bush
This appears to be a quotation from New York Times columnist Paul Krugman writing about the 2000 US Presidential election.He wrote that G W Bush""got within chad-and-butterfly range of the White House because the public, enthusiastically encouraged by many in the news media, treated the presidential election like a high school popularity contest. The successful candidate received kid-gloves treatment - and a free pass on the fuzzy math of his policy proposals - because he seemed like a fun guy to hang out with, while the unsuccessful candidate was subjected to sniggering mockery over his clothing and his mannerisms."
If my math is correct, 2000 was the year for the 54 presidential election.
Waht, wiyd u ask?
Approximately $40 million. http://illinoisreason.wordpress.com/2009/01/19/cons-fuzzy-math-lies-about-inauguration-costs/
from math import * def testPrime(x): factor = 2 while factor**2 <= x: if x % factor == 0: return False else: factor = factor + 1 return True candidate = 3 primeLogSum = log(2) n = int(raw_input("What is n? ")) while candidate < n: if testPrime(candidate): primeLogSum = primeLogSum + log(candidate) candidate = candidate + 2 print primeLogSum, n, primeLogSum/n
BenCarson was a neurosurgeon he used a lot of math to make surgery for others.
The correct spelling is prospective, as in: The prospective candidate had a strong math education. Or if you mean perspective, as in: My perspective of Mrs. Wood differed from my friend's perspective of our teacher.
In a normal election, it is necessary to count the number of votes cast for each candidate to determine the winner. This process may be simply finding the candidate with the largest number of votes or there may be preliminary run-offs with a 2-candidate final, or various forms of proportional representation.
Elections require counting, and addition to get a total. When the results of the election are reported on TV, percents are important. When you need to know how much one candidate beat another by, you have to use subtraction. The whole process always raises a candidate to a power, and often divides the country.
In math best
there no perfix in math
Math