 I think the greatest achievement was really developing that first marker lab. I think it's called the Genome Mapping Laboratory still. It's been modified and it's been enlarged and now it has a very central place in the reading program. But just thinking back to what it was to pioneer a program, I remember the very first look I had at what the space would be. There were no windows, it was just brick building and it was underneath was just a garage. And this building was offered, this space was offered to me. And the first thing I said was at Cornell I had to work in a brick building with no windows. I think the first thing we need to do at Erie is open a window so we can look out on this beautiful volcanic mountains in the background and see the rice paddies. And indeed we insisted on that. And I still walk into that laboratory and remember the decision to put in the windows and build that lab and design that lab and to see it functioning and working and booting out good science and good products today is probably the biggest reward. The other is I think the joy, the biggest joy is really the interaction with the Filipino staff and the people that I train and the many international scholars that came to my lab or that I've known through this collaboration for many years. Training people then enables you to sort of keep extending the sense of family because people go back to their countries or they continue to work in the international arena and having participated especially in those early days in an emerging program was really a source of a kind of family bonding that we still have today.