 Draft came along and tapped me on the shoulder and said come take your physical and I said no, I'm not doing that I'm going to join the Marine Corps. I was fired up. I mean I was hard charging, you know, heat and fed gas operated one each marine and I was ready to go to war. At some point they call us out and they said okay everybody pack one sea bag to stay on the island and pack one sea bag to go to Vietnam. So I did and that's what in that sea bag was the book that I had checked out of the Camp Hanson Library. That's 52 years later. That's what I'm doing is coming back to see how much of fine I've had them. Yeah, I've drug it around. Yeah, I've had it. I've carried it. It's probably been more places than most people. It's just a country boy from Colorado and I hadn't been out of the country and the first time in my life to be in an exotic place like like Okinawa and I just wanted to learn something about the culture and the people. You know the same battalion that my dad went to war in 1965 is the same battalion now that I command. It's it's an absolute honor. When I used to grab my dad's old camis. In particular, I remember Bravo Company third recon with stencil on there. I used to wear his camis go out there, play guns all the time with my friends out there and I've always wanted to be a Marine. It was more of a decision that you know that you make early in life of okay, you want to follow your father's footsteps and that was one that I wanted to do. So my son now is commanding us for a third recon. So I just decided it was time to repatriate the book. I just probably bring the book back and I wanted to be here to wait. It's Camp Hanson, but really the property of the Third Marine Division. I think that it's appropriate that I sign this off. I think it is appropriate and I think we've got a place for it in the library somewhere in the division headquarters.