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30 Seconds is a charades-like fast-paced general knowledge board game, created by Calie Esterhuyse and first published in South Africa in 1998. [ 1 ] The game is played with two or more teams of at least two players.
A second chart, the moving range chart, can also be used but only with rules 1, 2, 3 and 4. Such a chart plots a graph of the maximum value - minimum value of N adjacent points against the time sample of the range. An example moving range: if N = 3 and values are 1, 3, 5, 3, 3, 2, 4, 5 then the sets of adjacent points are (1,3,5) (3,5,3) (5,3,3 ...
The NCAA introduced a 45-second shot clock for the 1985-86 season; [13] several conferences had experimented with it for the two seasons prior. [14] It was reduced to 35 seconds in the 1993–94 season, [15] and 30 seconds in the 2015–16 season. [16] The NAIA also reduced the shot clock to 30 seconds starting in 2015–16. [17]
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A $600 range for the price of a prize is displayed as a vertical scale. A $150 range finder moves up the scale, starting from the bottom, and the contestant has one opportunity to stop it by pressing a button. The contestant wins the prize if the range finder is covering the correct price when stopped. [61]
minimum opening hands with 13 to 15 HCP; medium opening hands with 16 to 18 HCP; maximum opening hands with 19 to 21 HCP; For unbalanced hands with 22+ points: show a very strong opening hand by using the strong 2 ♣ convention. For balanced hands, open with a no-trump bid when you can limit your hand to the following point ranges: 15 to 17 ...
The table below summarizes the preferred moves for each of the 15 possible opening rolls, as selected by detailed computer simulations, referred to as "rollouts". [3]The first column is the move that the rollout says gives the most equity (i.e. the average profit or loss that one would net, per game, by playing the position to conclusion an infinite number of times). [4]
Jason Day hits out of a green-side bunker on the 8th hole during the first round of the U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club. Pin placement green approaches.