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So Dan, could you tell us a little bit about the role of American Councils in EURECA?
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American Councils is honored to be a part of the EURECA project and to have taken part
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in some of the early discussions of the ways in which American institutions
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and Russian institutions could cooperate long-term in the development of both
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tech transfer capacity and the strengthening – maybe even the mutual strengthening
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– of our innovation economies that are knowledge-based.
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And because Russian university culture is historically so strong,
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and American Councils has had a close relationship with Russian higher education
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for really, almost 40 years, it was sort of a natural interest that we had to in some ways
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raise the bar on the activities and the support of U.S.-Russia exchange that we do.
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And EURECA presents an opportunity to do just that, to set a goal, if we can,
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beyond projects that are focused on, let’s say, the development of books,
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development of tests, development of programs, to capacity building in a larger way
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that would be culturally informed. And at the same time draw on the knowledge
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and the resources that the U.S. could bring to that. So we saw an interesting opportunity
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here to build on what we already do reasonably well and to kind of raise that
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to the next level in terms of engaging in a serious, bi-national capacity building
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effort that really benefits both sides.
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So you mentioned that there were lots of other projects that the organization
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has been dealing with, and that they were a little bit different from this one,
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that this is a new type. So what can you bring in from the experiences in other projects into this?
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Sure. Well, on the one hand, I think that probably the single largest asset
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that American Councils has is its relationship with leading universities around
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the United States. Every university in some way is different,
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and universities make decisions about engagement, about working with partners
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– really as people do around the world – on the basis of trust. And I think
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there is that basis of trust between our university partners and American Councils.
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To know that if we recommend a project and invite a university partner to consider
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being a participant, that it, number one, will be solid, it will be well managed,
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and it will be academically significant. I think that that’s the value we add, in some sense,
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to the relationship, is our ability to facilitate communications
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and project development between the two sides. The other asset, I suppose,
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is just our know-how developed over the last 30 years in the area
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of bilateral project management. I can’t think of a better way to say that, but essentially,
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bilateral collaborative projects. Those are very different things than sort of
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just taking on a project ourselves and saying, “We will do it.” Right?
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In some sense, taking it on yourself and saying you’ll do it is a lot easier than
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having to work in collaboration. Let me give you an example of that.
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It’s one thing for me to write an essay. It’s another thing for me to write an essay
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with my colleague down the hall in the same corridor. Right away that same project
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is going to look, feel, and- it’ll unfold in a different way.
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Collaborating even with your neighbor or with your colleague in the next office is hard.
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It takes longer. But one would like to think that the outcome of that collaboration
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would be different, more interesting, more nuanced, would present
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a broader perspective than any single author would necessarily do.
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But it’s difficult to harmonize, it’s difficult to keep it in alignment, and it’s difficult
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sometimes to even agree what it is we’re doing, what the goal is and why we’re doing it.
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So I think there are two issues: the assets of American partner institutions,
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and the knowledge of how Russian-American collaboration can work.
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And our track record of successful collaboration over these many years
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in the area of higher education means that we have a lot of contacts in Russia,
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we know a lot of the models that will work and will be culturally acceptable
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in Russian context and also be rational and reasonable to an American. And I think
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that’s probably the set of assets that we bring to this. Our staff are multilingual,
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bicultural, tricultural; they have the same deep experience you see
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across the organization; we have a very talented group of people working
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in our Moscow, our Novosibirsk, St. Petersburg, Vladivostok offices.
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So we are on the ground in Russia. We build our experience based not on some
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recollection of how things used to be in Russia, but actually on how things are right now.
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Sure. And what are the most obvious synergies between the Russian
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and American universities that have been determined during those
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two days that the universities spent together?
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Well, you know, this is a really good question, because while we had done
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capacity mapping and needs analysis of the Russian and American partners,
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what was striking for all of us in the course of this conference was the extent to which
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the universities identified very similar areas as important. That’s the first thing,
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because you don’t begin with what necessarily is easy, you begin with what
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would be important to accomplish. And I think that agreement across the ocean
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and across institutional boundaries on what is likely to be a priority - for either side,
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when you ask them this question – I thought that was pretty interesting, and we saw
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that today in the multiple presentations that occurred of tentative project development
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– call it modular project development – where there was quite a bit of coincidence
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of arrangement of priorities. And one of the things that I guess jumped out at me
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was the importance of developing and strengthening relationships
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with industrial groups and business networks, and how you develop stakeholders
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that are not in the university. And that’s just not what universities used to think about,
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right? That maybe some of the most important stakeholders are not here,
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they’re somewhere else. And that’s an odd thing for any institution to think about.
