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View Full Version : Aviation Hall Inducts Cliff Robertson


AJ
July 17th 06, 03:44 AM
AP July 16

Cliff Robertson was enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame on
Saturday.

The actor, who grew up in La Jolla, Calif., would wash airplanes and
clean engines as a teenager in hopes that a pilot would give him a ride
and a lesson.

In 1969, he organized an effort to fly food and medical supplies into
Biafra, which had declared independence from Nigeria. And in 1978, he
organized a similar effort for famine-stricken Ethiopia.

"Gliding is my Walden Pond," said Robertson, 80, who most recently
reprised his role as the avuncular Uncle Ben Parker in the upcoming
"Spiderman 3."

Others enshrined included Bessie Coleman, the first black American to
earn a pilot's license, and Robert White, the first person to fly six
times the speed of sound.

Film producer Tony Bill served as master of ceremonies at the
enshrinement event.

Bill, 65, who has been a pilot for 50 years, directed "Flyboys," which
opens Sept. 29 and is about the birth of aerial combat during World War
I. He won an Oscar for best picture in 1973 for producing "The Sting."

The aviation hall was founded in 1962 in Dayton, the hometown of the
Wright brothers, and later established by Congress. Wilbur and Orville
Wright were the first of 186 enshrinees.

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