|
|
IT IS THE GREATEST DISASTER IN AVIATION HISTORY
AND THREE MEN ARE IN THE EYE OF THE STORM . . . .
|
| A packed airliner crashes into a Miami high rise, taking more than a thousand lives, and three men are caught up in a search for the cause: the guilt wracked engine designer; his embattled boss; and a crusty NTSB investigator; each aware that blame must be placed . . . and that their careers hang in the balance. (please scroll down) |
|
| After earning degrees in Aeronautical and Mechanical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Angus MacDonald served as Staff Engineer on the secret Nuclear Energy for the Propulsion of Aircraft Project in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Later, as a partner in Braxton & Company, Angus became an expert in corporate mergers and acquisitions, and since 1970, he has continued that work with his own firm, Angus MacDonald & Company, Inc. |
|
|
|
A Life Trustee of M.I.T., Angus has served on or chaired more than a dozen of the school's most important associations and committees, and was a founding member of the M.I.T. Council for the Arts. Named to President Reagan's Task Force on Arts and Humanities in 1981-1892, Angus was also a past president of the Toynbee Prize Foundation, and a founder of the Festival Orchestra Society of New York. Middle Ground, his autobiographical first book, was published by M.I.T. Press in 1971. He lives in Greenwich, Connecticut. |
|
|
|
|