OCR Text |
Show Box Elder NEWS CHRI&TMAS 1952 Japan To Harness Seeks To Confirm instein Theory Volcanic Steam TOKYO (UP) Volcanic steam now largely wasted, will be harnessed soon to turn the wheels of Japanese industry. An ambitious power generating scheme is being supported by the government. Eventually, It may cut Japans coal bill in To all our friends, both old and new, wo ox for a Christmas of good sheer and Joyous New Yeor. Dies-'.roec- (UP) m. A Generates Power STANFORD, Calif, vacuum tube that A generates enough electricity to handle the needs of a good sized city has been built by scientists at Stanford University. The tube will power a new atom smasher being built at the dSbfladafc Fool-Pro- ft accepts and generates more power nd operates at higher voltages (15 million watts or 20 000 horsepower) than any tube ever built. The tube will send millionth-of-a-se-onelectric pulses down the 200 foot length of the atom masher at almost the speed of light to break up atomic mater- and all. May the joy and peace of the Holiday be with our friends always. Man, Dog And Gun Give Police Lively Time Willard School Third Grade Back row, left to right: Don Christensen, Carol Morgan, Warren Wassom, Larry Braeg-ge- r, Jane Braegger, Rex Kunzler, Betty, meant trouble. Officers went to Frank Alsups McMurtrey, Iva Archibald, teacher. Middle home to arrest him for carrying row: Linda Barker, Roselyn Perry, Samuel as A (UP) CHAMPAIGN, 111 map, his dog, and his gun just ound like autumn and good port tout to Champaign police it the gun a concealed weapon out found his dog more danger-dus than his gun. . resistance Alsup made no when police started to take him to the station for having a 22 revolver In his hip pocket. His red cocker spaniel, however, bit one of the officers on the leg. All three ended in jail the gun in police custody, the dog at a veterinarians,. and Alsup in h$ clink for inability to pay a MODE O'DAY DAISY HANSEN ' Manager mm rP-- i mmm mm mm mm BALTIMORE, f University Says Nix HOLLYWOOD CANDY CO, the iSruons heauty And all lb happy cheer Reach you r heart this Ckrutmu And remain there all the Year May Md. Interiors Fawson-Your- t, (UIP) , g Stu- dents at John Carroll University must dress for the occasion at their classes, and a arb can land them in the deans 'Nice. means Too informal overalls, jackets, boos and sombreros among other things, according to faculty members. Deans of the college of arts and sciences and school of business, economics and government posted the following notice for ttelr men- The attire of Hopa-lonCassidy, the Lone Ranger and companions no doubt has its place but the university is not such a place. and jackBlue jeans, ets advertising social and athletic clubs are not to be worn at this university. - GOOD FORTUNE Charles Crane, a real estate dealer, started out with a $7,500 house and ended up with just a wooden shell. Cranes tale of woe began little more than a year ago when ne bought the home. Presently he found it being stripped by an dais, piece by piece. First the radiators were stoleri. Then came the furnace and plumbing fixtures, Including the lath tub. Finally thieves even talked off with the kitchen , sink. Crane now has hired a wreck-ncrew to tear down the house To Informal Garb (UP) , h Iva Archibald, Teacher Kunzler, Pamela Hudson, Marrone and Ilene Cheshire. Front row: Spencer Kunzler, Carol Butler, Eugene Cook, Nancy Suzuki, Robert Schroeder, Donna Rae Vandals Strip House, Winter and Ronald Stewart. Even Kitchen Sink $25 fine. CLEVELAND, O. GOOD CHEEK fastest-gr- owing , 1 omt YuM'xlo wishes to one GOOD HEALTH h g out, oh beds, ring out Duke Vault of one-ixsc- In , appearance, it looks like a 'ire hydrant with a large open-nin the side for the air pump o form a vacuum. RSng (UP) University physicists have started experiments In the strange world of super-lotemperatures. Described as one of the fields in physics research," the low temperature study at Duke is aimed at seeking explanations of the propercertain ties of helium and metals when they are cooled to super-lotemperatures Helium, cooled to 445 5 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit, will not stick together but will crawl up and down the sides of containers in search of heat. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP) California state officials claim they have the safest vault this side of Fort Knox. It was designed to protect 12 In bonds and "asih. , It has thick brick walls, 'ined with three layers of fireproof Insulation materials 'p three layers of half-incsteel plates. innf- bv a t'me clock, are 16 Inches thick. Any uf e. .uusiness hours would set off a burglar alarm notifying the state police, city oolice,' sheriffs office and, fire department. The vault is in the basement Gary Nay, Judy of the state capitol in ial. v DURHAM, N. C. OOD FRIENDS California Designs d r Helium Made To Dance In Search Of Heat A school now. Palmer Jewelry Pier Angeli spending Christmas at her home in Italy, did her Christmas shopping early for her friends in Hollywood. . . . -- Tube ng of Albert verified ,by measurements now t "ing made on four laree plat 'hotograohic plates at the Yale University observatory. The exacting work Is being done by Prof. Geoge A. Van a member of the Yerkes Observatory staff at the Univer "tty of Chicago. He has brought his plates here to use Yales ipre cislon. measuring engine, the largest one of Its kind in the ountry. Einstein In 1916 proposed that 'tars are not always where they eem to be because the gravitational pull of the sun bends starlight on Its way to earth As a result, an observer on earth tees the stars In an Incorrect position in relation to the run. Astronomers have not been satisfied with the many obser vations made to verify the the cry. In many of these observa. is &. .