Win a New Martin Gardner Book #2
Posted on September 10th, 2008 by CambridgeBlog in Martin Gardner Puzzles, MathematicsUpdate: This is last week’s puzzle, click here for this week’s puzzle!
It’s that time again! I’ve got another problem from Martin Gardner’s Origami, Eleusis, and the Soma Cube, and another copy available to win. We’ll move on to the other of the two first volumes in a couple weeks. Find this week’s puzzle after the jump.
Thanks for all of your entries last week! The winner of the first puzzle, with a clever poem is Wei-Hwa Huang, a longtime Gardner fan. I had several other right answers, but let’s allow the poem to reveal what it is:
Tags: Contest, Free Book, Martin GardnerSuppose that the escalator connects floors 3 and 2,
and that more escalators connect the building through.Let’s further add this additional supposition:
that when the Prof starts going up, he has some competition.A humble janitor of the name Stanley Spadowski
starts at the same place and goes down at rate Slapenarski.(And when we say “rate Slapenarski” we mean
that he goes down at the exact same rate we’ve seen.)Finally, let’s say that Stanislaw tries to be extra manly:
he doesn’t stop climbing until floor 1 meets Stanley.(Though these additions might seem rather deranged,
you have to admit that the floor height is unchanged.)And now we ask for just one piece of datum:
Where is the prof when the custodian hits the bottom?Well, we know that his speed is five times as shifty,
so when Stanley’s moved 50, Stanislaw’s moved 250.At half of that Stanislaw had just reached floor three,
so he should be exactly on floor four, you see.To sum up: the men are now separated by three floors,
have made in total 300 steps and no more.A simple division means (unless we have blundered)
the height of one floor must be exactly… 100.


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