It was 92¢, okay. I just wanted to clarify that.
When we're looking at situations and comparing full time to full time jobs, I come at this from a mother's point of view, recognizing that I was in and out of the workforce. Do we have any data that clarifies that? If we're trying to compare apples with apples, taking somebody who's been out of the workforce—let's say a person who is aged 35 may have had two children and, therefore, may have been off for two years—is that taken into consideration when you're trying to compare men to women with the same education, at the same age, and those things, or is that not part of the data or study?