Well, I’m not sure. I think I was pretty well-accepted, because at that time they had nobody, and I showed an interest, and I was there, you know, probably four or five times a week, and we were making some success. I mean we were making major changes, and things were improving, and that’s kind of the nice part of when I first started, it didn’t take much medicine, or preventive medicine, or anything in the zoo to make a big, big difference, because it was basically nothing. So once you get your preventive medicine programs going, your worming, your vaccinations, things like that, when you didn’t have that, you get a major decrease in deaths, you look at some of the nutrition, and do some of the basic stuff that’s so basic now, that, you know, wasn’t, they weren’t doing, so we got a great jump initially in the general health of the animals, so that was a very positive aspect, and there was no basically curators, there were head keepers, and I think I had a good rapport with ’em, because I was asking them all the time to help me with, you know, how this animal normally acts, stuff like this, and so I think it was pretty good, and the administration liked me, ’cause I wasn’t charging him anything, and we were making some, you know, positive improvements.