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If we wait for a dramatic event — a 21st-century version of Sputnik — it will be too late. There may be no attack, no moment of epiphany, no catastrophe that will suddenly demonstrate the threat. Rather there will be a slow withering, a gradual decline, a widening gap between a complacent America and countries with the drive, vision, and commitment to take our place.
Almost 50 years ago, the Soviet Union shocked Americans by launching Sputnik, the first Earth orbit satellite. The U.S. response was immediate and dramatic. Less than a year later, President Eisenhower signed into law the National Defense Education Act, a major part of the effort to restore America's scientific pre-eminence.

Today, our nation faces a more serious, if less visible, challenge. One of the pillars of American economic prosperity — our scientific and technological superiority — is beginning to atrophy even as other nations are developing their own human capital.

From TAPPING AMERICA’S POTENTIAL: The Education for Innovation Initiative. .Report of the Business Roundtable
Photos are from the NASA historical account of Sputnik. Click here to read the complete historical account.
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