Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
signedbewildered said:NO!!!! MELONS, THE ANSWER IS MELONS!!!!
EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
:lol: :lol: :clap:EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
im pretty sure the speed limit for tnis entire stretch doesn't exceed 55 mph, making tbis a trick question. Signing off again cause I am out of battery and bandwidth but NW Energy is promising within a few years they will have our power back up - personally i doubt it cause every truck i see is from bozeman and well i have seen how they do engineering over there.Ursa Major said::lol: :lol: :clap:EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
Grizbeer said:im pretty sure the speed limit for tnis entire stretch doesn't exceed 55 mph, making tbis a trick question. Signing off again cause I am out of battery and bandwidth but NW Energy is promising within a few years they will have our power back up - personally i doubt it cause every truck i see is from bozeman and well i have seen how they do engineering over there.Ursa Major said::lol: :lol: :clap:EverettGriz said:Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
I would suggest investing in a good generator. Ever since my house mysteriously burned down, after my good friend CDA helped me move some furniture, I have relied upon a generator for quality, low-cost and reliable electricity. It has been a godsenGrizbeer said:im pretty sure the speed limit for tnis entire stretch doesn't exceed 55 mph, making tbis a trick question. Signing off again cause I am out of battery and bandwidth but NW Energy is promising within a few years they will have our power back up - personally i doubt it cause every truck i see is from bozeman and well i have seen how they do engineering over there.Ursa Major said::lol: :lol: :clap:EverettGriz said:signedbewildered said:Read some of these articles last night. His entire life's direction may ride on the answer he gives to one simple math problem.
Q1: A vehicle leaves Cheney at 8:18 am headed southwest, traveling the 450 miles to Eugene at 129 MPH (it's traveling rapidly because, well it's leaving Cheney, and the driver -- like everyone -- wants to get the f*ck out of Cheney as fast as possible). Along the way, the driver stops at 4 separate tattoo parlors, where he spends $3,417 on six new tattoos, none of which mention ewoo. Like, at all. The tats were paid for by 8 heavily involved UO boosters; of course, that was before they realized the driver was about as sharp as a marble. The driver also stops for gas and road food in The Dalles, population 15,158, where he spends another $74.21, garnered from a less prominent and well-off Duck booster. Nearing Portland, the car -- a 1990 Honda Prelude, complete with after-market real spoiler -- breaks down. The driver calls a few contacts in Eugene and secures their credit card for payment of the tow, and replacement of the timing belt, which totaled $811.56. Since he's now well behind schedule (damn slow tattoo artists!), the driver searches until he finds a hotel with a "go ducks" message on their marquee, where he spends the night in a hotel room which would normally have cost $137.88, plus an $11.67 occupancy tax charge. After a $4.99 breakfast at Denny's -- the driver just loves the Moon over Mihami -- he's off, cruising the 114 miles south on I-5 toward Eugene. He finally arrives at 1:21 pm, but not before a quick stop at the Oregon bookstore, where he purchases a really awful yellow UO shirt from the bargain bin for $14.99.
Is the driver's IQ above 80?
Ursa Major said:I would suggest investing in a good generator. Ever since my house mysteriously burned down, after my good friend CDA helped me move some furniture, I have relied upon a generator for quality, low-cost and reliable electricity. It has been a godsen
grizindabox said:Jim Allen @srjimallen 11m11 minutes ago Cheney, WA
No way Vernon Adams returns to play at Eastern, coach Beau Baldwin said Wednesday. #ewufb
Ha ha, so today is garbage day and as I am driving out probably 10% of the garbage cans have a box for a new generator on them. Which made me wonder, do I even have $500 worth of food in my freezer that will go bad? I mean it might make sense if I was in Western Washington where the per goes out once a week, or I was a NoDak with a sizable investment to preserve. Couldn't get the math to work.Ursa Major said:I would suggest investing in a good generator. Ever since my house mysteriously burned down, after my good friend CDA helped me move some furniture, I have relied upon a generator for quality, low-cost and reliable electricity. It has been a godsen