 Knowledge Enterprise fosters the entire life cycle of research, from idea conception to implementation and translation of research into action. I'm leading a team of researchers that's sending this spacecraft to the moon. It's exciting. We're doing something for the first time, so it's also a bit terrifying. There's no playbook. We're making up the playbook as we go. The only way we're truly going to learn about the organic material on Mars and whether potentially there could have been life there in the past would be by bringing rocks back to the Earth. What we do with bacteria in space is try to use the microgravity environment of spaceflight to unveil novel clues in terms of how the bacteria are causing disease in our body. This is a protein microarray. It's a glass chip, and the idea was to take the blood from patients with cancer, put them on this array, and see which proteins they stuck to. And we ended up licensing those into the first clear certified blood test for breast cancer. So now we can sequence those tumors. We can identify the changes in the cancer cells. We can develop vaccines and T-cell immune therapies to try to target the very changes that are happening within those tumors. And our laser pulse, instead of being 100 yards long, is 100 microns. And that's about the diameter of one of your hairs. Even the first simplified machine that we'll build can have a tremendous impact on medical imaging. Companies and outside organizations like to partner with ASU because we're easy to work with. We're agile. We listen. I think we take pride in understanding problems that need to be solved. It was at ASU where I was given this unique opportunity to build an interdisciplinary team of our final students and bringing these students together in the pursuit of huge moonshot ideas. They offer coaching, support, and guidance to entrepreneurs and innovators who have a business idea and don't know how to take that idea into fruition. I moved up to store manager and I enrolled in the college achievement program and I was like, I can do school and have a degree and have a career debt free. The Adidas and ASU have created the Global Sport Alliance which was born out of a true shared passion for exploring every aspect of lives that sport touches. We work on grand social challenges like justice, gender equity, and racial equity. All of those questions are way bigger than any university. Media has always had the power to reveal or conceal different people, events, or histories. Like the story of Claudette Colvin, the stories that live in the archives of black newspapers can help us reckon more honestly with our nation's history. Rumors, propaganda, all of these things serve to divide us. Our research group was able to train software to identify software vulnerabilities and our core group has actually created a new startup company called CyroCon based on the technology. We all understand we need water. We all need food and we want a clean environment too. We have to mobilize around a set of solutions and mayors cut across all different sectors of society and knowledge enterprise helps to connect the dots around the university. We try to answer pertinent questions that enable us to understand what we need to do right now in order to improve our chances of survival. Curiosity drives innovation, it drives knowledge, it drives progress. If we don't keep asking questions, then I think we become complacent with what is and I know we can do better than that. We share a desire to help the world to be a better place and to solve these unknowns. It's a mindset about how we approach challenges and uncover truths about the world to have an even greater impact.