write any two mathematical pullza taking help from the newspaper
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Here’s something puzzling.
A few years before he died, aged 95 in 2010, I interviewed Martin Gardner at his home in Norman, Oklahoma.
Gardner was a journalist, a novelist, a magician, a philosopher and one of the earliest public debunkers of pseudoscience.
Yet he was probably best known – and most loved – for popularising mathematical puzzles.
In his monthly column Mathematical Games, which he wrote in Scientific American between the 1950s and the 1980s, he introduced many brainteasers as well as giving old classics new twists.
I asked him if he enjoyed solving puzzles?
“Not particularly,” he replied. “I’m not very good at it, really.”
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