 If it's all mixed up, because it's always in the middle. This is mic one, check one, two, one, two, mic one. This is mic two, mic two, check one, two, all right. Let's get these festivities started. We're on a tight timeline. My name is Bill Jeffries. I'm the senior associate dean for medical education here at the Larner College of Medicine. And in case you haven't noticed, this is match day. And this is the class of 2018. Your head is too big, according to the. They can't see us in Danbury. But first, we want to acknowledge our Abel and medically qualified bagpiper, that's Dr. Jim Wallace. He's a radiation oncologist when he's not piping. And a funny story about Jim. We used to do this coming in from the outside, but there was a lot of wind gusts. And with his kilt, there was complaints from the College of Nursing over there. So thank you, Jim. We also want to acknowledge that in addition to the people here, we have a lot of folks who are watching online through our live stream. And we have our affiliates in Danbury, Norwalk, Queensbury, Bangor, Waterville, Central Vermont Medical Center, Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital, and beyond. So welcome to all those folks. And here to see the same drama that we're going to go. I'm an avid picture. I'm not really a photographer, but I had to take a lot of pictures. And so I want to get one shot of this class. And you can't move, because it's going to be a panorama. If you move, then your face will get cut up. But we're going to take a picture of this class. How about this? Strike your pose now. Here it comes. Here it is. And then there's the one selfie for me. So I have several prepared remarks. No, never mind. I don't really have that. Nobody cares what I have to say, because we're here to match. But there are people who have important things to say. And one is somebody who's given his heart and soul to this institution. And it is my, I'm sad to say, it's my outgoing boss, your dean, Dr. Rick Moran. Well, thank you all. And I'm going to get Bill to do a sweep of the whole upstairs too with his panorama shot. So once again, last night, you packed the biggest space we have in the university for a dinner. And today, you've completely packed this place. It's amazing to sit here and look around at the complete monopoly of places and people that are here today. And it's a tribute to the excitement that this day makes in our University of Montecology Medicine calendar. So thanks, Bill. And welcome to all of you, especially the people this is all about today, the members of the class of 2018. I'd like to offer a special welcome to Provost David Rizowski, who is here with us. David is not, this is not his first attendance at Match Day. He's enjoyed the excitement before. And so he's back again. And we hope to have him come for at least for as long as his tenure here at the University of Vermont is. Thank you. I'm turning my head. That's why it's messed up. So class of 2018, I'd also like to welcome Eileen Whalen. Eileen, where is Eileen? Over here in the corner. Eileen is the president and chief operating officer of the University of Vermont Medical Center. And this is her first Match Day. So she's just taking out. That's why she got crushed over in the corner here. So class of 2018, you'll face a lot of revelations in your career in medicine. Though this certainly may be the most public of those sorts of events. And this is a big moment for you and a big moment for all of us here at the college who've helped to prepare you in various ways for this day. It's especially meaningful to me this year as it's my last match day as dean. So I share with you the curiosity about what the future may bring in a more personal way than I've ever had done before at this event. So and along with all of you, for all of you, we share your love of medicine and your dedication to the profession that you're going to be practicing in for the rest of your career. And we wish you the best in this next big step that starts in just a few minutes. So with that, I'd like to invite Provost Brasowski to come to this podium to share his thoughts. Thanks, Rick. It is really an honor for me to stand here with you all today and with your families today. This is one of my favorite events at the university. It's right up there with our May commencement and with convocation, of course, the white coat ceremony. And this really starts a whole season of ceremonies for us at the university. So this holds a very special meaning to me as well. Match day nationally, and of course, here at the University of Vermont, is one of the most inspiring and exciting events in all of academia. We join colleges of medicine around the country today at the anointed hour in opening envelopes and in sharing news and in celebrating and in looking ahead to your residencies and your futures. And it's a future that I know you all have worked very hard to create here at this great university and in this great Larner College of Medicine. And your faculty and your staff and your fellow students walked alongside you from the moment that you started your medical education at Vermont. And today, they're