Submitted by A. M. Rizzi of Torrey, Vermont
.
Why
Are There No A-or B-Sized Batteries?
Because they are obsolete. A-and B-sized batteries once existed as component cells within much larger zinc carbon battery packs. The A cells supplied the low-voltage supply for the filaments in the vacuum tubes used to supply power to early radios and crank telephones.
Of course, the descendants of the old A-and B-sized batteries are still with us. As electronic devices have gotten smaller, so have the batteries that power them. As might be expected, the A cell came first, then B, C, and D cells. The batteries were lettered in ascending order of size. James Donahue, Jr., of Duracell, Inc., says that as cells smaller than the original A cells were developed, they were designated as AA and then AAA cells. Donahue reports that there is even a new AAAA battery.
So the old A-and B-sized batteries are no longer in production. It’s no use having a battery larger than the device it powers.
Submitted by Larry Prussin of Yosemite, California. And thanks also to Herman E. London of Poughkeepsie, New York; Nancy Ondris of Kings Park, New York; and Ronald Herman of Montreal, Quebec
.
If you’ve noticed, those circles are located about three feet off the ground and usually near the entrance. They are called wall protectors, and their sole function in life is to keep doorknobs from slamming against the walls. And with some of the paperthin walls we’ve encountered in motels, wall protectors may be responsible for keeping the structural integrity of the building intact.
Submitted by Carol Rostad of New York, New York
.
Why
Does Starch Make Our Shirts Stiff?
Starch is a type of “sizing,” a filler used to add body, sheen, and luster to limp clothing. All shirts come off the rack with sizing, but sizing is water-soluble; every time the shirt is washed, sizing comes out of the shirt. The main purpose of adding starch, then, is to restore the original body of a garment.
The main ingredient in starch is wheat or, less frequently, corn. The grain is mixed with water, resins, and chemicals. As Bill Seitz, of the Neighborhood Cleaners Association, describes it, the starch is literally absorbed by the fabric. Cotton plus wheat is stiffer than cotton alone.
Norman Oehlke, of International Fabricare Institute, adds that starch also enhances soil resistance, facilitates soil removal for the next wash, and makes ironing easier.
Synthetic fabrics aren’t as receptive to starch as all-cotton garments, so extra chemicals are added to the starch, such as polyvinyl acetate, sulfated fatty alcohols, silicones, and our personal favorite, carboxymethylcellulose.
Submitted by Kris Heim of De Pere, Wisconsin. Thanks also to Stanley R. Sieger of Pasadena, California
.
We spoke to a delightful young woman at Campbell’s named Ginny Marcin, who, astonishingly, did not have the answers to these questions at her fingertips. But she spoke to the vice president of Letter Distribution and obtained the following information.
Campbell’s makes two sizes of letters for their soups. Small letters go into some of the prepared soups (such as the Chunky line). Slightly larger letters bejewel their vegetable and vegetarian vegetable soups.
It is the stated intention of the Campbell Soup Company not to discriminate against any letter. All are equally represented. However, Campbell’s cannot control the distribution of letters while inserting the letters and soup into the can, so irregularities can result. You might find a can with eight q’s and only three u’s, screwing up your plans to use the letters as Scrabble tiles.
Come to think of it, if the letters really are distributed randomly, why does Campbell’s need a vice president of Letter Distribution?
Submitted by Tom Carroll of Binghamton, New York
.
What
Is the Purpose of Corn Silk?
These strands, which bedevil shuckers and flossless eaters alike, actually do have an important purpose. The longer threads of corn silk stand outside of the husk in tufts to collect pollen. The pollen then travels the silk to the ear of corn and fertilizes it.
Edith M. Munro, director of Information of the Corn Refiners Association, told
Imponderables
one of the critical factors exacerbating the loss in the corn harvest during the 1988 drought was that the “lack of moisture delayed the development of silks or dried the silks up, so that no silks were present when pollen was released.” Without sufficient pollination, the growth of the corn is stunted, resulting in ears of corn with only a few kernels.
