Radio Broadcast (May-Oct 1925)

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©C1B6629S3 o RADIO BROADCAST Vol. 7, No. 4 August, 192 / From Figures to Fame Professor Louis Alan Hazeltine Finds that the Algebraic Unknown Quantity, X, Equals Fame, Fortune, and the Neutrodyne By MYRA MAY s ELDOM, if ever, would any one select algebra as a sure road to fortune. While plumb tricate problems of the so the unknown quanti ing, banking, advertising, physics and every kind of concentration are glaringly depicted as a part of the curriculum of most correspondence school courses, it is exceedingly unlikely that these confident advertisers would indicate algebra as the one path through which one might attain to Fame and Fortune— that visionary goal of one's dreams. But it has been demonstrated that algebra and Fame and Fortune are somewhat synonymous and that one gains experience from the one branch of mathematics that helps to solve the in PROFESSOR LOUIS ALAN HAZELTINE Inventor of the neutrodyne circuit, embodied in thousands of receivers used all over this country and abroad. Mr. Hazeltine is head of the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology at Hoboken, New Jersey, and is here shown using a wavemeter in his laboratory higher branch. And ty, X, may, after all, be the Fame and Fortune of your dreams as well as the solution to your involved algebraic equation. It is seldom that one gains Fame and Fortune through the direct application of mathematics, however, and, student or scholar/he is fortunate, indeed, who, having solved his algebraic problem, finds that the X, literally spells Fortune itself. Such was the case with Louis Alan Hazeltine, inventor of the "neutrodyne" circuit. If someone were to ask you why radio interested you, you might reply that you liked to try for distance, or that you enjoyed the enter