PAGE 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1944 New Device Used In Plane Recognition Ability to identify planes in one-fiftieth of a second or less is the basis for recognition training of all Navy fliers, it was revealed here today with announcement that a peacetime General Electric de velopment has taken war job in side of the Navy’s new “flash pro jector.” The “projector” is a portable, electrically timed film strip pro jector which flashes images of planes and ships, friendly or en emy, on a screen. The images are viewed from various angles, for a split second, as a training pro cedure to teach pilots to make quick decisions in combat. When Naval Personnel begin aircraft recognition courses, the length of time the projector’s image remains on the screen may LOUPOT’S Trade With Lou — He’s Right With You! be set for several seconds. Eventu ally cadets must identify correctly images which appear for only a fraction of a second. One of the Navy technicians who developed the projector, Lieut. Alston Rodgers, USNR, before the war was division engineer for the G-E lamp department of Los An geles. Lt. Rodgers combined a G-E timing circuit originally used for regulating equipment for welding lamp bulb filaments with an elec trically-operated shutter. And soon the “flash projector” evolved, using an ordinary 60-watt bulb as a part of the timing circuit. The projector is the size of a small suitcase, and 1600 images are contained in 100 feet of 35 millimeter film on a spool which is a little larger than a package of cigarettes. When the operator- instructor actuates a switch se lecting one of three different flash intervals, the shutter opens and allows the 300-watt projector to throw an image on the screen. It is also possible to operate a lever which holds the shutter open, if discussion of the picture is de sired. A counter registers the images so that a frame anywhere on the film can be quickly posi tioned by means of a convenient crank. Detailed descriptions of The library is trying to locate Volume XXIII of Catalogue of Birds, shipped from the British Museum of Natural History. If anyone on the campus received this book by mistake please noti fy Mrs. Sugareff, order libra rian at the library. each picture are listed in a loose- leaf binder carried in the cover of the case. Nat’l Farm, Home Hour Changed The National Farm and Home Hour, for more than 16 years a nation-wide broadcast carrying important agricultural information to rural people, is to be^radically altered, according to information to Acting Director J. D. Prewit of the A. and M. College Extension Service from M. L. Wilson, nation al director of Extension work, Washington. Effective June 19, the Depart ment of Agriculture and the War Food Administration will be drop ped from the format except on Saturday. The Saturday program will be continued under the pres ent name, and a five or six minute period will be available to the De partment for farm news or speak ers. A similar period will be avail able for homemaker information, Prewit was advised. One feature of the present program, the Fri day Victory Garden broadcast, will continue through July 28 and then be dropped. The name of the program Mon day through Friday will be changed to “The Homesteaders.” It will be conducted without the Depart ment’s participation by a master of ceremonies who will give about three minutes of farm news which the network will gather on its own initiative, along with items of spe cial significance or importance fur nished by the Department of Agri culture. From the beginning of the pro gram, Director Wilson said, the Extension Service found the Farm and Home Hour an invaluable aid in keeping farming people inform ed on agricultural measures and facts of vital general import. For 15 years, important phases of 4-H Club work as carried on by 10,000,- 000 past and present 4-H members, have been broadcast on this pro gram the first Saturday of each month. For several year sa similar program was broadcast for and by rural women taking part in home demonstration work. The National Farm and Home Hour is broadcast 11:30 a.m. to 12 noon, Monday through Satur day, by a national chain, and car ried by several Texas stations in cluding those at El Paso, Amarillo, Austin, Waco and College Station. Explaining the reason for the al teration, the broadcasting company said that too many city listeners are not interested in the program in its present form because of so much farm emphasis. Extensive Service Nutritional Report Increased war-time use of min eral oil in salad dressings, salted nuts, potato chips and doughnuts may hav eserious nutritional con sequences. This concern is expressed by Hazel Phipps of the A. and M. College Extension Service who cites nutrition research at state experiment stations which have shown that mineral oil robs the body of at least two of the fat- soluble vitamins necessary to health and also of two important minerals, calcium and phosphorus. The American Medical Associa tion also has issued a recent warn ing against indiscriminate use of mineral oil, Miss Phipps says. The AMA statement says prolonged use of mineral oil can interfere seri ously with the absorption of Vita mins A, D, and K by the body. The specialist in food prepara tion explains that because doctors sometimes recommend mineral oil for special diets, apparently many people prescribe it for themselves. 4-H Club Girls Do Large Salvage Job Members of girls’ 4-H clubs in Southeast Texas don’t wait for “drives” to keep salvage collec tions rolling. Recently the mem bers of the Jane Long Junior 4-H Club of Richmond, Fort Bend County, disposed of 1,890 pounds of waste paper which they had . gathered from their own and the homes of neighbors as a phase of their war work. The transaction added $13.35 to their club treas- v- ury. - Paralleling this, members of the . 5 Eagle Lake and G'ldiden clubs of Colorado County searched out over-age fountain pens in their . communities. The Eagle Lake girls publicized their campaign with homemade posters in store win dows and placed collecting boxes inside the stores. The final count > totaled 95 pens. The Glidden Club members made a house-to-house canvass and resurrected 30 pens more or less out of service. Sal- 'h vaged pens are reconditioned at v>l Houston and distributed to soldiers overseas. DR. N. B. McNUTT DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady’s Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 18th Remember your Dad with useful gifts. We have plenty of smart gifts he’ll want. Manhattan Shirts Manhattan Sport Shirts Manhattan Neckwear Palm Beach Neckwear Hickok Bar H Belts Hickok Jewelry Swank Gift Novelties Holeproof Socks Meeker Bill Folds Swank Toilet Kits Uatalina Swim Trunks Val-A-Pak Luggage flTaldropfl(8 “Two Convenient Stores” »- College Station -0- Bryan GUION HALL THEATRE COMING- TO YOU DIRECT. TUESDAY, JUNE 13 TWO FREE SHOWS 7:00 p.m. For All Servicemen and Students 9:00 p.m. For College Faculty and Residents of College Sta.