Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
And thank you very much to both of you for appearing before us. Just so the committee knows, I had the opportunity to meet Mr. Eaton in Botswana and to see the WUSC program that's going on there.
I want to commend you for the work you're doing. My son-in-law is from Kumasi and he's finishing his Ph.D. in electrical engineering. He has a physics background. You may want to have a chat with him at some point—a brilliant young man.
My observation is that it's opportunity for education that is going to change Africa. And putting these kinds of things in place to ensure that they have the opportunity for education is going to move those countries forward.
When I was in Ghana I actually had the opportunity to meet a young man who is a hydrologist. Ghana is undertaking to map all of their underwater resources because they know there is going to be great potential there, and I'm sure WUSC has some interest in seeing that happen.