Thank you.
I'll continue with you, Dr. Smith. Thank you for the invitation to tour TRIUMF. I had the wonderful opportunity many years ago to tour TRIUMF when it was still pretty young—and I was obviously a lot younger too. It would be interesting to see how TRIUMF has changed. I also had the random luck to be put in a cabin on a train across Canada with one of the scientists from TRIUMF who worked on the CERN particle detector team in the Higgs particle project. Don't test me on how all of that works, but it was all very interesting.
All of this is to say that it was very exciting to be working at UBC, as I was back in the late seventies and early eighties, when TRIUMF was just starting. It was very much a point of pride there. At that time, I think three universities had teamed up—hence the name—and it was a really big example of co-operation in big science.
How does that work nowadays between TRIUMF and Canadian universities, or universities from wherever, who actually have a say in and are part of that team that runs TRIUMF?