It has been a few weeks since station closing, and aside from our stalwart winterovers, the SPTpol crew is back home and looking at the data streaming north from the telescope. Shown above is an early reduction of the first scan made over the nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A (also known as NGC 5128). It is a temperature map, made using the 90 GHz detectors. Cen A is close enough to Earth that we can actually resolve structure in the galaxy; in SPTpol, we see the center of the galaxy (the blue blob), and the two relativistic jets from the active galactic nucleus (the yellow blobs). Note that this map is flipped around the vertical axis relative to most images you will find on the web. This is still a very rough reduction: the temperature scale isn't calibrated, and the pointing model isn't optimized, but its very exciting to already see the jets with such high signal-to-noise in one observation. The mm-wave emission from the jets is polarized, and we will be using observations of Cen A as part of our polarization angle calibration scheme.