, MARCH 3, 1947 THE MICTITGAN fATLY FACE WILLOW AIRPORT: Engineers Will Display Jet Propulsion Advances The public will get a good close look at some of the most signifi- cant developments in the field of jet propulsion on April 18 when the aeronautical engineering de- partment throws open its Willow Run facilities in connection with the Engineering Open House. Several jet power units -the I-40 turbo-jet, used on the Army's P-80 Shooting Star, the I-16 which powered the Bell P-59, and the smaller impulse unit from a Ger- man V-1 buzz bomb - will be on display. Spectators will also be treated to the sight and sound of a jet Music School Mfembers Will Give ecitals Concert Group Plans Renaissance Music Music school students and fac- ulty will present a varied series of recitals this week. James Wolfe, music school stu- dent, will present a piano recital including sonatas by Mozart, Beethoven, and Hindemith at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Rackham Assembly Hall. The program will be open to the public. A panorama of secular music of the middle ages and the Renais- sance will be presented for gradu- ate students in the music school, at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Including music from the Troubadour period to late 16th century Italian instrumental mu- sic, the program will feature two selections by the early composer Dufay. Students participating in the concert are Gloria Gonan, Eunice Wilcox, Robert Waltz, James Wal- lace, William Poland, Freeman Russell and. Jean Morgan. Paul Bryan, Edwyn Hames, Ar- lene Burt, Robert Warner, Theo- dore Powell and Nelson Hauen- stein will also take part in the program. Prof. Elizabeth Spelts of the music school will present a song recital at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The program, wW'2h will be open to the public, will include songs by Bach, Mozart, Brahms and Von Weber. Steel Hanging Runs in Family For Craneman (Continued from Page 1) the engineer. Most of ths crew has. been together since 1942. Explains 'Steel Hanging' Ray Popp, who has been a steel hanger for 21 years said a few things about the intricacies of the connecting work which has been going on for the last four weeks. The beams are first bolted into place and then, after one section of the building is completed, the pieces are riveted. The riveting crew started work with a clatter last Thursday. Foreman of this gang is "Smoky" Burke, from the smoky city of Pittsburgh. Asked if Ann Arbor's rainy cli- mate affected the construction work, Popp said the rain makes the girders slippery and the men must be extra careful in doing the "squirrel" work. Popp denied having any fears of high places, for "if you start on the first floor and work up, you just get used to the height." He added that after years of experience the connecting work becomes second nature. Meanwhile, the number of stu- dents watching the progress of the construction work on sunny afternoons is growing. Most typi- cal of comments heard by this writer as he infiltrated among one of these crowds were: "You'd think those men up there would fall, the way they throw those bars around," and "I wouldn't do that kind of work for double un- ion wages." Spanish Play Will Be Given 'Bonds of Interest' Has Modern Theme La Sociedad Hispanica will pre-E sent "Los Intereses Creados," a Spanish play by Nobel prize win- ner Jacinto Benavente at 8:30 unit in operation, according to Karl Stevens, chairman of the aeronautical engineering commit- tee for the Open House. A small scale model of a V-1 unit will be in action, and according to Prof. David T. Williams of the depart- ment "it should provide noise and excitement enough for every- body." All of the engines to be on ex- hibition are used by the depart- ment in research work here, Prof. Williams explained. This research is in the field of "design study," a stage of work which he de- scribed as a "pre-blueprint exper- imentation." Emphasizing the great advances that have been made in jet work in the last few years, Prof. Wil- liams said that the I-16 engine developed only a few years ago is now completely obsolete. "How- ever, that sort of quick turnover is inevitable in the work of a brand new science." Research work here is devoted largely to missile propulsion, which means that the department deals more with rockets and ram jets than with the heavy turbo- jets used for aircraft, he contin- ued. A good guess as to the nature of future research may be made from two experimental studies that will be on display for the Open House - a study of how turbulence affects flame speed in combustion and one on heat trans.- fer in rocket motors. Busses will leave from in front of East Engineering Building for Willow Run Airport every hour on the hour from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the day of the Open House. Guides will conduct the groups of visitors to the various displays, so that no hapless students will be lost in the vast stretches of the IEducators Hit Teach ers for Goin on Strike (odemii Violation Of Existing Contracts LANSING, March 29- P -The Michigan Education Association came out against teacher strikes today in a resolution passed unan- imously by the 100 delegates to the organization's annual conven- tion here. "As members of a profession having high professional stand- ards, and as individuals engaged in essential public service, we be- lieve that teachers should not par- ticipate in strikes in violation of existing contracts," the resolution declared. However, the resclution asserted that the anti-strike pledge does not mean that the organization "condones inadequate salaries or unsatisfactory working conditions which some teacher groups have sought to remedy by means of strikes." The organization approved reso- lutions urging the elimination of war emergency certificates for teachers, and the reorganization of school districts into larger units "to provide more equalized educational opportunities." Kar)ins k-s Tax Cl riies Recorded The published statements of Prof. Louis A. Karpinski, of the mathematics department, on the income tax reduction bill, recently passed by the House, have been in- serted in the Congressional Rec- ord of March 26 by Rep. George Sadowski (Rep., Mich.). The statements, in which Prof. Karpinski charged the tax cut would be a "gift" to high income groups, appeared in The Daily Coronach, an Elegy" dedicated # Wayne Dunlap of the Musicl to the late University organist, Palmer Christian. by its composer, Edmund Haines, will be feauired in a concert to be presented byj the University Symphony Oreihes- tra at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Hill Auditorium.- Under the direction of Prof. School, the program will include Howard Hanson's "Symphony No. 1": a suite adapted from Gabriel Faur incidental music to the Ma terlinek drama "Peleas and Melisande"; and "Premier Rhap- sodic for Clarinet and Orchestra" by Debussy, Concert To Feature Elegy bylHaines Folk-Lore Lecture Prof. H. Jasselson of Wayne University will give a lecture on "Russian Folk-Lore" at a meeting of the Russian Circle at 8 p.m. to- morrow in the recreation room of the International Center. Russian songs will be sung and tea will be served after the lecture. Sunday movies, the Union Execu- tive Council will present a pro- gram of three films at 7:30 p.m. to- day in Rms. 317. 318 and 320. "Desert Victory," a narrated1 portrayal of the British routing of Rommel during the African cam- paign of 1942, will highlight to- "Fundamentals of Basketball and "Sunday in the Valley of Mem ico," a travelogue. will complet the 90-minute show. All the filn are accompanied by narrator's de scrips ions. The pro-rams are open to bot men and women students 4 AL J" JL Union To Begin Weekly Filn Series Initiating a series of weekly . dad's program, 111. ( Q - La airport. Ih March 23. ,d r; v i S I' ,f, I C s 1 ijl 5 : i , 4) I' - \ STORE HOURS DAILY 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. lip Behind the Scenes 1I toGive .to'Wear Pretty lingerie, dainty negligees . . . fresh and lovely as Spring itself. Famous-name perfumes / in the light mood of Spring to wreathe ~ Easter costumes in an aura of delightful fragrance. 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