It was a momentary interest on the part of the board of trustees in replicating the panda exhibitry at Brookfield Zoo. And as you noted, Brookfield was the first, back in the 30s, to exhibit giant pandas. And so when the opportunity came when China was relaxing on that front, several members of the board of trustees were quite interested, but we turned away from that in respect to that we didn’t feel we had an appropriate facility. Although we’d maintained one of the original three panders for some 15 years, we did not feel we had adequate setting. We would have to build a considerable facility to accommodate them appropriately. And I’m quite glad that they went to the National Zoo instead. And I, and, among others, Bill Conway then benefited when the Chinese authorities invited us over to view the Chinese zoos and their pandas within the Chinese zoo circumstance. But I’m just as pleased that we did not prevail in terms of seeking the additional pandas after the originals, because it seems to me those institutions that have found themselves in a very peculiar relationship, both with the Chinese governmental authorities and with their publics in terms of expectations, that can’t really be realized in an ordinary zoo circumstance.