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The reward for coding errors found in Knuth's TeX and Metafont programs (as distinguished from errors in Knuth's books) followed an audacious scheme inspired by the wheat and chessboard problem, [10] starting at $2.56, and doubling every year until it reached $327.68. [3]
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In 2003, as a mature student, Leeson completed a BSc in Psychology at Middlesex University.He is a guest on the after-dinner and keynote speaking circuits, [24] [25] stating in 2019 that "two events a month is enough to keep me in the manner to which I'm accustomed". [26]
Proselytizing for precision questioning on a commercial basis continues via the Vervago company, [1] co-founded by Matthies and Worline. [ 2 ] Tens of thousands of people in universities and companies throughout the world have studied different versions of precision questioning.
Question Hour is the first hour of a sitting session of the Lok Sabha devoted to questions that Members of Parliament raise about any aspect of administrative activity. The concerned Minister is obliged to answer to the Parliament , either orally or in writing, depending on the type of question raised.
A patrol car randomly passed by the scene of an active bank robbery in Süsterseel. One officer, 55-year-old Norbert Domnick, attempted to enter the bank when one of the robbers stormed out to face him. Both were killed in the ensuing fire exchange. The second robber managed to escape while 40,000 DM were found on the deceased robber.
Gerald Leo Posner is an American investigative journalist and author of thirteen books, including Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK (1993), which explores the John F. Kennedy assassination, and Killing the Dream: James Earl Ray and the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1998), about the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
A version of the game in Europe involves spotting yellow cars, [1] and it appears in the British radio sitcom Cabin Pressure under the name "yellow car", with no scoring. [ 14 ] In the United States, this game is known as "banana", [ citation needed ] and in Scandinavia a similar game called gul bil exists. [ 15 ]