the un andrew young's visit to southern africa, where he met with samora machel, the leader of mozambique. and he talked about, you know, this marxist-oriented leader that--that andrew young is meeting with, and then i put in the head note, 'but years later, as president, reagan had one of his most convivial meetings with a foreign leader with the meeting he had with samora machel in the white house,' and--just to point out some things there. he didn't have everything right we say in the introduction of the book, 'he functioned as a one-man think tank.' he did not one-man think tank.' he did not have time to master the nuances of every foreign and domestic and defense issue that he wrote about,' and very few political analysts or writers or pundits can predict the future and come out with a perfect record. on the section on southern africa, and south africa in particular, where he talks about apartheid, you know, he thought sanctions wouldn't work; he was making that argument very clearly in the 1970s; that it wouldn't work to get rid of apartheid. and he did say that, 'we find apartheid