<DIV style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif;"><DIV>Somebody must have originated that quote, but I personally am dubious that it was Asimov.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>The closest thing from Asimov that I know of is in one of the columns he wrote for Fantasy and Science Fiction and reprinted in one of his collections. It was about Darwin and Wallace and how they independently came to discover "survival of the fittest". Asimov said something to the effect (I'm sure this is far from his exact words) "I know it sounds hackneyed, but the answer came to him in a flash of inspiration." I think that is as far as he went about Eureka moments in this column. He certainly didn't say anything about "it was funny".</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>If I had to guess the originator, I would suspect Martin Gardner, perhaps in his book "Aha! Insight".</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Other equally trivial observations:</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>"looked at a spectrograph of my friends voice" contains two illiteracies. The word should be "spectrogram". A "spectrograph" is the instrument which looks at in this case sounds and produces a written spectrogram. It's like saying "camera" when you mean "photograph". Come to think of it, that last word should be "photogram". Better analogy: telegraph versus telegram.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>I few years ago I read a magazine article about female cadets at West Point. The article was either entitled "spring steel and sex appeal" or had that phrase in it. Perhaps the female cadet who used that phrase to the writer was echoing or parodying a phrase well known at West Point since before it went co-ed.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>From Vachel Lindsay's "The Congo" stanza iii:</DIV>
<DIV> Beat on a Bible till he wore it out</DIV>
<DIV> Starting the Jubilee revival shout</DIV>
<DIV> ...</DIV>
<DIV> And slammed their hymbooks till they shook the room</DIV>
<DIV> With "Glory Glory Glory" and "Boom Boom Boom"</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV> - Jim Landau</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>"White people have no souls" - Baron Munchausen</DIV><BR> <BR><HR>Netscape. Just the Net You Need.</DIV>
------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org