Return To Message Board
Author Topic:   Liverpool Questions
Sandgrounder posted 3/9/09 4:16 PM    
To all Liverpool teams may I request that you link to the Southport website and then to "Questions" then to "2008" and finally to "3rd March".Having done that you should have access to one of the worst quizzes played in Southport in recent years. How to spoil a night out and the bring about the demise of MQL then set quizzes like this.I know there have been complaints before, obviously these have been ignored. If anyone had scant regard for the people required to play this set then they should never have been sent out.You can see the scores achieved and the press report on site by following the requisite links.I have waited until these points had been posted on site so that my complaint can be substantiated.This is not an individual complaint but includes several Southport teams or players.
Jon Gilbert posted 6/17/09 5:03 PM    
What exactly is so terrible about this set?
Scouser posted 8/2/09 1:39 PM    
DUnno...Too difficult for our chums in Southport, perhaps?
Alan posted 8/26/09 12:46 AM     Click here to send email to Alan  
Rean uninspiring set, but one question was wrong. If toothpaste consisted of mostly sodium fluoride, those without dentures would be dead
Andy Chadwick posted 8/28/09 9:24 AM     Click here to send email to Andy Chadwick  
From Wikipedia:Molecule of the WeekFebruary 19, 2008Sodium fluorideWho would have thought that such a simple salt could be so useful—and controversial? NaF was the original fluoride source used in water to prevent dental cavities. In many communities, however, this was deemed a violation of people’s freedom of choice—some even thought it was a communist plot to poison Americans—and it often was outlawed. Today, NaF is the most common chemical used to fluoridate toothpaste. It is also used as an industrial cleaning agent and a metallurgical extractant.
Andy posted 8/28/09 9:26 AM    
From Wikipedia:Molecule of the WeekFebruary 19, 2008Sodium fluorideWho would have thought that such a simple salt could be so useful—and controversial? NaF was the original fluoride source used in water to prevent dental cavities. In many communities, however, this was deemed a violation of people’s freedom of choice—some even thought it was a communist plot to poison Americans—and it often was outlawed. Today, NaF is the most common chemical used to fluoridate toothpaste. It is also used as an industrial cleaning agent and a metallurgical extractant.
Return To Message Board

http://www.liverpoolquiz.org.uk/index1.html  | Post New Topic