You couldn’t give any history about the animals initially to ISIS. It was just keeping the basic information and you would able, you’d have a hard copy and a paper copy and you’d send the paper copy to ISIS and you’d keep the hard copy. And that became the record, and on the back, you were able to write whatever entries you wanted to keep on the animals. So it was not uncommon to have group index cards for the animals when I got there, they were changing the cards over, you know, we were changing, ISIS where there were individuals records rather than group records. And that in itself was a huge improvement for the management of the animals, knowing a little bit more about them and can have stuff documented about the individual animals, you chose what you did or did not want to write, which was always subject to some criticism by some staff members. I mean, some keepers would write it’s eyebrow was out of place yesterday, and they would, if you didn’t take every comment and let me clarify this, there wasn’t every keeper, there’s some keepers that just wrote so much stuff that was so trivial, maybe some researcher would wanna know the placement of an eyebrow, but it became issues at time of what was or wasn’t put in the cards. I mean, we were wound up then we also kept keeper’s reports, but there was no retrieval system to it. They’d filed by date, but if you didn’t know when the specific thing happened, you may have to go through months or years worth of reports to find when the eyebrow was out of place.