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"To dare is to do ... to fear is to fail."
This philosophy has characterized John Goddard since he was 15, when
he listed 127 challenging lifetime goals--like exploring the Nile,
climbing Mt. Everest, running a five-minute mile and playing Clair
de Lune on the piano.
Now, a generation later, he has accomplished 109
of these quests, and has logged an impressive list of records in
achieving them. He was the first man in history to explore the
entire length of the world's longest river, the Nile, in a 4,160
mile expedition which the Los Angeles Times called "the most amazing
adventure of this generation." He then matched that achievement and
became the first man ever to explore the entire length of the Congo;
he scaled the Matterhorn in a raging blizzard after several
professional guides had refused to go along, and he has established
numerous records as a civilian jet pilot, including a speed record
of 1,500 mph in the F-111 Fighter-Bomber, and an altitude record of
63,000 feet n the F-106 Delta Dart.
A graduate of the University of Southern
California where he majored in anthropology and psychology, Goddard
has studied obscure cultures in all parts of the globe. In addition,
he has climbed 12 of the world's highest mountains, conducted 14
major expeditions into remote regions, traversed 15 of the worlds
most treacherous rivers, visited 120 countries, studied 260
primitive tribes, and traveled in excess of one million miles during
his adventurous life.
A resident of La Canada, California, where he
lives with his wife and two of his five children, Goddard does not
believe in pursuing adventure for the sake of frivolous thrills, but
used these experiences to achieve a worthwhile end. This end, for
him, is scientific exploration, adding to the world's store of
knowledge. "Digging out the facts is the real challenge," Goddard
says in summing up his career. "The adventure is exciting and
enjoyable--but secondary."
Yet digging out the facts can be a hazardous
occupation. Goddard has been bitten by a rattlesnake, charged by an
elephant, and trapped in quicksand. He has crashed in planes, been
caught in earthquakes, and almost drowned twice while running
rapids. But his overwhelming desire to discover fresh knowledge and
to complete his youthful list of goals has driven him on in spite of
the danger.
Honored by the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce
as one of California's outstanding young men, Goddard belongs to the
Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles (youngest member ever admitted),
the Adventurer's Club of Chicago, the Explorers' Club of New York,
the Savage Club of London, the Royal Geographic Society, the French
Explorers' Society (only American member), the Archaeological
Society, the Mach II club, the Sigma Chi Fraternity, of which he is
a life member.
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