Mr. Chairman, I am sure Mr. Wray, whose footsteps I have followed in, in not only this project, but in a whole lot of others, had excellent intentions. I have not changed very much in the way the department does business from the way that Mr. Wray had set the plans forward. In this instance, what killed us was being too far down the road at the change of the government to make a decision not to go, and bad forecasting as a result of the numbers that were given to us by the Spanish authorities, by the people who were operating the fair and by the Canadian authorities. As I said, the pulses through the Imax theatre, which we depended upon because they made the film three or four or five minutes longer, so they cut down the number of pulses and that cut down the number of people who were going through the pavilion.
Mr. Chairman, have we learned from it? We have learned enough to tell them when they asked us if we would go to Korea, to say no and I would recommend against any of these expositions in the future most vigorously, even to Mr. Wray. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I just want to say that I do not think Mr. Wray had any bad intentions, I think he was making a decision based on the numbers and information which was placed before him and I believe Mr. Wray was acting in good faith. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.