This week's puzzler:
While we were way up north this fall looking at the New England
foliage, we visited our friend, Doug Mayer. He said, "There's a road
right near my house that runs directly north and south."
I said, "Yeah? Show me."
And Mayer says, "I can put my car on this road and point it north,
and drive for a mile and when I'm done, I'm a mile south of where I
started."
The question is very simple: How's he doing it?
Last week's puzzler:
The owner of a record store hires a pimply faced, high-school kid to
work on Saturdays.
He says to the kid, "You know what to do. But I got one little
extra thing for you. I�ve got two piles of used 45-PM records that I�m
selling for my friend Sam. Each pile consists of 30 records.
"The records in the first pile are two for a buck. The other pile is
three for a buck. I don�t want you to put the money in the register. I�ve
got to give it to Sam. Put the money into the cigar box under the
counter."
At the end of the first day, the owner comes back to the store, finds
that all of the records have been sold and there is $25 in the cigar
box. The two-for-a-dollar records sold for a total of $15, and the
three-for-a-dollar records sold for a total for ten bucks.
Encouraged by the rapid sales, the next week Sam shows up with 60 more
records.
The owner gives the kid the same instructions. This time, the kid says,
"I noticed last week that people were taking two records from one
pile and three records from another pile, so I decided that this week I�m
going to sell five for two bucks."
The fellow who owns the record store says, "Seems like a good
idea."
At the end of the day, though, the owner opens the cigar box and there�s
$24 in there. He says, "You�re missing a
dollar!"
The kid says, "No, I sold all the records."
And that�s the question. Where�s the missing dollar?
Last week's puzzler answer:
In the record sale in Week #1, the records in the pile marked 2 for
$1 were priced at 50 cents each. And the records in the pile marked 3 for
$1 were priced at 33.33 cents each.
In the record sale in Week #2, the records were all marked 5 for $2,
which averages out to 40 cents per record. And that average price is the
problem.
Because if you averaged the price of the records for sale in Week #1, the
true average is 41.67 cents.
To make $25 in the record sales in Week #2, the clerk should have priced
the records at 5 for $2.08 to reach a total sales figure of $25.
_______________________
Scott MacLean
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 9184011
http://www.nerosoft.com
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