 Hi everybody! I am Tane Danger. It's Give to Gustavus Day. I've actually been doing Give to Gustavus Day for several years. The last two years I've been here, we've been inside the construction of the Nobel Hall of Science, which is now actually like complete. Look at this thing. It looks beautiful from here. And so I wanted to ask somebody about what this has all been like. I have the absolute best person to talk to. Not you, Gus! Gus is the best. I'm going to know you're great. But Gus, you're an expert in all these things. So I don't know, Gus, we should walk and talk. And can you tell me a little bit about Nobel here? It's been under construction for several years, right? Yeah. I know. Do you understand what? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah, it's been under construction for several years. Gus has done a lot of tours on campus and been accompanying that. And for the past several summers, it's been a construction zone, right? Yeah. Oh, wow. Okay, so yeah, what does it look like out here until relatively recently? A bunch of fences have been out here. A lot of big construction zone. Just something you'd expect. A lot of noise, dirt. Yeah, the dirt gets in your hair. I know. It's not good. But it's looking beautiful now. I mean, can you just tell me a little bit about what it means to have this finished and done now? It's so good. It's awesome. It's wonderful. The classrooms look really good. And it offers a good study space for students. Yeah, that's good. And there's this cool part here, if we can pan over. This is where the old Nobel meets the new Nobel. There's some amazing metaphor there, right? Of the past and the future. And I know you're like a poet, Gus. So if you can just give us your favorite analogy. Well, Gustavus celebrates the past and the present here on campus. So alumni come and visit all the time. And old Nobel is still here. But we're trying to make it better for the students who are here now. And so it's just kind of a bridge, almost literally. Bridge. That's beautiful. I love it. Gus, you're a poet. That's fabulous. Okay, I'm going to ask you something totally unrelated. But it's just like a selfish desire of mine, which is, people may or may not know, I was integral. I founded the improv comedy company because David's Linus. So, Gus, I don't know, do you know anything about Linus and how it's doing now? Absolutely. Gus is so excited about Linus. Gus loves Linus. It's his favorite thing to do on Friday or Saturday nights. Linus at Linus. And you like it because you're a lion. And it's Linus, you know? And they do short form improv, which is a bunch of games, and Gus loves to play. Gus, you are a poet and a scholar. And I'm so grateful for this time that we had together. I don't know, any last things that you want to just leave people with on this Give to Gustavus Day you wanted them to know? Thank you. Thank you for watching. Thank you for seeing our wonderful campus and give some money so we can make more new nobles in the future. Yeah, we got to make several new nobles. So thank you for making the pitch so directly. Thank you very much for being our fabulous interpreter. All right, it's Give to Gustavus Day. New Nobel. It's beautiful. Linus is really fun. All right, we'll see you soon. I don't know why I have this pumpkin, but I think that's funny.