Thanks so much for that question.
One of the things in terms of Washington, D.C.--I'm doing some more research on this and I will be able to come back with quantitative data--is that they have started to recognize, through their monuments, the contributions. Museums are going up. One gentleman spoke to me at the conference. They're starting to recognize the contributions that blacks have made to the American armed forces, and it is widespread. Obviously, we're talking about 40 million to 45 million blacks across the United States, so it's in terms of the autonomy they have to make sure that these things actually get recognized.
In Philadelphia, one of the museum contributions that individuals made was a home that one of the soldiers lived in. There was real estate development and they wanted to rip down a particular house. The community fought against it, because the house reminded them of the individual who served in the war. So that was preserved as history. There are various examples, and my office can certainly come back to you on that with respect to specific locations. Those are the two that I can cite right now.
Thank you.