"I started at the Pacific Film Archive, but it wasn't paid. And the first paid position was again in Berkeley at the university, namely in the Music Library. Because I played, as I said, I went to music school, I played the piano and I sang, so I knew something about music. And I started cataloging at Berkeley University in the Music Library. And from there I got out, there I learned a lot of things again, and so on. And I learned that they are opening a librarian position at the Hoover Institution at Stanford. I asked, there was the manager who did the interview with me, he was Polish and I think he helped me a little because I was Czech. So I joined the library there. First it was, what was the name of the function, print, old newspapers or old books were printed. And I was there for about two months, and then I came to book cataloging. And I gradually worked my way up, because there's always some promotion position, right, so I finally got to the Slavic Library. Slavic, you know, are Slavic languages, so I cataloged there, not only in Czech, but in all other languages as well as in Russian. And at Stanford University, a certain professor Tříska taught, who was a Czech who came here at the age of eighteen and was in the department, the Political Science department. She was a very clever person and gradually I also came into contact with her. And when he found out that I taught in the Czech Republic, he recommended me to the language department at Stanford, where they teach all kinds of languages. And those languages that are used a lot, like German, Spanish, or Arabic now, they have special departments. And I got into the so-called Special Language Program, a special language program, where less spoken languages were taught. Like tagalog or pashu or hindi and so on. And among others there were also Slavic languages, because Russian had its own department. And Czech, Polish, Serbo-Croatian, Hungarian, Romanian, that's all on this Special Language program. And that still exists today, yes a special language department. Well, there I am, I've been teaching Czech there for twenty-two years now, and there are still students there."