Flying



By William “Doc” Halliday

Have you ever flown in an airplane?  Since at least the legend of Icarus in Greek Mythology, mankind’s dream of flying has been recorded.  This is the legend of a father and son using wings made of wax and feathers to escape Crete.  The father, Daedalus, warns the son not to fly too high or the heat of the sun will melt the wax.  Icarus ignored his father’s instructions, and did fly too close to the sun.  The heat melted the wax causing him to fall into the sea and drown. 

But even prior to this legend, some men (and women) would look at the birds flying and wonder if they could fly also.  In about 1,000 B.C. kites were invented by the Chinese.  In 852 B.C. English King Bladud attempted to fly.  Legend says he used necromancy to build a pair of wings that attached to his arms. Bladud made an attempt to fly at the temple of Apollo while wearing the wings, but the mythical figure unfortunately didn’t get the right blueprints from the spirits; he fell to his death. 

In 400 B.C. Archytas of Tarentum is alleged to have designed and built the first artificial, self-propelled flying device, a bird-shaped model propelled by a jet of what was probably steam, said to have actually flown about 650 feet.   This machine, which its inventor called “the pigeon”, may have been suspended on a wire or pivot for its flight.  It was described in the writings of Aulus Gellius five centuries after Archytas lived. 

In 1250 A.D. Roger Bacon, an English cleric, proposed flying machines and motorized ships and carriages in his writings.  In the late 1400s, Leonardo da Vinci designed flying machines and a parachute. 

In 1670, Francesco de Lana Terzi published a design for a lighter-than-air ship.  In 1680, Giovanni Borelli an Italian mathematician concluded that human muscle was inadequate for flight.  Then, in 1709, Bartolomeu Laurenço de Gusmao designed a model glider. 

In 1783, Jean François Pilâtre de Rozier and Marquis d’Arlandes made the first free aerial flight in a Montgolfier hot-air balloon.  That same year, Jacques Alexandre César Charles and M.N. Robert flew in a hydrogen balloon.  Two years later Jean-Pierre Blanchard and John Jeffries crossed the English Channel by balloon.  Jean François de Rozier and Pierre Romain became the first documented fatalities of flying that same year, 1785. 

In 1797 André Jacques Garnerin made the first human parachute descent, from a balloon.  George Cayley published a classic treatise on aviation in 1809.  William Henson’s design for an aerial steam carriage was published in 1843.  That same year, George Cayley published a design for a biplane. 

Baptiste Henri Jacques Giffard invented the Giffard dirigible. It was an airship powered with a steam engine, and weighed over 400 pounds.  It was the world’s first passenger-carrying airship (then known as a dirigible). Both practical and steerable, the hydrogen-filled airship was equipped with a 3 horsepower steam engine that drove a propeller. The engine was fitted with a funnel pointing down. The exhaust steam was mixed in with the combustion gases and it was hoped by these means to stop sparks rising up to the gas bag; he also installed a rudder vertically.

On September 24, 1852 Giffard made the first powered and controlled flight travelling 16 miles from Paris to Trappes.  The wind was too strong to allow him to make headway against it, so he was unable to return to where he had started. However, he was able to make turns and circles proving that a powered airship could be steered and controlled.  In 1867 Wilbur Wright was born near Millville, Indiana. 

In 1870 Alphonse Pénaud experimented with twisted rubber to power a model helicopter.  Orville Wright was born in Dayton, Ohio in 1871. In late 1885 Wilbur was accidently struck in the face with a hockey stick.  He became inhibited after the loss of his front teeth, and subsequently failed to attend college (Yale). In 1886 Orville started a printing business while he was still in high school. In 1889 Otto Lilienthal publishes Der Vogelflug als Grundlage der Fliegekunst and two years later he began successful gliding experiments.  In 1895 he flew biplane gliders.  He died the next year in a glider accident. 

Also in 1896 Octave Chanute began biplane gliding experiments in Michigan and Samuel P. Langley produced successful steam-powered models that flew.  Orville dropped out of high school to publish a newspaper, the “West Side News,” and Wilbur joined him as editor. The newspaper business was not profitable and the Wrights returned to contract printing, in 1889.  In 1893 the Wright brothers began to sell and repair bicycles. The Wrights manufactured their own bicycles, the “St. Clair” and the “Van Cleve.” The bicycle business turned profitable beginning in 1895.  Wilbur developed an aerodynamic control system for aircraft and built a kite to test it in 1899.

Alberto Santos-Dumont, Brazilian aviator, circled the Eiffel Tower in an airship in 1901.  Beginning in 1900 and continuing through 1902, the Wright brothers flew gliders at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, refining their control system. At their home in Dayton, Ohio, they built a wind tunnel and conducted research on wing shapes. In 1903 Samuel Langley’s full-sized, manned “Aerodrome A” crashed on take-off. 

Today, December 17th, is the 111th anniversary of the Wright brothers first controlled, sustained powered flights made at Kill Devil Hills in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.  The weather was freezing with a headwind gusting to 27 MPH.  With the four flights made by the Wright brothers on that day in 1903, the era of powered flight took off. 

Doc Halliday is an author, columnist and consultant who resides in Marshall, Texas.  He may be contacted by mail at:  P. O. Box 1551, Marshall, TX 75671; or by email at:  w_halliday@yahoo.com

GIVE US YOUR FEEDBACK.  CLICK ON “COMMENT” TO TELL US WHAT YOU THINK or use one of the alternative methods for providing feedback.

click here to CLOSE THIS PAGE

OPINION: TICK TOCK – TICK TOCK

By Ron Munden – November 30, 2018

The clock is running and the Marshall City Commissioners, true to form, appear to be doing nothing.

