Skip to main content

Recalling 1st Moon walk: July 20, 1969


July 14, 2009

A special 10-page issue of "Science Times" in the July 14 New York Times  celebrates a day when seemingly everyone on Earth stood still as humans took their first step on the Moon.

ASU professor Lawrence Krauss was one of a group of 22 Americans, an Englishman and a Pole who recalled for journalist Claudia Dreifus how they experienced the Apollo 11 Moon landing.

Like others, Krauss remembered exactly what he was doing: "Like the geek I was, I had set up my own ‘command center' in our family room in Toronto, where I had plans of the command module and the LEM, and I watched TV..."

Krauss is now an internationally acclaimed theoretical physicist and cosmologist, author of several books, including "The Physics of Star Trek." Krauss directs ASU's Origins Initiative. He is a professor in ASU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences where he is a faculty member in the Physics Department and the School of Earth and Space Exploration.

Article source: New York Times

More ASU in the news

 

Supply chain effects of Baltimore bridge collapse

Arizona State University helping prepare people for careers in growing semiconductor industry

Matthew McConaughey and ASU are helping an Arizona school district. Here's how