we go to the very polite and courteous suzanne malveaux. thanks. live from studio 7, i m suzanne malveaux. the massive anti-government protesters in cairo s tahrir square seemed to dwindle. the egyptian capital moving toward semblance of normalcy. traffic back on the streets, the bank opening, and the stock exchange will reopen on sunday, and the vice president says they will resume sales of government bonds. investors response will reveal the confidence in the government, if any. they have given up any notion that president mubarak will leave before elections. the u.s. is supporting democracy talks between vice president omar suleiman and opposition groups. one taking part in talks on sunday, the banned muslim brotherhood. i think that the muslim brotherhood is one faction in egypt. they don t have majority support but they are well organized, and there are strains of their ideology that are anti-u.s. what i want is a representative government in egypt. and i have con