Well -- In addition to the many good things people are being cajoled into saying about you, Marge, one thing that strikes me is how much yourlife has been at the center of making critical resources available to all of us. We've been onquite a technological journey--and it's one that you've helped us takeas a community. In the late sixties, I remember we had the image of the briefcase libraryand those precious few essential books we'd be able to pack in it and carry with us to our next assignment. Given my own considerable literary holdings, I always found that a terrifying image of radical detachment. In the seventies, you and Phil fomented a giant leap forward for us, based on that portable microfiche reader and library of cards you created for it. Now wehad scores if not hundreds of our key documents, able to be read (albeit dimly on those awful screens) with the twist of a dial on a mechanism that could, like the briefcase library, be carried in one hand. Iremember my envy of those who were able to pack one of those with them as we left Chicago en route to our global postings. But you didn't stop there. In the early eighties, personal computers burst upon the scene, and suddenly we found ourselves gifted with the Golden Pathways CD. You and your team produced an unbelievably rich compilation of what we'd done over the previous twenty years--and there it was, all on a slim and shiny disc, at our finger tips and the click of a mouse. Another quantum jump for all of us that you helped make happen. Again, here you are, nearly thirty years after that, still at the heart of our now vastly expanded archival collections in Chicago. You're the one likely to respondwhen any of us requests a copy of some item from those rows of file cabinets. Beyond that, you're at the center of a team using the latest web and Internet tools to make those materials widely availableto future generations. Talk about a sustained commitment! So, thanks, Marge, in the midst of these technological revolutions, for all the ways that you've drawn on them to contribute so much to our common life. You also give the lie to that adage about old dogs. Blessings, and a happy 85th -- Gordon and Roxana