Page 6 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1975 Opera comes to Granbury Opening night draws celebrities STEPHENVILLE — A celebri ty-studded packed house, includ ing' Gene Autrey and Texas Att. Gen. John Hill, hailed the open ing (actually the second grand opening) of the 90-year-old Gran bury Opera House Thursday night. The production company, made up of Tarleton State Uni versity students and some area personalities, provided what Paul Baker, director of the Dallas Theater Center, called . . an excellent evening of entertain ment.” The Hollywood-style opening was complete with limousines and searchlights and included an authentic judge to present the prologue. Judge Jack M. Lang- don, also chairman of the board of the Granbury Opera Associa tion, appeared wearing white- tails and a beat-up Western straw hat so that “. . . you all will know what a real Texan looks like.” Director Mary Jane Mingus said the opening went “as smooth as glass. We had a raucous crowd that had a good time; I think. First-night crowds are usually very quiet, but this group (over 300 strong) was in the aisle boo ing and hissing the villian and cheering the hero.” The melodrama was the first production in the Opera House since it closed in 1911. A com munity effort produced a recon structed showplace for the com munity with a full-time summer stock schedule. The students are TAMU wind tunnel tests complete on space shuttle A TAMU team of aerospace en gineers has completed wind-tunnel testing of a mock-up scale model of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s space shuttle. The space administration pro vided the group, headed by Dr. David Norton and Dr. Allan Parker, an additional $15,000 this month. They have been working with the shuttle for the last five years and have explored several problem areas during their research. Their current efforts are to calculate the phenomenon of base drag. Base drag comes from the large blunt area at the rear of the aircraft where the rocket nozzles are lo cated. The task is to see just how much the drag affects the flight characteristics of the shuttle. They have found that up to 50 per cent of the total drag is from the base when the shuttle is flying at a low angle of attack (almost straight). “No one else has done this sort of testing, so we are the first line of research in trying to define this drag,” Parker said. “The idea is to measure the forces and moments on the base and compare them with the forces on the complete vehicle. Testing included measuring 32 points of pressure on the base of the aircraft simultaneously at various speeds in the wind tunnel. Norton said that the particular drag problem has been obscure previously because most wind- tunnel tests have been run with a tail-mounting system that affects the base drag. “We’ve eliminated this, and now our tests will be used to determine if previous informa tion is accurate, he said. Other tests are being run on the shuttle in 24 wind tunnels across the country as scientists struggle with problems from flap systems to skin drag. Total testing will total about 30,000 wind-tunnel hours. “Our data is necessary so other scientists can begin designing flight paths and payloads to fit the aeronautical capabilities of the air craft as it is now,” Parker said. The U. S.-manned space program for the next decade centers around the space-shuttle system. The con- Embrey*s Jewelry We Specialize In Aggie Rings. Diamonds Set— Sizing— Reoxidizing— AH types watch/jewelry Repair Aggie Charge Accounts 9-5:30 846-5816 For Battalion Blassified Call 845-2226 'Juffnamta U ( Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega 74 Greg Price v If you ivant the real Ithlng, not frozen or i canned . . . We call it “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: '3071 Northwest Hwy. 352-8570 cept of a reusable orbiter can mean significant savings for a large number of missions. The space- shuttle orbiter is about the size of a Boeing 707 and is to be reusable after a short turn-around period. receiving 12 hours college credits for their summer’s work. The first production is “Gold in the Hills” to be followed by: “Charlie’s Aunt,” a farce comedy with music, July 10-27; “Pursuit of Happiness,” a 1776 comedy, July 31-August 17, and “Once Up on a Mattress,” a hit musical com edy, August 21-September 7. The student group is learning the theater from front to back. They wired lights, made costumes, painted seats and even sold ad vertising to culminate a commun ity effort that resurrected the old opera house from a roofless shell. Local businessmen and artisans gutted the building and rebuilt it. Irreplacable window frames were done by hand in a local cabinet shop and donations of time and equipment came from every sector. One supporter of the restoration noted, “I can’t stress enough how this was the result of everyone’s work. I’ve never seen people unite and pull together like this.” The townspeople got the opera house built but they still needed actors. This is where Mrs. Min gus, the Granbury Opera Com pany, and Tarleton State Univer sity joined to offer a program of acting experience and college credit while acting in a profes sional summer stock company. JoAnn Miller, a regular in the Dallas dinner theater circuit and a native of Arp, is directing the restoration of the opera house and producing the shows. She is a night club entertainer who be gan her career as a singer with Tommy Dorsey’s band. Theater goers will be able to hear her tal ents in the two numbers she does in the play’s saloon scene. New road paving better, cheaper Two new types of roads will be laid arid tested in a joint venture by TAMU, a French petroleum company, and Shell-Canada Ltd. One type is to be tested in South Texas near Corpus Christi and the other at Lufkin. Prof. Bob Gallaway of TAMU’s Texas Transportation Institute, said Shell-Canada will conduct the first field-equipment trials of a sand- asphalt-sulfur road-surfacing material the week of July 17. Representatives of the Texas and Louisiana highway departments and selected contractors will be present for the second phase of the demonst ration. The public will be restricted from the initial phases of these trials. “The uniqueness of the mix stems from the fact that it is six percent asphalt cement, 13 per cent sulfur and 81 per cent locally available sand,” Gallaway said. ‘This produces a superior road paving material that is estimated to be about 15 per cent cheaper than conventional materials. “Sand is substituted for the more expensive rock or graded aggregate while the sulfur acts as a structuring agent for the sand. Rock is expen sive to transport and sometimes hard to obtain. Also the price of asphalt is accelerating upward due to the petroleum shortage,” he said. Another field test will be held in Lufkin in August where a test section of road will be installed on Highway 69. This portion will involve a sulfur-asphalt emulsion as the binder, a process developed by a French petroleum company. It will be sponsored by the Sulfur Institute. The binder is 30 per cent sulfur and 70 per cent asphalt. 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