Calculate the number 9602
[1595] Calculate the number 9602 - NUMBERMANIA: Calculate the number 9602 using numbers [9, 2, 5, 6, 39, 568] and basic arithmetic operations (+, -, *, /). Each of the numbers can be used only once. - #brainteasers #math #numbermania - Correct Answers: 20 - The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović
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Calculate the number 9602

NUMBERMANIA: Calculate the number 9602 using numbers [9, 2, 5, 6, 39, 568] and basic arithmetic operations (+, -, *, /). Each of the numbers can be used only once.
Correct answers: 20
The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović.
#brainteasers #math #numbermania
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Cork Screw

Gary and Martin were standing at the urinals in a public lavatory, when Gary glanced over and noticed that Martin's penis was twisted like a corkscrew. "Wow," Gary said. "I've never seen one like that before."
"Like what?" Martin said.
"All twisted like a pig's tail," Gary said.
"Well, what's yours like?" Martin said.
"Straight, like normal," Gary said.
"I thought mine was normal until I saw yours," Martin said.
Gary finished what he was doing and started to give his old boy a shakedown prior to putting it back in his pants. "What did you do that for?" Martin said.
"Shaking off the excess drops," Gary said. "Like normal."
"&%$#@ !," Martin said. "And all these years I've been wringing it."

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Georges Urbain

Died 5 Nov 1938 at age 66 (born 12 Apr 1872).French chemist who first isolated lutetium, the last of the stable rare earths. Between 1895-1912 he worked on the rare earths and performed more than 200,000 fractional distillations in which he separated the elements samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium and holmium. In 1907, he described a process by which Marignac's ytterbium (1879) could be separated into the two elements, ytterbium (neoytterbium) and lutetium. He named the new element after the Roman era village than stood on the site of Paris, his home town. (It was independently discovered by von Welsbach at about the same time.) Urbain also discovered the law of optimum phosphorescence of binary systems and wrote on isomorphism.
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