Introduce our speaker for this evening. Professor allen guelzo. Professor guelzo is a teacher, hes a professor, and he is one of the leading historians in a variety of disciplines, early american history, religion, and cultural history. But he is, perhaps, best known as one of the most prolific and important historians of the american civil war. And, of course, Abraham Lincoln. Hes received numerous prestigious awards including the lincoln prize, the Abraham Lincoln Institute Book prize, and he authors regularly a number of articles that are published in leading newspapers, usa today, the wall street journal, Washington Post and hes featured regularly on television and radio programs such as nprs weekend edition. He is the henry luse professor of civil war era at Gettysburg College where he serves as director of the civil war era studies program. However, he is on sabbatical from gettyburgs college this year and serves as the william g garwood visiting professor in the James Madison pr
University addressing high profile cyberattacks, including the hack on Sony Pictures. [video clip] the cyber threat is becoming more diverse, more sophisticated, and more dangerous. That is why we are here. We were at a transformational moment in the evolution of the cyber threat area the actions we take today, those that we fail to take, will determine whether cyberspace remains a realm of opportunity and assets or one that facilitates bold new ideas or whether it becomes a vulnerability. Unless we take action to strengthen our partnerships, most importantly between the government and the private sector, and unless we develop a resilient set of defenses, i worry that a tax like the ones against Sony Pictures entertainment could become the norm. It is not all doom and gloom. You will hear later today from president obama. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. We have ideas and a pass and a plan to address these threats. There is a framework to get this right. We know what we need
Education. Host ronde is in woodbridge virginia. Good morning rhonda. You are on with dr. Tatum. Caller good morning dr. Tatum. I am calling because my daughter insisted that i come home early so i can see dr. Tatum on cspan. She has applied to spelman. Her name is daniel lyall and shes so excited about the possibility of being excited accepted at spelman. She is predominately gone to a white school but she has her heart set on coming to spelman. Her godmother lives in atlanta and every day shes on twitter after school and if she could have taken off a school to be here to watch her program she would. Im just going to find out what is the possibility of her being accepted at spelman . Thank you. Guest certainly you are making a great case for her. I want to congratulate you for her advocacy and i cant comment on her application. I havent seen it and i cant comment on the air about it but certainly i want to thank you for your encouragement of her and well keep our fingers crossed for d
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between the engineering and technology department of the university and the public sector, as a cradle of innovation, as an orchestra of variables that are working all at the same time is transferable to other university environments around the country, and for that matter, the world? absolutely. and we ve been visited by countries like the country of norway and ireland, who are trying to look to regenerate new jobs in their economy. certainly, most of the states in the united states, we ve had some interaction with, in the past year. everyone s looking to do this. and it s really quite achievable. it s about having a very systemic approach. we re not random in what we do. we have a systemic method. and we re willing to teach anybody how to do it. the other flip side on this is we only spend about 500,000 a year on our programs to do company creation. that s a pittance compared to what what some states are spending, but we actually have a