The main thing to know
about Donald D. Engen is that he is an airman. He has
been flying actively for fifty-four years and has flown
265 or 270 different types of aircraft. He's lost track
of the exact number. He served in the Navy from 1942
to 1978, progressing in rank from seaman second class
to vice admiral. He was in three wars, beginning with
World War II. He holds twenty-nine awards and decorations,
including the Navy Cross. As a dive bomber pilot flying
Curtiss Helldivers off the Lexington in 1944,
he helped sink the Japanese carrier Zuikaku.
Later on, he was a Navy test pilot, deputy commander
of Atlantic Command and the Atlantic Fleet, and, in
the 1980s, head of the Federal Aviation Administration.
He is seventy-two but not yet ground-bound. "I
have a glider today that I keep in Nevada, and I kind
of commute to it," he says.
Since last summer, Admiral Engen has been director
of the National Air and Space Museum in Washington,
D.C. He carefully avoids comment on his predecessor [see "The
Revelations of Martin Harwit," p. 38], who
left amid controversy in 1995 and under whom the museum
strayed from its prime charter to collect, preserve,
and display historic airplanes and aerospace artifacts.
Nevertheless, as Admiral Engen declared when he was
appointed, it's a "new day" at Air and Space,
marked by an emphatic return to the museum's traditional
mission.
Admiral Engen's first act as director was to reappoint
Donald S. Lopez--World War II fighter ace, retired
Air Force lieutenant colonel, and arguably the best
liked and one of the most respected persons on the
museum staff--as deputy director, a position he had
held from 1983 to 1990. He also continues to fly when
he can, mostly a Cessna 172 but "now and then" a
Stearman.
The two of them are seen frequently walking the museum
floor, where fresh paint and more attention to exhibit
maintenance are apparent. Restoration work and care
of the museum's 344 vintage aircraft are now a priority,
beginning to correct a situation reported by the General
Accounting Office in 1995 in which the collections
staff felt "disenfranchised," partly because
of "little or no interest shown by the museum
management in restoration." GAO noted that only
about four percent of the total museum staff was engaged
in restoration, compared to twenty-two percent so engaged
at the US Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
Astrophysics Lab Closes
Some of the changes taking place on Admiral Engen's
watch come from having steered a budget cut into the
most positive direction possible. Congress reduced
its funding allocation to the Smithsonian Institution,
of which the Air and Space Museum is a part. Air and
Space took its proportional share of the reduction.
Budgets for the museum's exhibits, the aeronautics
department, and space history were not affected, but
the astrophysics lab--founded by former director Martin
O. Harwit--has been abolished. (Among the findings
of a 1995 report by the National Academy of Public
Administration were that "the astrophysics laboratory's
contributions to the museum's mission do not justify
its presence" and that "the single most important
reason the lab is located at the museum is that the
former director was an astrophysicist and expressed
strong interest in the lab's research and its ability
to sustain his work as a scientist.")
One element of the museum, the Garber Preservation,
Restoration, and Storage facility in Suitland, Md.,
will actually gain funding and staff. "When Don
[Lopez] and I came here, we both agreed that we need
to send a signal that we want the Garber facility to
resume its eminent place in our hierarchy," Admiral
Engen says.
The entire museum reverberates with the enthusiasm
of the staff and of the two veteran aviators in the
front office. Showing off work in progress in October,
Don Lopez pointed to preparations to bring in an F-86
Sabre as the centerpiece of an exhibit on airpower
in the Korean War. That is the first of several exhibits
and displays keyed to the fiftieth anniversary of the
US Air Force, coming up in 1997. "We're going
big on the fiftieth," Admiral Engen says.
The F-86 will occupy the open center space at the
west end of the museum. Suspended above it at eye level
from the second floor walkway is a shark-toothed P-40
fighter with "Lope's Hope" lettered on the
nose. "Lope" is Don Lopez, who started out
flying P-40s in China against the Japanese. "The
P-40's giving the Sabre top cover," he observes.
(Actually, he also has considerable personal regard
for the F-86, which he flew in combat in the Korean
War. That opinion is shared by Admiral Engen, who rates
the FJ-3M--the Navy designation for the F-86H--as one
of the two airplanes he most enjoyed flying. The other
was the F8U3, an advanced model of the Vought Crusader
with a bigger engine that he flew as a Patuxent River
test pilot in 1959.)
