0.1 Arithmetic (also see 9.3) Remedial or Developmental? Confusion over Terms, Don Ross, 1:2, 1970, 27-31, 1.2 Two-Pan Weighings, Chris Burditt, 3:2, 1972, 80-81, C Cyclically Permuted Code: A Variation on Binary Arithmetic, J. Maurice Kingston, 5:1, 1974, 29-36 Computation of Repeating Decimals, James E. McKenna, 7:2, 1976, 55-58 Smith Numbers, A. Wilansky, 13:1, 1982, 21, 9.3 Cryptology: From Ceasar Ciphers to Public-Key Cryptosystems, Dennis Luciano and Gordon Prichett, 18:1, 1987, 2-17, 7.2, 9.3 What's Significant about a Digit?, David A. Smith, 20:2, 1989, 136-139, C, 9.6 FFF #85. Unto Everyone That Hath Shall Be Given, John W. Kenelly, 26:1, 1995, 36, F Number Words in English, Steven Schwartzman, 26:3, 1995, 191-195 The Mathematical Judge: A Fable, William G. Frederick and James R. Hersberger, 26:5, 1995, 377-381, 1.1 The Square of Any Odd Number is the Difference Between Two Triangular Numbers (Proof Without Words), Roger B. Nelsen, 27:2, 1996, 118, C, 9.3 Fractions with Cycling Digit Patterns, Dan Kalman, 27:2, 1996, 109-115, 9.3 FFF #112. United in Purpose, Bruce Yoshiwara, 28:2, 1997, 119, F FFF #121. A Case of Black and White - But Not So Much Black, Peter Rosenthal, 28:5, 1997, 377, F FFF #125. Effects of Changing Temperature, Dave Trautman, 29:1, 1998, 35, F More Coconuts, Sidney H. Kung, 29:4, 1998, 312-313, C, 9.3 FFF #138. Fifty per cent more for fifty per cent less, Norton Starr, 30:1, 1999, 39-40, F Interval Arithmetic and Analysis, James Case, 30:2, 1999, 106-111, 9.5 FFF #140. Whose Real World?, Elizabeth Berman Appelbaum, 30:2, 1999, 130, F FFF #144. Spoiled for Choice, Norton Starr, 30:3, 1999, 210, F, 3.2 Saving Digits, Mark McKinzie, 31:2, 2000, 146, C FFF #167. Double from nothing, Richard Askey, 32:1, 2001, 48, F FFF #173. Loss of face, R. Askey, 32:1, 2001, 50-51, F Word Problems, Lawrence Braden, 32:1, 2001, 70-71, C Miscellanea: The Doctor and the Mathematician, Edwin Rosenberg, 32:4, 2001, 318, C Powers Made Easy, James Kirby, 32:5, 2001, 329, C, 9.3 FFF #191. Syllabus Innumeracy and the Easy A, Charles Redmond, 33:2, 2002, 138-139, F FFF #192. Addition by juxtaposition, Brendan Kelly, 33:3, 2002, 226, F FFF #193. Slide into poverty, by student, 33:3, 2002, 226-227, F FFF #194. Hitting the sales, the editor, 33:3, 2002, 227, F Musharraf Exposed, Margaux Marie Siegel, 33:3, 2002, 229, C Introducing Binary and Ternary Codes via Weighings, James Tanton, 33:4, 2002, 313-314, C, 3.2 Adding Fractions, Dan Kalman, 34:1, 2003, 41, C, 5.1.2 A large square consisting only of digits 7, 8 and 9, Hisanori Mishima, 34:4, 2003, 303, C, 9.3 FFF #219. A faulty test question, Joseph G. R. Martinez, 35:1, 2004, 41-42, F A Generalized Magic Trick from Fibonacci: Designer Decimals, Mrjorie Bicknell-Johnson, 35:2, 2004, 125-126, C, 9.5 Linearizing Mile Run Times, Garrett I. Ash, J. Marshall Ash, and Stefan Catoiu, 35:5, 2004, 370-374, 9.2 FFF #231. Solar Power, Ed Dubinsky, 36:1, 2005, 49-50, F How Many Checks?, Ted Ridgway, 36:2, 2005, 113, C FFF #234. A multiplicity of multiplications, Hyman Bass, 36:2, 2005, 141, F (see also Shirley B. Gray, 37:3, 2006, 214-215, F and Yves Nievergelt, 39:2, 2008, 137-138, F) Federal Money, Joseph Crukshank, 36:3, 2005, 208, C FFF #242. Lighter than air, Marie S. Wilcox, 36:4, 2005, 316-317, F Wrong, Wrong, and Wrong: Math Guides Are Recalled, New York Times, 36:5, 2005, 362, C Where are the missing Ò8-termsÓ?, Johann Hoehn and Larry Hoehn, 37:1, 2006, 68, C Watch Your Units!, Stan Wagon, 37:2, 2006, C Teaching Tip: How large is n!?, Leonard J. Lipkin, 37:2, 2006, 109, C Alligation, Joseph Crukshank, 37:2, 2006, 113, C FFF #251. Hot stuff in Canada, Neal Madras, 27:2, 2006, 123, F FFF #254. Computing the cost of a fence, Johnny Lott and Georgia Cobbs, 37:4, 2006, 291, F Bad Ad Arithmetic, Stan Lipovetsky, 37:5, 2006, 363, C FFF #262. Attributed to Vladimir Putin, Andre Toom, 38:1, 2007, 44, F Freaky fractions, Rick Kreminsky, 38:1, 2007, 46, C, 9.3 Misusing ÒpercentÓ, Ted Ridgway, 38:2, 2007, 95, C Kong size percent, Art Friedel, 38:2, 2007, 123, C Was He Serious?, Julian Fleron, 38:2, 2007, 130, C Literate maybe, but numerate?, Alfinio Flores, 38:4, 2007, 277, C Compound Addition, Joseph Crukshank, 38:5, 2007, 377 and 387, C Remainder Wheels and Group Theory, Lawrence Brenton, 39:2, 2008, 129-135, 9.3, 9.4 It Was Only a Sign Error, David Cox, 39:2, 2008, 135, C One-Upmanship in Creating Designer Decimals, James Smoak, 39:3, 2008, 211, C Missteps in Mathematics Books, Jerome Dancis, 39:5, 2008, 280-382, F, 0.2