 The Burroughs Wellcome Fund's mission is to support biomedical research and education. We want everyone to have an appreciation or understanding of science. We're very committed to what I would call a pipeline and that would be young people who become scientists or doctors. One of the things that we've learned over the years is that although a single trip to a museum is great and it gets young people excited and a small percentage of them stay excited, it's very difficult to sustain. When you have a residential school like the North Carolina School of Science and Math, you have a lot of hours that you can have the young people doing things. They design, they build, they conduct experiments and they learn a lot by doing. We recently gave a gift that helps support a FAB lab and the young people can come in and make things. Many times they do that outside of the class curriculum but they want to make something to answer a question or learn more about it. One of the other things that I think is nice about the school is its geographic diversity. Students come from all over the state so you could probably fill the school ten times over with kids in the research triangle area whose mothers or fathers are MDs, PhDs, engineers, yet by having this greater geographic diverse touch all corners of North Carolina and hope is that at least some of the students and hopefully many of the students will stay in North Carolina or will come back to North Carolina after their education. So I think it's certainly a win for North Carolina to invest these sort of dollars. Every penny spent is probably, if someone did an economic analysis, you could probably argue is paid back 10, 20, 30, 50-fold.