have nearly 100 staff there, they were all affected and these are the ones who help support our effort in syria. monday night the temperatures got down to freezing and all of them, just like others with there, were out in the street and in their cars because of the after shocks, and these are the after shocks, and these are the ones who would get up at sunrise and get back to work with theirfamilies, sunrise and get back to work with their families, trying to do all that they can provide the support needed in syria to keep people alive, keep help going and hope going. logistically, roads have been ripped up, airports destroy, train tracks don t exist anymore. how are you physically getting your people into place? very good question. we are actually procuring, had a large procurement in syria in the last few days where we found medication supplies, consumables to get into a hospital to keep things going. we learned this morning that the border between turkey and
of our brains actually turn off when we rely on gps behind the wheel. then a lot of laughter around the table. martha, this is for i think it s probably true thatre? your brain turns off a little bit. lin yottu remember whe used to have, like, folded up te maps in the glove compartment and they would kind of fallcomp apart. fap righll apartt. ? uartm and then i remember mapquest where you would put in the door and then you printed out and ato least then you had to kind of look at it and think about where you were going to go.n t e now, you don t have to thinknd s about anything. surpg thaturprisin i don t end up in the drink because, yeah, i don t think i can get anywhere withoutut my my gps. h greg, youar recall that segment. officer that s actually based on a real thing, which is people have people havereal i driven into lakes or into onto train tracks. but this gps brain is not a flaw. this is evolution. it s not any different than learning other technologies,y dn learning other