Pat Mulroy. (chuckling) Yeah, a keeper named Pat Mulroy came, and he was working in the building at the time, came in and, “Something is wrong, you know, with the gorilla baby.” And we ran in there and sure enough, there was just this baby laying there, like she had been beaten. So, and Fisher was just coming in too then. And we ran in there and we separated the animals, got the adults of the way and got her, and Fisher said, “Let’s take her to the children’s hospital,” and I grabbed her in my arms and we drove her in Fisher’s car to the Children’s Hospital. In Chicago, you know, not that far away from the zoo. And we drove her down there, and of course they didn’t know what to do, but we talked them in, he Fisher really, talked them into doing, taking care of her and treating her. They said, “We don’t know how to treat.” “You treat her like a baby, it’s the same thing exactly.” And they set up a little ward, not in the human ward because I could see why they wouldn’t want to do that. But they did down below, downstairs in the basement, they set up a ward where she was being taken care of, and given exactly the same care as an abused baby would’ve been cared.