 If you have family in town, you can live with your family. I don't recommend necessarily freshmen living off campus unless that's the only option for them. I know that for our students, I work with graduate students so they're a little bit older. And so I'll put someone from Shenzhen in touch with a student from Shenzhen. Like I'll just put them in touch together and then they'll email and sort of help each other out. We also have an office of off-campus housing which gives students resources so that they can look for off-campus housing while they're abroad. Okay. Lee, do you have any thoughts on that? Do you have friends who have lived off-campus? Yeah, so like personally, I live on campus for the past three years. My fourth year, my senior, I'm living off-campus right now. And what I did is just like since I'm on campus already, so I'm familiar with this environment. So I just go do different apartments and talk to their leasing office and then just throw out details from that. And now I'm living off-campus. Another option is probably, Adina, you may be able to answer this, is to contact the student groups directly. Yes, yes, yes. Because there may be a student group from X number of particular countries. It could be from China or India or Japan or Turkey or wherever. And there's always someone graduating. So when someone graduates, there becomes, you know, there's a room that gets empty. So if you've got three men from India living together and one's graduating, that's a perfect opportunity for someone new to come in and move in. So those are always good options.