Okay, there were a number of questions there. Obviously, I’ll try to answer as many as I can and can remember. As far as for us, I’m not going to say there’s any type of number one best seller. Every deal is unique, but obviously, legacy transition issues, lineage transition issues, tend to be good times where a company is in a good position to transition ownership. It’s somewhat expected by both employees as well as customers as well as the community, and that positions the company pretty well for new potential ownership in a lot of ways. Those tend to be the better transactions that we do. When a company is broken, when it’s a fire sale, when it’s an auction, when it’s a distressed asset, those are not the type of deals we tend to do. We find that poor companies in this business are poor for a reason, and it’s usually some sort of broken market or their asset positioning within the market, and we cannot fix all of those two things. There are companies out there that buy those and they believe they can and many of you have seen the results of that. But, that’s not what we do. As far as the ranking of what drives, again, obviously, different things drive sellers. We would always tell you, and we have said for years, that it’s really not valuation, it’s really not tax increases, segmentation of the waste stream. Those are all secondary items. The number one issue that drives deals in our model in our business is what we call lineage transition issues—estate planning, death, disability, disease, divorce—those are the kinds of things where there is something going on within the ownership, and that’s why most deals that we close, we’ve been talking to for four, five, six, seven years of relationship building and know what is transpiring within the ownership of that company. That’s a long-winded soapbox answer to your question, Tony, but that’s sort of how it works for us.
Tony Bancroft – Gabelli: That’s great. Thank you so much.