And i am professor of english and the graduate dean at jackson state university. And welcome to our panel entitled World War Two from the air. The sponsor for this panel is the university of southern mississippi dell center for the study of war and society, with representatives for our sponsor. Please stand at this time. Lets thank our sponsors. Moderator for this session is Marshal Ramsey marshal a nationally recognized editorial cartoonist, shares his cartoons and travels the state as a mississippi. Todays editor at large, he is also host of a weekly statewide Radio Program and a Television Program on mississippi public broadcasting. And marshall is the author of several books. He is a two time pulitzer finalist and was named a top 100 employee of gannett. Marshall, take it away. Thanks. Yeah. A couple of housekeeping notes. If you do not turn off your phone, i will draw a cartoon about you. And it it will not be ready just to let you know that. And also, two of them, tom clement, wa
I am first Stephanie Mcdaniel and i am professor of english and the graduate dean at jackson state university. And welcome to our panel entitled World War Two from the air. The sponsor for this panel is the university of southern mississippi dell center for the study of war and society, with representatives for our sponsor. Please stand at this time. Lets thank our sponsors. Moderator for this session is Marshal Ramsey marshal a nationally recognized editorial cartoonist, shares his cartoons and travels the state as a mississippi. Todays editor at large, he is also host of a weekly statewide Radio Program and a Television Program on mississippi public broadcasting. And marshall is the author of several books. He is a two time pulitzer finalist and was named a top 100 employee of gannett. Marshall, take it away. Thanks. Yeah. A couple of housekeeping notes. If you do not turn off your phone, i will draw a cartoon about you. And it it will not be ready just to let you know that. And also
And i am professor of english and the graduate dean at jackson state university. And welcome to our panel entitled World War Two from the air. The sponsor for this panel is the university of southern mississippi dell center for the study of war and society, with representatives for our sponsor. Please stand at this time. Lets thank our sponsors. Moderator for this session is Marshal Ramsey marshal a nationally recognized editorial cartoonist, shares his cartoons and travels the state as a mississippi. Todays editor at large, he is also host of a weekly statewide Radio Program and a Television Program on mississippi public broadcasting. And marshall is the author of several books. He is a two time pulitzer finalist and was named a top 100 employee of gannett. Marshall, take it away. Thanks. Yeah. A couple of housekeeping notes. If you do not turn off your phone, i will draw a cartoon about you. And it it will not be ready just to let you know that. And also, two of them, tom clement, wa
Criticism from inside its been mostly in the vein of how dare he meaning how dare an insider give away the secret. How dare an insider talk about other insiders in a way that perhaps might not be in keeping with the code that we have a shinkman. People keep asking me why are people uncomfortable here . I welcome the discomfort but i also think this is what we do. We should invite discomfort. He next author paul reid talks about his book the last lion. They were kate coauthored with the late historian William Manchester. This threepart series on former Prime Minister Winston Churchill. From the printers row lit fest this is 50 minutes. Thank you very much and thank you all for turning out on a sunday morning for this event. Im excited to be here with paul reid. We had met before and we had talked before and we are both churchill buff so its a measure treasure to see him again and thanks for thank you for coming out to chicago. We will talk for 40 minutes and leave plenty of time for que
I think that the talent is it comes down to leadership. As you look at these guys, it took decades to emerge as leaders, and eventually they became public figures. We just reversed the model now and public figures first who later become leaders. That said, in any of the societies, if theres true leaders with the credibility to take their country forward, technology can find them, so in that sense, theres a level playing field, but you cant overnight. You talked about building up new leaders, but its different in the Virtual World than it is. Physical world. I think we came to the conclusion that its easy to Say Technology drives all the changes, but the essence of human leadership is very hard, very important, very person dependent, and very much dependent upon the charisma and ability to get people excited and motivated, and those are skills it will take a long time for computers to get to. Jen . Assuming youre right opposed to plato about assumptions, okay. [laughter] and anonymity s