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X Prize Lands in New York; Rocket at Rockefeller Center
Space.com ^ | Thurs. Apr 25, 2002 | Tariq Malik

Posted on 04/25/2002 1:50:00 PM PDT by The_Victor

NEW YORK, New York – A Canadian spaceship rolled into Rockefeller Plaza Thursday as Erik Lindbergh, the grandson of aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh, came to Manhattan to promote space tourism with plans to follow his family legacy across the Atlantic Ocean.

The spaceship, the Canadian Arrow, and the younger Lindbergh’s Trans-Atlantic flight, set for May 1, are part of an effort to push private-based space tourism in the public eye and highlight the X Prize, an international competition to put three people in space and return them safely. In 1927, Charles Lindbergh became the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic.

"It’s human nature to explore around the next curve and over the next hill," Lindbergh told SPACE.com. "But I think there’s an overriding sense of apathy toward space today because it’s generally well-known that people, children in particular, can’t reach it."

But the X Prize hopes to buck that notion and open up space to people other than millionaires, such as Dennis Tito and Mark Shuttleworth, who paid $20 million a piece to ride a Soyuz capsule up to the International Space Station. The visit to the Big Apple coincided with Shuttleworth's launch early Thursday morning from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

Founded in 1996, the X Prize heralds back to the aviation competitions at the start of the 20th century. Those contests, like the $25,000 Orteig Prize set for the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean – eventually won by grand pere Lindbergh, pushed air travel from being viewed as a reckless endeavor sought by a relative few to the common mode of transportation used today, said competition organizers.

The X Prize competition offers a $10 million grand prize for the first successful launch of a three-person crew to a height of 62.5 miles (100 km) that returns safely in a craft that can be re-launched two weeks later. Since the contest’s inception, 21 teams from five different countries have entered, with vehicles ranging from jet planes souped up with rocket engines to more familiar designs, like the six-story high Canadian Arrow rocket, a mockup of which was displayed at Rockefeller Plaza and later moved to Central Park.

Lindbergh is a trustee and vice-president of the X Prize Foundation, which is holding the X Prize competition, and director of the Lindbergh Foundation. In addition to building support for the competition, his flight will also benefit the Arthritis and Lindbergh foundations.

"I think the draws of space travel are its uniqueness, and of course the view," said Linda Smith, a private pilot and former flight attendant who came upon the Canadian Arrow during a walk through Central Park. "It gives you the true global sense of perspective, and I imagine my grandchildren will all be vacationing in space."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: canadian; eriklindburgh; space; xprize

1 posted on 04/25/2002 1:50:00 PM PDT by The_Victor
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To: The_Victor
You can go to aeroplanner.com/lindberg/ and watch the progress of Lindberg's flight across the country and across the Atlantic.
2 posted on 04/25/2002 2:11:10 PM PDT by OldFriend
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To: OldFriend
This link might work better.
3 posted on 04/25/2002 2:14:18 PM PDT by strela
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To: The_Victor
This is the granson of the guy who thought Hitler was a nice fellow. Read your WW II history.
4 posted on 04/25/2002 2:50:44 PM PDT by Otis Mukinfus
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To: The_Victor
Flying across the Atlantic on May 1st is great an all, but when are they going to fly it into space.
5 posted on 04/25/2002 3:14:21 PM PDT by Husker24
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To: The_Victor;space
Looks like 2003 will be a big year for a couple of X-Prize participants. I'm ready for space tourism to get rolling.
6 posted on 04/25/2002 3:26:03 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: Otis Mukinfus
To bad, but if my infant son had been kidnapped and murdered I'm not sure how I would end up. Lindburg was a hero for his age, today he would suffer from far less hero worship. I guess we have all just grown up a little, and on a whole, we are the better for it. Just ask any suscessful women or minority which world they prefer. I know which one I prefer.

As for his grandsons stunt, I've beaten Lindburgs record across the Atlantic dozens of times. Nice little memorial stunt, but nothing more. I wonder, does he have a GPS in is sandwich bag?

Well, off to split atom for peace

Mrneutorn1962, aka Matty, the wonder cat

7 posted on 04/25/2002 4:03:46 PM PDT by MrNeutron1962
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To: Otis Mukinfus
This is the granson of the guy who thought Hitler was a nice fellow. Read your WW II history.

Lindbergh voluntarily flew on combat missions in WWII (in the Pacific theater) and as a civilian (FDR had refused to renew his commission) advised US pilots on how to get the most out of their fighters and bombers. Helping the war against Hitler's allies is a strange way to express one's pro-Hitler sentiments.

BTW do you advocate holding the grandson responsible for Lindbergh's pre-war views?

8 posted on 04/25/2002 4:19:03 PM PDT by aculeus
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To: strela
That is the site I posted.
9 posted on 04/25/2002 5:12:59 PM PDT by OldFriend
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To: Otis Mukinfus
Don't drive a ford or drink coors dude. (actually those are both good advice but for other reasons)
10 posted on 04/25/2002 5:17:14 PM PDT by Dinsdale
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To: The_Victor
Here's a pic:

The CBS Early show will have something on this at 8:35 AM on Friday morning.

11 posted on 04/25/2002 7:20:06 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: OldFriend
You were just off by one "h" in the link, that's all.
12 posted on 04/26/2002 7:29:35 AM PDT by strela
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To: The_Victor
I caught the interview of Lindbergh on The Morning Show. It reminded me why I've given up viewing these idiot morning shows. The interviewer goes on and on about Lindbergh's struggle with some disease (boring) and then mentions, just in passing, that his duplication of his father's flight has something to do with space tourism and they cut to a commercial. I thought the reason he was there was to promote the X-Prize. I could've gotten more information by reading the back of a cracker-jack box.
13 posted on 04/26/2002 4:40:53 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: all
Lindbergh Lands in Paris After Flight to Support Space Tourism

By Pamela Sampson
Associated Press

02 May 2002

LE BOURGET, France (AP) -- Erik Lindbergh arrived in France on Thursday after flying across the Atlantic Ocean to duplicate his grandfather's historic 1927 New York-to-Paris solo flight.

Lindbergh's Lancair Columbia 300 -- dubbed the New Spirit of St. Louis -- landed at Le Bourget airport outside Paris shortly before 5:30 a.m. EDT (0930 GMT). The flight lasted about 17 hours.

The re-creation was part of celebrations for the 75th anniversary of Charles Lindbergh's famous May 20-21, 1927 voyage. That flight, the first nonstop solo run from New York to Paris, took 33 1/2 hours.

Erik Lindbergh had taken off from Republic Airport in Farmingdale, New York at 12:15 p.m. EDT (1615 GMT) on Wednesday.

Lindbergh already has duplicated the first two legs of his grandfather's journey: from San Diego to St. Louis, and St. Louis to Farmingdale.

His $289,000 aircraft, made of a glass and carbon composite, has an average cruise speed of 184 mph (296 kph), compared with the 108 mph (174 kph) of the original Spirit of St. Louis, built for $10,580.

The single-engine plane uses a Global Positioning System navigation device to chart its exact location. In comparison, Charles Lindbergh used dead reckoning -- basically, "holding a compass and guessing at the wind," as his grandson has described it.

The voyage was designed to raise awareness of rheumatoid arthritis, which disabled 37-year-old Lindbergh for 15 years before drug treatment helped restore his movement.

Organizers also hope the journey will promote the X Prize Foundation, a St. Louis-based nonprofit group that is offering $10 million to the first private group that can build and launch a manned spacecraft into space, then repeat the feat within two weeks.

14 posted on 05/02/2002 7:17:26 AM PDT by Brett66
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