 How's it on your side Leslie? This hasn't seen the light of day in quite a while. This is exactly what this center is going to need. Good job guys. Great. Good job fellas. Yeah. Looks nice huh? Yeah my good. That's crazy. Definitely. I think what we want to do is just get it as far away as we can and you know what we might... It's probably okay to start cutting it. You think the dust from that's going to hurt anything Amy? Get it far away from the grays you're going to bring here. Now I'll tell you why now. Okay come. I'll do it again, put you back in and just get it into your face this time. I'll tell you why and hold on a second. Lean over, kind of look down at things, are you pleased right now with what's going on? Just kind of look over here right about here. You pleased? Oh yeah. Yeah? Tell me what's going on now. What's next? We're about to remove the stops that hold the mural in place. Get these out of the way so that we can raise the mural and use the... You talk loud all of a sudden, you got quiet on me. It's exciting right? Yeah. I've been talking loud all morning but we're about to hoist the mural into place and we've got a rigging up here that we're going to strap around the mural, protect the mural as we're putting it in place and probably here in about 30 minutes we'll have it set in its final destination. It's exciting huh? It's very exciting. We're happy to be able to be a part of this. This is really a really good deal. We're just going to use it out by hand, be able to strap and we can actually use this to help us support it as we lift it. This is a really important piece. This was originally painted by local artist Perfereo Salinas in the 1970s and it was done as a diorama background that was at the Lone Star Hall of Horns down at the Lone Star Brewery and originally there was a longhorn right in front of this mural that is a spring scene, blue bonnet, quintessential Texas and when the Lone Star Brewery closed up this was purchased by David Carter of San Antonio and he rescued this mural and another and the other mural he's donated to the city of San Antonio, it's down at the Convention Center and this one was donated to the Whitty Museum and we had always planned that it would have a permanent home where it could be on permanent display in one of our new buildings as the Whitty was expanding. So now with the Maze Family Center we're finally able to have this showcase for this wonderful mural. The problem is between the time that it was donated to the Whitty Museum and having the Maze Center ready there was a horrible fire at the Wolfson Building where the mural was being stored and displayed and the entire structure which was a historic building on main plaza was completely gutted and destroyed. This mural is the only thing that survived that fire, it was one of the worst phone calls I ever got in my life to say that they had had a four alarm fire in the building. I rushed downtown, grabbed a hard hat and I didn't even know if the mural had survived and luckily just as Dave was breaking we could look into the building and see that the mural was still there, firefighters were still putting out hot spots in the building next door and then it became okay it survived, it's had some damage but we can save this, this is not a total loss, we can work with this. This is of the fire downtown, it survived the fire but it's so beautiful, it's permanent home at the Whitty Museum and the Maze Family Center, I mean what a day, this is a historic day and I'm so mural-backed. It's a very exciting day, the Preferious Alenus mural that was picked out of the fire like the Phoenix from the ashes just a couple of years ago and conserved by our wonderful conservator, Ann Zanikos and her team and now to have it back in a public space at the Maze Family Center for everybody to enjoy in all its glory, this is a historic day for the Whitty Museum, we've been waiting for it for a long time and today's the day, it gets hung in its new home so we're really thrilled to see it as part of us now.