Work Alumni Focus
Alumni Focus
Connecting the Dots
Written by Federico L. Merle   
Sunday, 13 September 2009 20:54

This month, 40 years after “the eagle” landed successfully on the moon, MIT as an institution and it’s alumni as heroes, are once again nourishing our history. Thus, this issue of The Graduate wants to commemorate the work of an incredible group of people during a historic moment.

It is well known that generating positive changes in the world and achieving dreams fueled by passion, commitment, teamwork, and organized efforts are parts of MIT’s DNA. The University’s relationship with space missions isn’t something new either. As official data from it’s website states:

More than one-third of the nation's space flights have included MIT-educated astronauts, who have logged a total of more than 15,000 hours in space. NASA has chosen more MIT graduates to become astronauts than graduates of any other private educational institution. Only the US Air Force Academy, the US Naval Academy and the US Naval Postgraduate School have had more graduates selected for the astronaut program. Four of the 12 astronauts who walked on the moon during the Apollo program were MIT alumni. They logged a total of 51 hours exploring the lunar surface from 1969-72”.

But MIT’s impact on the world’s space-flights and particularly on the Apollo 11 mission was even deeper. “Landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth” was one of those few events in history that made all the countries be united as one, that made every frontier vanish, that combined different languages into a unique message of hope that flooded everyone’s hearts, and that made the whole world look up at a same objective at the same time. July 20, 1969 was when it happened, and MIT was a major player in that historic crusade.