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engineering, the physical sciences, and various scientific and industrial fields, bringing to 28 the total of fellowships granted since the beginn...
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TYGON PAINT

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Corning Glass * Works*

• Resists acids, alkalies· water, oil. gasoline, alcohols e High dielectric strength— non-flammable a C o l d a p p l i e d to w o o d , metal or concrete • A p p l i e d by s p r a y g u n , brush, or dip e May be air-dried or baked e Glossy, easily cleaned surface

TYGON Plastic P a i n t coatings are a liquid formulation of T y g o n sheet stocks, the chemically inert plastic used t o protect acid tanks and equipment. T y g o n Paints w i l l not oxidize and chemically deteriorate w i t h age. Resist most acids, a l k a l i e s , as w e l l as o i l , g a s o l i n e , fresh o r salt water and alcohols. W i l l n o t contaminate solutions.

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Please send free test panel of Tygon Paint, and copy of your new Paint Bulletin 709. Name

University News

CompanyAddress PROCESS EQUIPMENT DIVISION

U. S. STfNEWARE 1158

THE

721,610, equivalent to $3.25 per common share; 1947 net earnings of S3.08 per common share. Stockholders of t h e Texas Co. will vote a t their annual meeting April 26 on a proposal to increase the company's authorized capital stock to 20 million shares from 14 million shares.

FOR PROTECTION AGAINST FUMES,

OF

GE 1949

Fellowships

31 4

1 1 15 15 15

1

15

16 1

] _l

Research fellowships amounting to $18,460 have been awarded by the General Electric Co., Schenectady, Ν. Υ., under its education fund t o 15 graduate students for advanced study. Seven of the students re­ ceived Charles A. Coffin Fellowships for advanced study in electricity, physics, and the physical sciences; 1S2 fellowships in C H E M I C A L

WEEK

honor of Mr. Coffin, one of the founders and first president of General Electric, have been awarded since their establish­ ment in 1923. Eight other students were awarded Gerard Swope Fellowships for advanced study in industrial manage­ ment, engineering, the physical sciences, and various scientific and industrial fields, bringing to 28 the total of fellowships granted since the beginning of the awards. The fellowships are awarded annually on a competitive basis to graduates of uni­ versities, colleges, and technical schools who have shown through previous work that they could undertake or continue ad­ vanced study either in this country or abroad. AVinners of the awards may re­ ceive up to .$1,500, plus a grant for any special equipment needed in their chosen fields of research. Loans also may be avail­ able to the students during the period of study.

Research Corp. Grant to Texas College of Mines The Research Corp. of New York has granted the Texas College of Mines and Metallurgy, El Paso, Tex., a $2,000 grantin-aid to support the research in the ab­ sorption and emissior» of radiant energy by organic dye-type molecules. The work is being conducted by J. A. Hancock, asso­ ciate professor of chemistry.

Texas Co.

Fellowship

The Texas Co. has established a fellow­ ship a t the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. The fellowship amounts to $1,500 per year and is in the field of the application of high frequency oscillation to analytical procedures.

Grant to U. of N.C. A grant of $4,500 has been made by the Research Corp., New York, Ν . Υ., in support of a project on the chemistry of pyrones being conducted by R. H. Wiley a t the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Juniata

Projects

Aided

The department of chemistry of Juniata College, in Huntingdon, Pa., has received grants of $2,500 each from the John II. Wald Co. of Huntingdon and from the Research Corp., New York, Ν. Υ. The study of glass compositions for use in re­ flective highway markings has been under­ taken under a research fellowship provided by the Wald company. D . M. Rockwell, professor of chemistry, is supervising the work of Consuelo Garcia of Nicaragua, a 1948 graduate of Juniata, and two other assistants. In the second research project, R. T. Davis, Jr., assistant professor of chemistry, is at work on a study of the adsorption of gases by solids. AND

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