 We have our DG and Sam, and they will be assisted by them. They'll have to pack our cinema, they'll pay for it. Well, no, I think what we do is, you and I cut the film. Everybody cut the film. We could snap up so that they'll remember. Wait. The camera is running around. You are seeing the occasion. Also I would like to acknowledge Boit from CPS, Jim from making this building ready for the open house. With that I would like to address the occasion here. With that I would also like to take a few words from the staff. Well, thank you Sam. It's a great pleasure to be here. And finally have the open house coincide with a well-opened and well-occupied facility. A BPS and the iPad came in some weekend and they could swap with a dummy that could get over in green hills. But anyway, I think it's really great that the social sciences division, which has been growing so much, finally has enough space in order to work with some degree of comfort. Before you were a bit shoehorned in over on the other side of the road. And with a friction and squeezing with the plant breeders, et cetera, we're making life awfully constrained. But one thing I have to say, and I'll talk to Sam about this, that one of the, I think, tremendous strengths of Erie has been a very strong commitment to social sciences. Right from the very beginning, Randy Barker, then Bob Hurt and John Flynn and many, many great Dr. Hayami. Many of the greats in agricultural economics spent many, many years here and helped, in fact, incorporate and mainstream the concept of social sciences into agricultural research for development. And in fact, the concept of research for development and how that's measured, how that's quantified, I think can be traced right back here to Erie. So there's a tremendous history and tradition of major accomplishments of social sciences and major influence of the social sciences at Erie. The secret, I think, to that has been the integration of social sciences with the other disciplines in the institute. And so while you were shoehorned in over across the road, it also made sure there was lots of physical contact. Maybe too much physical contact. But lots of physical contact among the different disciplines and social sciences was embedded in them. And so while I think it's great that there is this expansion of area that can allow social sciences to continue to grow, I think it's critically important that you work, make an extra effort to retain and even further the integration of the other disciplines. And I think that if you are able to achieve a certain degree of physical comfort in these new facilities, I trust that there will be even more incentive to integrate with other disciplines. So that's my message today is that congratulations on having a new home. Sorry, having a new house. But don't forget that a home includes not only the structure that you live in, but the people you interact with. And I trust that that interaction will be and your home will continue to be all across the research community of Erie. With that, congratulations. Welcome home and thank you. Thank you very much, Dr. Zugler. And you will love this on our shirts. And because you were mentioning about integrations, bridging the gaps in dry sciences, that's how SSB works. Before we ask everyone to do a tour of the different facilities that we have and also our respective offices, which you have to make sure to visit because we cleaned them in the last three hours. Jean Hemel here gave us a gift two days ago. He was trying to capture all what happened during this part of the renovation. And he came up with a two and a half minutes summary of the renovation that took place since last year. And I would like to share them to everyone on our screen.