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560 lines
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The mini-Annals of Improbable Research ("mini-AIR")
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Issue Number 1995-03
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March, 1995
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ISSN 1076-500X
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Key words: improbable research, science humor, Ig Nobel, AIR
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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A free monthly mini-supplement to
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The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR)
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the journal of inflated research and personalities
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published by The MIT Museum
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-----------------------------
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1995-03-01 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1995-03-01 Table of Contents
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1995-03-02 Skimpy Snippets from AIR 1:2
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1995-03-03 In Defense of Cindy Crawford
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1995-03-04 Ig Nobel Plea and Contest
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1995-03-05 Puzzling Predators
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1995-03-06 Top Quark Tour
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1995-03-07 Carning Error
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1995-03-08 Improbable Education
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1995-03-09 Animal Recovery Movement
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1995-03-10 AIR Vents -- Exhalations from our readers
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1995-03-11 Government Improbability Catalog
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1995-03-12 AIRhead Project 2000: preliminary results
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1995-03-13 May We Recommend...
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1995-03-14 AIRhead Events
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1995-03-15 Calls for Papers
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1995-03-16 What is AIR? (*)
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1995-03-17 How to Subscribe to AIR(*)
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1995-03-18 How to Receive mini-AIR, etc.(*)
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1995-03-19 Our Addresses (*)
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1995-03-20 Please Forward/Post This Issue! (*)
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Items marked (*) are reprinted in every issue.
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1995-03-02 Alluring Snippets from AIR 1:2
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The articles in AIR itself contain too many photos, graphs,
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drawings and typographical niceties (and more important,
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are too long) to publish in mini-AIR. Here are skimpy
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summaries of randomly selected articles from the
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March/April 1995 issue (vol. 1, no. 2) of AIR.
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AIRhead Research Review (regular column)
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Summaries of recent published reports about: (a) motion sickness
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in amphibians; (b) whether men lie on fear surveys; (c) waist-to-
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hip ratios in Miss Americas and Playboy playmates; (d) the
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behavior of Japanese tree frogs under microgravity; (e)
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hypercapnia during wretching in dogs; and (f) the collapse of
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toilets in Glasgow.
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--see: AIR, vol. 1, no. 2, Mar/Apr 1995, p. 5.
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NOBEL THOUGHTS (regular column): David Hubel
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An interview with the 1981 Nobel Laureate in physiology or
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medicine explores his views on supermarket etiquette, with special
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emphasis on the propriety of eating grapes in the store.
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--see: AIR, vol. 1, no. 2, Mar/Apr 1995, p. 8.
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"Fetal Man in the Moon (image)," by Robert Roger Lebel of Genetics
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Services, Elmhurst, Illinois.
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An ultrasonographic image obtained during an obstetrical
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transvaginal study at five weeks of gestation is remarkably
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similar to the mythical man in the moon.
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--see: AIR, vol. 1, no. 2, Mar/Apr 1995, p. 11.
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"The Dental Micro-Luger," by Walter Martin, SAS Institute, Cary,
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North Carolina.
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An x-ray image demonstrates a new application of microtechnology.
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A micro-luger is employed to break up an impacted wisdom tooth.
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This makes the eventual extraction less traumatic for the patient.
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--see: AIR, vol. 1, no. 2, Mar/Apr 1995, p. 13.
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"Nematodes and Hieroglyphs," by Mark Benecke, Zoologisches
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Institut der Universitaet, Koln, Germany
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The author presents photographic evidence that hieroglyphs were
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not invented by the Egyptians. Credit must instead be given to
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the microscopic roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans. In the
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laboratory, C. elegans displays a wide range of behaviors.
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Benecke's research shows that this range is much wider than had
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been realized.
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--from AIR, vol. 1, no. 2, Mar/Apr 1995, pp. 17-18.
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1995-03-03 In Defense of Cindy Crawford
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We must rise to defend the honor of a noted researcher, Cindy
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Crawford.
