Skip to main content

Never too late to serve

ASU Biodesign engineer says 9/11 prompted a career change, and his life is the richer for it


Mark Richards

|
November 10, 2015

Mark Richards had always dreamed of being in the military, but because he was already in a career, he figured he was too old to start.

Then Sept. 11 happened.

"That really just changed everything. All the excuses melted away, and I knew I had to serve my country," said the now-sergeant in the Arizona Army National Guard and research engineer at the Biodesign Institute's Center for Biosignatures Discovery Automation.

Watch his story here, part of ASU's Salute to Service.

See videos of the ASU community serving in other branches of the armed forces here.

More Science and technology

 

Visar Berisha sits to the right of a microphone

ASU researchers develop special microphone to verify human speech

​Deepfakes have become a large societal concern with the advent of video and audio content generated by artificial intelligence, or AI. A deepfake is a convincing imitation that blurs the lines…

Nicholas Rolston

Leading students toward a future of renewable energy

Nicholas Rolston, assistant professor in the School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering, one of the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University, has found his passion…

Three men kneeling next to a stack of cases and smiling.

SPARCS mission spacecraft bus delivered to ASU for final assembly

The Arizona State University team that is building the NASA-funded Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat, or SPARCS, cleared a major milestone this week — receiving its spacecraft bus at the School…