Were you a Professor, Assistant Professor, or … Yeah, assistant professor, and at that time, veterinarians at Johns Hopkins had dual appointments. So if you were in comparative medicine, you also had a dual appointment in one of the other medical things, and I started out in Department of Surgery, human surgery. So I taught dog surgery to human medical students, in their senior year they had a dog lab, and so we’d go up there, and, you know, teach ’em how to do splenectomies, lobectomies, anastomosis, and various things, and teach ’em how to monitor animals under anesthesia, and instilled in them that they were responsible for looking after them and aftercare, and checking their dogs post-surgically, and things like that. And then the last two years, I switched over to the Department of Radiology, and that’s where I met some of my colleagues that got me interested in radiology, Dr. Everett James and Dick Heller, who we’ve published quite a few things together, and that was kind of another, opened up a new area of diagnostics that I became interested in. So you were, your first exposure was the antelope at the Boston Zoo that you saw. And then now you’re getting exposure at the or at the Baltimore Zoo. Yeah, first through necropsies, first thing, started seeing, we were doing necropsies on the animals that died at the zoo.