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In mini-AIR 1995-02 we announced the premiere of the new AIR
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column "Cindy Crawford Discovers," which reports on the scientific
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efforts and achievements of supermodel Cindy Crawford (and her
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ilk) as documented in research journals such as "Vogue,"
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"Cosmopolitan," "Elle," etc.
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The following day we received an inquiry from the magazine
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"Entertainment Weekly," seeking an advance copy of the first
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column. We duly faxed a copy of the colunm, which concerns Cindy
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Crawford's recent achievements in chemistry.
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A day later, Entertainment Weekly's editors informed us that they
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consider Cindy Crawford's scientific achievements "too
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insubstantial" to report.
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We must take exception. In our view, Crawford's lack of a Ph.D.
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in no way disqualifies her from conducting research with shampoos.
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To see this, one need look no further than her report concerning
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"a patented outrageous formula... enriched with pro-vitamin B5,
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silk protein and moisture-binding silicone." (The full text of
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Crawford's paper appears on page 11 of the January, 1995 issue of
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the research journal "Vogue.")
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1995-03-04 Ig Nobel Plea and Contest
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The Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony is in jeopardy unless we can gather
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additional funding for it. The event's major funding source has
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chosen to withdraw its support. The ceremony is held in MIT's
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Kresge Auditorium with 1200 spectators, with help from more than
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150 volunteers. We have to cover expenses for equipment, props,
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printing, mailing and telephone costs, for union labor in the
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auditorium, etc.
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Therefore, we proudly announce the Ig Nobel Prize Contest.
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We are not too proud to beg. If you would like to help, please
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send us $1 together with a 3 x 5 index card bearing your name
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address, phone number and e-mail address. Mail it to:
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The Ig Nobel Prize Endowment
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AIR
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The MIT Museum
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265 Massachusetts Ave.
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Cambridge, MA 02139
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For those who want something for the dollar, here is what you can
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win:
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FIRST PRIZE
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A free year's subscription to The Annals of Improbable Research (a
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magnificent 6-issues/year print publication).
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SECOND PRIZE
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The lucky (?) second prize winner will win a 1995 Ig Nobel Prize
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Ceremony Poster autographed by several Nobel Laureates and by the
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Swedish Meatball King. That individual will, if he or she
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chooses, attend the ceremony (at his/her own expense) and sit on
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stage beside the Swedish Meatball King and Queen during the
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Ceremony as an honorary member of the royal family.
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THIRD PRIZE
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A free copy of mini-AIR.
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EVERYONE ELSE
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If you include an adequately stamped self-addressed envelope we
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will send you a worthless xeroxed certificate proclaiming you to
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be a FIG (Friend of the Ig).
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Yes, you can write this off on your taxes -- it is a tax
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deductable contribution to MIT. Donations larger than $1 are of
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course most welcome.
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------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-05 Puzzling Predators
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Thanks to our AIRhead foolproof proofreading regimen, the February
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issue of mini-AIR contained a grossly curious list of "African
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predators." Several thousand readers kindly wrote in to make
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sure we knew that tigers habitually dwell in Asia. Many also
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pointed out that (as put succinctly by investigator K. Hearn)
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"giraffes and wildebeest are generally not considered predators,
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unless one happens to be a leaf or a blade of grass." A reader
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identifying himself as "Art in Hollywood" was moved to poetry:
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"Ahhh those thrilling nature films showing the fearsome giraffe
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stalking it's wily prey - the leaf!"
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------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-06 Top Quark Tour
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Congratulations and huzzahs to the physicists at Fermi National
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Accelerator Laboratory for finding evidence of that most elusive
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of subatomic particles, the Top Quark. We at AIR are arranging to
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acquire Fermilab's entire collection of top quarks and prepare
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them for public viewing. A travelling exhibition will stop in
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major cities around the world. The Top Quark tour schedule will
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be announced as soon as we solve the minor technical problems of
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how to preserve and mount the specimens.