all joining you in the excitement and in the celebration. You know that education and service are cornerstones of our mission at the University of Vermont. And each of you is a testament to the strength of our programming. Throughout your time at the University of Vermont, you've dedicated yourselves to your studies and you've given of yourselves individually and as a class to our university community, to our local communities, and for many of you to international communities. This giving of your time and your energy and your knowledge and care is a hallmark, both of the University of Vermont and of course the medical profession. So in that way, you all are twice blessed. So I wanna thank you for your contributions. I know you'll continue to give and to give back as your medical careers commenced. And I promise that we at the University of Vermont and I as provost of this university, we will follow your progress with great pride, with great anticipation and with great admiration. We are enormously proud of you. And I'm confident that everyone in the mighty class of the Lerner College of Medicine 2018 will go on to do really great things and really important things. You'll achieve scientific and medical breakthrough. You'll save lives. You'll heal. You'll protect and you'll improve the quality of life for so many people. And in doing that, you're going to inspire the next generation of scientists and doctors. So wherever your match takes you, know that you will always be part of the University of Vermont and that the University of Vermont I hope will always be a part of you. You have my very best wishes and congratulations. Hello. Walking into meta 200 in the fall of 2016, I was greeted by a sea of smiling faces. Any previously noted fear replaced with a hint of confidence at having successfully navigated the first year of medical school. I quickly came to appreciate your dedication to learning and stood by and watched as you kept your head down and soldiered through the relentless pace of new information in the weeks that followed. As the biggest obstacle to date, step one came and went, you developed a new focus on the difficult task of learning clinical medicine. And for the first time perhaps, appreciated that this was an even bigger challenge than anything you would face in the classroom. But you were ready to rise to the occasion and rise you did with a new willingness to accept ambiguity and appreciate that there was more than one right answer or best path forward. Lessons that served you well as you planned your future career in medicine, charged with the difficult task, a matching skill with passion. And as you stand here today, you are ready to learn of your next adventure. But before you do, I'd like to share a secret. Well, the faculty here at the UVM Larner College of Medicine have taught you many things. You perhaps have taught us more. Through your actions, we have learned that you will one day master EKGs, we all just need to have a little faith. That life is a journey, not a destination, and having the courage and resilience to face change makes all of us unstoppable. And that coupling enthusiasm and compassion with raw talent really can change the world, one colleague and one patient at a time. And it is perhaps this lesson learned from all of you that makes me proudest to be part of this community and has given me a new kind of hope for the future of medicine. As Suzanne Colvin recently wrote in a perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine, sometimes you will try hard and study hard, but your patient will get sick and die anyway. What will make each of you a great physician is not your ability to cure people, but rather your desire to continue to try. And now your class president, Stephanie Alexis Brooks. With a sense of gratitude, there's so many people that we as a class are indebted to. I could go on and on. I keep joking that this is my Oscar speech. I have so many people to thank. But there's a few that I wanted to highlight, and I think that all of us wanna thank. And the first person is so personally and deeply invested in us, each and every one of us. And I know that she, for a fact, has met with every single person that's matching today. She's invested not only in helping us achieve our dreams, but also in keeping us from losing ourselves along the way. Of course, I'm talking about Dr. Sayla, who will be coming in just a moment with the envelopes. Don't get nervous. I know, right? I know. She is the one person, I would say, for me at least, who believed in me even when I didn't believe in myself. She poured her heart and her soul into helping us get here today, and we wouldn't have residency spots without her. So thank you, Dr. Sayla, wherever you are. The second person goes hand in hand with this, but I know that each of us would love to thank Emma. She put up with it. She held our hand through this entire process, even when we were all in a tizzy. And I know personally her calm, supportive demeanor just gave me so much peace in an otherwise really stressful season. And two people I also wanna recognize are Dean Moran and Dr. Paula Tracy, who were the