 I don't know how that happened. I didn't plan it that way. I'm Eileen Norcross. I'm Vice President for Policy Research at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. I got my undergraduate degree in Economics and US History from Rutgers Newark. While I was a student there, I had some wonderful professors who exposed us to Hayek and to public choice and to a lot of the mainline toolkit that we use here at Mercatus. And that prompted my interest in really wanting to be a scholar and be a researcher. I had one professor, Leo Troy, who told me about a center that had been at Rutgers Newark that was concerned with the School of Economics. And I thought to myself, I'd really like to do that one day. I'd really like to work there. He told me that they had a student, Tyler Cowan, who was brilliant and he had headed up this center. And I put that in the back of my mind. I went on to get a Master's in Economics at Rutgers. Then I went to work for an accounting firm. From there, I worked at a financial database and the entire time I just knew that I wanted to do research. I just kept reading and had that scholarly drive. I ended up in Washington, D.C., where eventually I find myself interviewing at Mercatus. About a year or so into the job, Tyler talked to me in the hallway and said, So, Rutgers Newark. And suddenly a light bulb went off that this was the Tyler Cowan I had heard about from my professor back in 1991. And I thought to myself, that's simply amazing. I don't know how that happened. I didn't plan it that way, but indeed I ended up working at the very place that I wanted to work at as a young undergraduate who was so excited about those ideas.