WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 194)
PAGE FOUPw
THE DAILY TAR HEEE
-PATRONIZE OUR
ADVERTISER S-
LACOCK'S
For Better
SHOE REPAIRING
Forma I Wea r
FOR RENT
Full Dress $5.00
Tuxedos 4.00
White Jackets 4.00
Tuxedo Junction
601 E. Trinity Ave. - J-1373
DXTRHAM, N. C.
Student Enrollment Commences
In Platoon Leader Training
Dr. William Kohn
OPTOMETRIST -Phone
3836
Over Carolina Coffee Shop
Monday-Friday
Saturday
9:0,-l:C0
CAROLINA
Today
Enrollment of eligible students
for the Marine corps platoon
leaders class has begun, accord
ing to an announcement by Maj.
B. W. McLean, public informa
tion officer of the Naval ROTC
unit.
Students selected for training
in the platoon leaders class will
receive summer training at Quan
tico, Va., and upon successful
completion of the course will re
ceive commissions in the Marine
corps reserve. All freshmen,
sophomores, and juniors are elig
ible to enroll in the course, Maj.
McLean said.
J Freshmen and sophomores who
'enroll will be required to attend
!tvo summer training periods of
I six weeks duration. Juniors who
jare veterans and have at least
j one year of service to their credit,
jcrc required to train for only
j one six weeks period, McLean
said.
! During their initial training
period si! students are rated as
T::.i;i: corporals and receive $30
a .cr.t.i in addition to board,
clothing, and medical care. Dur
! ing the advanced training periods
;the candidates receive the grade
iff sergeant and are paid $100
ia rr.r nth. All juniors are consider
ed is advanced students, McLean
liKiVEP.SM.-
presents v.
Tv.
mmm
;
lents chosen for platoon
training will be subject to
si 1 1 U'iU-
' j i.i i mm
'lllllfMI I.T
of a
their
j active duty only in case
i national emergencv or at
own request. After completion of
.the training periods and upon
.graduation from college, the stu-
upon his graduation frcm college
He must be single and agree"
to remain so until completion cf
his training period. He must not
have a claim pending for or be
drawing disability allowance, pen
sion, or retired pay from the
United States government. He
must sign an agreement to serve
for the required periods of ac
tive duty training. ;
Students interested in enroll
ing for the course of training
should see Maj. B. W. McLean at
the Naval armory on South Col
umbia street.
-Plays-
(Continued from page 1)
seph G. Stockdale (Joe Castel
lani), and Mac Shaw, Ridgewood.
N. J. (Harry). James Byrd is the
stage manager.
Master electrician on this ori
ginal bill is Danny Hughes, East
Orange, N. J., lighting techni
cians: Ellen Smith, Barnesville,
Ga., Betty Lokey, Raleigh, Ma
rion Powers, Rutherfordton, and
John Kirkman, Portsmouth, Va.
Properties will be handled by
Lee Noll, Berea, Ky.. Ralph
Long, Durham, and Virginia
Hamilton, Manhasset, N. Y. Scene
technicians are Kim Kinney and
Forrest Covington, Washington,
D. C. Pat Peteler will be in
charge of costumes and make-up.
- I
2" , I
. 4 U?C;
'mm ategi.i & Sftfr -ftfir i-i.ihjf-
; y ';,i:Baayi''r;''" "'-.-gY m '.
3 IV'A i ! I is
rtr ;:f -
ff I ilV if;
" ' ' -
"7
mam
Also
MUSICAL
NOVELTY
An SP Candidate
John Sanders is a Student party
candidate for the post of Secretary-Treasurer
of the student
bodv. rather than a CamDUS nartY
dents are eligible to receive com-1 i ,teiaiio
mi;;'"n a? ;fwnnr) lipi ifpnanfj in i .. .... . jCUiiegO
, -...lhe ijiM neadline yesieraay ;
me i.iarine corps reserve. -
. . i morning
jlu ue eiigioie lor piaxoon ieaa
er training a student must not
be enrolled in any other military
organizations, he must be a citizen i
of the United States, not less
DESIGNED for the Army
Signal corps, a cigarette case
size two-way radio is demon
strated by George E. Colmaa
of Red Bank. N. J. Ai bottom
is a close-up of the entire set
and antenna, which can be held
in the palm of a hand. The
"trarjs-rsceiver" will send and
receive messages over distances
as great as 200 yards.
Christian Council
Vill Meet Sunday
Army Announces
Reserve Officer
Positions Open
The Army is now offering com-
tenants for active duty to stu
dents who have served in the
j armed forces and who have com
pleted two or more years of col
lege, Joe Galloway of the Place-
meni service saia yesieraay.
