Big open problems in science and mathematics have a way of surprisingly showing up in simple puzzles. One big problem involves the famous fractal known as the Sierpinski gasket and how much space it takes in the plane as an object of fractal dimension Log_2(3). Ettestad and Carbonara showed that a simple puzzle posed by Barry Cipra in 1992 is an example of the Sierpinski gasket, and it can be used to study its properties, hopefully shedding light on some of the big mysteries associated with fractals and in particular to the Sierpinski gasket. In 1992 Barry Cipra posed an interesting combinatorial counting problem (call it the CSCP problem). In essence, it asks for the number of configurations possible if a circular arrangement of k cups, e...