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47: A prime number in politics and a whole lot else

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“Suppose you happen to see two four-leaf clovers in one day, so you see a third clover and you think it is amazing,” Banks said. “It’s not that the day is any different, you were just paying more attention.”

But 47 is a prime number. Surely that means something.

“There’s nothing special about 47 that I’m aware of,” Banks said. “The fact that it’s prime is incidental, not relevant.”

Don’t tell that to alumni of Pomona College, in Claremont, Calif. On the 1,500-student campus near Los Angeles, 47 is the magic number.

“A couple of students decided to do this tongue-in-cheek project to prove the number 47 is more frequently recurrent in nature than any other number,” said Mark Wood, senior director of communications.

They found more than they expected: Pomona College is on Exit 47 from the San Bernardino Freeway, the top row of an organ on campus has 47 pipes, and 47 students were enrolled at Pomona at the time of its first graduating class in 1894 (there’s 94 again).

But back to the campaign for a second.

Florida’s 29 electoral votes and Ohio’s 18 could add up to victory for Obama or Romney. Do the math.

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