To be eligible a student must
agree to serve on extended active
duty for at least two years fol
lowing appointment and must
meet the following requirements:
The student must have com
pleted at least one year's active
service in any of the armed forces,
which includes the Army, Navy,
Marine corps, Coast Guard, or
Air Force, during the period of
December . 7, 1941 to June 30,
1947.
A student must have completed
two years, one-half of the normal
4-year course for a baccalaureate
degree, and must be between the
ages of 19 and 32.
Students who have not gradu
ated must take a General Classi
fication test.
CAMPUS
CALENDAR
4: 00 STUDENT PARTY EXEC
utive committee. Roland
Parker 1, GM.
4:00 UNIVERSITY PARTY
Steering committee. Ro
land Parker 2, GM.
5 : 00 PAN - HELLENIC COUN
cil. Grail room, GM.
7:30 TRYOUTS FOR GEORGE
Dandin. Caldwell "Y."
8:30 UNI VERS IT Y HOUR.
WDUK, Durham.
8: 00 C AROLINA DAMES
club. Mrs. John Foushee
will speak, Main lounge,
GM.
9:00 DIALECTIC SENATE. 3RD
floor, New West.
Orders for Rings
To Be Taken in Y
Orders for class rings will be
taken in the YMCA lobby tomor
row afternoon from 1:30 to 4
o'clock.
Orders will also be taken dur
ing the spring quarter, but rings
ordered after tomorrow will. not
be delivered in time for com-
Pre-Ncital Course
Plans Discussion
"Labor and Hospital Procedure"
will be the topic for discussion
at tomorrow afternoon's Pre
Parenthood course which begins
at 3 o'clock in the District Health
department.
The final session of the course
will be held March 21 with a
discussion of the "New Family
Set-Up." The course is being of
fered as a community service for
prospective parents. All people
interested in the subject are in
vited to attend.
-Banquets-
(ContiTmed from page 3)
orial plaque, symbolic of the
team's outstanding swimmer,
meet.
Dr. Arthur Jensen, a Southern
conference swimming official paid
tribute both to Twining an-j
Ralph Casey in a brief after
dinner address. "Dick Twining
is the best all-around swimmer
I've ever seen," stated Jensen,
and "I consider Ralph Casey to
be the best trainer of swimmers
I've ever seen."
Floyd Drew, freestyle artist,
was elected captain of next year's
mermen.
CAMPUS CI
MCE
The Intercollegiate Christian
council of Western North Caro
lina will hold its annual Race
field d?.v at Bennet
in Gicensboi'o, Sunday
:from 2 to 4:30 o'clock.
For further information stu
dents are requested to see Gallo
way at the Placement service mencement exercises ihis year.
office in South building. If a stu-!
dent is definitely going to apply,
he should get in touch with Lt.
F. W. Morse, 215 East Rigsby
avenue, Durham, Galloway said.
Both campus political parties j
requested that a correction be '
noted. :
Featured ;
g an open
lip progran
t the field day will :
toruir., iptt ch, wor- :
, and a social hour. 1
than 17 years old at the time ;
of enrollment nor more than 25 !
CLASSIFIES S
SPECIAL NOTICES
IV
116 E. Parrish Street
Durham, N. C.
I CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT
t TYPING EFFICIENTLY DONE !
! Theses, term papers, piays, quick
j sen ice. Call F-3691. eh 1x1
rr.tchamcsi cor.C:'.
252-A Jutkion C-ever..ns.
y r.e beta at ;
ui ;a no. -r: or '
; 2-2452-1 i !
I 0
i
'A little birdie lold me
that the
BEGGAR'S OPERA"
9J
r
r
r
r
fi
r
r
r
r
r
r
c
r
V)
is tomorrow
And that is what I plan
to do!"
Tickets on Sale at
"Y" Lobby, Hill Hall
" and
Carolina Sport Shop
John Gay's
BEGGAR'S OPERA
A Musical Satire
Jan Schinhan and David Samples
DI HECTORS
Y'
A
FOR RENT
6A
WANTED PERSON TO SHARE;
small house with two others. Car
necessarv. Write ABC, c,o Daily Tar
Heel. " (3-c3350-li
13U3 ."KEVROLET CO";.?:
ana ht ter. Car in exce-.ler.t
Rudy Iar.es'.cn. U.N.C.. Tr.
P:ttsbor- Road.
: -RABID !
.Hst-duiofi.
rt. No6I,
;2-24Gl-ll :
VJ-H CHRYSLER COXVERTI'
Joe Cv.s-J:i Phi K.v,?33 Sign
,LE. SEE
a House.
1-2459-1)
AUTO PARTS i
New Used Rebuilt
"AA" Quality!