last class they're gonna celebrate match day with, at least in their current leadership not forever, but in their current capacity. So thank you for talking to them. Dean Moran and Dr. Tracy, as we all know, have been incredibly committed to the school and made this an amazing place to be a student. So thank you both for that. People I wanna thank most is all of you. There's no other group of kind, courageous, quirky individuals that I would have wanted to go through medical school with. Now I can't see what I wrote. You guys are amazing. I can't read what I wrote anymore. This journey not just bearable, so thank you all so much for that. Every start, I have a quick story. This has been pre-approved by my dad and my mom and dad are watching in California. Love you guys. So some of you know my dad's a surgeon and when he matched, he matched at his second to last choice. I know that sounds like you're a literal worst nightmare right now. But stay with me. Two things happened because of where my dad matched. The first was that he met my mom. So I'm grateful for that. He became a surgeon. He became the exact same thing that he would have become had he matched at his first choice or his last. And he would be the first person to tell you that every single day, perhaps to a fault. No, I'm just kidding dad. He absolutely loves what he does. So today, when you open the envelope, if you match it your first choice or your last or somewhere in between, know that we all have the matchless privilege of being able to be physicians. We get the chance to walk with patients through some of the most difficult and intimate parts of their life. And we also have the joy of bringing them hope, which is amazing. And that's what we did all this hard work for, I think. Okay, so with that, we're gonna go ahead and get started. Thanks who started this journey with us are gonna call names like three to four at a time. So when your name is called, walk to the left side of the stage and pick up your envelope from them. If you wanna share your news at the podium, just wait in line. You guys know all this, but I'll just read this. And then announce where you match. When you get on stage, put your dollar, the jar for the dollars is gonna be right here. Say your specialty. And then also read the correct place. I think at the top of everyone's thing, it says University of Vermont. So just like take a second and like read the whole thing. Don't, it's fine. Welcome to like come back on stage later and get in line or just whatever you wanna do. But once you make the announcement, make sure to shake the hands of our leaders and then also give Dr. Muah high five. Change unexpectedly. Here, Mr. Filch has asked me to remind you that the construction areas are out of bounds to everyone who does not wish to die a horrible death. Now, the time has come to place the students into their specialty. Minerva, please bring the sporting hat and you will be sorted into your specialty. Let me see who is first. Osha Bitterman, Osha Belong. So comforting, so compassionate. I feel strangely compelled to tell him my embarrassing secrets. That's a powerful spell. Psychiatry, another nice one. So warm, so ridiculously friendly. Good with everyone, even children and babies. Long-term relationships, I can't imagine. Oh, very well, family medicine. Let's see, this one seems calm under pressure. Reliable, strangely so horrific. I could take a nap right now. Anesthesia, difficult. Hard to pin down exactly. Warm and friendly. Psychiatry? No, but a scientific mind too. Fine scholar, good leader. Neurosurgery, yes, I think neurosurgery. I hear the lifestyle is very relaxed. No, you seem hesitant. All right, a little bit of everything then. Medicine. So many. Oh, okay, I'm supposed to put a dollar in here right now. So I'm Tim Henderson, I'm going into emergency medicine and I am couples matching with my girlfriend Paige who goes to UC Davis, is going to OB-GYN. So she's live from Sacramento right now. All right, and these are nice. We are going to advocate healthcare, Chicago. Going into Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. I just found out what I'm going into. I'm going to radiology. Daughter Cecilia. I'm matching into family medicine. I just wanted to say hi to my parents who are here and also Carrie, Kelly and Rosie who are watching. So I'm matching into family medicine and we're going to the University of Vermont. Here. Myles, Grunwald, Lindsey Eastman, Tin Nguyen. Hey guys, I'm Sorob. I just want to say congratulations to everyone. We did it. And I'm so very proud to share this moment with you guys. Quick shout out to my mom and dad. I love you guys so much. I applied general surgery and I'm going to, oh, my friends and family are gonna be very happy. I'm coming home. This is my first time at the Memorial Hospital Center and joys and babes. Senius, I matched in neurosurgery at West Virginia University. Can I guys speak another mic? University of Vermont, internal medicine. Eastman, I'm going into OBGYN. I'm Myles Grunwald. I'm going into general surgery. I'd like to thank my family, particularly my dad up there. Say hello to all my family