 Good morning. I'm delighted to be able to have this opportunity to talk to you. I'm sorry I couldn't be there in person, but at least I have this been given this opportunity through the wonders of modern technology. I'm Marina Whitman professor of business administration and public policy at the University of Michigan but probably more relevant from your point of view is that I am the daughter of and the only child of John von Neumann after whom you have named your society and I thought I'd spend a few minutes telling you why I think the name you've chosen for your society and also the name you've chosen for this first gathering the Hunnavators are so particularly relevant. First the innovation part. As I'm sure you know my father spent his whole life innovating and in fact he innovated in so many different fields that I'm always afraid that I'll forget and leave one out. He innovated in mathematics, in physics, in economics, in computer science, which didn't even exist until he invented it, and in security strategy. And his mantra to me as I say he's only child was he didn't care what field I chose to go into but he impressed on me that it was a moral obligation to make use to the fullest of whatever intellect or talents I'd been given. So that was something he believed extremely strongly. So that's the innovator part. Now for the Hun, the Hungarian part and maybe the best way to talk about that is to tell a story, which may be apocryphal, but it certainly went viral. And that is as follows. That in the middle of the Manhattan Project when a bunch of people were sitting around in the evening drinking beer and talking because of course they weren't allowed to leave the hill, one of them said, how come it is that so many of the geniuses on this project come from a little country that nobody can even find on a map called Hungary. And one of the other guys said, well let me let you in on a secret. They are actually not Hungarians or not even human beings at all. They are Martians. But in order to conceal the fact that they are not humans, they all speak Hungarian, which of course nobody can understand. And as I say that went viral, books have been written about the Martians who are five specific Hungarians who worked in the US war effort during World War II. And therefore when I was looking for a title for my memoirs, which were published a few years ago and which by the way talked quite a bit about my relationship with my father, I titled the book The Martians' Daughter. So that as I say explains why you've chosen so well in your naming. But my father, although he was very much a Hungarian, chose to spend the bulk of his adult life in the United States and a great deal of his innovative thinking was done here. So I think I'm particularly pleased that I've had a chance to wish the very best of luck for this first Honevator gathering and all future gatherings of a new generation of Hungarians in the United States.