 In the technology world, in the mining and process metallurgy world, there are actually not all that many women. And these days people are really concerned about why that is, and I think there are many reasons. When I started working in the 1970s and 1980s in the workplace you would find lots of pin-up girls, naked women, pictures on the wall. I used to have a very rude drawing on my wall and the women who would join the workforce at that time would clearly have to put up with that. When I went to Sudbury in 1988, the manager of the smelter there, a man named Jose Blanco, a very, very good guy, had pushed all that out of the smelter so that all the calendars were gone. He was probably one of the exceptions to have done that by 1988. I don't think we really got civilized until the 1990s. Certainly not in maybe the late 80s as when the civilization started. At the same, interestingly enough, about 2005, one of the employees, a male who was working in a plant in Wales at the time, called me up and he was complaining about the naked women in the calendars in the workplace in Wales in 2005. So I don't know where Canada goes in the scheme of things but certainly in 2005 they were still there and I think I'm sure they have gone by now but it took a while to do that. I read an article recently that women are very big into engineering that is connected with sustainability, any sort of engineering that is connected to biological fields, I believe, in the education system than more women than men. In the mining it is about, I don't know, something like 20%, perhaps, maybe even less, I think it's less now, maybe 17% women in schools in mining. And it's a real shame because we're not taking advantage of that part of the world's expertise.