 I think we're one of the most important assets in Alaska because the only enemy they really have is Alaska, and we teach them how to fight that. If the place wants you dead, it does not like us in the wintertime. The Army saw there was a need for over snow mobility and mountain mobility. A couple of name changes later became the Northern Warfare Training Center. They started looking around for a place to do that and in 1948, I believe it was, they came up here to Alaska. Being able to sustain through harsh conditions pretty much wins the battle. That's what we're trying to teach. I think we've forgotten a lot of this stuff because we're not really engaged with direct combat, you know, with a cold region. Center! Well, they can expect at least six days out in the field and for some of them it's a significant emotional event for them. That was one of the design concepts that we came up with when we did this, is to keep the students outside as much as possible. We teach that bad days kill. It was one bad day where you just don't want to do it anymore. It could be your last. The whole course and the point of it is to teach people to bypass their own personal misery to be able to lead other soldiers to success, so. I learned a lot, a lot. It put a lot of the Army in perspective for me because I had no idea that the Army is training to repel down mountains, being this type of weather, you know, and that puts, you know, the future of the Army in perspective. Like, we might be fighting people in this kind of weather, having to do this kind of training. Being pushed all the way to the edge and then figuring out what you can handle. And this schoolhouse definitely does that.