEnders appearance. But the pub’s matriarch has been in the soap longer than Barbara Windsor. So our first question is….
1.) Multiple Choice Question
Who played the original Peggy Mitchell in 1991, three years before Windsor joined the cast?
SunglassesGlassesBlack topBlue check
Info
And here’s the evidence. Ricky and Sam’s wedding day in 1991, with Frank and Pat Butcher, plus Peggy Mitchell on the right. Click NEXT
2.) Multiple Choice Question
Cambridge has ousted Harvard as the world’s best university, with UK and US institutions filling the top 17 places. Which country, in 18th place, broke their stranglehold?
SwitzerlandCanadaAustralia
3.) Multiple Choice Question
“He’s history.” Who?
Tony BlairThe StigLarry King
4.) Multiple Choice Question
Mr Blair’s memoir A Journey has, however, officially become Britain’s fastest selling political memoir, beating…
Peter Mandelson’s The Third ManAlastair Campbell’s The Blair YearsBill Clinton’s My LifeJeffrey Archer’s Prison Diaries
5.) Multiple Choice Question
Who has NOT launched a perfume this week?
The SunIggy PopSex Pistols
6.) Multiple Choice Question
Bought for £1,645, sold for £1,700. What?
Photos of Stan LaurelA book on birdsMP’s duck house
Info
This is the duck house that sank the career of the former Tory MP. The floating Stockholm duck island came to symbolise the expenses scandal in 2009. But Sir Peter said his ducks had never liked it and proceeds from the sale went to Macmillan Cancer Support.
7.) Multiple Choice Question
In his new book, Prof Stephen Hawking says the universe exists because of one all-encompassing hypothesis: M-theory. But what might M stand for, according to its originator?
MasterMortalityMatrixMap
Answers
It’s four, actress Jo Warne, who was Peggy for three months when daughter Sam eloped with Ricky. One is Annie Nightingale, 40 years a Radio 1 DJ this week; two is Anna Karen, who plays Peggy’s sister Aunt Sal; three is Rita May, who plays Connie Rathbone in Coronation Street. It was Switzerland’s ETH Zurich, placed 18th. McGill in Canada was next, then Australian National. The rankings are by QS academic advisory board, which said UK and US universities had an advantage because English is the language of academia. It’s Top Gear’s The Stig, according to host Jeremy Clarkson, who was critical of Ben Collins’s legal fight to call himself The Stig. Tony Blair cancelled book signings due to protests and the successor to chatshow king Larry was named as Piers Morgan. Mr Blair’s book sold 92,060 copies in its first four days, the strongest ever opening-week sale of a memoir since Nielsen BookScan records began in 1998. However, Margaret Thatcher’s The Downing Street years was estimated to have sold 120,000 copies in its first week. It’s Iggy Pop. The Sun launched its first perfume, called Buzz, while punk band the Sex Pistols also entered the market with a unisex fragrance that promises to “create mayhem”. Iggy is to be the subject of a Jim Jarmusch documentary, but no smellies. Yet. It’s the duck house, for which Sir Peter Viggers famously claimed £1,645 on expenses. He resigned as an MP and this week sold teh house for charity. The Laurel photos fetched £8,000 at auction, while a £5m book called Birds of America is to go under the hammer. It’s matrix, according to Edward Witten, who came up with the theory in 1995. He also said it could stand for “magic” or “mystery”.
Your Score
0 – 3 : Mournful
4 – 6 : Mediocre
7 – 7 : Magnificent
For a complete archive of past quizzes and our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, visit the Magazine page and scroll down. You can also do this quiz on your mobile device. Find out how to get the BBC News website on your mobile device
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.