Find a famous person
[1828] Find a famous person - Find the first and the last name of a famous person. Text may go in all 8 directions. Length of words in solution: 6,5. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 33 - The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović
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Find a famous person

Find the first and the last name of a famous person. Text may go in all 8 directions. Length of words in solution: 6,5.
Correct answers: 33
The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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Moths

A woman was having a passionate affair with an inspector from pest-control company. One afternoon they were carrying on in the bedroom together when her husband arrived home unexpectedly. "Quick," said the woman to her lover, "into the closet!", and she pushed him into the closet stark naked. The husband, however, became suspicious and after a search of the bedroom discovered the man in the closet. "Who are you?" he asked him.
"I'm an inspector from Bugs-B-Gone," said the exterminator.
What are you doing in there?" the husband asked.
I'm investigating a complaint about an infestation of moths," the man replied.
"And where are your clothes?" asked the husband.
The man looked down at himself and said, "Those little bastards!"

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Salomon Bochner

Died 2 May 1982 at age 82 (born 20 Aug 1899). Salomon Chaim Bochner was a Galician-American mathematician and educator who is remembered for his Bochner theorem of positive-definite functions and the Bochner integral. In the later development of abstract Fourier analysis, the Bochner theorem was basic to the theory of distributions. He started his academic career in Germany. In 1933, as a Jew, with the rise of the Nazism, he fled to the U.S., where he joined the faculty at Princeton. In addition to his life-long interest in harmonic analysis, in his prolific writings, Bochner also contributed significantly to complex analysis, differential geometry, probability and other pioneering work in pure mathematics. In his later years, he turned almost exclusively to the history and philosophy of science. His best-known book, The Role of Mathematics in the Rise of Science (1966), was translated into many languages.«
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