I by MARY LEE Man has always been cred ited with inventiveness, but don’t underrate his mate. May be man did make plastics out of soy beans—but it was a little woman who sprayed corn flakes with gold to decorate a picture frame! But more significantly, to day, women are using in highly innovative ways some of the more traditionally masculine items found in automotive stores. According to the Motor & Equipment Manufacturers As sociation, women have moved into the auto supply stores in a big way. They now buy half of everything sold there, and they use the products in many a new fashion. According to some home makers, oil additives are just the thing to brush on metal posts of bird houses. It makes them so slippery that squirrels and cats can’t climb up to frighten birds or steal their food. Women also have learned to zap those basement crickets with precise shots of automatic choke cleaner from a pres surized can. And they find sweeping the walks easier with a heavy-duty push broom such as those used by service sta tions for clean-up. You might call it one-up manship in this man’s world when women make household f appliances gleam with auto I polish, or free sticky garden * gates with automobile lubri cant. They also replace mop-up rags with windshield cleaning paper, because it’s so tough. Women have discovered that empty five-quart oil cans are great for starting tender young plants. And junk tires painted pastel colors are amusing to decorate a driveway. As yet the gals haven’t found anything different to do with the mechanic’s hand cleaner except use it to clean their own “green” thumbs. But just wait. It wouldn’t surprise us if they found it could be j used as a laundry aid or salad dressing mix! A Singing Flame May £nd Air Jets’ Whine A "Singing Flame” may put an end to the whining sound of the airplane jet engine, if the experiments are successful at the College of Engineering, Pennsylvania State University. Mechanical engineer Ger hard Reethof is searching for an efficient, economical method of reducing the loud whine of fan-jet engines. His premise is that, if a pure tone could be generated in a jet engine’s hot exhaust gases and if that sound could be pitched exactly out of phase with the fan-blade noise, the twb will cancel. Preliminary research has shown that an oscillating electric field acting on the boundary of the hot part of an oxy-acetylene flame does result in the generation of sound at the frequency of the imposed electric field. In fact it was even possible to transmit music with consider able fidelity; hence, the term singing flame. 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V mmN PI llß_in - QQc MORTON.’assrastL 3 SI.OO 1 lUIVUII ULUD IU Du PET*RITzTiE SHELLS 3iJ^>Lsl.oo At# store will be closed july 4th. HKVI7V«I7faT!TIT3TVITSE7inRTYnT3RTIVIRTfn!V!n7f?RVfRn9n^YT9Vy!TVVFT!YYY9VVIH SHOP AHEAD FOR HOLIDAY SAVINGS no CHOWAN Bmiß KDBNTON, NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JULY 2, IM9. N. C. State University’s Grads Rank High In Pay For Their Skills By GRAHAM JONES RALEIGH North Caro lina State University's May World Shooting Event More than 2,000 marksmen of rifle, pistol and shotgun from 60 nations are expected to compete in the 40th World Shooting Championships being held in Phoenix, Arizona, Oc tober 17-26. The National Rifle Associa tion of America will host the matches on behalf of the United States and the Inter national Shooting Union. Com petition is open to both men and women. graduates have started their careers at salaries ranging up to SIO,OOO a year and above, despite a nervous national economy. A report from the NCSU Placement Office shows fre quent five-figure incomes for graduating seniors in such fields as engineering, the physical sciences and tech nologies. Those salaries were forth coming in face of a tighten ing job market across the na tion that affected employ ment from manual laborers to PH.Dd’s. The NCSU School of Engi neering, which enrolls ap proximately 30 percent of the University’s 12,700 students, graduated students who start ed their careers averaging $9,708 a year. Graduates of the NCSU School of Textiles, which trains highly educated men for North Carolina's largest industry, started work at salaries averaging $9,660 a year. Another high-salary field was the pulp and paper sci ence curriculum. Starting salaries for the graduates in that field averaged $10,836 a year. The NCSU Placement Of fice reported that some 700 employers conducted a total of more than 9,000 interviews during the 1969-70 academic year. Those employers ranged from West Coast manufac turers to North Carolina in dustries. NCSU graduated more than 2.300 men and women at its May 30 commencement, the largest class in the history of the University. Os those graduates, the ma jority are starting their ca reers, others are fulfilling military obligations and some will continue their education for advanced degrees. Aver age starting salaries for stu dents who have reported to the NCSU Placement Ofice by schools are as follows: Agriculture and Life Sci ences: $7,860, an increase of 5.5 per cent over last year’s starting salaries. Education: $693 per month —Most teachers enter con tracts on a nine-month basis. Engineering: $9,708 with a greater percentage of this year’s graduates starting their careers in North Carolina. Forest Resources: $10,836 PAGE THREE for pulp and paper graduat $7,200 for recreation and pi administration graduate!; a $7,788 for forestry graduat Liberal Arts: $8,280 “ma ly in the fields of manaj ment training and non-tech cal sales.” Physical Sciences and i plied Mathematics: ss! with approximately a sou) of the students in this schi continuing their education. Textiles: $9,660, with I majority of the students ti ing positions in North Ca lina. Design: Up to $10,860 foi product design graduate.