home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1132>
- <title>
- Aug. 08, 1994: Investigations:Hugh Sidey's America
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 08, 1994 Everybody's Hip (And That's Not Cool)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HUGH SIDEY'S AMERICA, Page 31
- Sky King Flies Again
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Hugh Sidey
- </p>
- <p> Look for the soaring soul of America this week of high summer
- among the corn fields and pastures around Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
- The gentle prairie breezes are being ruffled by the snarls of
- thousands of tiny airplanes, birthed in basements and garages,
- built from plans or kits, antiques rescued from rust and decay
- by men and women who, like Orville and Wilbur Wright, still
- want to fly free like birds. Now and then at this mecca of private
- aviation, the towering cumulus clouds are sundered by warbirds
- like the gull-winged Corsair, the kind the Jolly Rogers squadron
- flew in the Pacific, lovingly restored by men with heroic memories
- and oversize checkbooks (half a million dollars and up).
- </p>
- <p> Before this week is out, more than 12,000 airplanes and 1 million
- onlooking enthusiasts will flock to the Experimental Aircraft
- Association convention, centered in Oshkosh but splayed out
- over the lush Wisconsin landscape from Fond du Lac to Appleton
- and Green Bay. This remarkable event was begun in a basement
- 42 years ago by flyer Paul Poberezny, the son of a Ukrainian
- immigrant. Involving 400 types of aircraft, it is judged by
- some to be the world's biggest convention and aviation's most
- diversified air show, dwarfing state fairs and even Woodstock
- '94, drawing people from all 50 states and 80 countries, many
- of whom are looking for customers for the airplanes they build.
- </p>
- <p> However, this joyous encampment is, in its way, a protest against
- government regulation. With its exuberance, it defies the devastation
- wrought by liability lawyers on aviation. The troubles are grave.
- In 1978 manufacturers produced 17,800 small airplanes. Today
- they turn out fewer than 1,000, a 95% drop in business, much
- of it due to the fears of lawsuits. Under existing laws, manufacturers
- can be sued any time a plane breaks down or is involved in an
- accident--even if the sturdy little flyer has flown reliably
- for a quarter-century. Piper Aircraft Corp. of Vero Beach, Florida,
- made the famous Cub--the little yellow plane that thrilled
- county-fair audiences with rides and stunts like the Flying
- Farmer, a "runaway" plane with Grandma on board and cornstalks
- streaming from its landing gear. Now the company is in bankruptcy.
- The $25 million annual budget that Cessna used to spend to promote
- flying has been used up in lawyers' fees.
- </p>
- <p> The number of airports for small planes fell from 10,000 to
- 4,000 in a decade. The process of getting a pilot's license
- became so intimidating that the number of beginners, which used
- to run 140,000 a year, fell to less than half that. The romance
- of flying seemed to be dying. "If a kid wanted to fly for fun
- he'd be better off to go get himself a horse or a Harley," Poberezny
- once muttered in frustration. But flight has been in the American
- bloodstream for nearly a century, and is not about to be extinguished.
- The surviving flyers are master innovators, skirting the dense
- regulations and distancing themselves from the lawyers. A 1949
- federal rule makes it legal to fly an airplane even if it has
- not been certified by the FAA so long as the plane is not used
- for commercial purposes and 51% of it is built by the owner.
- As a result, manufacturers now market 200 kinds of do-it-yourself
- kits. Some 16,000 home-built planes are flying, ranging from
- the spidery ultralights to midget P-51 Mustangs. They come with
- exotic names such as Kitfox and Glasair. An ultralight costs
- only a few thousand dollars, and even a sleek Cozy Mark IV,
- a four-passenger plane, can be built for about $20,000--and
- 2,500 hours devoted to tooling the plane together. The Glasair
- people claim that building their kit plane is the equivalent,
- in hours, of getting a college engineering degree.
- </p>
- <p> For all the time and expense, the ranks of those who cannot
- resist the allure of flight are growing. E.A.A. now has 140,000
- members in 750 chapters around the globe. The club is expanding
- 5% each year. Meanwhile, there is a bill near passage in Congress
- that would put an 18-year limit on liability for manufactured
- aircraft. Pass the bill, Cessna promises, and it will gear up
- production of small planes. "Remember, most of the people in
- the world have not flown--many yearn to," says Tom Poberezny,
- Paul's son and the current president of E.A.A. The romance of
- the sky may only have been obscured.
- </p>
- <p> The men and women on the Oshkosh flight line know that. Bart
- and Karen Miller of Madison, Wisconsin, brought their children
- Jacob, 4, and Sarah, 2, in a Cessna 182, one of those models
- headed for extinction. They pitched their camp beneath a wing,
- and as the kids played with a model plane, they watched the
- air show. Architect Frank Pavliga, 37, tenderly wiped the drops
- from a summer squall off the wing of his Pietenpol Air Camper,
- a 1929 design built from plans given to him and his father by
- Bernard Pietenpol himself. Pavliga had flown the tiny plane
- from his home in Rootstown, Ohio, and a couple of friends joined
- him in a Cub and another Pietenpol. Says Pavliga: "If there
- is anything I own in my life that I will never sell, it is this
- airplane."
- </p>
- <p> Private aviation, in the end, is the personalization of an American
- frontier, with its own pioneers and explorers. Nat Puffer, 68,
- flew in from Mesa, Arizona, crossing the Rockies with his wife
- in their Cozy. As a kid, he had met Amelia Earhart. "If you're
- going to go faster than 55 m.p.h.," she told him, "it's safer
- to be in a plane." He never forgot.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-