and friends who are here and also those who are watching from away. I love you all. We are going to Rush University Medical Center. And I'm going to the University of Chicago. My name is Tin, I'm going to Anesthesia. UT Southwestern. Julia Shatton. My name is Julia. Say hello to my mom and Betsy and Amy who are live streaming. Oh, and I'm going to be an ophthalmologist. And I am going to be doing my training in ophthalmology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center for my preliminaries in medicine. Ethan Harlow, Stephanie Brooks, David Leon, and Nick Kovacs. Hi, I'm Tim Flanagan. I'm going into anesthesiology. This is my wife, Jenna, and that's baby Fiona. And we are going back to Boston. We're going to the Leahy Clinic in Burlington, Massachusetts. Family over there, a family behind me. So let's do this. Pediatrics. I'm matching into radiology, also a prelim. Got St. Vincent's for prelim and Hartford Hospital for radiology. My name is David Leon. As you may know, I did not apply into only one specialty. And so where I'm going to be going next year, I opened it up before offstage, so I cheated. But I'm going to John Hopkins University in Combined Emergency Medicine and Aesthesiology. Christina Liu. Mary Kate Lopicolo, and Talia Kostick. I'm Nick Kovacs. This is my wife, Kristin, and our son, Henry, two weeks old. We're going into emergency medicine. Going to a curling clinic in Virginia. I'm Christine. I'm going into radiology. Matching either into peach genetics or general pee. My grandmother's streaming on her iPad. Going into family medicine. Kelsey Sullivan. And this is my husband, Andrew. And this is our son, Avery. University of Vermont Medical Center Pediatrics. Medicine, this is my boyfriend, Benji. We are going. Oh, I'm shaking so hard. Shout out to my parents, my brother, sisters-in-law, and Angelina, of course. I'm going into general surgery. UCSF Fresno. Gayathri Prabhakar, Guilana Finoganov, Derek Luzan, and Soraga Reddy. Thank you guys so much. I love you. So I just want to take a second. I'm shaking so much that it's not going to come out well. I matched into neurology at Brown. Well, and I'm Gayathri. I am going into pediatrics. This is my brother and sister who found a way to be matching, but they're younger than me. My parents are up there. Thank you so much. Thanks to everyone who's watching here, abroad, and everywhere around. So I'm going into pediatrics. I can't breathe. I'm going into Soraga. I'm going into family medicine. Hello to all my friends and family watching on the live stream. I love you all. I'm going to Kaiser Permanente in Seattle. Andre Robinson. Sherilyn de Stefano. Finagena. I'm going into internal medicine at Yale New Haven, Waterbury. I'm Autumn, and I'm going into general surgery at the University of Vermont. My name is Sherilyn de Stefano. Couples matching into family medicine with my boyfriend, Aaron, who is on FaceTime here. He's in Tel Aviv, Israel right now, and I will be opening both of our letters. So we'll both be finding out at the same time where we're going to be. But I say thank you to my family who is watching and my sister, and also his family who's watching the live stream right now. Thank you all. So we will be going to the University of Utah. My family medicine. I so appreciate the attention to detail. And I'll be going to Maine Medical Center and put it in name. I'm Andre Robinson. This is my husband, Sardar. I'm matched in obstetrics and gynecology. I'm outside. My name's Derek Luzum. I'm going into psychiatry. This is my wife, Ashlyn, and our son, Thomas. To UMass Med School. What's that? Dr. Cruden. Going into internal medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Hi, I'm Josh Pothan. Shout out to our friends and family right now. And I also, as an MD-PhD, I just wanted to say a quick thank you to the Larner College of Medicine for letting me do a PhD that combined medicine and computational simulation. That's the kind of board thinking we do at the University of Vermont. Going to, the adventure continues in Florida, Ocala, Florida, UCF. Rachel Carlson. Allison Mercier. Nicole Mendelsen. Dana Robado and Weiwei Shen. And I'm going to anesthesiology. Thank you to my family that's here today and watching a- I'm Allison Mercier. I'm going into family medicine. And shout out to all those in Denver watching. Thank you. I love you. This too, too, is for you. And Michael O'Cour. I'm going to the University of Vermont Medical Center. The University of Vermont. I'm going into internal medicine. I'm Anton. I'm going into internal medicine, too. And I'll be heading to Hofstra. And I'm going to Virginia Mason Medical Center in Washington, Seattle. So I know everyone's dying to know where I match, but more importantly, I know you're dying to know who I'm wearing. This is my amazing husband, Ian. Who many of you know. Hi to all my friends and family back out west. I am going into family medicine. And I matched at UCLA. Kish and Patel. Into internal medicine. Hi to mom and dad and Ted. Livestreaming, caselift, thanks for being here. Hi, mom. My name's Kish and Patel. I'm going into family medicine. I just want to say