It was in 1972 that we moved down to Southampton which was another youngish university. Sheffield, of course, was so - called red brick university and had been founded in the 19th century but had expanded a great deal and has expanded since. Southampton was another originally red brick university and was expanding at that time, and Barry Cunliffe had got a very energetic department going and so it continued to grow in a very satisfactory way, I think. I very well remember my inaugural lecture there. As a professor one was expected to give an inaugural lecture and my theme, I chose to be social archaeology which I think was what archaeology was working towards at the time, but it was perhaps more memorable for the circumstance that the vice-chancellor, Professor Gower, knew well Sir Mortimer Wheeler because he had served in Sir Mortimer Wheeler's regiment while Wheeler was a colonel in North Africa during the war, and so Sir Mortimer Wheeler agreed to take the chair at the inaugural lecture. And so he was invited to make a few preliminary remarks, and Wheeler's remarks were very interesting but they extended from 5 minutes to 10 minutes to 20 minutes and an inaugural lecture is very carefully timed, it's supposed to be about 40 minutes, then you repair for drinks, and so the vice-chancellor evidently became slightly restive, as, indeed, did I, I was very nervous and I'd like to give me inaugural lecture. And so he sort of tried tactfully to interrupt Sir Mortimer in full flow and Sir Mortimer just got more firmly in his stride and recollected his military days with “Gunner Gower” as he referred to the vice-chancellor, in the North African campaign. But, anyway, Wheeler, finally sat down so I was able to give my inaugural lecture and so that was, as I say, on the theme of social archaeology.