 I can say a few things, including his own impressions. There are three things I'd like to do very quickly. The first one is, of course you can all add your own judgment, but personally I believe this has been the most interesting science review week that I've attended in the last seven years. So I feel very, very happy about this, the whole range of things that have been presented and the quality of the research and the new ideas and the results that are being produced seemingly much faster than before. That's just all extremely good and we reassure you. The second thing before I could get this, which I sometimes do, is I need to of course link all of it, although mostly ladies are few men. Do you work in the background to make this thing work? So the barricade or so on, which is really great in terms of a lot. There's one other little thing I want to do. I'll give a little personal price to somebody under who can come forward. Now the young scientist program has been a lot of work and of course as she has pointed out, there's been a lot of people involved with these, but there's always one person who needs to bring it together. And I know that she spent a lot of time on this. In doing everything, how to pay a very transparent amount of money, divide the budget to support the young scientist program, I think she's faced a few interesting new challenges in this process. But I just want to thank you for all of this and you can now make a wise choice. You can either eat this yourself, or share it with your daughter, or share it with your committee. Thanks for your great work. Please find a thank you. I would like to say expressing this really great pleasure with how this week has gone and the incredible depth and breadth that was covered that reflects the breadth, but not completely of the work that's going on here, the depth is as well. I'm always impressed with Lachan. He starts out and says there's three points he wants to make in the action, and makes all three. I definitely lose count. At the dinner of the year 1990, he said he had four rules. I was sitting there like, God, how can you make this four rules? But at any rate, there's no question that the great work of the organization, the energy that we see in the work that's going on here right now, young scientists, old scientists, in many ways reflects that energy that Lachan brings to the job. As you all know, Lachan's leaving sometime early next year. I set out a memo announcing his replacement to the Matthew Morrell, and we're excited about Matthew's joining, but there's no question in learning this Lachan very much. He has put his heart and soul and plenty of time to say goodbye, but this is, I think, the best time to just think a little bit about how much Lachan has brought to the Institute. The young scientists, I think, he has taken special attention to your needs, making sure that we bring you here, that we have an institution that's welcoming for you, that will help you grow, that you have not just one mentor, that we have several mentors. And so I think we should all at least put our hands together and thank Lachan for this. Whether it's a cartoon set, they could never get people to integrate because the silos, people like to stay in silos, so they can then blame it on anybody else. Well, that's one way to look at it. Now, another way to look at it is to design a system of work so that you have focus and you can address critical issues and you are truly accountable for what happens. If you're in a silo, you cannot point to anybody else. So I think that let's be very clear about that. And I think let's also be clear that when we think about the Global Rights Science Partnership, if it's a silo, it's a silo as big as the world and it's a silo as large as the world's largest food crop. That's a hell of a silo. It offers great opportunity. It offers great challenges. And I think what we see, what we have seen this week, clearly of the choice, mention of multifaceted needs of the world's most important food crop. Rather than 15 different programs, that was the choice. And I think as we have seen risk grow and as we see the depth and richness of the research that is being conducted, as we see how that results of that result we're actually reaching into the farmers field. We saw many, many presentations and it ranged from the most fundamental discovery research all the way to what's happening in one poor farmer's field, be it in Eastern Africa, be it in South Asia, be it in Southeast Asia. And that was truly impressive. If that's a silo, I'll take it too. So I think you all need to be very proud of yourselves of what's going on, the work you're doing, the energy you've brought to the endeavor. And I think to have, even as exciting as it is to have survived an entire week and at the end of the weekend's phase we're all getting a little tired. But just for me personally, I want to just thank you all for the tremendous commitment you have to the vision of the Institute, which is of course my mission, as Bruce reminded us this morning, and the energy you bring to it and the commitment you bring to it. It's just so much fun to be working with you all and it's such a great pleasure to have the opportunity to get the last word. The last word is, have a great weekend. Thanks a lot.