Calculate the number 735
[6806] Calculate the number 735 - NUMBERMANIA: Calculate the number 735 using numbers [3, 7, 4, 8, 41, 621] and basic arithmetic operations (+, -, *, /). Each of the numbers can be used only once. - #brainteasers #math #numbermania - Correct Answers: 11 - The first user who solved this task is Nasrin 24 T
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Calculate the number 735

NUMBERMANIA: Calculate the number 735 using numbers [3, 7, 4, 8, 41, 621] and basic arithmetic operations (+, -, *, /). Each of the numbers can be used only once.
Correct answers: 11
The first user who solved this task is Nasrin 24 T.
#brainteasers #math #numbermania
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Difference between hypothetical and reality

A little boy goes up to his father and asks: “Dad, what's the difference between hypothetical and reality?”

The father replies, “Well son, I could give you the book definitions, but I feel it could be best to show you by example. Go upstairs and ask your mother if she'd have sex with the mailman for $500,000.”

The boy goes and asks his mother: “Mom, would you have sex with the mailman for $500,000?”

The mother replies, “Hell yes I would!”

The little boy returns to his father. “Dad, she said ‘Hell yes I would!'”

The father then says, “OK, now go and ask your older sister if she'd have sex with her principal for $500,000.”

The boy asks his sister, “Would you have sex with your principal for $500,000?”

The sister replies: “Hell yes I would!”

He returns to his father. “Dad, she said ‘Hell yes I would!'”

The father answers, “OK, son, here's the deal: Hypothetically, we're millionaires, but in reality, we're just living with a couple of whores.”

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Richard Pough

Born 19 Apr 1904; died 24 Jun 2003 at age 99.American ecologist who was founding president of the Nature Conservancy (1950), one of the nation's largest environmental organizations. He later helped develop the World Wildlife Fund. His training was in chemical engineering, but his lifelong passion was the outdoors. In the 1930s, he persuaded a New York socialite to raise money to buy Hawk Mountain, Pennsylvania, as a bird sanctuary to protect the hawks from devastation by hunters. In 1945, in the New Yorker magazine, he was one of the first to warn that DDT could drive fish, frogs, and birds extinct. He also fought for a law that banned the sale of rare-bird feathers for women's hats. He wrote the Audubon Bird Guide.
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