What number comes next?
[3052] What number comes next? - Look at the series (97895, 45638, 32156, 18101, ...), determine the pattern, and find the value of the next number! - #brainteasers #math - Correct Answers: 67 - The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30
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What number comes next?

Look at the series (97895, 45638, 32156, 18101, ...), determine the pattern, and find the value of the next number!
Correct answers: 67
The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30.
#brainteasers #math
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A sister and brother are talki...

A sister and brother are talking to each other when the little boy gets up and walks over to his Grandpa and says, "Grandpa, please make a frog noise."
The Grandpa says, "No."
The little boy goes on, "Please .. please make a frog noise."
The Grandpa says, "No, now go play."
The little boy then says to his sister, "Go tell Grandpa to make a frog noise."
So the little girl goes to her Grandpa and says, "Please make a frog noise."
The Grandpa says, "I just told your brother 'no' and I'm telling you 'no'." The little girl says, "Please .. please Grandpa make a frog noise." The Grandpa says, "Why do you want me to make a frog noise?"
The little girl replied, "Because mommy said when you croak we can go to Disney World!"
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William Thomas Astbury

Born 25 Feb 1898; died 4 Jun 1961 at age 63. English physical biochemist who was the first to make use of X-ray diffraction patterns to study the structure of nucleic acids (1937). Astbury researched the method under Bragg for seven years, then investigated the structure of wool in both the stretched and unstretched forms. From the difference in the diffraction patterns, he began to try to work ot the structure of protein molecules. His preliminary determination of the structure of nucleic acids were, in fact, wrong - but it gave impetus to Pauling's work with proteins, and to Crick and Watson's study of DNA structure. His work, slowly decoding the nature of molecular structure of virtually the largest organic materials, fibrous and globular proteins, was valuable to both science and industry.
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