So we developed a Carl H. Lindner, it’s called CREW, the Center for the Reproduction of Endangered Wildlife. And Betsy was our first director of research. And the first remarkable thing she did was she took- It was the first time it had ever been done, where one species was the mother of another species. And we sent her to New York, oh, I don’t remember if it was New York or Chicago. I don’t remember at the time. It probably was New York, ’cause I don’t remember Chicago having bongo at that time, but they were able to superovulate some bongo, and she had some bongo embryos which he placed under her armpits on the way home in the plane, she had them taped to her armpits to keep them at the right temperature in a specific medium. And at home, we had some common eland superovulated and ready to go. When she hit the ground, we drove her to the zoo and we implanted those eland.