 Just recently our students had the opportunity to interact in a pretty intimate small group setting with Jeffrey Emel, the chairman of General Electric. In addition to that, Mike Meal, the CEO of GE Capital, came to the session and in that small group they were able to ask questions that were on their mind about leadership, about MBA education and about the business world that they will walk into in the future. Your destiny is going to include an incredible perspective of globalization. General Electric is a really fabulous company with great leaders that develops super managers that over the years has had consistently great performance. I think that one of the things that they get to really learn is to get some insight into how a senior business leader views managing his company, views managing people, views the role of his business in society. There will be a billion people that join the middle class in the next decade, a billion people. We learn a lot in the classroom, work through case studies every day, but to have a chance to speak to Fortune 100 CEOs and actually interact with them, ask them questions, is a good chance to get real life learning to complement what we have in the classroom. I think that the MBA education at the Fisher College of Business is a sterling education, but to be able to pile on top of that interaction with these high ranking CEOs really gives you a feel for what's happening in the corporate world. We can learn about case studies, we can learn about what's happened historically, but to hear what's cutting edge and what's going on in the world is one of the best learning experiences we can possibly have.