 Hey, look at this. What? Oh, the article. That's great. And then congratulations. Doesn't it look good? It does. Do you hear what just happened to me? No. You remember when I presented that paper last May? Sure. That guy from tech was so interested in my topic, took me out to dinner, wanted me to send him more data, showed a real interest in my ingenuity, remember? What happened? He ran a couple of the experiments I described and published them before I could. Man, can you do anything? I don't know. I've been so busy with my advisor on another project, I haven't had time to work on my own research. This guy definitely understood what I had. Took it another step or two. I don't know what I'm going to do. But hey man, you did it. Yeah. It's great to see your name in print. Isn't Dr. Kim your advisor? I thought he'd be the second author. You give that to Professor Jones. Yeah, Dr. Kim asked me to. Oh. He needs Jones' support when they vote on his tenure this fall. And for that NSF grant he'd be walking on. But Jones was never even in the lab. She knows nothing about what you were doing. Oh yeah, I remember. She helped you a lot with the writing. She basically wrote the abstract. And helped me with about three rewrites on the article. She knows all about it. Well, good then. That's great. Yeah, it is. Oh, Professor Jones. Did you hear that hero was cited for plagiarism in that article that he wrote? Dr. Kim just got a letter from the journal this morning. Man, that's really awful, isn't it?