Radio age research, manufacturing, communications, broadcasting, television (1941)

Record Details:

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w I 1 i H. G. r.REia (SEATED) AND C. J. YOUNG TEST ELECTRO-CHEMICALLY PRO- DUCED COLORS FOR USE WITH RADIO FACSIMILE EQUIPMENT AT PRINXETON. THIS INVOLVED-LOOKING EQUIPMENT IS BEING SET UP BY H. W. LEVERENZ, DR. G. H. BROWN. AND C. N. IIOYLER TO UTILIZE RADIO-FREQUENCY POWER IN INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL PROCESSES. things of permanent value to health, to living, to work, to entertainment. Research means change — and to change, without setting in motion sequences of unfavorable results and reactions, requires profound thinking and planning. We realize, during time of war, that all has not been well. For one thing, scientific research for several decades has moved along with ever increasing speed but the sociological aspects have lagged and, as a result, the impacts of new advances and re- sulting changes have not always been beneficial. We are now in the stage of this war where our thoughts are clearing and where we see the road more certainly. We are at the stage where some are thinking of post-war plans and ac- tidiis. Research and the changes brought about by research should loom large in this thinking. We in RCA have much to con- tribute. We have much of promise to offer to our generation and to pass on to future generations. Re- search has grown stronger during stress of war. Research can and will continue strong along the road to peace and in the time of peace to follow. The United States and the world need strong scientific re- search, and a dynamic determina- tion is required to see that the re- sults are applied to the benefit of peoples everywhere. This is both a promise for research and a chal- lenge to research. Now is the time to begin the thinking that will lead to plans and actions for the future. FROM THIS HIGH-TEMPERATURE FURNACE USED IN METALLURGICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF RADIO CIRCUFT COMPONENTS, C. WENTWORTH AND W. L. CARLSON PREPARE TO REMOVE A TEST SAMPLE. WITH SLIDE-RULE AND REFERENCE BOOK, INSTEAD OF TUBES AND CIRCUITS. R. S. HOLMES AND DR. I. WOLFF PLAN AN ATTACK ON A RADIO PROBLEM. 6 RADIO AGE ^fi^v