 Today, what you're witnessing is a mass casualty drill run by the state of Hawaii within the scenario for RIMPAC. In the scenario, a few days ago, there was an earthquake which has really flexed the medical capabilities of the island that we're on. Unfortunately, a few days ago, there was an aftershock which exceeded those capabilities. And so now we're standing in what is a field hospital sort of situation where patients can be brought in by bus, ambulance, all sorts of ways to be evaluated and they decide how severe those injuries are and they're put into various categories based on their injuries. If the injuries can be treated here, they'll be done so. If there's something that needs to go to a hospital far away, they can put them in an ambulance and take them there. And then also, if it's really something beyond the capability of what is now the overrun hospitals on this island, they can be helicoptered to one of the other islands of Hawaii to be treated. This today is a bigger part of what is the HADR, the Humanitarian Assistance Disaster Relief scenario as part of RIM of the Pacific. It's a multinational, multi-agency effort. We have America playing a part in this, Japan is overall in charge of the HADR, and we also have some of our Chilean Navy involved as well. We also have non-governmental organizations, ones you'd be familiar with such as Red Cross, Save the Children, World Food Program, are involved in this and the importance of this is that this is a scenario, but it's a very real-life scenario and if there was a disaster somewhere where we'd all be ready to respond, we're already trained to work together and so that learning curve takes place in the exercise and when it comes to people's lives and when it really matters, we're ready to hit the ground running as a team. All of our services are working together proving that not just as one country we can do this but coming together with Japan and Chile and even our Australian counterparts have helped out in this and I think it shows that we really are ready to respond if there is a tragedy somewhere in the world.