 paint a mural on a location that they're less likely to come back and vandalize it with graffiti. Now it's 80% that they don't come back and re-vandalize. This is one of our 20% locations so we check it often and if it's been vandalized a lot then we'll come out and we'll schedule a paint out and this year in correlation with the North Texas Aviation Centennial we're dedicating all of our murals to aviation history at Fort Worth. We're a collaborative effort between three of the museums here locally the Fort Worth Air and Space Museum, Veterans Memorial Air Park and the B-36 Peacemaker Museum to help build awareness of the aviation history and heritage here in the local area and hopefully to inspire some kids towards careers in aviation or aerospace. The graffiti thing was was part of our outreach to the community to help us do the celebration for the year. We just told her we could help with with artists and help promote her program and so she decided that she wanted to do all the murals this year with an aviation theme which is which is great for us in terms of building the awareness within the community. Today it's going to be TCU Leap so we're gonna have about a hundred. This is our second year that they've worked with us. For today's we're gonna be using some things that some of the cadets with the Civil Air Patrol put together. So they're their conceptions kids conceptions of some of the aviation heritage things that have taken place in the last year. The only difference between art and graffiti is permission.