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-------------------------------------
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1995-03-07 Carning Error
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The person identified in the February issue of mini-AIR as "John
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Carne" has requested that we identify him by his correct name,
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"James Carne." This James Carne resides in Amsterdam and is
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presumably male, though we make no definite claim in that regard.
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Nor do we make any specific statement as regards this individual's
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middle name or indeed on the question of whether this individual
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has a middle name, nor do we rule out the possibility that the J.
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(i.e., "James") Carne in question has more than one middle name.
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Please do not address correspondence on this matter to us, or to
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anyone named Carne, or to any resident of Amsterdam, or to anyone
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who can read. Thank you.
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------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-08 Improbable Education
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[EDITOR'S NOTE: We received this letter from an AIR
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subscriber. It made us feel very proud. Perhaps you
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will find subversive inspiration from it:]
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I want to congratulate you on the second issue and the very real
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impact it is already having.
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Yesterday (the day after I received it in the mail), my
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girlfriend's 14 year old son picked AIR#2 out of my pack (where my
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"current reading" is kept). He proceeded to read it intently
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cover to cover, especially "A Natural History of the Articulated
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Lorry".
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This is a kid who, in 6 years that I've known him, has betrayed
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relatively little interest in the various "educational" magazines
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(the usual: "Natural History," "Smithsonian," "National
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Geographic," etc.) compared to the lure of Nintendo.
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Not that there haven't been other factors behind his nascent
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interest in science. But we've had to fight the determined
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efforts of the public school system to get him to loathe science
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with a passion. The motivations may be different, but the actions
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are the same.
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It's a long, uphill, and ongoing battle, that will doubtless
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continue until he's out of the clutches of the above-mentioned
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negative influences. AIR has given him a big boost.
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Thank you!!!
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Mark Crispin
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Bainbridge Island, Washington
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-09 Animal Recovery Movement
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This RFP (request for proposal) appeared in a recent issue of the
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"NIH Guide."
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NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY (RFPs/RFAs/PAs)
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**************************************
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EVALUATION OF COMPOUNDS FOR ABUSE POTENTIAL IN BABOONS
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(RFP N01DA-5-7050)
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National Institute on Drug Abuse
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We take this opportunity to again express our support for 12-step
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animal substance abuse recovery programs. (Thanks to investigator
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Barry Saver for bringing this RFP to our attention.)
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-----------------------------------------------
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1995-03-10 AIR Vents -- Exhalations from our readers
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At the end of his quarter-page quasi-treatise on pronunciation,
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Lipkin ( "Nucular Physics," AIR, vol. 1, no. 1, Jan/Feb 95, p. 30)
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makes an assertion that should be quashed. He states that
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Murphy's law was penned by "someone else with the same name."
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However, it is well known that someone else with the same name was
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responsible for the entire corpus of works of "Homer", and there
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have been many allegations that the same author was also
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responsible for the writings of Shakespeare. It strains credulity
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-- let alone even a cursory analysis of style and symbolism -- to
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claim that one author was responsible for all three corpora.
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Dennis P. Geller, Brookline, MA
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Thanks to my biographer Manuel de Mosa you can read (in German
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language) a report on my life and my problems caused by innovative
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mind-control-techniques. It is published electronically on the
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file "pub/doc/BRDStasi.roman" of the server "ftp.ira.uka.de".
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-Lukas Servatius Derenbold
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[EDITOR'S NOTE: You can also access this document via the AIR
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home page.]
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----------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-11 Government Improbability Catalog
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[This is adapted from the APS newsletter
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WHAT'S NEW, Mar. 3, 1995, by Robert L. Park]
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The 420-page report, "Alternative Medicine: Expanding Medical
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Horizons," lays out a NIH Office of Alternative Medicine agenda
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for research into a variety of topics. Homeopathic medicines
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employ dilutions far beyond the point at which a single molecule
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would remain, but the water "remembers." Where does physics fit
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in? Well, when really weird things happen, like mental healing at
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a distance, it must be quantum mechanics (physicist Brian
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Josephson is cited for authority). Medical ethics are not
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ignored; the possibility of distant organisms being harmed by non-
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local mental influence is raised, and board certification of
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mental healers is proposed "to protect consumers from predatory
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quacks." An entire chapter is devoted to "Bioelectromagnetics."
