Langhorne M. Bond, a former head of the FAA whose name has long been associated with the landmark 1979 crash of American Airlines Flight 191 in Chicago, died January 29. He was 84.
Bond was administrator of the FAA from 1977-1981 under President Jimmy Carter Jr. This was a busy time in aviation industry regulation. Air travel was booming during the 1970s and new widebody jets like the Boeing 747 and McDonnell Douglas DC-10—which entered service earlier in the decade—seemed to rule the skies.
