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Rob Ransone, an aeronautical engineer from Texas A&M, flight
tested some unusual aircraft as a project flight test engineer
during his eleven years at the Air Force Flight Test Center,
Edwards AFB, California, and later as Development Engineer, VSTOL
Technology for American Airlines in New York City. As a
commissioned officer at Edwards he flew 106 hours of performance
and stability & control flight tests of the YB-58A Mach 2
bomber, and tested the Tri-Service VSTOL performance, and stability
& control flight tests of the XC-142A Tilt-Wing VSTOL transport
and the X-19 Tilt Propeller VTOL aircraft. In 1964 he was the
flight test representative on a 13-person Department of Defense
team that evaluated the Federal Republic of Germany's ability to
develop VSTOL aircraft. At Edwards he received three outstanding
Officer Effectiveness Reports and a civilian Sustained Superior
Performance recognition. He left the Flight Test Center in 1968 to
study VTOL and VSTOL aircraft for American Airlines in New York
City as a means of relieving air traffic congestion in the
Northeast Corridor. For American Airlines he evaluated several STOL
aircraft concepts, and tested the French Breguet 941/MacDonnell
MDC-188 STOL transport in simulated passenger routes. He defined
STOL field length criteria, defined comprehensive STOL Airlines
System Requirements, and evaluated the feasibility of a floating
STOLport in the Hudson River to serve Manhattan Island. His work
with a citizens protest group was documented in the display
Confrontation of Technology with Society at the Smithsonian Air and
Space Museum in Washington, DC. His Society of Automotive Engineers
paper, Chelsea STOLport - The Airline View, documenting the
floating STOLport controversy, was published in the prestigious SAE
Transactions For 1976 for its "high quality, lasting value, and
contribution to the art." Only 10% of SAE papers presented each
year are awarded that honor. Mr. Ransone is an Associate Fellow and
Lifetime Member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics, and a Lifetime Member of the Flight Test Historical
Society. He lives in Virginia, is happily married to the former
Paula McBride for more than 50 years, and has two grown children.
The story traces the life of a drop of water from the ocean,
through evaporation into a beautiful cloud, and her travels through
the sky. When she falls into a dirty river or bay it makes her
sick, and she is happy to return to the clean ocean. This time she
freezes into a beautiful snowflake. She lands on a tree, melts, and
travels down a pretty stream into a water purification plant. She
then travels through a long pipe into a glass of water drunk by a
small child. After going through the child's body, hydrating him,
helping him to digest his food, and cleansing his body of things
that could make him sick, she goes through the toilet back into a
water purification plant that removes the bad things from her.
Finally she travels through a beautiful river back into the ocean,
where she begins all over again.
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