The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 39, No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 14, 1953 Page: 3 of 8
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T APRIL 14 1U1
THK OKLAHOMA DAILY Vutwwnatf if OUiknu Xirmii OUb
FACS THRU
rgan Recital to Be Given
y Dorothy Young Here
irothy Young went winner of
National American Guild of
aniflt'n competition will appear
recital at 8 pm Wednesday in
jjmberg hall
fin Young a senior in organ
in Oklahoma City will play
Ifs “Paasacaglia and Fugue In
liinor" the "Sonata on the 94th
lm” by Reulike Marcel Dupre's
Kir Stations of the Cross" and
i'U Parme Nous" by Olivier
Ksiaen
is a result of the National A G
-ompetilion she has received the
irlitzer Memorial fund award of
n and the Jean Tennyson award
$1500 for study and travel in
roe She will leave in June for
Is and the Fontainebleau school
fine arts to study organ and
fi position for a year
liss Young Is a member of Mor-f-Board
honor society and Mu
Epsilon musical sorority
DOIIOTHY YOl'XG
Judgement Day Is
Program Theme
I)etartmrnt of six-ial sciences
will iarticipate in a program en-
titled "Judgment Day fur the Social
Sciences" at 7:30 jm Thursday
April 10 in 105 Union Student rep-
resentatives from each deiKirlment
of social sciences will defend his
particular department
This muting is sponsored try a
class in community organization in
the school of social work Mem-
bers of the program committee are:
James M cares Muskogu chair-
man Wanda Rouse Hitchcock
Elaine Shutlce Oklahoma City Joy
Jester Amarillo Tex and Gerald
Di GrapiKi Maynard Mass
Carroll Slack Norman will rep-
resent the school of social work
on 'the program
Iifrsavrrs to Meet
Women's regular life-saving
classes will meet from 4:15 to i
pm Tuesday in the women's pool
and from 6 to 8 pm on Wednesday
Dr Miser Will Leave
To Print Map of State
Dr Hugh B Miser staff geolo-
gic of the l'$ geological survey
announced that he will leave for
the slate of Washington Wednes-
day to rinl the geological map of
Oklahoma which will be printed
about Decent! icr 1954
Dr Miser said "I have been in
a car long enough to travel around
tiie world seven times and put in
50 years of endeavor on the map:"
He said 1M4 pieces of copy went
to make up the new map w'hich if
he copy w ere laid end tn end it
would 1m 4143 feet long The pur-
liosc of the map is to show by colors
the distribution of rocks within
the state
Drama Students to Give
Play on TV Program
'First Night" a play featuring
students in the university school
of drama will lie shown on the
“Open Window" at 1:30 pm April
19 on WKY-TV
Ruiel J Jones director of the
school of drama will tie in charge
of the production and will lie in-
tr ixl need by Dr Sherman P Law-
ton program director
STUDENTS!
TEACHERS!
iano Recital
ated Today
zan Marsh recognized as a brll-
t American pianist will give a
tal at 1 pm Tuesday in Holm-
g hall
ursh has appeared in recitals
i leading orchestras in France
ind Switzerland Austria Ucl-
n and the United States He Is
head of the piano department
he Jordan college of music at
lor university Indianapolis Ind
fter a recent recital in New
City's Town hall the New
Herald Tribue stated “Mr
sh's performance is on so ele-
d a communicative level that
Is seldom aware of his super-
re manual mastery His playing
'hopin and Liszt is a revelation
his reporter”
he New York Times in an article
igh praise sxke of hUr “extra-
nary command of the mechan-
of the piano"
he recital Is free to the public
llowships Are Open
Clicm Engineering
even fellowships are open for
1953-54 year in the university
ool of chemical engineering
R L Huntington chairman
I
utstanding grants for graduate
lents to make secial research
lies arc offered by the Ameri-
cas association Black Sivalls
Bryson Inc Gulf Oil corpora-
i Magnolia Petroleum comjiany
oney-Crawford tank and manu-
uring company the Texas
iany and the Dow Chemical
ipany
pplicants may write Dr Hunt-
ion for further details Sui-
ts chosen will begin their pro-
ms next September at OU
Niae Students Initiated
Mu Epsilon honorary math
entity held initiation for nine
IH members recently Initialed
e John II Borden Virginia M
tagan Lee R Gallagher Leo
mon Edwin R Harris Jasper
Jackson Jr James P Ilpp
