 Easy question. I should have started with this. Okay, first name, where I'm from, not my major. Yeah, okay. This is weird. Hi, I'm Nicole Crum, and I'm from Summerville, South Carolina. My name is Hunter Hill, and I'm from Aspen, Colorado. My name is Alexis Gajaheis, and I'm from South Burlington, Vermont. It's like starting a new journey for me, getting like far away from home. And my mom's a professor at UVM, so I grew up on campus in some way. The first time I came to Vermont was the day I visited the school. I noticed that during orientation and whenever I would visit my mom on campus, how kind everyone was, and that was a priority for me. To be able to kind of try a lot of new things that I've never tried before, it's definitely something I've really come to appreciate, especially being on campus now. The whole team, like even the upperclassmen, they were very welcoming. They cheered like their little sisters. Even on like weeknights, they'll study with us, and go study all over, eat together. They just been like family, basically. They made it like a lot easier to transition than college. Being a snowboarder, I ended up breaking a lot of bones and having a lot of things go on with myself that I wasn't really happy about, and I spent a lot of time in the hospital. And so it really became something that I was interested in, something that kind of grew into this new thing that I really appreciate, which is being part of the medical profession. I'm also a film and television studies major, and the great thing about UVM is that their film classes are a lot around theory. So I think that's a lot more engaging to me academically, to learn more about like what makes a film a good film, or what doesn't. Like how does that affect the culture and the society around it? Come visit, come talk to people. I mean, I know it's hard being, I mean, I was just there, but when you come to campus, start up a conversation with just anyone, and they're more than likely to tell you all the great things about UVM.