 I was in the Marine Corps for nine years, definitely coming out of the military, especially with having a family, was a scary transition. I didn't really know it was on the outside, as well as, you know, really that level of uncertainty is what makes it the scariest. I went to school before I joined the Marine Corps, and this was in 2003, and we were paying upwards of $30,000 a year. So I had come into the Marine Corps with a bit of debt on my shoulders, and it's an overwhelming feeling. The Yellow Ribbon Program is really the reason why I'm able to come to school at a private institution such as Drexel, while having a family and be able to afford it. The Yellow Ribbon Program is an agreement that the university participates in, or a university can participate in, with the Department of Veterans Affairs. So it's not something that's actually given to the student, it's something that the university participates in that is in conjunction with the post-911 GI Bill. So whereas the GI Bill is given to the actual student veteran, the university participates in the Yellow Ribbon Program, and together they combine to provide essentially, you know, full tuition for a student veteran. Every veteran who reaches out says, how do I participate in the Yellow Ribbon Program? How do I apply for those benefits? And it's nothing you apply to, at least for us. It's nothing you apply to. It's really you're just applying to the university, you're then providing your certificate of eligibility, which indicates that you're 100% eligible for your post-911 GI Bill, and after that, everything else just falls into place with the Yellow Ribbon Program.