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This is tricky stuff: "Weak EMF may, at the proper frequency and
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site of application, produce large effects that are either
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clinically beneficial or harmful."
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------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-12 AIRhead Project 2000: preliminary results
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As announced in mini-AIR 1994-02-03 (June, 1993), we are compiling
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a list of studies, projects, and products that involve the number
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two thousand. Randomly selected items from the list include:
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ITEM 66605 (Submitted by investigator Dennis Gately)
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"Science 2000," An educational program to bring high school
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science instruction into the next century, a joint project of
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Tufts University and Governor Dummer(no this is not a typo)
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Academy.
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ITEM 66606 (Submitted by investigator Chris Garrigues)
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"The NII 2000 Steering Committee," a group of high-level
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executives and distinguished academicians that seeks white papers
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on topics relevant to NII technology deployment, whatever that is.
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-13 May We Recommend...
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Research reports that merit a trip to the library.
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Investigator Barry Bogin reports: "I was searching Medline the
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other day for articles by one CE Graham, perhaps the formost
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expert in chimpanzee estrus cycle endocrinology and I found that
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there is another CE Graham -- possible a medical researcher from
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Australia. The following are three articles that 'merit a trip to
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the library.' Any one of these may seem innocuous, but taken _en
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mass_ I think there is a sinister pattern."
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1) Graham CE (1992) Thumb paronychia treated with leeches. Med.
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J. Aust. 156(7):512.
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2) ________ (1982) Painless jogging for 15,000 km after a
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lumbrosacral stabilization with screws and cement. Med. J. Aust.
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1(9):389.
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3) ________ (1993) Sudden death while lawnmowing. Med J. Aust.
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158(3):216.
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(We welcome your suggestions for this column. Please include full
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citations. If possible, please send us a photocopy of the paper.)
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-14 AIRhead Events
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SIGMA XI, Warren Michigan Fri, May 12
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Speech and improbable slides at the society's annual dinner.
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Info: Kurt Godden 810-986-1479 godden@gmr.com
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1995 IG NOBEL PRIZE CEREMONY Thurs, Oct 5
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INTERSOCIETY POLYMER CONFERENCE Tues, Oct 10
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Keynote address / improbable research seminar / slide show.
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Stouffer Harborplace Hotel, Baltimore, MD
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Info: (518) 387-7942
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*** If you would like to host an improbable research seminar /
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slide show please get in touch with us.
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-15 Calls for Papers
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CALL FOR Barium Enemas of the Rich and Famous. Please send x-rays
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only.
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CALL FOR DATA for the Agonized Student Excuse Project.
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College instructors lament that incoming students are not as
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prepared as their predecessors. We are collecting a wide sampling
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of outstandingly improbable excuses offered by students. The
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theme of the excuse must be: "why I cannot or should not be
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responsible for learning or thinking." Only genuine data
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collected from students is acceptable. We are collecting the best
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and worst excuses given by students. Please specify the subject
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being taught. Please email entries to BOURBAKI@NEU.EDU
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CALL FOR NOMINATIONS for the 1995 Ig Nobel Prizes.
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Prizes are awarded for achievements that cannot or should not be
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reproduced. Nominations may be submitted, anonymously or
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otherwise, by e-mail or by standard mail. Please include
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documentation.
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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1995-03-16 WHAT IS AIR? (*)
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The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR) is a splendid educational
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magazine produced by the entire former editorial staff (1955-1994)
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of "The Journal of Irreproducible Results." AIR's co-founders are
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Marc Abrahams, who edited the Journal from 1990-1994, and
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Alexander Kohn, who founded the Journal in 1955 and was its editor
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until 1989. AIR is published by the MIT Museum in Cambridge, MA.
