[laughter] and i told them, "yeah, we do, and i come from--ehhh--the private one, very expensive." it was a revelation. this was a very worldly guy who knew--but he didn't know that just like americans don't know what i just told you either. they don't know that--this is common in europe. very common in europe because it's thought of as like having, you know, first and second class in the train, which by the way the french did have. they don't have it anymore, but they use to have on the subway, for those of you who remember, the old metro, the car in the middle was the first class, and the cars on either side were second class, and the ticket was cheaper--on the same train--if you went in the one car than the other, and the cars were cleaner and a little neater and a little nicer if it was first class, but then with the--in the 1960s, part of the great 1960s uprising, they got rid of that because the population said, "no more of that. that's outrageous." so now it's only one class on the french parisian subway. but, yeah, i think uni--i say all this because universities would have