raymond yao, he becomes a proponent for the claim, but he is one of the original members. so it is with that $145,000 loan that the appraisers go out and they come up with a figure. it will be accepted by the indian claims commission in 1972. the claims commission will accept the appraisal for 22 million acres at 21 million million, about nine cents an acre. remember no interest. , there is however going to be an additional $4 million added for mining profits that were lost before the date of taking. $26,154,000ward, for 23,000,970 acres. so about $1.07 an acre, it is a pretty good deal if you can get it. so this is where it fits in 1972. the claim has gone through. now, it is supposed to be a done deal. this is where things are going to go off the rail. it takes 40 more years for the reach the to actually shoshone's. 40 more years. ok. now, now, resistance to the claim had existed going pretty far back. i talked about the 1963 meeting that opposed -- with a family that opposed this. other shoney's also closed to this. shoshone's are also opposed to this. in 1973, after th