 Well, it was a pleasure, but all you had on your mind, did you get any sleep? Till about 5.30 this morning when the phone rang, you had to do with the Philippines. I figured it might. We'd thoroughly had done it. He was on the other end of John on the phone call, so he too was suffering. You both look fine from that early. We have a little different mood this year with the governors. Even the Democrats, I think, are recognizing that we're accepting our new responsibilities, not ruining our hands very much, and reporters ask me what the mood is. I say, well, you know, we can raise taxes to it, we have to, and we want to make it easier and not harder for you to balance the budget. And I wanted you to know that before you. I appreciate that. I also wanted to show you something, if I may, and I'll just take a minute. This is a book I'm doing about Japan and Tennessee, which is coming out in May. And I put in here a little article that The Washington Post carried about it. It comes out of a series of trips I've made there over the last seven or eight years. Tennessee has become the state with more Japanese capital investment than any other state, and I've been there seven or eight times. And I wanted to plant in your mind and thought. Senator, just past the resolution, a knowledge of the King of government and many of those things all begin in the next year. Thank you very much. My subject here, there has been something that is now going to continually relate to the things we've had with the Philippines, which seem to be very much on edge. But my subject date comes around the other side of the room. It's a place down south of us here called Nicaragua. You may have heard of it, but we've gotten interested in it here. But I understand seriously the concerns that some of you have but not think of it as you're scared by a request that would be covert and so forth. I just have to tell you that everything that is going on down there requires us to continue this assistance and this time real assistance, not just non-lethal to the freedom fighters. We have met at nine different times with the Sandinista government to try and negotiate and discuss about having a negotiated settlement. Let's take the issue first of whether that's Sandinista government, whether we are interfering with the legitimate government or not. There was a revolution against the Somoza. The Sandinistas were probably the oldest and actually organized group in that revolution. And they were, their philosophy was common. Others joined, it was a general revolution. Our country, we went around at the time, but our country stayed out, did not stand up for Somoza. And then the revolutionaries asked the organization of American states they wouldn't appeal to Somoza to step down and end the killing. And they asked for a statement of what was the revolution about, what were they trying to achieve. And they got the statement, it was democracy. It was all the things that we believed in, freedom of press and human rights and pluralistic government, people's freedom of speech and assembly and so forth. And Somoza did stand and the revolution was apparently over. And then the Sandinistas being organized as they were, and we've seen it happen before. We saw it happen in Laos and we insisted on them.