(Karen exhales) I hope that they’ll be continuing to work together on what I hope will be more successful programs for integrating zoos and field work. I think that issue is probably the hardest one to resolve with your community, your at-home community and your donor community is that they’re willing to support all your programs in your zoos. They’re willing to help with your endangered species breeding programs in your zoos. They’re willing to, but when you tell ’em you wanna spend $100,000 in the desert, in the Sahara, in our case, that’s much harder to sell. So, and I don’t see that it’s gonna get a whole lot easier to sell, but we have to work. I think zoos in the future are gonna need to work harder at making that connection for their donors and really doing the work because that relevancy is gonna become very important, particularly as long as we continue to face and don’t seem to have any really good answers for the animal rights people who wanna shut us down, who see no value to what we do at all period. And so, just doing more of what we do and not expanding our true relevancy is asking for the battle to continue and the uphill battle to stay relevant as anything but entertainment for our local. And if the animal rights people win, then we’re not considered entertaining any longer.