Of course, the City Commission has chosen to not keep the public informed on their progress. Why let the citizens know what is happening?  The Commissioners could be doing great work but that is hard to believe based on their record.

In my November 21, 2018, article I said:

I have learned that the Commission met on November 14 and narrowed the list of candidates and agreed to hold interviews. It is all good but now the bad part. They agreed to hold interviews on December 3. This is still good, BUT the Commissioners decided not to interview all the candidates the same day. I can only assume that they did this because some of the Commissioners don’t have the endurance to work a full day.

So, the Commissioners had to select a second day for interviews. Because of the commissioners’ busy schedules, the next day they can hold interviews is December 12. This means that is going to take these Commissioners one month to interview 4 to 6 people.

Since writing that article I have learned that there are only four candidates to interview.  So, the Marshall City Commissioners have decided that it is impossible to interview four people on the same day.  If the interviews are one hour and there is 15 minutes between interviews, the entire process would take less than 6 hours.  In my opinion it is very important to interview all four candidates on the same day.  The Commissioners need to hold the interviews on one day and meet the following day to make the selection.

That is not what the Commissioners plan to do.  They plan on interviewing two candidates on December 3 and nine days later interview the remaining two candidates.  The Commissioners better take detailed notes during each interview since the selection process will be at least 10 days after the first interview.  How can someone be expected to remember the details of these interviews for 10 or more days.

WHAT! NO NOTES!!

I recently learned that the Commissioners are strongly encouraged NOT TO TAKE ANY NOTES during the interviews.  The reason given for this advise is that these notes would be subject to an open records request.  The Commissioners notes could become public information.

This “no notes” recommendation would not be a problem if the process of selecting a new city manager was completed in a single day.  However, based on the current timeline and track record of the Marshall City Commission, the process is going to take between 10 to 20 days.  It may be even longer.

What is wrong with these City Commissioners?  Why can’t they complete the interviews on December 3? I have come up with only three explanations:

1.       They are lazy

2.      They are physically unable to perform the duties of a City Commissioner

3.      They just don’t give a damn

As I said in my last article:

The clock is ticking. The City Commission should act quickly and the person that can make that happen is Mayor Hurta. In bridge they say, “he who hesitates is lost.” The same thing can be said for hiring a city manager.

I would not recommend you select one of these commissions as your bridge partner.

click here to CLOSE THIS PAGE

OPINION: WHAT THE HEY IS GOING ON?

opinion180912

By Ron Munden – October 23, 2018

 

On September 12, 2018, I wrote an article titled, “OPINION: ARE THE MARSHALL CITY COMMISSIONERS ABOUT TO VIOLATE ONE OF THEIR OWN ORDINANCES?”.

The article discussed Ordinance Section 2-12. This ordinance requires that at least 25% of the city sales taxes be spent on street maintenance. I pointed out that if the City Commissioners approved the proposed 2019 city budget without repealing Section 2-12, the City Commissioners would be violating their own ordinance.

I left town before the meeting but I understand that there was a public outcry against repealing Section 2-12 so the City Commissioners did not repeal the ordinance, but they did pass a 2019 budget that did violate Section 2-12.

So, the answer to the question above appears to be – yes, the commissioners did violate their own ordinance.

Fast forward 6 weeks.

Read the complete article by clicking here

GIVE US YOUR FEEDBACK BELOW. Click on “comment” to let us know what you think.

DO YOU GIVE YOUR FULL COMMITMENT?

Print

By William “Doc” Halliday

When you take on a task or a project, do you give a commitment to do your very best? Or do you only make a perfunctory effort?

Decades ago, I observed a man sweeping the sidewalk in front of an isolated store in a desert area. The parking area was not paved, and the wind blew frequently. Any area that this man swept was soon to be covered in dust again. Yet, he gave it his finest, comprehensive effort. He picked up every item on the sidewalk in order to ensure that no dust escaped his broom, and then replaced that object in its now clean (albeit temporarily so) spot. I wish I could have spoken to him in depth, but I was not fluent in the language. This is a great employee! Do you have individuals like this that work for you? Or, would your efforts for your employer put this man to shame?

For years I told a story about Jimmy Carter, believing it to be true, as I had obtained the story from a reliable source. As a young naval officer, the future President of the United States was assigned to the nuclear submarine program under Admiral Rickover. That much is true. The untrue or at least unverified story is that Carter was given an assignment to write a report on a particular subject. He did, and handed the report in to the Admiral. Several days later the report was sent back to Carter with “Is this the best you can do?” scrawled across the front.

Click here to read the complete article

 

The 1970s — California Nudes

nude1975-101wOv

The 1970s — California Nudes

By Ron Munden

WARNING: This gallery contains photos of nude women. I don`t understand why but if you think you might be offend by these images please leave this page immediately.

Editor`s note:
Recently I was cleaning out my office and found these prints. I scanned them and decided to post them as part of my walk down memory lane.

These images were taken between 1972 and 1975. During that time, I sold photographs in parks, malls, and on street corners. For me the two best selling categories of photos were nature shots and female nudes. So, a couple of times each year I would hire a model or trade her for a portfolio. Fortunately in the Bay Area there were lots of people looking for a portfolio.

These are a few of the remaining photos from those shoots.

Click here to see the photos and comments on the photos