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============================================================ The mini-Annals of Improbable Research ("mini-AIR") Issue Number 1994-03 July, 1994 ISSN 1076-500X Key words:science humor,Improbable Research,Ig Nobel ------------------------------------------------------------ The mini-journal of inflated research and personalities. Published by The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR) at The MIT Museum ============================================================ ----------------------------- 1994-03-01 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1994-03-01 Table of Contents 1994-03-02 News: Yes Indeed! Curiousity, Kilt, the, CAT 1994-03-03 Additional, Unreported Dangers from Mexican food 1994-03-04 International Sweetness Ages 1994-03-05 Specimen of the Month 1994-03-06 May We Recommend... 1994-03-07 Upcoming Events 1994-03-08 Calls for Papers 1994-03-09 Purpose of mini-AIR (*) 1994-03-10 How to Submit Articles (*) 1994-03-11 How to Subscribe to AIR(*) 1994-03-12 How to Receive to mini-AIR, etc.(*) 1994-03-13 AIR's Mailing and Internet Addresses (*) 1994-03-14 Please DO make copies! (*) Items marked (*) are reprinted in every issue. ------------------------------------------------------------ 1994-03-02 News: AIR, Curiousity, Kilt, the, CAT 1. Yes Indeed! We are very pleased to announce: You can now become a charter subcriber (whatever that means) to The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR). The magazine will appear on your doorstep 6 times per year. For details, see section 1994- 03-11 below. PLEASE SPREAD THE WORD!!!!!! 2. Curiousity We AIRheads continue to receive queries from former readers of The Journal of Irreproducible Results (JIR) hungry for details of why the entire staff (1955-1994) of JIR felt it necessary to resign from that publication and create The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR). The matter is explained in news reports in The Scientist (July 11), Science (June 24) and Nature (June 9). Details can also be obtained by emailing a request to air@mit.edu. 3. Kilt Would the Scottish reader who mailed a kilt to the AIR editorial office please inform us of your address? We are otherwise unable to send you a letter acknowledging that the contribution is tax- deductible. 3. the Effective with this issue of mini-AIR, we must discontinue our popular data feature "The 'The' Count." "The 'The' Count" reported how many times during the previous month the the word "the" appeared in major metropolitan newspapers in 162 cities. If and when Internet sites in Asia and Australia agree not to censor the data, we will resume publishing the column. 4. CAT The winner of the CAT scanner lottery is Norman F. Lee of Hong Kong. Second prize, a wooden tongue depressor, was won by Traian Mihaescu of Iasi, Romania. ---------------------------------------------- 1994-03-04 Additional, Unreported Dangers from Mexican food by Steve Mirsky New York City The recent report from CSIPI [1] on the high fat and salt content of Mexican food, though long overdue, still neglects to implicate the myriad other health dangers consumers face when dining in Mexican restaurants. The plates upon which Mexican food is traditionally served can be very, very hot, indeed approaching the "yip yip woo hatcha" stage. Contact between said plates and human skin can result in tissue damage followed by vigorous hand waving and blowing that in turn can cause hyperventilation. A little-discussed danger of Mexican dining is the finite probability of encounters with roving Mariachia bands. A condition known as Castanet Culjone, though rare, is particularly painful and debilitating. In addition, the small mobile orchestras are exceptionally annoying, which can lower the immune response. Finally, there is the much observed but little discussed "twice-burned" phenomenon, consistent with the relative indigestibility of certain key ingredients of Mexican food that register particularly high on the Scoville Organoleptic Test (the official scale of hotness)[2]. At least one Navy test has shown that window cleaning fluid, especially if it contains ammonia, can be an effective topical neutralizing solution for SOEYYWH (Sudden Onset Egress Yip Yip Woo Hatcha)[3]. REFERENCES 1. The Center for Science in the Public Interest 2. "Peppers," by Amal Naj, Vintage Books, 1992, p. 25. 3. Personal communication to the author. A Naval Academy graduate reports that his roommate at Annapolis used to spray his (the roommate's own) anal region with Windex after a spicy meal. ------------------------------------------------------------ 1994-03-04 International Sweetness Ages by Susan Andersen, Lennox University, London, U.K., and Bernadette Highwood, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts In virtually every culture, people who have generous, kind dispositions are described as being "sweet." However, this term is usually reserved (by other adults) for individuals who have reached a certain age. We conducted a cross-national study[1] to determine how "the minimum age of adult sweetness" varies from country to country. Our results our presented below.