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DRYDEN HISTORY TAKES FLIGHT GALLERY AT PALMDALE CIVIC CENTER TO FEATURE NASA EXHIBITS.


Byline: Jim Skeen Staff Writer

PALMDALE - NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 Dryden Flight Research Center The Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC), located inside Edwards Air Force Base, is an aeronautical research center operated by NASA. On March 26, 1976 it was named in honor of the late Hugh L.  is turning a former jury assembly room at the Palmdale Civic Center into an exhibit hall.

The former courthouse room at Ninth Street East and Avenue Q-10 will become the Aerospace Exploration Gallery, which is to contain an ever-changing set of exhibits that depict NASA activities.

NASA is leasing the space for $1 a year, but is picking up the tab for operations and maintenance costs. The transformation is being done primarily by NASA workers and with just a few hundred dollars for materials, said Fred Johnson For the fictional character, see .

Fred Johnson was a Major League Baseball player who played for the New York Giants and the St. Louis Browns. He debuted in 1922 on September 27th with the Giants.
, director of public affairs Those public information, command information, and community relations activities directed toward both the external and internal publics with interest in the Department of Defense. Also called PA. See also command information; community relations; public information.  for the NASA center at Edwards Air Force Base Edwards Air Force Base, U.S. military installation, 301,000 acres (121,805 hectares), S Calif., NE of Lancaster; est. 1933. It is one of the largest air force bases in the United States and has the world's longest runway. .

``Since 9-11 it's been more difficult for people to get onto the base,'' Johnson said. ``This is something here in the community for the public.''

Exhibits would include things like models, flight hardware, space and flight suits, and interactive displays, such as a small working wind tunnel wind tunnel, apparatus for studying the interaction between a solid body and an airstream. A wind tunnel simulates the conditions of an aircraft in flight by causing a high-speed stream of air to flow past a model of the aircraft (or part of an aircraft) being tested. .

The gallery is tentatively expected to be ready for the public in April, but already it's been put to use serving as a gathering spot for a recent NASA budget Each year, the United States Congress passes a Federal Budget detailing where federal tax money will be spent in the coming year.

The following charts detail the amount of federal funding allotted to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) each year over its past
 briefing.

The room features a small office area that looks like a building, adorned with a windsock, that might have been found on the NASA flight line back in the late 1940s or early 1950s. Plans call for installing a diorama which will depict a woman known as a ``computer'' - working on flight data.

In Dryden's early days, women called ``computers'' took raw data from aircraft instrumentation Aircraft instrumentation

A coordinated group of instruments that provide the flight crew with information about the aircraft and its subsystems. These instruments provide flight data, navigation, power plant performance, and aircraft auxiliary equipment
 devices and made computations to turn out usable information of such factors as speed, fuel consumption, and the aircraft's center of gravity. The women who worked as computers were treated as junior engineers both in the tasks they were assigned and in their working relationship with the male engineers.

One of the artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 in the room is the engine nozzle from an SR-71 Blackbird “SR-71” redirects here. For other uses, see SR-71 (disambiguation).

The Lockheed SR-71 was an advanced, long-range, Mach 3 strategic reconnaissance aircraft developed from the Lockheed YF-12A and A-12 aircraft by the Lockheed Skunk Works.
, a research plane capable of speeds over 2,000 mph. At the recent budget briefing, the nozzle was used as a TV stand.

``This is an opportunity for the entire community to use this facility,'' said Dryden Director Kevin Petersen. ``Hopefully we'll get a lot of education and public outreach from this facility.''

The courthouse opened in February 2001, bringing civil cases back to the Antelope Valley for the first time in 11 years. For lack of room in the old Lancaster courthouse at Avenue J-2 and 10th Street West, civil cases had been transferred out of the Antelope Valley, and half the valley's criminal cases are heard in courts in Van Nuys or elsewhere.

Not long after court cases were shifted to the Michael D. Antonovich Michael Dennis Antonovich (born 1939 in Los Angeles, California) is a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors representing the Fifth District, which covers northern Los Angeles County, the Antelope, Santa Clarita, Pasadena, and parts of the San Fernando and San  Antelope Valley Courthouse in 2003, two of the four courtrooms were leased out to the AERO Institute, a consortium involving NASA, the city of Palmdale, and academia, as a base for its operations to promote science and technology education.

The consortium provides technical, undergraduate and graduate training.

Although the gallery is separate from the AERO Institute, it is expected that the two would work collaboratively on programs.

The other two courtrooms were leased out to the Social Security Administration's Office of Hearings and Appeals. The jury assembly room and a court clerk room, which will be used as a computer room, were not included in the Social Security Administration's lease.

The Social Security Administration has decided it needs only one of the courtrooms, and the other will go toward an expansion of the AERO Institute, said Assistant City Manager Steve Williams.

Jim Skeen, (661) 267-5743

james.skeen(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

3 photos

Photo:

(1 -- 2 -- color) Alan Brown of NASA Dryden Flight Research Center's public affairs, above, shows drawings the new Aerospace Exploration Gallery at the Palmdale Civic Center. Below, an SR-71 spy plane's exhaust nozzle is used as a TV stand.

(3) The front nose of an A-4 Skyhawk jet is one of many items at the Aerospace Exploration Gallery, to finish in April.

Gene Blevins/Special to the Daily News
COPYRIGHT 2006 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Feb 13, 2006
Words:670
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