 Well, today we're going to dedicate a statue, we're going to dedicate a walking path here in C.P. Hadley Park, which is a linear park connecting about four neighborhoods in southwest Fort Worth, and the Prairie Wind is a piece of artwork that is a public art from the city of Fort Worth. It was designed by the artist Michael Pavlowski. We started this piece 28 months ago, and we had a number of meetings with the neighborhood association and had a lot of input with the various members of the neighborhood. And it was just a rewarding experience for everybody, I think, including myself mainly. And we kind of developed a theme, it's sort of a combination of the romanticized version of the prairie, sort of a romantic, lonesome notion of the prairie combined with environmental aspects of the prairie. So the figure on top of the totem represents that romanticized notion of the prairie, and then the three sides of the totem, the three barrel leaf sides, each one represents an aspect of the prairie. The first is the land of the prairie itself, and the second one is the sky above the prairie, and then the third one are the waterways of the prairie. So each of those three sides or themes contain images relating to those three aspects of the prairie. We're very excited about what's going on here. We've had a multitude of projects, capital improvement projects being paid for. The park was paid for partly out of gas money, the public art program, the sidewalks are being put in with capital improvement money. Summer Creek, which is the extension of Grandbury that comes into Southwest Fort Worth, is completed today, and we'll be opening brand new lanes connecting Southwest Fort Worth to downtown. Southwest Parkway is under construction and is about 500 yards to half a mile from here, and we can see it going in. So we've got a multitude of projects, so we're pretty excited.