And Tappan Gregory actually caused the building of the Wolf Woods, the large outdoor exhibit for the wolves where I did my studies on their social behavior and had students and others with me, but it was Tappan Gregory who, as I say, caused that to be built. And he’d also brought his other interest in terms of the carnivores to Brookfield and among others, he brought fishes from a retreat in Maine to Brookfield, and we weren’t able to keep fishes’ disease problems and other things. But Tappan Gregory, it happens, was a pioneer in terms of night photography of animals. Now (chuckles) he was also quite a well to do lawyer among other things, but he had this animal fascination and attraction, but also serious interest as reflected. He actually published a book on the night photography of animals. This was back in the 1930s that he did his work. And so in terms of a person on the board of trustees of the Chicago Zoological Society who had a substantial background in terms of familiarity with animals in the wild and what perhaps they needed in captive circumstances, Tappan Gregory was an outstanding exception. I mean, most of our people, lawyers or others, just simply have no intimate familiarity, whereas Tappan Gregory definitely did.