[2] Country Age (Number of people surveyed) ======= === ========================= Argentina 51 5 Australia 64 550 Austria 58 69 Belgium 57 57 Brazil 56 179 Bulgaria[2] 90 1 Canada 58 867 Columbia 59 2 Costa Rica 58 2 Croatia[2] 114 1 Denmark 59 59 Ecuador[2] 3 1 Estonia 63 7 Fiji[2] 98 1 Finland 67 85 France 14 89 Germany 84 357 Great Britain 64 1222 Greece 58 12 Hongkong 51 17 Hungary 59 4 Iceland 66 7 India 50 27 Ireland 60 41 Israel 75 124 Italy 55 60 Japan 62 41 Korea 58 3 Kuwait[2] 206 1 Malaysia 54 6 Mexico 59 14 Netherlands 50 178 New Zealand 64 103 Norway 62 80 Peru 50 2 Poland 67 12 Portugal 58 29 Romania[2] 714 1 Russia[2] 4 1 Saint Lucia[2] 1 1 Saudi-Arabia[2] 91 1 Singapore 58 27 Slovenia 69 2 South Africa 50 75 Spain 48 33 Sweden 48 143 Switzerland 69 94 Taiwan 61 10 Thailand 54 10 Turkey 58 10 USA 68 12934 NOTES 1. Due to space limitations,we cannot list here the many national agencies that helped us carry out the survey. We gratefully acknowledge their assistance. 2. Data may not be reliable for countries that reported fewer than two responses to the survey question. ----------------------------------------------------------- 1994-04-05 Specimen of the Month Taxonomic and analytical text prepared by Emmert Lowery, Jr. This item is on exhibit at The MIT Museum. ITEM #786-4591-089 Ferdie The Cow This fiberglass bovine, measuring eight feet in length from tail to snout and four feet tall at the shoulders, appeared on the morning of October 31, 1979 perched atop MIT's 150 feet tall Great Dome. The previous night Ferdi had been, "liberated" from its home in the Hilltop Steak House in Saugus, Massachusetts, by an unidentified group of MIT students. Ferdi's visit to the Great Dome attracted wide media coverage, and the Hilltop management took it in good stride, displaying Ferdi with mortar board and diploma after its return home. Ferdi returned to MIT in 1990, as part of the MIT Museum's exhibit on science humor. Since then she has served both as exhibit artifact and landmark. "Take a right at the cow," has become a standard instruction to visitors. ----------------------------------------------------------- 1994-03-06 May We Recommend... Research reports that merit a trip to the library: "Identification of Gourmet Meat Using FINS (Forensically Informative Nucleotide Sequencing)," by Alistair Raymond Russel Forrest and Patrick Robert Carnegie., "Biotechniqes," 1994, vol. 17, no 1, pp. 24-26. The report reads in part: "To protect both producers and consumers from illegal substitution of cheaper meats for expensive meats, it is necessary to have tests available that are effective with both cooked and processed meats.... This high cost of development cannot be justified for gourmet meats, such as emu, crocodile, and buffalo... As an example of the application of the improved FINS technique, a sample of an emu shish kebab ordered at a local restaurant was analyzed..." It was found that the "emu" shish kebab was actually buffalo shish keb. (Thanks to Gene Cutler for bringing this to our attention.) "An Automated Feeding and Testing Device for Elephants," by Charles W. Hyatt, Andy T. Richardson, Bruce W. Copeland, John R. Lehnhardt, "IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement," Vol. 43, No. 1, February 1994, pp 100-101. The abstract reads: "An automated feeding and testing device was developed to provide behavioral enrichment and research instrumentation for the elephants at the National Zoological Park/Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC." (Thanks to Steve Goldstein for bringiing this to our attention. Goldstein points out that this device may be the world's biggest touchpad keyboard.) (We welcome your suggestions for this column. Please include full citations. If possible, please send us a photocopy of the paper.) ----------------------------------------------------------- 1994-03-07 Upcoming Events MIT ALUMNI/AE CLUB OF LONG ISLAND date TBA U RHODE ISLAND, Kingston Sept 30, 3 pm Pastore Hall Auditorium (Chemistry Dept.) Spons. by URI Sigma Xi and URI Dept. of Chemistry For info: Prof. Louis J. Kirschenbaum kirschenbaum@chm.uri.edu 401-792-2340 1994 IG NOBEL PRIZE CEREMONY Thurs., October 6 Kresge Auditorium,MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts. You are cordially invited to attend. "CRAZY AFTER CALCULUS" ongoing An ongoing exhibition of extraordinary humor at MIT from prehistoric times through the presen. [NOTE: The police car that recently materialized atop MIT's Great Dome is now in storage at The MIT Museum.] The MIT Museum 265 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA (617) 253-4422 (ktl@mitvma.mit.edu) GODDARD SPACE CENTER, Greenbelt, MD Oct 28 details TBA MENSA CONVENTION, Chicago, IL Sat., Oct. 29 For info call Dianne Miller, (708) 747-5651 INTERSOCIETY POLYMER SOCIETY Mon., October 10, 1995 Stouffer Harborplace Hotel, Baltimore, MD The society recommends early reservations. Info: (518) 387-7942