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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1920)
PAGE 4 T H E C H E M A W A A M E R IC A N FEATS OF MEMORY E very norm al person has a good m em ory for th in g s th a t in terest him deeply or th a t concern him in tim a te ly; we all rem em ber some h ap p en in g s, some facts, e tc ., w ith o u t any conscious effort and we never forget them . T h e m em ory is largely susceptible to tra in in g and to be successful all stu d en ts m ust have m em ories th at have been eith er consciously or unconsciously train ed and developed. T h ey concentrate th e ir m inds on th e th in g s they w ish to rem em bei and associate one set of facts w ith other sets in order th at all may be properly classified and pigeon-holed in the brain for ready reference w hen desired later on. Some persons have rem arkable pow ers of m em ory. O ften, how ever, only details of one p articu lar subject are retained exceptionally well. John W esley, the fo u n d er of M ethodism , w rote about a m an of his acq u ain tan ce “ who was so th o ro u g h ly acq u ain ted w ith th e Bible th at if he was questioned as to any H e brew w ord in th e Old or any G reek w ord in th e New T estam en t he would tell, after a little pause, not only how often th e one or the other occurred in the Bible, b u t also w h at it m eant in every p la c e .” “ Such a m a ste r of Bible k n o w led g e,” W esley declared, “ I never saw before and never expect to see a g a in .” T . B. M acaulay, the em inent E n g lish historian and essayist, also had an e x tra o rd in a ry m em ory; it is said th a t he could repeat “ all D em osthenes by heart and all M ilton, as well as a great p art of th e B ib le.” It is related th at w hen a nearly illiterate servant g irl, em ployed in the hom e of a S cottish preacher, be cam e delirious in fever she repeated lo n g S crip tu ral passages in H ebrew . It seems th at th e k itch en w here she w orked adjoined th e m in iste r’s stu d y and th a t he w as in the habit of reading the Bible aloud in original H ebrew . A lth o u g h she had not understood a word or consciously tak en note of the read in g , her m ind had seized w hole phrases and sentences and held them u n til her illness caused a peculiar d istu rb an ce of her m ental faculties. L in co ln ’s biographers tell how he com m itted to m em ory w hole chapters of th e Bible and could repeat any passage verbatim . In earlier d ay s people d e pended m uch m ore on th eir m em ory th a n they do now. Books were few er and these books w ere read and re-read u n til th e ir co n ten ts were know n by heart. Now we have so m any books and papers th a t such a th in g is o rdinarily impossible. P A P E R A IR -C U SH IO N S F o r cen tu ries th e Japanese have been m aking a ir bags for various purposes out of paper. F or such bags th e y use paper made of bamboo fiber, an ex ceptionally stro n g paper m aterial. T his paper is b u ilt up of six or eight th in tissue-like layers, laid so th a t th e grains of th e different sheets will altern ate. F lex ib le shellac cem ent is used to hold th e sheets together and to m ake th e whole fabric a irtig h t. T h e shellac gives th e finish ed product a dull reddish color w hich is u n attra ctiv e and m akes th e cushions and other air bags even when new appear old. T h is dull color was largely resp o n sible for th e failure of such goods, despite th e rid ic ulously low price at w hich they w ere offered, to find a sale in th is co u n try w hen an attem p t was m ade to in tro d u ce them some 20 years ago. A paper air-cushion m easuring a foot square or larger w hen inflated m ay be deflated and folded up in to sufficiently small com pass to be carried in the vest pocket. A rticles m ade of th is m aterial are s u r prisingly lig h t and resistant to w ear. If properly cared for, it is said, they will last for m any years. Japanese air-cushions, air-beds, e tc .;a re q u ite cheap, com pared w ith A m erican-m ade rubber goods for the sam e purpose, and they give longer service. T h a t ex p lain s w hy A m erican m an u factu rers have been u n able to sell th eir ru b b er cushions in Japanese m ark ets. TH E MOVIE A S A M A G N IF IE R M icroscopes even of the h ighest m ag n ify in g power are very lim ited in th e ir scope, for the more they e n large an object the fainter th e object becomes. But th e movie cam era can m agnify a th in g alm ost any n u m ber of tim es and still th e sharpness of every detail will be preserved. T h is is done not only by m ag n ify ing the actual object itself but by m agnifying or pro lo n g ing its m ovem ent*. F ren ch and G erm an ex p erts have recently w orked out m ethods by w hich movie pictures can be m ade at th e trem endous speed of 500 to 2000 a second, in place of th e usual eig h t or so. T h is is done by aid of the electric flash. A bullet can be photographed in flight, and w hen it is thro w n on th e screen it will be seen to m ove as slow ly as if it were a snail. T he com pressed gas of the pow der change can be seen leaving the barrel of th e g u n , and even th e waves of air set up by the b ullet can be detected. T h e w ink of a hum an eye can by the same process be ex ten d ed so th a t it will occupy a m in u te. A m an ta k in g a flying ju m p can be show n as if poised in the air, and every p art of his m ovem ents can be studied w ith the g reatest deliberation. T h e action of th e hands of a pianist or violinist can th u s be recorded and then th ro w n on th e screen m agnified—in point of tim e— by 10, 100, 1000 or any num ber as required. T h e buzzing of a h u m m in g -b ird ’s w ings, w hich is as sw ift as th a t of an electric fan, can be show n on th e screen as a leisurely and graceful u n d u la tio n . E very m ovem ent and process th at h ith erto has baffled analysis I ecause it was too sw ift for th e eye to study can now be stretched out so th a t each and every p art of it can be stu d ied w ith perfect leisure. T h e pos sibilities of the m ovie for purposes of education are lim itless and they at e only ju st beginning to be realized. 1