 It is. I think I'll be able to come on schedule to the point for I will kind of slow down. Maybe I can add leg a little bit. As I was saying, I think I'll get the statement on Halloween tipped. There's over. Scroll down the bank. Your father happened to be using it. And he started in on it. He sort it out and so on and he beat me. And so you told us that George won or they confessed. And then he started beating. And you told us that George Washington confessed that he cut down a cherry tree and his father didn't do anything to him for telling the truth. His father wasn't in the tree when they cut it down. We have about four and a half minutes. George said about his interview with that sleazy character in. No. Well, the interpreting is a very robust casting to all the people of the Soviet Union. And when he made that declaration about getting out of Afghanistan and so forth. The interpreter just didn't interpret that. They understood English why they cut the rest of it. I think that gives us a new thing in these relationships. We've offered an interview or something on the air. I think from now on we ask, okay, we'll provide our own interpreter. ABC Radio full broadcast of the president's radio address. One minute from now. One minute. This is the ABC radio full broadcast of the president's Saturday radio address. Thirty seconds from now. Ten seconds. My fellow Americans, this week we commemorate Easter and Passover. Annual events of profound religious significance. It's appropriate that during this holy time our Secretary of State journeyed to the Soviet Union on a mission of peace. And I'm pleased that the word from that trip is good. While in Moscow, Secretary Shultz presented a new American proposal and made constructive progress toward reaching an agreement to reduce our respective nuclear arsenals and establishing better relations between our countries. Building a more peaceful world is our goal. Secretary Shultz reports to me that headway was made in his discussions with his Soviet counterparts on several issues. He made clear, for example, that Americans take human rights seriously as is evident during this week of religious import. We cannot and will not close our eyes to the suppression of religious freedom. Be the victim a Christian, Jew, or other religious faith. Secretary Shultz demonstrated this when he represented all of us in a Passover dinner, a Seder, as it is called, with Soviet Jews in Moscow. Secretary Shultz noted that the favorable resolution of several human rights cases is a good sign. There are many cases of divided families and separated spouses that are virtually resolved, and we'll be watching. In our contacts with Soviet leaders, we've also pushed for the settlement of regional conflicts that have brought destruction, misery, and death to the peoples of Afghanistan, Angola, Cambodia, Nicaragua, and elsewhere. If an overall lessening of tensions is expected between the United States and the Soviet Union, the Soviets and their clients will have to show a readiness to accept peaceful, negotiated solutions instead of prolonging bloodshed. The issue of embassy security was forcefully raised as well. Secretary Shultz let it be known that recent Soviet espionage outrages have gone beyond reason. Today, the United States and the Soviet Union have an opportunity to take tangible step-by-step progress toward a more peaceful world. This is in both our interests. Nowhere is that more evident than in our talks about reducing the number of nuclear weapons threatening mankind. An actual reduction in the number of nuclear weapons would be an historic first. An accomplishment both sides could build upon for further progress. Secretary Shultz reports that his talks in Moscow left him optimistic that an agreement to reduce the number of longer-range INF missiles is within reach. Significant issues remain, and our negotiators will intensify their efforts to clear them away when talks resume in Geneva later this month. When Mr. Gorbachev and I met in Reykjavik last year, we reached an understanding on some of the basic tenets of an agreement to reduce intermediate-range missiles. In the intervening months, we've been encouraged by signs of Soviet willingness to remove the roadblocks that have been holding back progress. In Moscow, Secretary Shultz sought to clarify the Soviet position. He reaffirmed the basic structure of the Reykjavik formula, and both governments agreed to the principle of on-site verification. Shorter-range INF missiles, weapons that are of direct concern to our European allies, were also part of the discussions in Moscow. Both sides of the table agree that a limit should be set on the number of these shorter-range missiles and that a global framework will be the basis of discussion and that the principle of equality will govern. Secretary Shultz has briefed our allies on the details and has given me a full report on their initial reaction. Direct consultations with our allies will continue on further negotiations and plans. We must look at this issue in a calm, careful, and deliberate manner. When I return to Washington, I will meet with the bipartisan congressional leadership to review this week's progress. It's my hope that the process now underway continues to move forward and that Mr. Gorbachev and I can complete an historic agreement on East-West relations at a summit meeting. Finding the pathway to a safer, more peaceful world will take unity among free peoples, as well as all the courage, tenacity, and hard-nosed bargaining power we Americans can muster. Secretary Shultz was scouting out the way in Moscow. Our message is, we are proceeding. Until next week, thanks for listening. God bless you. Cut. I gave him back about three or four seconds. Three quarters. You got some photos outside. Yeah. Here's the thing I gave him. What's next one? Shouldn't go out there without it. Where is it? There's somebody here. There's something to it. Oh, I need to give him a lot. Thank you very much. Well, I appreciate that. Going down to Santa Barbara for a few more years. It's a good time to retire in two years. It's a good time to retire in two years. It's a good time to retire in two years. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Very good. Good luck today. Thank you very much. He's the best. He's the best. Let him go. Thank you. He's leaving us after five years. We are going to put up here at the ranch. Thank you, sir. Thank you, Commander Barrett. Commander's been up here for two years. He's responsible for all the people up here. He's a great person. Yes, well, I'm just going to be delighted to see what it means in the Navy to bring something back here at home. I've got something coming. We all, I was asked to be tested and we were all a little bit pleasantly. Duck College, you know. There is a story of ducks in their egg list. Well, thank you very much. Thank you. You only have to mention something that's delivered, the answer. Oh, great. I think that came by way of Frank Carlucci. Oh, yeah, that's great. I was wondering who did that. Yeah, I didn't know that he was an authority on ducks in the Navy. Oh, great. Well, goodbye again. Thank you for the invitation. Don't make me. I usually don't make the arrangements. They just tell me where I'm going.