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#1
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Indeed sad news for me personally. I have been a fan of Bill's for many
years and have always used and recommended his books throughout my tenure in aviation as an instructor. Bill was a fine man, and contributed much to the safety and education of the pilots who came up in my era. Thank you for posting this news on the group. I'm sure there are many here who share my feelings about Bill and will be grateful to you for taking the time to note the passing of one of aviation's true pioneers. Dudley Henriques (A Bill Kershner Trained Flight Instructor) "Jim" wrote in message ... 'Spin Doctor' Bill Kershner dies at 77 Pilot, flight instructor, and aviation author William K. Kershner, 77, died January 8 in Sewanee, Tennessee, after a prolonged battle with cancer. He soloed an Aeronca Defender from Clarksville, Tennessee's Outlaw Field - a grass strip at the time - in 1945 at age 16. After four years flying Corsairs in the Navy, Kershner worked as a corporate pilot, flight-test pilot, and special assistant to William T. Piper Sr., then president of Piper Aircraft. With the help of his wife, Betty - who typed his handwritten manuscripts - Kershner authored and illustrated a series of five highly regarded flight manuals; his Student Pilot's Flight Manual alone has sold more than 1 million copies. Kershner contributed often to AOPA publications, including AOPA Pilot and AOPA Flight Training. More than 8,000 spins... |
#2
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I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful
and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim |
#3
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![]() "Jim" wrote in message ... I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques |
#4
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
"Jim" wrote in message ... I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques The good thing is that I recall reading an article recently about a woman who was teaching along-side Bill and it sounded like she might keep things going where he left off. I can't now remember where I read this, but it seems like she was a college professor or some such, but was teaching flying on the side. It sure would be nice for someone to carry on what he started. Matt |
#5
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She probably teaches at Iowa State.
Dudley Henriques "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Dudley Henriques wrote: "Jim" wrote in message ... I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques The good thing is that I recall reading an article recently about a woman who was teaching along-side Bill and it sounded like she might keep things going where he left off. I can't now remember where I read this, but it seems like she was a college professor or some such, but was teaching flying on the side. It sure would be nice for someone to carry on what he started. Matt |
#6
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
She probably teaches at Iowa State. http://www.aopa.org/members/files/pi.../spin0608.html Nope, University of the South, Sewanee. Matt |
#7
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Go Gators!!!
:-)) D "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Dudley Henriques wrote: She probably teaches at Iowa State. http://www.aopa.org/members/files/pi.../spin0608.html Nope, University of the South, Sewanee. Matt |
#8
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She's Catherine Cavagnaro, chairman of the math department at the
University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee (the university owns the airport and the rest of the town). Kershner's only affiliation with University of Iowa was that their press published his books until recently. My wife and I took ground school from him early October and flew with Catherine. It was a terrific experience. Kershner had stopped in-air instruction a few months earlier and was ill, but he did a fine job with the classroom instruction. It was a great pleasure working with him and getting to know him a little. Catherine takes the flying and instructing very seriously and I'm sure that she will indeed take the torch from her mentor and carry it forward. David Dudley Henriques wrote: She probably teaches at Iowa State. Dudley Henriques "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Dudley Henriques wrote: "Jim" wrote in message ... I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques The good thing is that I recall reading an article recently about a woman who was teaching along-side Bill and it sounded like she might keep things going where he left off. I can't now remember where I read this, but it seems like she was a college professor or some such, but was teaching flying on the side. It sure would be nice for someone to carry on what he started. Matt |
#9
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That's good to know. Having the chair of the Math Dept. at her level means a
dedicated personality :-) It's good someone will be carrying on the fine work Bill has done. Dudley Henriques "David Kazdan" wrote in message et... She's Catherine Cavagnaro, chairman of the math department at the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee (the university owns the airport and the rest of the town). Kershner's only affiliation with University of Iowa was that their press published his books until recently. My wife and I took ground school from him early October and flew with Catherine. It was a terrific experience. Kershner had stopped in-air instruction a few months earlier and was ill, but he did a fine job with the classroom instruction. It was a great pleasure working with him and getting to know him a little. Catherine takes the flying and instructing very seriously and I'm sure that she will indeed take the torch from her mentor and carry it forward. David Dudley Henriques wrote: She probably teaches at Iowa State. Dudley Henriques "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Dudley Henriques wrote: "Jim" wrote in message ... I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques The good thing is that I recall reading an article recently about a woman who was teaching along-side Bill and it sounded like she might keep things going where he left off. I can't now remember where I read this, but it seems like she was a college professor or some such, but was teaching flying on the side. It sure would be nice for someone to carry on what he started. Matt |
#10
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I own at least one copy of each of Bill's books. Bill brought a very
useful and valuable point of view and methodology to instructing. Many students "need" numbers, their minds require the numerics and physics behind the maneuver before they understand and accept the maneuver. Bill provided this. I for one am and forever will be indebted to him for this alone. Jim I agree. Bill's books made it possible for instructors to couple technical information with creative teaching to present that information on levels all students could understand. His input to aviation will long be remembered by those of us who benefited from his contribution. Dudley Henriques This is sad news. In a way, he was already mised as his writing in AOPA Pilot had become far less prolific, but I had no idea of the reason. I will always remember some of the hilarious stories he told in his magazine articles, and his books will continue to be invaluable learnend and training tools. Peter |
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