1.8 Million See Enola Gay
Next door to the Sabre is the most famous and most
popular special exhibition in the history of the National
Air and Space Museum. It houses the forward fuselage
of the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped
the first atomic bomb on Japan in 1945. It was a plan
to use the Enola Gay in a politically rigged
show about the horrors of nuclear war that brought
the museum's previous regime tumbling down.
As of mid-October, the Enola Gay exhibition
had drawn 1.8 million visitors, approximately double
the number for the previous attendance champion, a "Star
Trek" program that logged 880,000 visitors in
1992.
Among the notable new programs at the museum is "How
Things Fly," which opened in September with more
than fifty touch-and-participate exhibits explaining
such things as how a heavy airliner gets aloft and
stays there. Interactive displays include a visitor-operated
wind tunnel that demonstrates lift, drag, and the aerodynamic
effects on airfoils. Visitors can climb into a Cessna
150 and watch the rudder, ailerons, and elevator move
as they manipulate the controls. A General Electric
cutaway shows the internal workings of a turbojet engine.
The idea, the museum says, is to help dispel some of
the mystery of flight while preserving the magic of
it.
Also new is "Cosmic Voyage," an IMAX film
that premiered on the five-story screen of the museum's
Langley Theater August 9. It combines computer animation
with live-action footage for a white-knuckle guided
tour through time and space. Viewers are there for
the "Big Bang" birth of the cosmos. They
watch as a comet fireball races toward primordial Earth.
They ride the "cosmic zoom" through superclusters
of galaxies, then plunge down in scale to explore the
subnuclear world of quarks.
The filmmakers held themselves to rigorous scientific
accuracy. For example, it took more than 950 hours
of time on a Cray C-90 supercomputer to calculate the
precise positions of stars and gases and simulate the
colliding galaxies portion of "Cosmic Voyage." After
its opening run at the National Air and Space Museum,
the film will be available for showing in specially
designed IMAX theaters elsewhere.
The Dulles Center
As administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration
in June 1985, Donald D. Engen signed an agreement giving
to the National Air and Space Museum for one dollar
a year enough land for an "annex" at Dulles
Airport (which was owned by the FAA in those days)
in suburban Virginia, west of Washington. Little did
he imagine that the project would not really begin
to move ahead until eleven years later and that it
would fall to him to raise the $200 million required
for its completion.
The "annex" tag is long gone. Now it's "the
Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum
Dulles Center." The main display hangar will be
a massive facility with a clear dome under which visitors
can walk up to such large treasures from the museum's
collection as the space shuttle Enterprise, the
Concorde, a B-17 bomber, and the SR-71 "Blackbird" reconnaissance
aircraft. In the middle of it all, says Admiral Engen,
will be "the fully restored, World War II B-29
bomber that hastened the end of a terrible war, the Enola
Gay."
For the first time, Air and Space will have not only
the floor space but also the big doors, high ceilings,
and reinforced floors to allow exhibition of aircraft
and spacecraft too large to show in the main museum
on the National Mall. Also on display at Dulles will
be many of the 32,000 artifacts in the collection,
less than ten percent of which can be displayed at
any one time at the museum downtown. In addition to
the exhibit areas at Dulles, there will be a large-format
theater, classrooms, and a facility simulating a control
tower where visitors can see and hear airplanes landing
and departing from the airport. The archival collection
and the restoration and storage operation will also
move to Dulles from the dilapidated Garber facilities
in Maryland.
Congress has authorized $8 million for planning and
design of the Dulles Center but has made it clear that
there will be no federal funds for construction. Roads,
interchanges, a taxiway, and infrastructure support
will be contributed by the state of Virginia. The rest
of the money must come from a public fund-raising campaign.
Admiral Engen says the Dulles Center is his top priority. "My
goal is to have the facility open and be able to walk
through the doors on December 31, 2001," he says.
Challenging as it sounds, don't imagine that this
is all that Admiral Engen is doing. In September, Secretary
of Defense William J. Perry appointed him to conduct
an independent review of the Department of Defense
executive support air fleet. That he was chosen for
the task and that he took it on in stride are further
indications of the caliber of the man now setting the
course at the National Air and Space Museum.