And Cy, essentially, back to the war time and how that affected the zoo. It affected the zoo because a person that could be a keeper in the zoo could go two miles away, worked for consolidated aircraft, know nothing about building airplanes, but get to work on time, learn to be a riveter in one day, rivet these airplanes together and make way a lot more money. So the zoo staff was drawn from the zoo down to the aircraft factories and other war industries, but primarily the aircraft factories. So two things were happening simultaneously. As San Diego exploded in population, the zoo staff was depleted, and at the same time, the zoo visitor count rapidly exploded. So the war workers that had moved from Arizona and Oklahoma into San Diego frequently, the wife and the husband were employed. They’d bring their kids during the summer when there was no school to the zoo in the morning and say, “Okay, kid, we’ll pick you up at the end of the day.” So the zoo was overrun by unsupervised young people, but at any rate, so it was, they needed dedicated people. And my concern, of course, was not money.