how proud I am and happy I am to have been a part of this medical community here. Really quick, my mom's watching on Livestream. Mom, I love you. Thank you so much. I would not be without all your sacrifices. Christina is also watching my partner in Morocco. You're my rock and my heart and I love you so much. We'll find out where we're going very soon. I'm going to St. Mary's Medical Center in Grand Junction, Colorado. Husband John, I just want to say thanks to my parents who are watching from Arizona. Good luck to my dad who's having a colonoscopy today. Hope you studied. Thank you so much to my great husband, John, for all the foot rubs after the long OR days. So I'm going into urology and we're going back home to Mayo Clinic in Arizona. I'm Ashley Deeb. I'm going into general surgery. This is my boyfriend, Jason. I want to say thank you to my family who's up there, my friends, everyone who's been there for me. And I am going to St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in Massachusetts. Susanna Quicker, Adam Petchers, Nate Sugiyama and Taylor Wolfgang. I just want to say thank you so much to my family and friends especially. My husband's folks and his sister, my aunts and uncles and cousins, Jill and Louise, Jeff and Sylvia and Sophie, my grandparents, Boo Boo who's watching and of course my Vermont mother, Nacandra. So much. Oh, and of course the clinical faculty. Thank you so much. Okay. And I'm going to, I'm going to Japan, You've been there summer. Moshe Biderman, Saraya Thera and Kazra. Daniel Sugiyama, I'm going into anesthesiology and we just want to thank all of our family and our friends and everyone watching. Thank you very much. And we are going to Beth Israel Deacon as for anesthesiology, Huffs for medicine. Kazra. Tim Flanagan, half dollars, you're welcome. It's great to have everyone in one room. My name is Moshe Biderman. I'm going to Psychiatry. Thanks everybody online who's watching. Love you. Oh, geez. Northwestern, Chicago. So my name is Taylor Summer and I don't think I've been this nervous since my first brain surgery, which is totally fine because I'm going to go into neurosurgery. At UC San Diego. I'm Saraya. I just want to say it's so beautiful to see how many people came out to support my class, my wonderful class. I love you all. I want to say that my friends here became my family and I love you. I also want to say hi to my family who's watching from live stream back home. Thank you so much. And also congratulations to my twin sister who matched into family medicine today. Also thank you to UVM and the UVM Board of Trustees to help me become who I am. Thank you. I'm going into general surgery and I'm going to, I'm going to George Washington University. I'm coming home. I'm going into general surgery. I'm Susanna Cricker. I'm going into family medicine. We are going to Albany Medical Center. I'm taking Libby Day, Alex Miller and a pour of a Triveti. I'm going into internal medicine, Brown University. Brittany, I'm going into general surgery. This is my boyfriend Adam. Thanks guys. Going into general surgery, I want to thank everyone. I want to thank my parents who are here, my sister who's like 37 weeks pregnant, who couldn't be here today and all my friends and family, my clinical partner Julia. And I'm really excited to find out where I'm going to surgery. I'm going to... Rachel! Richard Mendez, Teresa Flanagan, Peter Evans and Christina Cahill. I'm going into urology, just like Kathleen, we did it for the glamor. So I already knew where I was going but this letter luckily does confirm it. Just wanted to open it to be sure. So I'll be headed to Albany. Thank you to my family and friends for over the years for your support. And my family's here, shout out to you, my sister watching. And I applied into dermatology and I matched at UMass. And Patrick, not going to get that. Hey, my name's Richard Mendez. I'm going into general surgery and I'll be training at the University of Vermont Medical Center. I know you guys have already seen me. We're here to read for our friend, Alex Miller. We're trying to connect with her on FaceTime now. She couldn't be here because she's an overachiever and she's accepting some big award for her global health work in New York. Going to University of Michigan Hospital Ann Arbor. And emergency medicine. Emergency. Hi, everyone. I'm Eric Day and I'm matching to internal medicine and I don't know which one is who. We're going to UCSF Fresno. Lisa Wang, Eric Schmidt, Jennifer Tufts, and Elaine Wang. My name's Pat Trelanzo. I'm visiting from the Penn State College of Medicine. Thank you for having me here. I'm going into radiology. I'm going to be in the West Chester, West Chester Medical Center. Thank you very much. Hi, so I'm Peter Evans and I'm going into pediatrics. Going into internal medicine. Just briefly, thanks of course to our family, both original and adoptees and to all our classmates. I matched at the University of Pennsylvania. And I matched at Childress Hospital Philadelphia. I'm Steven Maurer and I'm going into internal medicine. I'm Melissa Rafferty. I'm doing anesthesiology. And we would really love to thank all of