 Good afternoon. I'm Dr. George Van Otten, and my students generally call me Dr. Vio. I started life as a poor farm boy in Oregon, grew up on a dairy farm in western Oregon, and went to manage to get ahead enough money working in the summers to work my way through college. Went to Oregon College of Education. I think it was about a thousand students in those days. I won't tell you how far back it was, but let's just say it's more than 40 years ago, almost 50 years ago now. When I was there, I got this notice from the United States government saying congratulations. Your friends and neighbors have selected you to join the Army. I thought maybe that didn't sound as good as the Air Force, so I immediately volunteered for the ROTC, became an Air Force officer upon graduation, went to pilot training, flew C-130s for about five years. A little more than that, I guess, altogether. Different aircraft, but C-130s primarily. Then I separated from the Air Force, stayed in the reserves, and went back to Oregon State University with GI Bill. Otherwise, poor farm boy like me had never happened, and went for a PhD in geography. Spent a little time in Alaska working as kind of a church mission for our church. There was a small Native American college, Alaska Native College at Sitka, and I went up to see if we could keep that going, and put a couple of years in there, and then came back and was hired as the Dean of the Army Intelligence School here in Sierra Vista, Arizona. We wanted to return to Arizona, my wife's a Native American, and all my children and grandchildren enrolled in the Taunawatham Nation, and I wanted to make sure they could participate in tribal things. So that's kind of how I got into this, and how I connected Homeland Security and geography over time.