On July 20, 1969, Trojan Neil Armstrong guided the Apollo 11 lunar module to a safe landing on the moon. Find out how that day and its aftermath affected future USC engineers and students from around the world.
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Fifty years after the first moon landing, USC professors reflect on how the Apollo 11 mission invigorated a tumultuous nation.
“There are new reasons to go to space,” says USC’s Anita Sengupta. Among them: tourism, mining and telecommunications.
USC’s Sam Erman reflects on working as law clerk to the late justice: “I discovered a man whose sincere humility animated fierce commitments to justice, fairness, and the judicial role.“
They created unforgettable memories as children in USC’s mentorship program. Now these Trojans are helping the next generation of campers build confidence and make lifelong friends.
USC research has shown that immigrants provide U.S. companies with a true competitive advantage, and policies that limit them could be just as detrimental in the long run.
Clinton and Gerard Tibuck — who had been separated since 2015 — spent Thanksgiving together after a USC law student helped Clinton win asylum.
As interest in science declines, would a decades-long plan to set foot on Mars reignite America’s passion for giant leaps? One USC professor believes it just might.
USC Viterbi student Zane Durante is developing natural language processing techniques to identify truthful or deceptive speech in child forensic interviews.