 failed miserably to do that this morning. I guess it's up to me. So as you heard, Eric said that Jane is going to Colorado to become a skiing grandmother. And for some other reason, I can't remember what it was. I couldn't resist showing this slide. Oops, wrong computer. This is Jane. This was taken several years ago, just after Jane's knee was demolished by a snowboarder. Was it here or in Colorado? In Utah. And it just so happened that Maggie Bartlett of our communications office was right there to take pictures of the event. So we have it recorded. She promised never to show it. She brought that. Well, she's not sure. As I said, Maggie happened to be right there. I was actually going to say, fortuitously, Maggie was there. But I don't know if Jane would agree with that. But there's actually a serious point that I want to make from this slide. Jane seems to be accident prone. And a few years later, she was in another accident where she broke her ankle. And that one happened to be just before the first meeting of the H3Africa Consortium. Jane is the first meeting in Addis Ababa. So Jane decided that with her broken ankle and against the advice of her doctors, her family, and everybody else, she decided she would go to Addis and not let an mere inability to walk stop her. So she managed to use mechanically, this device she was using to scoot around, to get herself to Addis. And the effect was that the attendees at the meeting, who had just been funded by NIH mostly for the first time, who were not used to NIH grants administrators and so forth, were incredibly impressed that she would make the effort in spite of not being able to walk. And found that it really showed her dedication to the project. And they were right. I think commitment and dedication have been the hallmark of Jane's career with NHGRI, OHGRI, NCHGR, whatever it was at the time. She has been involved in a number of projects, sequencing, this is from the Bermuda meeting, human microbiome projects from H3Africa stuff. I know it's a little hard to see her in there, so I hope that helps. I point this one out in particular, because if you look at the picture, all you can see is her hair, because she's blocked by Jim Watson's hat. Another thing, another contribution, major contribution, that Jane has made to NHGRI which I don't think is as well known, is that she's the person who started the program analyst program. And we've been very fortunate over the years to have, since 1992, actually, to have a group of really enthusiastic and talented young people who come to NHGRI right out of college have spent two years more or less here, so I'm a little less, I'm a little longer, and then they've gone on to medical school, or graduate school, or law school, or in a couple of cases have made NHGRI their career. Now, and I think this is one of Jane's big legacies to us. So I know, just to finish up, I know you all are wondering how someone so young as Jane is ready to retire. And the answer is that she was very young when she started at NHGRI, embarrassing enough? So I just want to thank Jane for everything she's done for NHGRI and give her one last chance to correct all the embarrassing things that have been said about her.