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-News for Thur. 25 April & Fri. 26
April 2002 Lindbergh Grandson to Repeat Historic Trans-Atlantic
Flight
Jenny Badner New
York 26
Apr 2002

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to Jenny Badner's report (RealAudio)
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In 1927, aviation
pioneer Charles Lindbergh flew non-stop from New York to Paris in his
single-engine plane, The Spirit of Saint Louis. It was the first solo flight
across the Atlantic Ocean. To mark the 75th anniversary of that event, Charles
Lindbergh's grandson is preparing to repeat the historic flight.
On May 1, Erik
Lindbergh plans to fly a single-engine plane solo from New York to an airport
just outside Paris, just as his grandfather did.
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| AP |
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| Erik Lindbergh gives a thumbs up from his plane "The New Spirit of
St. Louis" |
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But the
similarities end there. When Erik Lindbergh traces his grandfather's
ground-breaking 1927 trans-Atlantic flight in an aircraft called the "New
Spirit of St. Louis," he will be connected to the latest satellite technology.
And, he explains, there are other differences. "The only real similarity is
that it's a small, single-engine aircraft. It's different in that ... it's
composite, it's low-wing. It goes almost twice as fast, and is much more
efficient. So it's really very different. This isn't about re-creating the
flight as much as it's about celebrating the flight," he says.
Erik Lindbergh
hopes his trip will bring attention to his sponsor, the X-Prize Foundation,
which encourages commercial space travel. Currently, 21 teams are competing for
a $10 million prize for building and launching a manned spacecraft twice within
two weeks.
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| AP |
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| Charles A. Lindbergh poses with his plane "The Spirit of St. Louis"
in this 1927 photo |
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Erik Lindbergh
compares the reward to the $25,000 Orteig Prize, awarded to his grandfather for
his flight. He says that flight changed people's perspective on flying. "Before
he flew, people who flew in the air were considered flying fools or
dare-devils, barn-stormers, etc. And after he flew across the Atlantic, people
who flew in the air were called passengers," he says. "So, it really was a
shift in perspective. It wasn't a tremendous leap in technology. That was
happening already. So that's exactly what we're trying to do with the X-Prize
foundation. This technology is here. We've been flying into space for
30-years."
The journey is
also sponsored by the Lindbergh Foundation and the Arthritis Foundation. Erik
Lindbergh suffers from the incurable joint disease, rheumatoid
arthritis.
Erik Lindbergh
has already flown solo across the United States. But the 18-to-20-hour flight
to France will mark his first trip to Europe.
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