Low Prices!
TRANSMISSIONS
Rebuilt Guaranteed
Ford "A" S17.95ex
Ply 35-39 25.95 ex
Chev 29-38 (all).. 24.95 ex
Open Saturdays
Until 6:30 PJM.
VILLAGE
Today
i
!
x
bud ARRnTT Jz
m mm rw W
lou C0STELL0
Til! ANDREWS SISTERS
r.
b W M sr L
TOR SALE
-37 FOHD
o boevs sho
ONE INSULATED ICE BOX IN GOOD :
condition. Will sell dirt cheao. See
O. H. Allen, 30 Oakwood Drive or i
phone F-5283 1-2453-1 1 '
FOR SALE AUTOMOTIVE 6BB
1S47 FOUR DOOR PLYMOUTH DE
luxe sedan. Radio, heater, white sice
walls, plastic seat covers. Good con
dition. Call F-5453 after 5 p. m. anv
dav. (3-2453-1
STATION" WAGON THE
but the motor purrs like
kitten See it at Foe Mar. suits and
ubmit bid to Box 10SO Chapel Hill,
nef.re .sren j"'n. U-1ZU0-1)
HET.P VAKTED 8
' tEMBLRS FOR STRING BAND SEE
Toir; 'atie.vs. Memorial Ji,'.' titer
8:00 P.M. ' (1-24SO-1)
.AA. AUTO
WRECKERS
(J 2 Miles Out New Raleigh R4.
DURHAM J-8372
CARTOON ;
Only Arrow oxfords have an
these features:
Perfect fitting Arrow
collars
Mitoga shape for
trimness
Sanforized label
Anchored buttons
Crisp, long-wearing
Gordon oxford cloth.
See your Arrow dealer
for Gordon oxfords todayi
ARROW
GORDON
OXFORDS $3.95
ARROW
SHIRTS and
UNDERWEAR
i
i
HANDKERCHIEFS
TIES
SPORTS SHIRTS
LOST
12
1935 FORD TUDOR. A GOOD BUY AT
S150. See B. C. Brock, 217 Jackson
Circle. Victory Village anytime after
6 p. m. (2-2451-H j red
ONE LADIES GREEN SKIRT FRIDAY
M-.icb 4th between Carolina Cleaners
and Victory Viiisge. Reward. Call F-425(
Mrs. Mary T. Gibson.
(2-2457-1)
'41 FORD TUDOR. FOUR NEW TIRES,
& BLACK SHEAFFER PEN.
Name engraved. Reward. Contact Kai
E. Nielsen. RR No. 2. Chanel Hill or
1 T ' " - . rTU T" . tt i r
f'
12-2454-1)
For the Newest
WHERE TO EAT
2P
SPRING FASHIONS I
I I i bat. 11
IN
i FOUND A GOOD PLACE TO EAT
I j Whid Powell's Colonial House System,
I ! opoosit; Citv Hall on West Rosemary.
I ; Delicious short orders. Open - Mon.-
s. 11 a.m. to midnight, Fri. and
i sat. ii a.m. ta z a.m. (chixii
Men's Clothing
VISIT
March 16,,
llrh
!)') (ta:-: incl); . .
Memorial Hall
iao e. main
Durham
.
SURCVELGCfTTA
E.UT HE D DNTT
SAY HOW Tfi&T.Vj
hP! H DO';NI'
ONE. BRICK
AT ATIME-VILL
u years rr
-AUDTHELN
WE'LL BE i
'ELlG'Bi-E FOa
OLD -AGE.
PE:NSI04S-'
,;e'li BEGiU'
RIGHT
- ' i : t
mi
Ck
o m-"s:-s ccVv : .,; tears it down, the: boss.
iJ p-drt'ij r7bC'' :. WE'RE OUTA A WE'VE J
-yl-V -. V: f , - OO&S-ANi'MDU GOTTA
l-r K .-Z'-:- -.' V r.: 1. II KNJOWS HOW TEAS IT III
Ii i;.ffrfjr Uq iXsinT-rmmi,, , . I I HARD IT'LL BE Y? DOWN .rrj I I
t-- -; iiuw s . .,:A 1 1 new otrryM-Jy 1 1
- Gefr your CHEESE BLINTZES TODAY at HARRY'S
h TrBH TUATf H01V KY TITOE- WE CAU. ME EXPLAIN THE L'N1TP $TAT$ HARP TO MY COl'STW TD V j 7
" 1 ( YC LEAK.NEP TO ) NOW FLOWED BECAUSE I M TO ME VCJ TOO MAY CALL JU po... J L V
I i mm 't&mm ml, m
For Students of Science and
Engineering
in. ... .
