when we got to take naviropene to south africa and it became a law that pregnant women had to take h.i.v have babies to be born without hiv/aids, this was remarkable. but then, all of a sudden, and particularly in south africa, these women had this terrible choice because they couldn't breast feed their children and transmit hiv/aids. but there was no clean water, so we were giving babies malaria because they were walking with gas cans full of filthy water on their head to make the formula milk. so i went to south africa and said what are we going to do? so i worked with a company about putting in water wells. i have been back a few times and i've gone to these girls' schools, and these girls, they were curtsying to me and looking down and calling me sir because they were taught that any important person was a sir. and i think one of my most rewarding experiences was telling these girls, i'm like you, i'm a woman, i'm not a man, and every important person isn't a sir. you're important. i spent the entire day teaching these women, these young women that not everybody that was important wa