While we see another year off, at ANN we like to use this space
to pay tribute to those in aerospace and aviation who will not be
among us as we welcome in the New Year.

Some left us far too early; others lived long, healthy lives.
But whatever the individual circumstances, we honor these folks for
their courage, contributions, and prescience in the field of
aerospace that bonds us all.
6 Jan 2006 -- Hugh Thompson: As a US Army
pilot, Thompson was flying patrol during the Vietnam War on March
16, 1968, when he and his crew came upon American ground forces
attacking civilians in a Vietnamese village. That village was
called My Lai. After landing their helicopter between the troops
and the fleeing civilians, they pointed their guns at their fellow
troops to prevent more shots from being fired. ANN report 9 Jan 2006

6 Jan 2006 -- Eric Beard: The accomplished
pilot of "Russian Thunder" (above) lost his life in an apparent
weather-related accident in Skagit County, WA. Beard was flying for
his day job with Airpac Airlines. He was the only person onboard.
ANN report 8 Jan 2006
10 Jan 2006 -- Taryn Robinson: Twenty-two year
old Air Force pilot Second Lieutenant Robinson had been severely
burned in a September crash that claimed the life of her flying
instructor. Robinson was the daughter of former Goodfellow AFB
commanding officer Loci Robinson, and had been assigned to Lackland
Air Force Base in San Antonio when she was injured. ANN report 13 Jan 2006
9 Feb 2006 -- Freddie Laker, 83: A pioneer of
low cost airfare, Freddie's Laker Airways, 1966 to 1982, brought
him fame, fortune, and knighthood... as well as bankruptcy and a
British Civil Aviation Authority ban that forced Laker (below) into
exile. ANN report 13 Feb 2006

20 Feb 2006 -- Darrell Wittke: Gyro pilot,
former smoke jumper and Army paratrooper, Wittke was an active
participant on the Rotary Wing Forum, an online spot for gyro
pilots. He left his job and motorcycled from Montana to Louisiana
to assist after Hurricane Katrina. ANN report 28 Feb 2006
27 Feb 2006 -- Robert L. Scott, 97: An Air
Force officer perhaps best known for his autobiography, God is My
Co-Pilot, about his exploits in WWII and the Flying Tigers and the
Army Air Forces in China and Burma. Flying 388 combat missions in
925 hours from July 1942 to October 1943, -- and shooting down 13
Japanese aircraft, he became one of America's earliest fighter aces
of the war. ANN report 28 Feb 2006
6 Mar 2006 -- Major
General Kenneth L. Tallman: Served as Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University's (ERAU) second full-time president from
1985-1991. Known as "The General," Tallman
(right) brought athletics to the institution, introduced
scholarships and expanded the university's course offerings to
include engineering, physics, and computer science. Before ERAU, he
served in Vietnam as General William Westmoreland's executive
assistant, later becoming chief of staff for manpower and personnel
for the Air Force. ANN report 10 Mar 2006
21 Mar 2006 -- Air show performer Nick
Nilmeyer, 23: Nilmeyer had just wrapped up a practice routine, and
was on approach to land at Metz Field in Greenfield, CA when his
Extra 300 crashed about 20 feet off the runway. Another tough loss
for the aerobatic community. ANN report 22 Mar 2006
26 Mar 2006 -- Angelo
D'Arrigo: Known as the Birdman, the Italian pilot (left)
died at an Italian airshow, when the Sky Arrow in which he was a
passenger crashed. In 2001 D'Arrigo guided a migratory eagle over
the Sahara desert and the Mediterranean Sea via hang-glider; he was
also known for his flights over some of the world's tallest peaks,
including when he stunned climbers on Mount Everest with his hang
glider in 2004. He broke his own altitude record, flying nearly
30,000 feet over the Tupungato volcano in the Andean Cordillera,
and maintained his kinship with birds, sponsoring the Condor
Research Project. ANN report 27 Mar 2006
2 Apr 2006 -- Retired Chief Warrant Officer Mike
Novosel, 83: Novosel flew B-29s and UH-1 helos in combat
and was a Medal of Honor Recipient for a rescue mission as a
medevac pilot with the 92nd Medical Detachment. ANN report 10 Apr 2006
8 Apr 2006 -- William Rowe: Former Helicopter
Association International (HAI) president (1974) and chair (1975
and 1976) and lifetime member of HAI Board of Directors. ANN report 14 Apr 2006
19 Apr 2006 -- Legendary test pilot and engineer Scott
Crossfield, 84: Perished in a GA accident. Crossfield
(below) was the first man to fly at twice the speed of sound and
worked as an aeronautical research pilot at Edwards AFB's
High-Speed Flight Station, where he flew the X-1, X-4 and X-5
research planes and the experimental delta-winged Convair XF-92. It
was his work with two Douglas research planes that made him famous;
he was the first man to Mach 2 and nearly made a debatable Mach 3.
ANN report 20 Apr 2006

20 Apr 2006 -- Stanley Hiller, Jr., entrepreneur,
rotorcraft designer: United Helicopters and Hiller
Aviation founder, Hiller was the noted designer of the first FAA
certified helicopter, the Hiller 360, as well as many inventions,
which are featured at the Hiller Aviation Museum. ANN report 25 Apr 2006
25 April 2006 -- Col. J.B. Swindal, 88: Veteran
of WWII and the postwar Berlin Airlift, Swindal was aircraft
commander for Air Force One when it carried the body of murdered
President John F. Kennedy from Dallas to Washington on November 22,
1963. Prior to lift off, the oath of office was administered to
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson aboard the plane. He became
President-elect Kennedy's personal pilot in 1960. ANN report 1 May 2006
16 May 2006 -- Heli-Hero
James Phelan: Phelan (shown at right) was involved in the
first helicopter combat rescue in April 1944, when he and his pilot
flew their Sikorsky YR-4 behind Japanese lines and rescued an
American pilot and three British soldiers after their plane
crashed. ANN report 26 May 2006
17 May 2006 -- Scott Wilcox: As Ultralight
Flying Magazine Editor-in-Chief, Wilcox had been leading one of the
industry's most prominent ultralight publications for more than 20
years and was a visible and vocal proponent of personal flight and
the freedoms they represented. ANN report 18 May 2006
3 June 2006 -- Aviation Reporter Michael
Dornheim: Award-winning journalist at Aviation Week for a
quarter-century, and a GA pilot himself, Dornheim won the
Aviation/Space Writers Association Award of Excellence for stories
on the space shuttle. He was also a three-time winner of the Royal
Aeronautical Society's Aerospace Journalism of the Year Award. ANN report 13 June 2006
16 June 2006 -- Scott Manning: Lost when his
Bede BD-5J microjet "The Stinger" went down during a practice
flight, in preparation for a scheduled performance at Air Show
Ottawa. ANN report 16 June 2006

17 June 2006 -- Boeing Test Pilot James
Gannett: With a master's degree in aeronautical
engineering from the University of Michigan, he earned a lifetime
of aviation accomplishments, including testing experimental
aircraft alongside Chuck Yeager: when he wasn't flying one of 55
combat missions during nine months in the Korean War. In 1954, he
went to work for Boeing, where he tested the Dash-80, the
experimental version of the 707, and the first of the Boeing
700-series airliners. He was project pilot for Boeing's SST and
also tested the 727, 737, 747, and military adaptations of Boeing
aircraft. ANN report 24 June 2006