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Show fl rJS""n ( G33D30 mTS HAVOLirJE x pV A Rosue tar "OTOROIL I 4rin j STORE HOURS l f I ' ft i- MM V AW.! Mm It I I I vacciHaVC o - i: o - I 1 t i r i MOTOR OIL Havolind 20 or 30 W Cans SUPREME EPSOM SALT 4-LB. CARTON REG. IT3W T 79c 8 PRICES EFFECTIVE August 5th thru August Nth Open Sundays 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. HEAD COVERS ;Vinyl head covers, glove soft. -B!ack with red numbers, red with black numbers. 31.19 Value ro) tote 0(0 WILSON SAM SNEAD GOLF BALLS Pack of 3 $3.00 VALUE $1188 -t-l"W"1'-l"tt"l CAttWER ROTARY FOOD PRESS 2l2 Quart Size REG. $4.98 presto COOKER C A W W t n 2 1 -quart Size TAPE irich x 60-yard r a i cum FUEL ir 1 For qasoline stoves. lanterns and catalytic heaters. LAYTEXk g UvlngGloves LIVING ff GLOVES I NJU9 List $1.59 VALUE I A DRUG STORE FIRST, LAST AND ALWAYS! FINEST, FRESHEST DRUGS ONLY! . PRICES EFFECTIVE Thursday, August 5th, through Wednesday, August I Ith S3M VET'S DOG FOOD Vet's "Nutrition Rich' No. I Cans 1 Ayr oo TABLETS pL if VITAMIN gpk S . TABLETS tJ 100 M.G. 1 t:4 For extra strength ,1' Vj, and nutrition! yijj j 49c GfTS STORE HOURS WEEKDAYS 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. SUNDAYS - 10 A.M. Till .7 P.M. J PRE-SOFTENED LARGE SIZE J Y A X KIT CLEANER-WAX CLEANER-WAX Easy application to give your car a better shine. 16-oz. ,,,01123 VALUE U PHILLIPSi gf MILK OF if feiSu MAGNESIA 1 O pgW ANTACID-LAXATIVE W y" 'u' z" August 5, 1971 The Springville HeraW Page ThMeen iiili 'J ,tJJ mK liliilii BIG LIFT Sp5 Charles Boss wheels a front loading machine ma-chine into a dumping position during reconstruction of a seminary sem-inary at Vinh Sang, Republic of Vietnam. Specialist Boss, 402d Transportation Company, is one of many soldiers from the 4th Transportation Command who have given their off-duty off-duty time to help Vietnamese seminary and. high school students stu-dents improve their school area. Seaborg on Science Robots Dr. Seaborg By Glenn T. Seaborg, Chairman U. S. Atomic Energy Commission For the past fifty years or so, one of the favorite subjects of science fiction writers has been the robot. He is usually pictured as looking and acting just like a man, and in some stories robots actually succeed in conquering man altogether. Such .science fiction-type ro- mi9 bots do not pose any immediate threat this is that many of the special duties that we need a machine to perform could not be handled efficiently if it 11 .SstwL were m e shape of man. Why should it I have two awkward legs when it could I Tl I rou on wheels? Why should it have two eyes focused in the same direction when it could "see" all around itself simultaneously? If there is little chance for a self-controlling man-like robot in the near future, scientists have nevertheless made progress with machines called "humanoids" that simulate a few components of man and that provide greater strength, dexterity, or access to hostile environments. For example, earlier this year an electric company demonstrated a machine that looks like a walking truck. It is 1 1 feet high, has four massive mechanical legs, and is operated by a "driver" who sits in what could be called the cab. It can pick up small vehicles, lift a 500-pound load with one foot, and slide 1,000-pound loads across the ground. The operator commands it by simulating the motions he wants, as if he were walking on all-fours, and these moves are relayed to the machine as directions. The company is developing another humanoid that will look much more like science-fiction robots. But it will be merely a mechanical covering for a human operator inside. It is called Hardiman, and it would amplify its operator's strength about 25 times. It should be able to make virtually every move a man can make, and it would allow its operator to carry loads of 2,000 pounds or more. Still, Hardiman won't have the ability to control itself . that authentic robots would have. This would require a computer for a brain, and some progress is being made in that direction. Case Western Reserve University is developing develop-ing a computer system that will direct a mechanical manipulator to dismantle a nuclear rocket reactor without the need of human supervision. By combining the developing technologies of humanoids human-oids and of computers, we may someday have a machine , that we could call a robot. But most likely it would not look like man, since for the first time in history we will have a chance to improve the design. 1917- WITH OR. OTTO HAHW, ANNOUNCED THE DISCOVERY OF TH RARE RADIOACTIVE ELEMENT, PKOTACTIMIUM BORN JEWISH, SHE WAS SSIk CONSTANTLY HARRASSED I I KSgjv?i?iSiH BY THE NAZIS - VN W' k N LIVED IN ? TfcO VMlr"" I yS I EXTREME V e X W I flU&l poverty -gL Austrian-born physicist-pursued physicist-pursued THEORY THAT ATOMS WERE SOLID, UNSPLITTABLC LUMPS -AND WITH BETA RAY STUDIES BE6AN PIONEERING IN SPLITTING THE ATOM . AFTER EARNINOA PhD AT UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA, SHE WENT TO GERMANY TO WORK AT THE INSTITUTE OF THEORETICAL PHVSIC1 1 9ib- NAMED PROFESSOR EXTRAORDINARY AT UNIVERSITY OF BE RUN, AND HELD POST UNTIL HITLER CAME TO POWER . 1938 - FLED TO SWEDEN AND AIDED O.R. FRISCH ON RESEARCH LEADING TO THE DISCOVERY OF NUCLEAR FISSION. A HATER OF ALL VIOLENCE, SHE KNEW NOTHING OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOMIC BOMB. 1966 - SHARED A.B.C.'S FERMI AWARD WITH OR. HAHN AND PRC FRITZ STRASSMAM THE FIRST WOMAN TO OAIN THE HONOR. |