Submitted by Denise Dennis of Shippensburg, Pennsylvania
.
The word “secretary” comes from the same Latin root as the word “secret.” In medieval days, a secretary was a notary or a scribe, someone privy to secret and often important information. Over time, secretaries became not only men and women in charge of correspondence for an employer but trusted advisors to heads of state and royalty. So although today’s office secretaries may now be a neglected and abused lot, Europeans have long called important officeholders “secretaries.”
We wrote to several historians who were kind enough to unravel this Imponderable. They concurred that although Americans appropriated their governmental vocabulary from the English, no single term was used to describe cabinet-level officials in England at the time the United States Constitution was drafted.
The parliamentary-cabinet style government of England was not established until the early 1700s, and many of the titles from feudal governments still existed. Thomas L. Purvis, of the Institute of Early American History and Culture, elaborates on the mishmash of English titles:
members of the cabinet carried titles both feudal and modern, such as Chancellor of the Exchequer and Prime Minister. Intermediate in age were the secretaries of various departments, such as the former Secretary of State for the Southern Department (whose purview extended over the American Colonies) and the ad hoc Secretary
at
War.
Americans, in their revolutionary ethos, were not about to give a nod to the hated English king and his ministers. The terms “president” and “vice president” were chosen to distinguish elected leaders from the dreaded monarchy.
None of the framers of the Articles of Confederation wrote why “secretary” was designated as the term for America’s executive officers. The Department of the Treasury conducted an investigation into this Imponderable and found that the Library of Congress, the National Archives, and the Office of Protocol at the Department of State could provide no documentary evidence for the choice.
But all of our sources indicated that the attempt to distance the United States from any trappings of a monarchy contributed to the selection of “secretary.” Samuel R. Gammon, executive director of the American Historical Association, told
Imponderables
that “the older English tradition of terming the monarch’s chief executive assistants ‘Principal Secretary of State’ may also have been in their [the framers of the Constitution] minds.”
“Secretary” was a solid, middle-of-the-road choice. As Purvis points out, the title seems honorific yet confers no indication of aristocracy and could be applied to any department in the government.
Submitted by Daniel Marcus of Watertown, Massachusetts
.
Why
Is Prepackaged Chocolate Milk Thicker in Consistency than the Chocolate Milk You Make at Home?
Gravity.
If you make a batch of chocolate milk at home and put it in the refrigerator to cool, you will notice something when you fetch it ten hours later. The chocolate sinks to the bottom.
All is not lost. Simply shaking up the container will redistribute the chocolate throughout the milk.
But this kind of separation is unacceptable in a commercial product, especially one that is sold in a transparent container. So commercial dairies use stabilizers and emulsifiers to assure that the chocolate and milk remain mixed. Although the job of the (usually natural) stabilizers and emulsifiers is to keep the chocolate from falling to the bottom of the carton, the by-product is a thicker consistency than home-style chocolate milk.
Submitted by Herbert Kraut of Forest Hills, New York
.
Why
Do Fingernails Grow Faster than Toenails?
This is not the kind of question whose solution wins Nobel Prizes for scientists or garners prestigious grants for research hospitals, yet the answer is not obvious. The average severed fingernail takes four to six months to grow back to its normal length. The average toenail takes nine to twelve months.
Dermatologist Dr. Fred Feldman says that although nobody knows for sure why toenails lag behind fingernails in growth, there are many possible explanations:
Our medical consultants did not suggest the obvious: The faster growth of fingernails is nature’s way of providing us with a constant tool with which to open pistachio nuts.
Submitted by Dave Bohnhoff of Madison, Wisconsin
.
Why
Do We Dream More Profusely When We Nap than We Do Overnight?
According to the experts we consulted, we dream just as much at night as we do when we take a nap. However, we
recall
our afternoon-nap dreams much more easily than our dreams at night.
While we are dreaming, our long-term memory faculties are suppressed. During the night, our sleep is likely to go undisturbed. We tend to forget dreams we experience in the early stages of sleep. The sooner that we wake up after having our dreams, the more likely we are to remember them.