 I bet everybody's really, really anxious to hear me speak now, aren't you? Whether it's standing for just about an hour, and boy, I got a lot to say. How many things that came to my mind? First thing that came to my mind was I feel very badly done by, because when they broke the ground for the Brady building over there, now Brady was sitting in a tractor, and he actually got to run the tractor, and all I got to do was put a pile of sand in a hole. And I do have to say that the sound of that sand flopping into that hole had a real sense of finality about it. I think it's not the kind of sound you necessarily always want to hear. On a slightly more serious note, I have to say that when I first came to Erie, I swore I was not going to build another building. And when I recounted that to Norm MacDonald, he looked at me kind of quizzically and said, well, Bob, you're not going to be building this building, meaning keep your hands away from me. But at any rate, it is, I think, a sign of the changing times that an infrastructure that may have been necessary, suitable, and adequate for a certain kind of Erie mission, as we look to the future and saw the challenges that were facing us and the opportunities that were being presented to us largely because of our own work, the infrastructure that we had, the facilities we had were simply not sufficient to allow us to do what needed to be done. So we have, we'll be putting in this infrastructure that will allow us to begin to tap into the genetic resources we're unraveling and allow us to address many of the challenges that earlier speakers had alluded to. And just one final word. When the government of Australia made the gift to us, I was asked if it would be possible to name it after a preeminent Australian scientist. And in a nanosecond, it made, it immediately came to mind was Lloyd Evans, the gentleman who really embodied so much of the spirit of the leading plant science research that Australia is known for. And generations of top Australian plant scientists worked along with Lloyd and we see that heritage today in Erie. So it made a lot of sense. So with that, I want to thank you all for joining us, Senator Villar and other distinguished guests, Chancellor Sanchez, et cetera. It's been a great, great pleasure to have you with us. And if you would like to invite you to join us for a bit of not quite a merry end of the cocktails in the New York Times. So thank you all for coming and have a very pleasant evening.