THE BATTALION TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1981 Page 3 Local General aviation lacking New airports needed i* bill, whidi; nnittees sed had sessional and the |£, mittee ake recorar: itiated by David Sto> : , awn upbyfe ttees — al: made even ■, a respeckj <, said hei haotic atraoi hit, foravai cans felt I Peachy keen Start' photo by Greg Gammon jLisa Brown, Texas A&M Horiticulture Club president, dis plays some of the Fredricksburg ‘Loring’ peaches on sale at ithe Plant Sciences Building. A bumper crop of peaches this summer has left an ample supply on the market. The sale is a fund-raising project for the club. Each Vz-bushel box of peaches sells for $12.00 ... while they last. Jemocratici ist ship of the and the ation and icle I ship to serve as "floating leadquarters’ for Titanic search General aviation airports throughout Texas are inadequate and 25 new urban airports are needed for the state to continue attracting industry, says a Texas Transporation Institute resear cher. Many existing general aviation airports have not been maintained or modernized and require sub stantial investment to bring them up to acceptable standards, notes George B. Dresser, statistician at TTI. General aviation airports serve privately owned aircraft and not commercial air carriers, including planes for agricultural aviation, charter flying and special pur poses such as emergency medical service. Dresser said these air ports provide for separation of large and small airplanes and pro vide for efficient movement of air traffic. New plants locating in smaller communities in the South have an increasing dependence on corpo rate and business aviation, he said. The backlog of general aviation airport grant applications for state and federal funds exceeds $50 mil lion. Dresser said without sub stantial changes in funding, this backlog will increase and condi tions of general aviation airports in Texas will continue to decline. Dresser said some existing air ports must be reconstructed, and others need to be replaced be cause the present site is no longer adequate. Many cannot handle the larger, faster aircraft used by industry executives. He said Texas has relied on pri vately owned airports, particulary in urban areas. But airports no longer represent the highest priced use of land for a private owner, and except for a few oper ated by aviation enthusiasts, urban airports are fast dis appearing. Land costs, public opposition and airspace considerations make it increasingly difficult to locate new general aviation airports in urban areas. Dresser said that smaller communities have neither the support nor the tax base to develop airports to meet the needs of the cities. ^ Announcing the opening ♦ O, ♦ ★ TOMMY’S ★ ^ Game Room and Bar The search by a Texas oilman the ill-fated liner Titanic has own the spotlight on one of the nation s busiest research ships — the 174-foot Gyre, operated by Texas A&M University. | The Navy-owned Gyre will serve as the floating headquarters for the Titanic expedition, says the Texas A&M official in charge of the ship. I Despite the glamour attached to the Titanic hunt, science will proceed as usual aboard the Gyre, said Capt. T.K. Treadwell, an oceanographer and manager of the University’s marine operations. Although the research vessel is taking part in the Titanic venture, it does so as a part of a two-month long series of geological and oceanographic studies in the tlantic scheduled last year, readwell said. Although many people see only the glamour involved in the hunt for the Titanic — which sank in 1912 at a cost of more than 1,500 lives — the project will have im portant scientific merits, Tread well said. “The technology being tested in locating and photographing the Titanic could be used by the Navy in rescuing submarine crews or in recovering valuable or sensitive equipment from the ocean bed,” he said. The Gyre carries a crew of 10 and can accommodate up to 19 sci entists and their equipment, he said. ( Simply running the research (vessel costs about $6,000 a day, ^Treadwell said, but that figure didn’t worry Abilene oil mil lionaire and Titanic hunter Jack he is in thef Grimm since the cost is below av erage for such a research vessel. ip in orphan^ /liter when 1*1 Demands on the Gyre for scien tific studies and student training have been so great, Treadwell said, that voyages must often be scheduled a year ahead of time. During recent times, the ship has averaged 280 days a year away from its home port of Galveston, putting into other harbors only for supplies, repairs or to pick up a new group of scientists. In 1979 the Gyre set a new work record of 349 days away from home. Equipment aboard the ship in cludes such standard research in struments as salinographs, ther mographs, a computer, a magne tometer, dredges, sample bottles and other instruments for study ing the sea and ocean bottom, Treadwell said. Like seagoing sci entists everywhere, those aboard the Gyre often lease any highly specialized equipment rather than buying the piece, he said. The Gyre had already been scheduled by researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanogra phy and the U.S. Geological Sur vey to carry out two other scien tific voyages in the Atlantic when the opportunity came up to add the Titanic project, he said. “The three cruises are so closely related in nature (basic seafloor geology and water sampling) that the Gyre won’t return to port after the Titanic phase,” Treadwell said. “Many of the scientists and much of their equipment will stay on board for all three experi ments.” No Texas A&M scientists will be aboard the Gyre during the summer Atlantic cruises, which Treadwell said it is not unusual. Most of the major oceanog raphic study centers routinely swap scientists and ships to make the most efficient use of limited research money, he said. The Gyre left its summer base of operations at Woods Hole, Mass., in early June and won t re turn until a geological study of the Georges Bank region is completed later this month, Treadwell said. From there, the ship is sche duled to sail to South Carolina, Brazil and along the equator be fore returning to Galveston in late December. Treadwell said one emphasis of the Texas A&M oceanographic program has been the hands-on training of students, making the University one of only a handful that can offer students such ex perience before graduation. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ t ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Opens 11:00 a.m. Wednesday with a Lunch Special ♦ From 11-1 you can get draw beerj Jand a chopped beef sandwich for+ ^only ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ $2.00 Happy Hour — 2-7 p.m. with 2 for 1 mixed drinks We’re open 7 days a week Located in the Skaggs Center Next to Music Express ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ntC We Gets What Ya Likes In The WayOf Bikes! Takara - Ross - Campagnolo Cinelli - Shimano and much more Cycles, Plus the Bes Etc. Best Repairs & Prices Around — Call Us! 403 University — 846-7580 Northgat* (Across from Post Offica) Tk >~nArTE o Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN Mon.-Fri. 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