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Has NASA ever given the American people the truth about our space program?
Many people think not — leading to wild speculations that we didn't actually
go to the moon.
David Adair doesn't go to this extreme in his new
book, America's Fall From Space, but he does blast NASA for many other
cover-ups, especially the 1986 crash of the space shuttle Challenger. Adair
says he knew about the O-rings and other problems with the Challenger months
before the launch and has crossed swords with NASA by making public much
of what he knows. This has led to his becoming the national spokesperson
for the Ron McNair Foundation after McNair's death in the Challenger disaster.
Adair is an internationally recognized leader and
expert in the field of space technology spinoff applications for industry
and commercial use. A few of the world's leading organizations with whom
he has worked are the International Management Council, the Office of Science
and Technology of Israel, the European Space Agency, and the United States
Air Force. Within the last month he has been lecturing on space technology
at the University of Brazil and attended a dinner for President and Mrs.
Clinton at the special invitation of Brazilian President Cardoso.
In his book, America's Fall From Space, David
Adair tells the story of the U.S. space program through the eyes of a child
prodigy turned top rocket scientist. Building his first rocket at the age
of 11, David soon had progressed to the point that he was drawing attention
to his exploits by people such as General Curtis LeMay and Werner Von Braun.
His complicated mathematical formulas found their
way to the eminent scientist, Dr. Stephen Hawking, who at that time had
just received his Ph.D. in theoretical astrophysics and was at the beginning
of his own career. When they met and David was asked for the source of
his formulas, he sheepishly replied that many came to him in dreams. To
that Stephen Hawking replied, "I get a lot of my ideas through dreams also.
We dream on the same wavelength; therefore, that makes us brothers."
At the age of 17, David designed a missile for which
he was awarded "The Most Outstanding in the Field of Engineering Sciences"
from the United States Air Force. This missile, 10 feet tall and weighing
half a ton, was launched from White Sands Proving Grounds and was programmed
to land in an isolated desert location. That piece of desert land later
became known as Area 51.
In his lecture, David will discuss the surprise he
received when he was flown to the landing site for his missile and was
ushered into an enormous hangar the size of several football fields with
an elevator floor that dropped many stories below the surface. There he
saw an enormous engine made from a symbiotic material that responded to
changes in his emotions when he touched it. He knew this was not from our
technology and recently testified to this fact on April 9, 1997, before
select members of Congress.
Adair will answer many questions we have all asked
about the space program — one of the most puzzling being, "Why haven't
we returned to the moon?" He will literally boggle the mind with examples
of what awaits us from future space technology, making yesterday's science
fiction today's actuality.
Rave reviews follow David wherever he speaks. A world
class presenter, he delivers a powerful mixture of humor, information,
and personal experiences in a penetrating style that leaves audiences laughing
and looking forward to the future. In fact, his lectures have received
so much attention that Hollywood has taken notice and there are strong
rumors that a film will be made of David Adair's life story. Don't miss
this lecture!
— Cheyenne Turner
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