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Subject: [IP] The Wright Brothers' Centennial Re-enactment Falls Flat]
Delivered-To: dfarber+@ux13.sp.cs.cmu.edu Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 15:03:20 -0800 From: Bob Hinden <bob.hinden@nokia.com> Subject: [Yahoo: The Wright Brothers' Centennial Re-enactment Falls Flat] X-Sender: hinden@mailhost.iprg.nokia.com To: Dave Farber <dave@farber.net> Dave, The Wright Brothers' Centennial Re-enactment Falls Flat http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nyt/20031217/ts_nyt/thewrightbrotherscentennialreenactmentfallsflatI learned from a private pilot friend that because George Bush decided to attend and fly in on Air Force One, private plots could not fly in because they closed the air space. Seems ironic....
Bob The Wright Brothers’ Centennial Re-enactment Falls Flat December 17, 2003 By DAVID E. SANGER KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C., Dec. 17 - After all that, Orville and Wilbur had better luck a hundred years ago. The replica of the Wright brothers' 1903 Flyer did not fly at 10:35 this morning - there was not enough wind. And when the attempt was finally made two hours later, the biplane ran down a wooden launching rail modeled after the kind the Wrights used, its nose tipped upward, and then it pitched into a puddle of mud. And so the living heroes of American aviation history, John Glenn and Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Chuck Yeager, stood in the rain with tens of thousands of others to honor a feat of controlled, sustained flight that defied reproduction a century later. Instead, they heard from a former pilot in the Texas air national guard, George W. Bush, who took two helicopters and Air Force One to get to the dunes that on the Outer Banks. "The Wright brothers' invention belongs to the world," Mr. Bush said, standing before a giant mural of the Flyer in midflight, "but the Wright brothers belong to America." The White House had considered using the centennial event, and the celebration of the spirit of exploration that surrounded it, to announce a grand new mission for the American space program perhaps a return to the moon. But the Bush administration is encountering issues that the Wright brothers could scarcely have imagined - from arguments over what kind of mission NASA can handle and whether to let the space shuttle program whither, to how much would American taxpayers would be willing to pay for it. A decision, if one is made anytime soon, would likely be announced part of the president's State of the Union address on Jan. 20. With no grand goal to put before the nation, apart from a vague commitment to keep America in the forefront of aviation and exploration, Mr. Bush hailed the brothers and tweaked their doubters. "The New York Times once confidently explained why all attempts at flight were doomed from the start," said Mr. Bush, who makes little secret of his view that the American news media is filled with naysayers. "To build a flying machine, declared one editorial, would require `the combined and continuous efforts of mathematicians and mechanicians from one million to ten million years.' " "As it turned out, the feat was performed eight weeks after the editorial was written," he said, to laughter and applause. (The editorial on Oct. 9, 1903, was not about the Wrights but instead about the experiments of Samuel Langley of the Smithsonian Institution, whose attempts to get into the air ended about as gracefully as the attempt here today. The commentary carried the headline "Flying Machines Which Do Not Fly," and ended with the observation that "no doubt the problem has attractions for those it interests, but to the ordinary man it would seem as if effort might be employed more profitably.") As the experiment today underscored, cooperative weather was critical one hundred years ago, when the weather here was cold and the wind strong. "Everyone who was here at that hour sensed that a great line had been crossed and the world might never be the same," Mr. Bush said. Falling back to his Texas twang, he quoted a 12-year-old witness to the event, Johnny Moore, who ran down the beach yelling "They done it, they done it, damned if they ain't flew." But with a politician's premonition that history is rarely repeated, and failure is nothing to be associated with 11 months before an election, Mr. Bush left the field in Marine One before the attempts to get the replica of the Flyer into the air. The result was that the spectators who had hoped to see the primitive wooden biplane buzz the field got a very different sight instead: Ten minutes after the exact moment of flight, Mr. Bush was just overhead in Air Force One, looking out from his office aboard the 747 as it swooped in low over Kill Devil Hill, the dune where the Wrights tested their gliders. Then the president's plane slowly banked over the flat field where the Wright's contraption had barely made it 10 feet into the air a century before. By way of comparison, Air Force One is 231 feet long - not quite twice the length that Orville Wright managed to fly on that first, 12-second run of the day. (By late that day, Wilbur flew 852 feet in 59 seconds.) But by 12:30 p.m., the pilot of the Wright replica, Kevin Kochersberger, was ready to make a belated try. He never made it off the ground, first prompting a look of chagrin and later of laughter. The organizers of the first-flight celebrations knew the chances of failure today were high. While the replica had flown successfully over the field in recent weeks, the conditions had to be near perfect. With its small engine, the Flyer needs winds of at least 10 miles per hour to get off the ground, its designers said, and gusts that run above 22 miles an hour can make it hard to control. The problem is worsened by the fact that the plane's horizonal stabilizer was too close to the wings, leading to frequent stalls. But authenticity dictated that no one dared tamper with the original design, which the brothers later improved. Still, the disappointment among the crowd was palpable. Thousands had come to witness the moment, bringing small children along, bundled in rain slickers. By 11 a.m., even with Mr. Yeager on a stage describing his now-famous flight that broke the sound barrier, they were streaming out of the park. But the relatives of the Wright brothers said that simply being on the field, a hundred years later, was enough. Amanda Wright Lane, the great grandniece of the Wright brothers, told the crowds that her famous ancestors "may have the best seats today, the view from above." http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/17/national/17CND-FLIGHT.html?ex=1072706891&ei=1&en=da7d578e96c78ec9 ------------------------------------- To manage your subscription, go to http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
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