http://members.aol.com/Polycell/uniform.html


Name and Location:

George Olshevsky
Post Office Box 161015
San Diego, California 92176–1015

Hobbies and Interests:
Polyhedron model-making, dinosaurs, and (of course) geometric figures in the higher-dimensional Euclidean spaces. From the 1960s through the 1980s I collected Marvel Comics and compiled the Official Marvel Comics Index for Marvel. For 14 years I had the world’s only complete collection of Marvel superhero comics that extended all the way back to Marvel’s first comic book, Marvel Comics #1, October-November 1939. Now, however, I’m no longer an active comic-book collector. During the Marvel Index project I produced some 60 fully illustrated books, totaling more than a million and a quarter words—but after 1976 I never did manage to index every single Marvel superhero comic, just the more popular runs.

Indexing sets of things seems to be in my blood: My present “day job” is professionally indexing books of all kinds as a freelancer. My Dinosaur Genera List website is essentially an index to all the dinosaur names, and this Uniform Polychora website you are now visiting is, likewise, an index to all the convex uniform polychora. Just to keep my verbal skills intact, I do each day’s New York Times crossword puzzle. During the early 1990s I served two years as president of the San Diego Stamp Club, but I’m not currently an active stamp collector. (Over the course of some 40 years, I had assembled nearly complete collections of Poland, France, and United States postage and revenue stamps, and filling my want lists just became too expensive! I do keep up my membership in the American Philatelic Society, however, just in case I ever return to stamp collecting.)


Text ©1997 George Olshevsky, but the math belongs to everyone.