(, tions, a shift In starlight larger Willard School Second Grade Marie Ward, Teacher than predicted by Einstein has Back row, left to right: Marie Ward, teacher; Ronald Lofthouse, Rosemary Lundwall and been noted. Last February the Connie Hoskins. Back row: Kelly Cook, Van Biesbroeck Peggy Woodyatt, Jancie Goodell, Deon Barwent to Kharker, Delos Campbell, Jennifer Pubigee, Iva Shirley Barber, Patty Marrone, Carol Kunz-le- r toum in Africa to photograph the eclipse of the sun, 6ince an Ellen and Michael Sorensert. Archibald, teacher. Middle row: is the only time stars are eclipse Gray, Kent ' Molgard, Earlene Checketts, visible around the sun. Then, six months lk ter, in August, the astronomer went back to Khartoum to take a photograph of the night sky wthen the same stars appeared. He took two photographs on glass plates each time and then came to Yale to measure star positions on the plates by means of the engine. half. Engineers financed by the government have completed six vears of esearch Into the Industrial potentialities of the volcanic boiler on which Japan rests. The first power house using natural steam will be es tablished 6oon by the Kyushu Electric Power Co. The plant, somewhere In the volcanic area of Mt Kokonoe. on fhe island of Kvushu initiallv will generate 3.000 kilowatts but eventually the output will reach 150,000 IKW. About 40 other power plant are on the books, although completion of the full program obviously will take considerable time. The total output of electricity from volcano-powereturbines foreseen for the distant future is 4,000,000,000 kilowatts per year. Japan now generates an estimated 8,500,000,000 kilowatts per year, in the production of which some 8,000,000 tons of coal are burned. Atom-Smashi- (UP) Elns'eins theories ibout the sun and stars may be d find our host wishes H'VEV Conn. .'TEW 0"e g Method Found To Keep Citrus Pollen 36 Days RIVERSIDE, citrus-testin- Calif. (UP) A station here has g 'ound a way to store pollen for days so that citrus frees, dooming at different times, may be cross-breDr. James W. Cameron said he pollen is kept at a temperature of 39 degrees with a drying agent. The experiment was made in order to cross a trifoliate orange, which blooms in late March, with other citrus types which In May. The station, bloom maintained, by the University of California, is attempting to produce a hardier citrus root stock. AND ALL GOOD1 WISHES FOR A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON i s 36 d Willard School Fifth and Sixth Grades E. J. Anderson, Teacher Ba.k row, left to right: Jay Marsh, Kenneth Third row: Karen Facer, Deon Christensen, Wright, Kay Mogard, Joan Braegger, Earl Judy Suzuki, Phyllis Hancey, Rosanne Bekker, Jimmy Lundwall, Dennis Cole, Fred Kunzler, Anne Wood and Nancy Sorensen. Bender, E. J. Anderson, teacher! Second Front row: Michael Bowers, Darrell Wells, row! Bruce Perry, Lynn Stauffer, Cheryl Dean Oyler, Dennis Oyler, David Cheshire, Younger, Dale Nelson, Hazel Buckley, Dee John Larkin, Stephen Zundel, Glen Ward Checketts, Jeanne Wood, Darrell Jensen. and Gerald Cheshire. , SEASHORE'S AND CULLIGAN SOFT WATER ' Phone 25 Vf' Nothing Easy About Journey To Moon STATE COLLEGE, Pa (UP) Traveling to the moon or other planets isnt going to be a simple matter of getting into a .pace ship and blasting off State College Pennsylvania scientists, who have been study-nthe characteristics of outer 2tma.phere, say the ship will ave to stand the stress of great-varied temperatures, deadly .osmic and ultra violet rays and absence of air pressure. Dr. Marcel Nieolet and Phillip W. Mange of the ionosphere s laboratory said the revolve around the low density of molecules in outer space. They explained that tempera tures will vary as the distance from earth Is increased. As an example, a 70 degree tempera-ur- e on the earths surface will drop to minus 150 degrees, 50 miles up and climb to about 3 500 degrees 250 miles from the earth. The lack of molecules in space, the scientists revealed, also will 'ncrease the power of deadly ultra violer rays discharged from the sun Ordinarily, the damaging effects of ultra violet is ''Fet'd by the molecules In our atmosphere. ALL THE JOYS OF THE SEASON g - GOOD HEALTH GOOD FRIENDS y GOOD LUCK ' GOOD CHEER A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS h A HAPPY NEW YEAR dan-pen- ' . , i Berts Wheel Alignment Shopr V 17 East 6th North Brigham City, Utah Phone ' 919-- - It- Irtr BURTS BODY SHOP (iOt North Moin Phone 8.1-- |