'of 'v
' 4
PRODUCING METALLIC TITANIUM
FOR INDUSTRIAL EVALUATION
p. ?t -
Du Pont group research
developed a pilot plant with
daily capacity of 100 pounds
Du Pont research has just made
available to industry what may be
come one of America's key structural
materials, titanium metal. Midway
in density between aluminum and
iron and with an especially high
melting point, silvery-white titanium
offers an extraordinary combination
of strength, lightness, corrosion re
sistance and hardness.
Titanium is the ninth most com
mon clement. But it has leen slow
in coming into its own as a metal be
cause of the difficulty of separating
it in pure form from its ores.
i.
4 S. 4
S 1 -
is.-; i-rTi .
t kM".
HAFPENEC TO SO A'AN'V
EXPLA;EE5 LA5T
NOv'E .USES'
Men pictured on As pcc uvrc members 0
titanium research tcrjm. E. L. Andrsnn,
A.B.Ch., Briiiliam Young 'PJ;J. B. Sutton,
Ph.D.Phys.Ch., West Virginia 733; A. R.
Conklin, M.S.Phyz.Ch., (ieoria '40, are
shou n inspecting 300 lbs. of l)u Punt titanium
metal fpangc.
Du Pont scientists first lxran to
probe the possibilities of metallic ti
tanium in the course of their long
experience will, ihe titanium oxide
pigments. Their research was inter
rupted by World War II. Meanwhile,
the U.S. Bureau of Mines laborato
ries succeeded in producing the metal
for research purposes.
After the war, Du Pont scientists
developed a process for the produc
tion of ductile titanium metal that
can be scaled up to meet commercial
demands. The research team that
mastered the complex problem con
sisted of chemical engineers special
izing in design and production, as
well as chemists and a metallurgist.
In September 19 18, a pilot plant was
opened with a daily capacity of 100
pounds. Titanium metal is now being
produced in sponge and ingot form.
Samples are available to industrial
and college laboratories with research
projects in related fields. Studies of
methods for forming, machining and
alloying are under way.
Exhaustive studies will le neces
sary before the many possibilities of
titanium metal can be known. Be
cause of its high ratio of strength to
weignt, early uses may be in airplane
power plants and structural parts.
Its hardness and rust-resistance rec
ommend it for railroad transporta
tion equipment, marine power plants
and propellers, and food packaging
equipment. Its high melting point
suggests use in pistons, and its re
sistance to electric currents points to
"electronics. Titanium wire may be
used for springs and titanium sheet
for such highly stressed parts as
microphone diaphragms.
Your Opportunity in Research
The commercial development of ti
tanium metal is a typical example of
Du Pont research in action. How
ever, the Pigments Department,
which worked out the process, is
but one of the ten Du Pont ma'nu-
ach is
C. M. Olson, Ph.D.Phys.Ch., Chicago 36. and
C. II. Winter, Jr., B.S.Ch.E., Virginia Poly
technic Institute '40, removing 1004b. titan
ium ingot from furnace in lieot-trcuting study.
chemicals to plastics and textile fi
berscollege trained men and wom
en work in congenial groups where
they have every opportunity to dis
play individual talent and capa
bilities. Who knows what their con
tributions will mean in the future
to science and the world!
J I : .. fri ft
x s-..v f- .,
D B r r- .
-..umgw, n.a.un.E., Princeton ' 17, and
T D. McKinley, B.S.Ch., Wormier Poh
terhnic Institute '35, making a test of the hard
ness of ingot of Du Pont titanium metal.
r
THIS SOOKLH VIU HELP YOU
PLAN YOUR CAREER
Sond f-r vour pcr.-snDal
cony of 'The V j I'ont
Company 8 the Col
lege iraduate." L"c
scribrs ot.jiortm-i'ics
f'T tcoTi oad xP5fn
with many types of
training, l-',-.;,, .
individual nLili-v is rcrcnivJ arvj
"arded tiudcr the proup sysu-m of o;xr
anon. Address: 2513 Ncwouw Buildiug.
Wi.nnnst.ju, I.Vlav.aro.
K , 4"', i V "
. ' . : 4
ducts continuous research. Eacl
operated much like a separate com
pany. Within these "companies"
whose interests range from heavy
6ME
BETTER THINGS FOR -BETTER UVING
. . THROUGH CHEMISTRY
fir.
rr fjrt ul ra PvntU
li-i-tl
15
wst to
Ml
Ht !
s l IK V. ,, ?i if 1 asm . i t Til JM ilii
'if T,..r-.il..r -j-' ra t. -r .'ijr,'J-'k .-si Llf?ili3 V 8-7S
' ' " " 1 r i i i ) i , T"'