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Show Qeive ana Qeoven It was New Year’s morning. Bleary-eyed but resolute, a young husbandpulled himself out of carefully prepared eggs—once over lightly— toasted the bread a delicate brown, brewed a strong cup of coffee. He put the savory food on a tray along with the morning newspaper and mind, and the mother became impatient. “Jean,” she said, “the pink soap or the green bed and padded quietly down to the kitchen. He . carried it upstairs. ark His wife was awake by this time. Her eyes, widened in delight at seeing the tray. “Oh, everything looks so delicious,” she exclaimed as he‘set it beside her. “Happy New Year, sweetheart!” “Then you notice just what I’ve done?” “Every detail, dear.” “Fine. This is my New Year's resolution—I want my breakfast served like this every morning from now on!” In America when something becomes “popularly ae erati eefeelELL Te not 5 o 5 = 5 0 rapeelstlts Teen Sd priced,” it simply means that millions who can’t afford it are buying it. —O.A. Battista bu Mother discovered that her small daughter was more agreeable to a bath if a little game were made of it. One of the diversions she introduced was letting the tyke select the color of soap to be used. One day, though, the girl couldn’t make up her soap? Why should it take you so long to decide?” The little girl looked at her reprovingly. “I hafta think aboutit,” she said. “The: pink one’s prettier —but the green one tastes better!” —Ken Kraft Good-bye, Holidays! Junior broke the toys received As Christmas contributions Almost as fast as Father broke His New Year's resolutions. —Ruth Chadwick “I'm late for work... . "Suppose we just make three even piles fill'er up while 1 dress!" of dishes and let you each do a pile?” . upped submarine underwater endurance potential ’ tric Boat has succeeded in growing algae (pond from 12 hours to the present record of a no-strain, uninterrupted 60 days. Diesel-driven subs must surface in about 12 hours to renewtheir air, but the A-sub’s reactor needs no air. So the only problem is removing gases like the refrigerant freon, carbon dioxide from breathing, carbon monoxide from cigarets, and solvent vapors from wall paint and deck wax. Studies continue in all these areas, but success (by rigidly classified methods) permits Family Weekly, January 4, 1959 By electronic miracles which permit such feats as celestial navigation while submerged, our atomic subs will soon roam the world’s oceans free of any surface needs. Hidden beneath the polar icecap, they will be what the man chiefly responsible for them termed “ideal mobile missile platforms” defending us night and day. And as that d the Si If and other A-subs any time except when taking on or discharging auxiliary Diesel fuel, or loading ammunition. man, Adm. Hyman Rickover, points out with At Electric Boat, the General Dynamics Division It’s-also exciting to realize that what we learned from A-subs is 100 percent translatable to the in Groton, Conn., where nuclear subs are born, i oxygen aboard. the Navy's success in that role-has scum) in sealed bottles. The algae absorb carbon dioxide, generate oxygen, and provide edible food! two special departments concentrate on “human engineering’—the science of making an A-sub as nearly habitable as home. and reactivatingits air. Of the many experiments in progress, one holds high promise of solving the latter problem. Elec@ satisfaction, the A-subs will be harderto find than a black cat on a moonless night. needs of space ships. Scientists tell us that voyages like the Seawolf’s. are—except for direction—as important to man’s coming journey to the stars as endurance chambers and stratospheric balloon ascents. ) |