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Secondly is the sort of sense that came out very strongly in a number of
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the presentations that this is ultimately a cultural and educational issue
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that developing a culture of entrepreneurship is not so much about setting up an office-
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-and hiring a so-and-so, a patent specialist and a license officer; but is also about
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creating a desire and an interest in entrepreneurship in the youngest cohort
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in the university, so, the entering freshmen, the sophomores, the juniors,
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these undergraduates – that they would want to be part of this, and that they may
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in some ways be closest of all to the kind of mainstream of thinking of where
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the innovation is going to resist. So the issue is, number one, don’t block it, right?
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And number two, capture that and nurture it. And I think the third thing that comes out,
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if I were- let’s see, if I put on my Russian hat, if I were a Russian attending this- it would be
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to disabuse myself of the notion of predestination. That is, not that some nations
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and some peoples are just naturally entrepreneurial and others are not, right?
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What you can see is that Americans invest heavily in the education
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of entrepreneurial instincts, entrepreneurial habits, right? In young people.
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Purdue University brings in eighth graders and sixth graders and eleventh graders,
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young kids from the local schools, and talks to them about Discovery Park,
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and about inventions and about innovation, that this is not something where you just
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sit back and wait for it to happen, or you order people to go out and do.
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Rather this is something that’s nurtured from the very earliest stages,
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and you keep doing it, and one of the things that struck me today was that a number
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of our partners said that there is very much a kind of, if you will, a pedagogical,
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youth-focused thing here, that entrepreneurship and tech transfer is not
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just about high end business, that it’s actually about kids.
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Yeah, that’s fantastic.
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Are there any other organizations that are participating in the project?
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There are some remarkable groups, and I may not be able to remember the exact name
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of every one of them here, but in addition to our five Russian university partners
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– two hubs and three resource centers, three in Moscow and two regional hubs
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– we also have the four American universities that competed in the competition
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to be designated – and they were four out of fourteen that competed.
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And there is also a group of associations that are very very much a part
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of the commercialization and entrepreneurship ecosystem in this country,
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and we see the Association of Tech Managers as a critical professional group
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that sets the standards and mines the professional qualifications and
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collects the data – those are things that professional associations only can do.
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In other words, there are certain things that universities do very well,
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and there are certain other things that professional associations do,
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and you need them both. And for that sense, we had them both in the project
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from the very beginning. This was not an afterthought.
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AUTM was actually one of the participating partners that came in on this project.
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But through our connections with the Association of American University Research
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Parks, with the incubator group, with the entrepreneur group,
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with the venture capitalists – you just spoke with one here earlier today
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– you see the way venture capital is distributed in this country in a
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rather remarkable, layered, and highly sophisticated way: where the angels reside,
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who deals with which level of risk, where the venture capitalists step in,
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where the market finally steps in, and who pays for that first stage
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when nobody’s around yet to do that. These are the kind of issues that
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American universities wrestle with a lot. Some of our institutions,
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like the University of Michigan, have actually set up their own venture funds
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so that they don’t have to rely only on external funders - on donors
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and venture capitalists - but can actually invest university money in a project
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they believe is particularly promising before they sell it or hand it off
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to the next level of financial supporter. So the universities get compensated, in other words
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– they get compensated for the ones that do well and they lose money
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on the ones that don’t. And that’s fair.
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Sure. Is there any other organization that assists American Councils
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in putting this idea together and making the project work in Russia?
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Oh, yes, right, we have a principal partner, and to the extent that American Councils
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works on the U.S. and the North American side, and in close connection
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with the Russian partners, the principal Russian partner is our colleagues
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at the New Eurasia Foundation in Moscow, and Andrey Kortunov,
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who is both a longtime friend and a valued colleague and associate.
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And I think that this is probably exactly as it should be, that the balance
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and the management of the Russian side of the EURECA project needs to be in Russia,
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and needs to be in the hands of a Russian partner. I don’t think I could imagine
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a project being done in any other way. We happen to have an office in Moscow,
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and our office is represented there in some of the management decisions,
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but fundamentally the Russian side is managed by the Russians
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and the American side is managed by the Americans.
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And I think that ultimately makes good sense both in terms of laws
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and legislation and accounting systems, and communication.
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And the funder is-?
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The funder, U.S.-Russia Foundation, is a new foundation that has really, in my view,
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come up with just a remarkable concept. In some sense it’s a concept
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that builds on a lot of the earlier developmental initiatives that have been
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undertaken by our governments – by the Russian government,
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particularly by our government, by the World Bank. You see in some sense
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in this level of investment and this sophisticated kind of project,
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you see a really good example of how a donor can learn from all that’s gone before,
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and take some of the best experience and take that on to the next level.
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And I think American Councils is very honored to be part of that process.
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And the vision of that foundation is very much a critical part of this, that willingness,
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as a private organization, to take a bit of a chance on a project that is very complicated,
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that is not guaranteed to produce any quick results, but is likely, over time, to change the landscape.
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Thank you so much for your comments. I appreciate it.