The Ecphorizer
| Elusive Bubbles |
| Phyllis M. Bourne |
Issue #15 (November 1982)
things in our lives are nothing more than illusions
hanging in the air. How many times we dream of
possibilities which never came true. But that never
stops our dreams from shaping. We rationalize,     Â
synthesize, weigh all possibilities in our minds, but
still there is that child-like quality in our innerselves
which dismissing everything our intellect has learned,
yearns for those brilliant, elusive and mysterious
bubbles of illusion that seem to stay             Â
                                             just                            Â
                                                one
                                                   inch
                                                         away
                                                               from
                                                                     our
                                                                        reach.
Logic or imagination, experience or dreams,
reality or the wondrous world of make-believe,

a constant struggle between extremes. But
we'll always want to find the exact position
where standing on our feet we can let our
imagination fly to unknown worlds and
realities.Â
She's a former Program Officer for San Francisco Mensa and is noted for her cool parties and fiery Latin American cooking.
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Phyllis Bourne
Phyllis is a charming story-teller, is known for her fiery Latin American cooking, and is past Program Chair for SFRM.
| Le Coin d'Archimède 5 |
| Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevski |
Issue #15 (November 1982)
Last Month's Solution. The archaeologist marks storage locations (call them x and y) at 150 and 400 miles along the route from the starting point. He travels to x, using 30 gallons for the round trip and storing 45 gallons there. He repeats this, storing another 45 gallons at x. He now starts out with 75 more gallons, stopping at x to pick up 15 gallons from the 90 there and proceeding to y. At y he leaves 25 gallons and then returns to x to pick up the remaining 75 gallons. From x he proceeds the rest of the way across the desert, stopping at y to pick up the 25 gallons he left there. Total fuel consumed: 225 gallons.Â
Staff Member and occasional Cover Artist Martha Johnson embellished Phyllis Bourne's poem with a girl blowing soap bubbles in the original Ecphorizer by simply drawing on the pasted up camera-ready galley. I thought about asking her to do the same for this online reprint but we figured that it would mess up my screen! The artwork was so good and so in keeping with the poem that I did a bit of web tomfoolery to insert those bubbles. -Tod, 2006
More Articles by Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevski
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Phyllis Bourne
Phyllis is a charming story-teller, is known for her fiery Latin American cooking, and is past Program Chair for SFRM.