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AIM HIGH: Some alumni want Stanford
to shoot for the moon.
Rod Searcey
|
years from now, when moon studies
are old hat, maybe Stanford alumni will sit around at reunions
and reminisce about leisurely
afternoons hanging out in the lunar dome, drinking beer
and watching the earth turn. Remember those no-gravity
touch football games?
This may sound fanciful, even ridiculous,
but it’s no
joke to a group of ’65 alums promoting “a Stanford
lunar presence” in coming years. “The giggle
factor is reasonable and expected,” says Steve Durst,
a Palo Alto science editor who is spearheading the Stanford
on
the Moon project. “It’s inevitable that all major
universities will eventually pursue lunar studies. We
want Stanford to be
a leader when the time comes.”
Durst is owner and founder
of Space Age Publishing, which produces newsletters
for the space industry. He and three
colleagues are part of an organizing committee for
the International Lunar
Conference to be held in Hawaii in November.
Stanford
on the Moon began with conversations at Reunion 2000,
prompted by Durst’s class book entry that referred
to the optimism and energy of the Apollo era. “We
feel like that has been lost in the past 30 years,” says
Durst. Last April, he and some classmates formed
an exploratory committee
to promote the Stanford on the Moon concept. What
such an initiative might involve is undetermined,
Durst says, but it could be
as ambitious as placing a radio telescope on the
lunar
surface that could be operated by the School of Engineering.
Although
he has had conversations with Stanford officials,
including director of overseas studies Amos Nur,
Durst is not seriously advocating a Semester in the
Sea of
Tranquility. But he wouldn’t rule it out. “By
the end of this century, there will be a human settlement
on the moon,” he
says. “It’s not a matter of if, but when.” |