1. obgu jrer pnyyrq qraavf gur zranpr naq obgu jrer eryrnfrq va gur znepu bs 1951. bar sebz gur hf naq gur bgure sebz gur hx.
2. onunqhe funu mnsne.
3. fnyinqbe qnyv'f jbexf 'gur qvfvagrtengvba bs gur crefvfgrapr bs zrzbel' naq 'va ibyhcgnf zbef' ba gur urnq bs gur zbgu.
4. na nqiregvfrzrag bs oevgvfu nvejnlf.
5. 'gur ubarlzbbaref', vg vafcverq 'gur syvagfgbarf'.
I wonder where we go when we die. Pittsburgh?
You mean if we're good or if we're bad?
Monday, January 14, 2008
Sunday, January 6, 2008
7. Connect
Connect Adolf Hitler, Lenin, Stalin, Frankenstein and Tony Curtis.
(Hint: Sorry, the answer is too weird to be true, but I did not find a single article denying it - including Snopes - and I found a BBC article which seemed to support it. This is just a piece of trivia, not one that can be guessed I suppose.)
(Hint: Sorry, the answer is too weird to be true, but I did not find a single article denying it - including Snopes - and I found a BBC article which seemed to support it. This is just a piece of trivia, not one that can be guessed I suppose.)
Saturday, January 5, 2008
Friday, January 4, 2008
5. Identify
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
4. What was printed?
Pakistan toured India in 1960-61 for a five test series. To commemorate these events the cricket boards of both nations issued souvenirs. The Pakistani souvenir had a large image of their national symbol, a full page image of Jinnah and another of Ayub Khan (Field Marshall and President of Cricket Board), national anthem in Urdu and English. The Indian souvenir on the other hand had a smaller image of the Indian emblem, had no image of Gandhi, it did not carry the national anthem. Rather it had something quintessentially BCCI on its cover which was absent on their counterpart's souvenir. What is it?
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
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