THE BATTALION Thursday, September 28, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 7 dQt! ur n Solid-fueled Boosters To Compete With Liquid Fuel FINEST QUALITY FOODS At Old Fashioned Savings During Our County Fair Sale Texas and Villa Marie Rd. - Bryan, Texas Right (Copyright) Kroge FRUIT FLAVORS BORDEN S SHERBET SEVEN SEAS FRENCH DRESSING Z~l GAL. CTN. 8-Oz. 1 LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! # / Pruf Spray Starch 22 OZ. Size Vt, Flour Kroger Snowdrift Shortening Velveeta Dog Food cii' 69' Kroft Pard li«790 C 1 Lb. 7QC 0 Cans I □ KANDU Bleach 39^ HUNTS 8 OZ. CAN Tomato Sauce W \\ 0F COUNTRY OVEN CINNAMON, PLAIN & COMBINATION DONUTS 2 ALMA PINTO OR NAVY BEANS AUSTEX CHILI WITH BEANS AUSTEX TAMALES MAXWELL HOUSE 2 L COFFEE 1 Doz. Pkg. 24 OZ. CAN $1.35 1 LB. CAN Hunt's c™ 250 Peaches Star JCist Chunk Tuna ct,°"33 Kroger Evaporated Milk Carnation Evaporated Milk 2 5" 31 Alma PINTO BEANS ALMA TURNIP OR MUSTARD GREENS Puss N’ Boots CAT FOOD SEVEN SEAS CAESAR DRESSING JENO CHEESE PIZZA 6’/j OZ. CAN 8 OZ. BTL. 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MORTON FROZEN MEAT PIES SARA LEE FROZEN ROLLS VINE RIPENED TOMATOES LARGE SWEET BLACK RIBIER GRAPES U.S. NO. 1 RED POTATOES LB. 15 b!g •r DECORATOR CANDLE HOLDER COMPARE AT $2.99 SIZES 32-38 EACH 22 INCH DECORATIVE BOTTLE ASSORTMENT EACH Cinnamon Kroger BLACK ROLLS PEPPER % OZ ^ CAN | Ground «j| 4-Oz. Tin C How do you stop a firecracker in the middle of a bang? And start it again? This is very nearly the prob lem that the designers of tomor row’s big solid-fueled rockets face as they seek ways to make their boosters competitive with the liquid-fueled models. Today, liquid-fueled rockets have it over the solids in the manned spaceflight program. Al though the solid-fueled Minute- man plays a defense role with its intercontinental capability, there are definite problems in rating them for manned flight. Yet, NASA Administrator James Webb predicted here re cently that competition between solids and liquids would again open up. And it is at A&M that a team of space researchers are studying the tiny structure of solid fuels in an attempt to de termine their behavior and predict failures. THE GROUP is headed by Dr. W. B. Ledbetter who believes that the methods of study developed may eventually determine not only why rockets blow up, but also why auto tires tear apart. The group, including L. Dale Webb, formerly with Rocketdyne, and Davie Elliott, a Ph.D. candi date, has been stretching, squeez ing, twisting, heating, aging and chilling solid fuel to see whei’e the tiny cracks begin. “A rocket with a crack in its fuel becomes a bomb,” says re searcher Webb. Elliott was instrumental in de veloping a new device last year which can accurately stretch or compress materials while they are under a microscope. “OUR PURPOSE had been to develop a microstructural appa ratus and to learn whether other people’s hypotheses wei-e signifi cant,” says Ledbetter. The re searchers have found some error in theory. Composite rocket fuels are sort of a raisin pudding - affair—with the rubber compound “binder” being the pudding and the oxid izing compound “filler” being the raisins. The A&M researchers know that the beginnings of fail ures more often occur at the points of contact between binder and filler. SOLID FUELS will become more competitive with li'qtfid fuels when some way is found to give them “start, stop, restart capability and throttleability,” says Webb. At present, the researchers point out, the retro-rockets used in the Mercury and Gemini man ned spaceflight programs were solids and there’s a whole family of small vector control rockets which are used to keep satellites facing - one way. Engineering Talk To Be Delivered By Rice Gradute G. E. Nevill of Houston will be featured Wednesday (Oct. 4) in the first Engineering Lecture, a series inaugurated by the Col lege of Engineering - this fall, an nounced Dean Fred J. Benson. A staff engineer for Cameron Iron Works, Nevill will address students, faculty and the public on “From Titusville to Cook In- lett—The Evolution of the Oil Well Drilling Industry and the Outlook for Engineering Respons ibilities.” The 3:30 p.m. lecture will be in the Architecture Auditorium. The Engineering Lecture Series was set up to present industry, education and government repre sentatives with addresses centex - - ed on engineering fx - ontiers, in- dusti-y, society and education. Nevill has been in oil field drilling and production equipment design and manufacture most of the 39 years of his career. The Engineex-ing Series speaker has been assistant chief engineer, fox - ge and ordnance division chief engineer, standards engineer and quality control manager at Cam eron since 1948. The Registered Professional Engineer is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, chairing the ASME South Texas section and its pe troleum division. The 1928 Rice graduate and member of Tau Beta Pi sei - ved in the Southwest Pacific Theater with the Sixth Army Headquar ters dui-ing World War II. He organized and commanded a re- sei - ve x - eseai - ch and development unit and is a retix - ed colonel, U. S. Corps of Engineers, USAR. Nevill’s son, Gale Jr., is acting chairman of the Engineering Mechanics Department, Univer sity of Florida. 59 !