Maruska. Okay, we are all set. Tell me how important science and research was to your vision and generally to zoos in the United States or around the world. I think what zoos do best is to, and what their real purpose and passion, I mean their immediate purpose and passion is that they keep and breed and manage wild animals. They do that very well, but that has to be linked to a broader purpose. That has to come in tandem with the broader picture of global problems and climate, that has to be looked at in terms of the propagation of animals, excelling propagation, particularly in very rare species, a good example being the Sumatran rhino, which is one of the rarest mammals on earth, and an animal that hasn’t got a very bright future. So those are areas that I felt the Cincinnati Zoo needed to begin to develop and widen its scope. And we had a young lady that joined our staff, or she was going to school and would frequent the zoo.