For Abruzzo, 48, such inspirations are the habit of a lifetime. Now a real estate developer, he was sneaking onto the roof of his family's Rockford, Ill. home to play by the age of 5. As a boy, he reveled in diving 60 feet into the Rock River off a downtown bridge. More recently he has taken some 70 hang-glider flights off 4,000-foot-high Sandia Crest, once crash-landing on the balcony of a private home. "He'd do anything that was dangerous," confides Abruzzo's mother, Mary. "I got all my gray hairs from him."
Abruzzo's fellow voyagers are birds of a feather. Maxie Anderson, 43, head of a mining firm, skis, sails and pilots small planes. He started flying at 14, and at 16 managed to land his disabled Piper while peering around a windshield smeared with leaking oil. His ambition is to "lead the first mining expedition on other planets." Ex-Californian Larry Newman, 30, was an oil company jet pilot until he gave it up for hang-gliding. Now he is president of Electra Flyer Corp., which manufactures the sail-like contraptions.
Since their triumphant landing in France, the three men have been looking forward to writing a book, and movie offers may be in the wind. But would they seriously consider a round-the-world flight? "I'm not convinced about the technology," says Anderson. "I'm an engineer and I worry about those things." How about an encore across the Atlantic, by a different route this time? "The first time I tried the Atlantic I was crippled with frostbite for months afterward," says Abruzzo. "Because of that pain, it was difficult to go again. A third time would be much easier."
Saved by the Bell Reunion
The hookups, the meltdowns, the memoires
The case reveals what was really going on what they think of each other now!















