whole series was a work that we recently published in the european journal of international relations that talks about the use of war gaming for data collection for looking at data and for thinking about how we and put together policies and then how we use social science to help inspire our war game design and analysis. so we hope you can join us for all three of the the webinars. and this first one we re gonna be focusing on wargaming as a historical tool as an archive and as data and our second series which will be moderated by eric lynn greenberg is going to be looking more at can working design and how social science and approaches or can be used and when it comes to war game design and analysis. and then our final serial final of the series i get to host and it ll be with and some of our great folks have been working on these issues in national security and we ll bridge the gap about how some of the lessons that we ve taken from social science might be applied or not app
my brother-in-law s a pilot. he said, you know, cathy, have you heard. unbeknownst to me i guess enough was going on that one of our administrative assistants had already left the office, but my deputy, jeanie figg, was still in her little outer office, and he said, cathy, a plane has hit, you know, the world trade center, and then i think maybe he knew a second plane had hit, so he said stay in touch. i said i will, and i hung up the phone, and then i looked up and there was russ appleyard, this darling uniformed secret service agent, they were the ones in the blue blazers who had conducted tours, and i knew him for over 20 years, and his face is beat red and he s a redhead himself, and he said, cathy, you know, two planes have hit the world trade center, and a third, has hit the pentagon, and we re evacuating. i yelled at jeanie, and that s when jeanie and i grabbed our bags, and we ran downstairs, i think, you know, as my mind went through, as i worked out the door. all of
he wrote something ahead of time, but then he did actually, was he there? i don t think he did. so he was invited and then, i guess, he wrote, probably, an op-ed piece in the new york times how terrible the johnsons were and how terrible the whole administration was and he wasn t going to come to the white house festival of the arts, and somebody came, an accolade of robert loyle, i guess, and was circulating a petition during the during the party, and i don t think he got any signatures. that was the good thing. and there was the earth kit? she created her own stir. yes, and she was very late at arriving to the ladies lunch. the ladies had gathered, it was one of mrs. johnson s women doers luncheons. there were two things that she did that we never could get a good word for, women doers luncheons, anyway, that s what they were called, and beautification, stuff of that, i always wanted a new name. so ertha kitt was late, late, late. the ladies had had sherry an
guess, he wrote, probably, an op-ed piece in the new york times how terrible the johnsons were and how terrible the whole administration was and he wasn t going to come to the white house festival of the arts, and somebody came, an accolade of robert loyle, i guess, and was circulating a petition during the during the party, and i don t think he got any signatures. that was the good thing. and there was the earth kit? she created her own stir. yes, and she was very late at arriving to the ladies lunch. the ladies had gathered, it was one of mrs. johnson s women doers luncheons. there were two thing that she did that we never could get a good word for, women doers luncheons, anyway, that s what they were called, and beautification, stuff of that, i always wanted a new name. so ertha kitt was late, late, late. the ladies had had sherry and orange juice in the blue room, and we were getting ready to take her plate off the table. the luncheon was in the family dining roo
something he wrote something out of time, but then did he come actually, was he there? i don t think he did. so he was invited and then, i guess, he wrote, probably, an op-ed piece in the new york times how terrible the johnsons were and how terrible the whole administration was and he wasn t going to come to the white house festival of the arts, and somebody came, an accolade of robert loyle, i guess, and was circulating a petition during the during the party, and i don t think he got any signatures. that was the good thing. and there was the earth kit? she created her own stir. yes, and she was very late at arriving to the ladies lunch. the ladies had gathered, it was one of mrs. johnson s women doers luncheons. there were two thing that she did that we never could get a good word for, women doers luncheons, anyway, that s what they were called, and beautification, stuff of that, i always wanted a new name. so ertha kitt was late, late, late. the ladies had