in E Seay and Monte G Smith
Rural Children Will Be
Guest at Lions Circus
The circus is coming to town for
some OMO rural school pupils on
April 17
The children will be guests of
Norman businessmen at the Lions
club's lienefit circus at the county
fair grounds
Members of the Lions club hope
to raise $1500 to help finance a
Lions sponsored landscaping project
at the Cerebral Palsy institute
grounds Children at the institutes
will be guests of the club
It
k
t
NORMAN
COURTS
HOTEL
Norman's 65 room hotel
Each room with bath
Telephone In every room
adios
Television
Air-Conditioned
JBeautyShop
In connection
Phone 3000
North on U S 77
NORMAN'S FINEST
and 11
MOST COURTEOUS
STATION
JOHN'S
TEXACO
at the earner of
Uodaay tilvd and
Hi-Way 77
Space Available on
' Special Student Ships
SS AROSA KULM
MS ANNA SALEN
MS SKAUBRYN
eastbound westbound
Aug 11
' Aug 24
Sept 2 i
Sept 21
Oklahoma Citil
COUNCIL ON
STUDENT TRAVSL
17 IrnSway Niw York 7 N Y
(Ector 2-09M
A GROWING FIELD-
nstnimeiiiMioi
Modern manufacturing trends at Du Pont bring
ever-increasing opportunities for technical men
Do you think of instrumentation as
applying only to work in electricity
and electronics?
Or would you also include prob-
lems in chemical processing mate-
rials of construction and materials
handling as well as application of
equipment — both mechanical and
hydraulic— for measurement and
control systems?
At Du Pont instrumentation is
applied to widely diverse areas of
manufacturer operations It calls for
many diffeient technical back-
grounds In a typical instrument
group there may be men whose formal
training has been in mechanical
chemical electrical or metallurgical
engineering or in physics etc
Instrumentation is becoming more
and more important in the chemical
industry In fact many of today's
processes and products would not be
possible without' modem measure-
ment and control systems The trend
toward continuous processes means
challenging and constantly increas-
ing opportunities for instrumenta-
tion men
Du Font’s instrument program in-
cludes research development design
and supervising installation of proc-
ess control equipment Some of the
work is done in tiie central Engineer-
ing Department at Wilmington
However most of the major plants
across the country now have their
own organized instrument groups
Paul D Kohl left) BS in ME Purdue ’48
check the assembly of an experiments control
instrument
So you may visualize the scope and
diversity of the work here are ex-
amples of instrumentation recently
developed and designed by Du Pont
technical men:
1 A device to measure flow of approxi-
mately 30000 lbs per hour of gas at
more than 10000 psi To give 12
accuracy and be responsive to flow-
changes of five cycles per second
2 A device to monitor continuously
1200 similar temperatures Equipment
to record temperature and sound alarm
at a deviation of 1°C from desired point
3 An automatic control system to main-
tain a predetermined pressure-temperature
relation in a large-batch autoclave
during spontaneous reaction between
two chemicals
Thus it can lie seen that Du Pont
instrumentation is limited to no single
avenue of engineering Men with an
aptitude for the work get experience
in many pluiss of tiie Company's
teclin ical activi t ies— and an excellent
background for positions in manage-
ment and administration
ASK FOR 'Themical Kngineera at
1)ii fttnt" Nuw illnl ruled booklet d-
ucribea iuil iul uwiniiinriilt I ruining ami
piillM of promo! inti Juki wild pout curd
in K I ilu 1'iint tie Nemours 4 C'o
(Inc) 3A21 Nemoum Building Wil-
mington Delaware
Fid R Slrudar B Metal IV Kenssrlaer Pt Richard O Jackie HS in CkE Columbia
’SO examinee a pressure strain recorder with US and Gregory L Laeerstm PkD in ME
AUea K Purbeck EE Princeton '39 Columbia '49 test an infrared gas analyser
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER IIVINO
THROUGH CHuusnr
Watch "Camkada at Amttica" an Tuiamiaa
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Adler, Dot. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 39, No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 14, 1953, newspaper, April 14, 1953; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1802810/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.