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Encyclopedia > Brian Schubert

On July 24,1966, Mike Pelkey and Brian Schubert, two 26-year-old skydivers from Barstow California, made the very first parachute jumps from the top of the El Capitan mountain in Yosemite National Park. El Capitan is among the world's tallest sheer monoliths, ascending more than three thousand feet straight up from Yosemite Valley. It is the second highest unbroken cliff in the world (the highest is Mt. Thor on Baffin Island in the Canadian Arctic). The sport of BASE-jumping, practiced worldwide today and said to be the original extreme sport, began about twelve years later, obviously inspired in part by Mike and Brian’s El Capitan jump. An early pioneer and highly respected historian of the sport, Nick DiGiovanni, recently related the following to Mike and Brian: El Capitan is a 3,000 foot vertical rock formation in the Yosemite Valley, which is very popular with rock climbers. ... Yosemite redirects here. ... Yosemite Valley with Half Dome in the distance. ... Image:MtThor. ... Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada. ... BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. ...


“I'm not sure if you know, but before Carl Boenish organized the 1978 loads from El Cap it was you two that gave him the idea. He was a young jumper at Elsinore in 1966 with about a hundred jumps when he heard about your jumps. It was something that stuck in his mind and all that he did later, naming the sport "BASE" and coming up with the BASE award, is all due to what you two did.”


The sport consists of parachuting from man-made and natural fixed objects. BASE is an acronym for Buildings, Antennae, Span and Earth, the objects from which BASE jumpers commonly launch their jumps. Obviously it is not for everyone. Even highly experienced skydivers go through extensive training before attempting a first BASE jump.


Mike and Brian were honored as guest speakers at the 2005 Bridge Day event in Fayetteville, West Virginia, where 175,000 spectators converged over the course of the day to take part in the 26th annual festival on October 15th. Approximately 450 BASE jumpers from all over the world made more than 800 parachute jumps off the New River Gorge Bridge into the New River Gorge 876 feet below. The New River Gorge Bridge is the second highest span and one of the few places in the United States where BASE-jumping is legal for six hours, just one day a year. New River Gorge Bridge West Virginia quarter The New River Gorge Bridge is a steel-arch bridge, near Fayetteville, West Virginia; with a length of 3030 feet (924 m), it was for many years the longest in the world of that type. ...


Mike made his second BASE jump at the 2005 Bridge Day event from the 876-foot New River Gorge Bridge in Fayetteville, West Virginia. He and Brian are planning to jump together at the 2006 event, a few months after the 40th anniversary of their first El Capitan jump.


Brian Schubert died on the 21st. of October 2006 during the base-jumping event on "Bridge Day" at the New River Gorge Bridge, in West Virgina. - police and the park service are currently investigating his equipment for a suspected parachute malfunction.


  Results from FactBites:
 
glbtq >> arts >> Schubert, Franz (959 words)
In 1808 Schubert won a scholarship that included a place in the imperial court chapel choir and an education at the Stadtkonvikt, the principal boarding school for commoners in Vienna, where his tutors were Wenzel Ruzicka, the imperial court organist, and, later, the composer Antonio Salieri.
Schubert was significantly influenced by his close-knit group of male friends, known as the Schubert Circle.
Schubert's alleged homosexuality and its effect on his music are subjects of continuing debate among music historians and critics.
Franz Schubert: Definition and Much More from Answers.com (5703 words)
Schubert began to explore composition and wrote a song that came to the attention of the institution's director, Antonio Salieri, who along with the school's professor of harmony, hailed young Schubert as a genius.
Schubert's symphonies are the final extension of the classical sonata forms, and three of them—the Fifth, in B Flat (1816), the Eighth, in B Minor (the Unfinished, 1822), and the Ninth, in C Major (1828)—rank with the finest orchestral music.
Schubert's early essay in chamber music is noticeable, since we learn that at the time a regular quartet-party was established at his home "on Sundays and holidays," in which his two brothers played the violin, his father the cello and Franz himself the viola.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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