 Today we have the Sprye Summer Scholars, so we have high schoolers from all around the Vail Valley, and so they're practicing arthroscopic skills today, as well as other surgical skills that we do in our lab every day. We have a shoulder, we have a knee, as well as a hip in this lab right now. In addition to arthroscopic skills, we're also practicing suturing, so the kids are practicing how the suture wounds close, as well as fracture plating. The high schoolers will actually plate the saw bones models that we have here and then take them over to our instra machine, which will test the load to failure. So in this room, this is the robotic activity. So we've got the six degrees of freedom robotic arm here, and the kids are actually going to control this arm to perform a task that is basically the same kind of stuff that these robots do in the industrial setting. It's up to them to come up with whatever program or motion that they feel will best perform the task. Having Dr. Stedman here is just the greatest thing they could possibly have to the program because he started this entire place. I mean, he was here first, and he started the research institute. Having him here really puts it all in perspective. How one person can start something and build it up from the ground and have it turn into the number one orthopedic research institute in the world.