our friends and family, especially my mom and stepdad who are right there for all of your support and help we couldn't have done it without you guys. Well, I'm going to Michigan. And I'm also going to University of Michigan. Stephon Wheat, Curtis, William, Rebecca Wayland and Paul Barrisel. I'm going to my dad for all the work that they put into me. I could not have done this without you guys. And I matched into Kaiser Permanente Santa Clara. Hello everybody, my name is Eric Schmidt. I'm going into internal medicine. I just want to thank every single person in this room for being here and being meaningful to at least one person here. I love every single person watching and everyone in the live studio audience. All right. And I matched at Oregon Health and Science University. I'm going into emergency medicine. It's from my wonderful girlfriend Amy. Emergency medicine, Stephon Wheat. I'm going to University of Arizona, Tucson. Andrew Sheridan, Tria Nguyen and Daniel Trigg. Hi kids. I'm going to miss you guys. Where is Miss Claudia? All right. If you look up there, there actually is a Miss Claudia. I haven't been lying for the last four years. Anyway, it's been 32 years since she hitched her wagon to this little train wreck of mine. It's been 12 moves, seven states, three countries, two continents and we're finally home. Internal medicine University of Vermont. Andrea Blood, Theo Sisu, Liam Donnelly and Sammy Ramadan. Hi, my name is Paul Beharacell. I'm going into family medicine. Thank you to my mom who made the long drive up this morning and my friends and family looking in on live stream. I'm going to family medicine at Penn State. I'm going to Stanford. My name is Trieu. I just want to say thanks to my mom who's currently in Vietnam. Merci maman. I want to say thanks to my brother and my dad. Merci papa. Merci beyond. I'm going to internal medicine research pathway at Scripps Clinic Green Hospital. I'm Daniel Trigg. I'm going into pediatrics. I just want to thank my parents Phyllis and Wayne, Ashley and Maple. And I'm going to main medical center. I'm going into family medicine. I opened up off stage. This is my wife Janine and my baby Luca. I'll be at the University of Vermont Medical Center for family medicine. Ian Grant, Shannon Brady, Lauren Hagerty, and Maggie Graham. I'm going into pediatrics. This is my wonderful husband Graham, University of Vermont Medical Center. I'm Donnelly. I'm going into pathology. And I just wanted to say hi to my parents who are watching in Florida. This is my fiance, Jess. And I am going to the University of Vermont Medical Center. My name is Theo Sisu. And this is my fiance, Rachel. And I applied into urology. So I'm joining the rest of the stream team, Laura and Kathleen. We found out two months ago where we're going so it's not too emotional for us. And we're going to VCU, Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. So we're going back home. Hi, Mom. Hi, Sammy. I'm Sammy Ramadan. This is my partner, Alexandra. Hopefully my grandmother has power in Lebanon so she can watch this. I matched in surgery in the military and we're going to UC Davis. Colby Curl, Adrian Jarvis, Alicia Amada, and Michael Ialeggio. She'll shout out to Litview Society. Thank you so much for helping going into internal medicine. I'd like to thank all of my friends and my family who decided to live stream so that strangers don't know where I'm moving before they do. And I'm going to the University of San Diego. Hi, guys. I'm Ian. This is my girlfriend, Katie. Thank you to my family, my parents, my younger brothers, and my grandparents. I'm going to be doing anesthesia at Brigham and Women's Hospital. My name's Shannon Brady and this is my husband, Erin. I would just like to thank my parents for all their support over the years and congrats to my dad on retiring. So I'm going into pediatrics and we're going to Utah. My name is Grace Adamson. I'm going into family medicine. This is my wonderful husband, Matt, and my son, River, who've been through so much. They've put up with so much, including me switching careers and then switching my rank list at the last second. I'm too old for being Dartmouth. Family medicine. And this is Miranda and my husband, Seth. And I'm going into family medicine here at UVM. My wife, Kayla. This is Russell. And our daughter, Ellie. And we're going into pediatrics at Dartmouth-Hitchcock. I'm Alicia Imada. I'm going into orthopedic surgery at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine. Hey there. I'm Michael. I'm going into family medicine. A bit of a surprise. I'm going to University of Rochester, New York. This is my sister Vanessa. I also have my four other sisters and family here. But I want to say hi to my mom and dad in Indiana. I'm going into radiology. And I am going to, I'm going to Indiana for my transition year and then University of Vermont for my radiology. That concludes, yeah. So she gets all of 2018 matches. I'd like to just invite everybody to the given courtyard for cupcakes and also for all students who match to pin where they're going to be located for their residency. So congratulations, everybody. I'm so proud of you.