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The editorial board consists of more than 40 distinguished
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scientists from around the world including seven Nobel Laureates
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and a convicted felon. Each October, AIR produces the Ig Nobel
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Prize Ceremony at MIT, honoring people whose achievements cannot
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or should not be reproduced.
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---------------------------
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1995-03-17 How to Subscribe to AIR(*)
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Amaze your colleagues. Delight your friends. Impress yourself.
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Subscribe to The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR)!
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Put more AIR in the lab, the classroom, the office, the waiting
|
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room, the library, the living room, the restroom, ...the detention
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center. And it makes a lovely gift of the most unexpected kind.
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===========================================================
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===========================================================
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Please send a subscription to The Annals of Improbable Research
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for a period of (check one):
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___ 1 year (six issues) ___ 2 years (twelve issues)
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We do accept PGP-encoded order forms.)
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Rates (in US dollars)
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USA 1 year - $19.95 2 years - $34.95
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Canada/Mexico 1 year - $27 2 years - $45
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Overseas 1 year - $40 2 years - $70
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Total payment enclosed:
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Send payment to the Annals of Improbable Research (AIR), via
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Email: mitshop@mit.edu
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FAX: (617) 253-8994
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Mail: The MIT Museum
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Phone: (617) 253-4462
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---------------------------
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1995-03-18 How to Receive mini-AIR, etc.(*)
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mini-AIR is an monthly electronic supplement to The Annals of
|
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Improbable Research (AIR). It is available over the Internet,
|
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free of charge. To subscribe, send a brief E-mail message to:
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LISTSERV@MITVMA.MIT.EDU
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The body of your message should contain ONLY the words
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SUBSCRIBE MINI-AIR MARIE CURIE
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(You may substitute your own name for that of Madame Curie.)
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------------------------------------------------------------
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To stop subscribing, send the following message:
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SIGNOFF MINI-AIR
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To obtain a list of back issues, send this message:
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INDEX MINI-AIR
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To retrieve a particular back issue,
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send a message specifying which issue you want.
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For example, to retrieve issue 94-00006,send this message:
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GET MINI-AIR 94-00006
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To obtain a somewhat complete list of gopher sites that maintain
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mini-AIR, email us a request.
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::::: Hot AIR on the World Wide Web
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http://web.mit.edu/improb/
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::::: AIR extracts on USENET
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The USENET newsgroup clari.feature.imprb_research presents a
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syndicated weekly column of reports extracted from The Annals of
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Improbable Research. [NOTE: This is available only if your
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Internet site subscribes to the Clarinet newsgroups.]
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---------------------------
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1995-03-19 Our Addresses
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The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR)
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The MIT Museum
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265 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
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Subscriptions: 617-253-4462 fax:(617)253-8994 mitshop@mit.edu
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Editorial: 617-253-8329 air@mit.edu http://web.mit.edu/improb/
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PLEASE include your Internet address in printed correspondence.
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---------------------------
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1995-03-20 Please Forward/Post This Issue! (*)
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Please distribute copies of mini-AIR (or excerpts) wherever
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appropriate. The only limitations are:
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A) Please indicate that the material appeared in mini-AIR.
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B) You do NOT have distribute it for commercial purposes.
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------------------------------------------------------------
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(c) copyright 1995, The Annals of Improbable Research
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------------------------------------------------------------
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-------------
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mini-AIRheads
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-------------
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Editor: Marc Abrahams (marca@mit.edu)
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WWW Editor/Global Village Idiot: Amy Gorin (ringo@mit.edu)
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Associate Editors: Mark Dionne, Stanley Eigen, Jane Patrick
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Technical Difficulties: Diego Garcia, Francesca Thurston
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Co-conspirators: Mike Zarren,Gary Dryfoos,Chip LaChien
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Authority Figure: Barbara Linden
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============================================================
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IMPORTANT -- The Annals of Improbable Research is IN NO WAY
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associated with the name "The Journal of Irreproducible
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Results" or with the publisher of "The Journal of
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Irreproducible Results"
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============================================================
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