chuck wolfe, thanks very much for being with us. guest: thanks. host: if you were watching house of representatives last week here on c-span, you might have seen some or, i should say, a lot of the debate on the agriculture bill well into the evening on a couple of nights. $2.7 billion in budget cuts proposed by the house. the measure now goes to the u.s. senate. we're going to focus on what specificly is in this bill and its impact on the farmers and w.i.c. program and other areas. but first a news update. and with that nancy in the c-span radio stupid yoys. >> good morning. ahead of the united nations nuclear agency and opening remarks today at their conference in vienna, in the wake of japan's fukushima catastrophe, "business as usual is not an option," and he's urging a worldwide rethinking of safety measures to prevent new nuclear disasters. while some countries at the 150-member meeting want any new safety regime to be mandatory most prefer them to be voluntary. and on this note the iaea chief says that safety improvements are only effective