general professional problems facing US zoos today. Well some of that is actually due to where the zoo’s located, like in the south, in places you don’t get good freezes, parasites are just becoming a tremendous problem, because of resistance to the current worming medications. So that’s, I think is gonna, would fall into that category which you’re discussing. The use of sometimes what we call orphan drugs, where we can’t get the drugs that we know we need, because the FDA hasn’t approved them, and there may not be a large enough market for a drug company to make enough money to produce the drugs, like we know we’ve, there’s some drugs I’d love to have, and they just have gone off the market, and what we’re continually worried about is if wildlife pharmaceuticals goes out of the market, we’ve dried up almost all of our major narcotic drugs, and that’s on one person, Bill Lance is the person, through his passion for zoos, has maintained and kept that company going, and kept us supplied with M99, because we went for about four or five years with no M99, and that was almost a disaster, ’cause we, again, lost access to some of our big animals to do anything.