Well, cultural aspects were important to me to learn and that’s been a joy as far as any other places that I’ve been in the world to learn some of the foods, some of the cultures, some of the religions that exist there, and Uganda was no different. It was the first time that I had been involved in a dictatorship, and it ended up as that just about the time I was ready to come home, was the time of the six-day war in Egypt. And Idi Amin had really done the dirt on the Israeli people by using their know-how to build some roads in Uganda, and then kicked the Israel people out of the country, and kept all their equipment and did all the bad things that he could possibly do to ’em. And so we had some experiences with that sort of mentality that we had to deal with. I was with my wife one time when we wanted to look at Lake Victoria, we had not seen the lake per se, we’d been around it. And we found a road that we could go to. And when we got to the lake, there were soldiers there with machine guns, and they essentially said, “Halt, don’t come any further.” And we of course couldn’t understand their language, and they didn’t understand ours. And with that was the only time that we were kind of fearful of our life because Idi Amin used these young people that were well-trained, and I could see that they could pop off without too much difficulty.