wouldn t understand what you were singing? they wouldn t know the words? yes. it makes you realize as well that they re with music there s no barriers. there s no language really. if you speak french or english or japanese, they might not understand every word that you re singing, but they get the message at the end you re feeling when you re done with it. if you did a good job, if you i think i m just fortunate that i was blessed with something, and larry: did you hit it it s the nonbarrier. larry: how long was the tour? more than a year. larry: wow. hard to be away that long? it was understand hard because i was with the people i love the most. if i go away and have my husband and my son, i have my family now. on top of that, i had my mom, 82 years old. larry: how is your little one who knows my little ones? he just turned 9, and it doesn t it doesn t stop
die. we do not surrender. either victory or death. reporter: so the security council is behind closed doors now, fredricka, and we ll be monitoring to see if it approves a resolution. though many question the effectiveness level of these sanctions. the u.n. doesn t have its own army and so far no country wants to get involved militarily to help the protesters against gadhafi. richard roth, thanks so much. we ll check back with you throughout the day at the u.n. the fallout is hitting americans in the wallet. gasoline prices jumped an average of six cents a gallon yesterday. the biggest one-day spike in two years. the gas you pumped today was probably manufactured before the violence started in libya, but crude oil prices surged past $100 a barrel this week, and refiners are basing their current prices on future costs. and back in this country, another day of massive protests in madison, wisconsin. this time with some help from