Well, it was interesting, and the Angel Memorial, I grew up, my last six years out in farm country in Maricopa where I went to school, had 100 people in the whole entire city, so I was immersed right in the middle of Boston after driving across country, and at that time there was a state board that you had to take to practice what you do, and for medicine, whether it’s veterinary or human medicine, and the state boards were the same in date in California and in Boston, of course I had to pass the state board in Boston to be able to go to fulfill my internship, and there was a classic story of, well they always flunk one Angel intern, because the veterinarians in that are doing the state board were all from Amherst, which was a college that had lost its accreditation from the AVMA, and so there was a rumor that they had an ax to grind. So we sat there and we got some advice to don’t tell anybody you’re going to Angel while you’re taking the test. And so we kind of just tried to make ourselves wallflowers. And the last day when they were giving us our practical, they called out our numbers, and so they came and said, “What’s your name, and where are you going to practice in Boston?” I said, “Uh-oh, we’ve had it.” And it was supposed to be all confidential, you’re just given a number and you write your number on it, and so that, but they had it figured out. But fortunately everybody in our class graduated. So here we walk in and they give you a uniform with a white jacket, white pants, and you had to get white shoes, and my last two years in vet school, we wore jeans and a T-shirt. I mean that was in … So it’s a little bit of a culture shock, and they actually want you to wear something around your neck called a tie when you were in the clinic, so …