True. Today, we are going to launch a major long-term trial of Apple's iPad. This little device has only been around since April, so it's a new player in the consumer product stage. But people are just beginning to get a sense of how this might work on the educational stage. What we intend to do with the Patterson school is take that device and integrate it into our program to truly see what it has to offer in the educational world, but in particular in a professional graduate educational world. We're ahead of the curve here, and it's great for us to be in that position. It's the kind of thing we want to do, it's the kind of thing we need to do. It is great to be here with you to celebrate that and to thank also Lee Todd for his leadership and understanding and grasping of these opportunities for the last ten years. This will be the first instance anywhere where an entire school, its faculty, its students, its staff, will be working on the same device and working on the same device for an entire degree cycle. Today's diplomacy is going to demand something different, and we're looking to do exactly that. We're looking at this trial, looking at Apple's iPad or other devices like that, in applications developed for it, to see how that can advance that skill set. How do we prepare tomorrow's diplomats with the skills that we see in factor needed today and definitely are needed tomorrow? We're looking for applications that will really help you learn things in a different way. One of our supporters has provided us with an application called teleprompters. It turns your iPad into a teleprompter, the same kind the president used for the state of the union address....