==> geometry/dissections/disk.s <== Yes. Draw a circle inside the circumference of the disk, sharing a common point on the right. Now draw another circle inside the second, sharing a point at the left. Now draw another inside the third, sharing a point at the right. Continue in this way, coloring in every other region thus generated. Now, all the colored regions touch, so count this as one piece and the uncolored regions as a second piece. So the circle has been divided into two similar pieces and there is no point symmetry about the midpoint. Maybe it is cheating to call these single pieces, though.