 I'd like you to meet Katya from the Soviet Union, her friend, Star, her friend, Star. I want to date myself and look forward to it. How do you do? I brought a toy from Soviet children. I'd like you to have this toy very much. It shows how our children and the whole Soviet people want peace. Thank you very much. I think children on our planet cannot be happy while we have nuclear weapons. I know our country wants to, and it has suggested that we might perhaps do away with all nuclear weapons on us until I grow up, before I grow up. That would be a good thing indeed. I think that then children will be happy. You want to know something? I'm not a child anymore, but I'll be happy too. I think we, yes, we almost do everything we can to get rid of those nuclear weapons before you all grow up. Well, I know I could tell that. Well, we're very pleased to have you here in our country. Very pleased. Or is this for me too? Thank you. And this is a present for you too, so that you can become a child within yourself with all the children of the world. Thank you. The children as teachers of peace. You see, it's very easy for me to agree with you about peace. There has been four wars in my last time. And I'm glad that you're here and going to accompany her. If all of the children of the world could get to know each other, there wouldn't be any more than ours. Are you having a good time? All right. I envied you last night. I won't be able to go to the circus. Well, as president we're going to mule for a photo. You are her mother? Well, it's nice to see you to welcome you here. We're going to have a photo of Katia, her mother, and a star before you. Which way would you like to have us around you this way, all right? I'm going to be able to see you and have a good time and see all of our country that you can. I'll go to work now. Part of the work will be toward the by. Thank you for being the hostess. It was good to see you. Thank you so much. I'm so pleased with what you're doing. I think National Security of Human Rights is going well. I hope. I just got back from Moscow and it looks as if they really might do a new spirit of cooperation in these matters. I'm like frogs in the fog and I'm not sure which way to jump. You gave us the biggest lunch I've ever had in a long time. That's great. I'd like to get some of these divided spouses together. Just between us. Yes, between us. I'll tell you what I did with him in the fireside meeting in Geneva. I talked to him at a great length about this and I said, look, I'm not asking for an agreement. I said, this is something in which I will never mention it, will never be made public. What I'm saying is that if you would do this, we would stand back and let it be totally that it was your program, your idea, but my reason for asking is it would make it much easier then for me to make agreements and do things with you because this is a great source spot with our people. I made one approach that seemed to make sense to them. I said, one in every ten Americans has at least one grandparent in the Soviet Union. I said, so with us it's not a political matter, it's a family matter. And how can we trust you if you treat your own people this way? What hope is there for the rest of us? So if you want confidence building, this is the place to build confidence. But then, as I say, if you'd had that idea that we won't go up, that's right, we got this concessionary. We'd just be pleased and happy that they did it. The other thing I mentioned is that when Mr. Gorbachev comes to America, I said, remind him, have we come to visit many of his own country? About ten percent of us are from there. That's great. It's not just politics. That's great. Mr. President, thanks again. Keep up the great work yourself. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thanks. Good luck. Thanks.