 A little solar right here, that was a good one. Yes. Mr. President, we're very far from the Johnson-Watt County. No way to see you, Professor. No, you are. No. Well, I knew you were a partner. Well, I'd have recognized you kind of in the summertime. Good to see you. Yeah, okay. It's fine. Wait a minute, Professor. Okay. Okay, sit down. Good to see you. Good to be told. It's a defect once right, a lot better than it used to be. We had one more at the cabinet. Nobody let it be any second. Well, I want to thank all of you for your support of the U.S. Cabinet. free trade agreement. Since signing that agreement with Prime Minister Marumi in January, we've been working with the Congress on the language of the implementing legislation. And it's been a very cooperative process with the Congress. Jim Baker and Clay Yider think we may finish soon, so the legislation can be submitted formally to Congress when we return from the Toronto Economic Summit. And I think I believe Congress and the Canadian Parliament will approve the agreement, and thanks for the support such as you've given me. And this free trade agreement will mean vast new opportunities for growth and jobs in both countries. Speaking of Toronto, we're going to try to make further progress in our efforts to improve economic policy coordination among our summit partners. We also want to make to work more closely on identifying and eliminating structural rigidities in our economies, and there's no question that our macroeconomic coordination efforts to date have permitted major currency adjustments that have made U.S. exports extremely price-competitive in the world marketplace. We'll be talking a little more about that across the street. We're enjoying an export boom of impressive proportions so far this year. Exports are up 30 percent over the same period last year. Trade deficits declined again in April to $9.9 billion from $11.7 billion in March as the imports dropped sharply and as domestic demand has slacked off somewhat. Export growth has filled in contributing half of our strong 3.9 percent GNP growth in this first quarter. We want to keep the export boom going. We need to continue progress toward free trade, and that's why it's important, I think, in Toronto to give the Uruguay round negotiations a political boost toward a meaningful interim resolve in December. And it's also a why we still want to sign a trade bill this year. Now that the Congress has voted to sustain the veto, we're hoping they'll move quickly on a bill which will strengthen America's competitiveness and create even more new jobs. It won't be easy for Congress to agree on what should be in a second trade bill that they need to resolve the problems and salvage a good bill so we don't see three years of hard work on this issue wasted, but I think I'll save the rest of it across the street now and turn it over to you. Well, Mr. President, of the many terrific initiatives that you've gotten underway during your terms of office, one of the most exciting is Canadian free trade agreement. And many of your process movers who are here today, we've got a couple of hundred people in Washington on the Hill emphasizing the reasons to support the Canadian free trade agreement. And we will be there right till 24 hours after the ink is dry. And any... Nice to meet you. She's the newest member of my staff and members of the staff picture so far. Thank you. It's an honor to work for you. Well, listen, I'm pleased and appreciate you very much for what you do. Thank you very much. Kind of glad that you missed it. Thank you very much. Her husband, Sandy Sanders, who's younger than me, fortunately for him, a blonde hair fellow did a lot of the advance for the first family during the 1980 campaign. In 76 days from California, San Diego. Well, we're delighted to have Jackie Austin as I'll give him my best. I will. Thank you very much. She's a big fan of yours. Thank you for letting me come in and meet you. Appreciate it. Please. Do you want to get a photo of this? Sure. Why not? Sure. Thank you. Thank you. That's great. Thank you. Thank you. That's what your husband says. I'm going to do those two guys. That's right. It would be jealous. That's for sure. It's nice to meet you. Thank you. Thank you. I'll see you. Hello. Sandy. How are you? Hi, I'm Tom. Nice to see you. Nice to see you again. Tom? Yeah, hello. I'm going to show you on the other side of the house. All right. There we are. Okay, that's great. Everybody can look right here. Take a big smile. Thank you, Mr. President. You're welcome. Thank you. Thank you. It's just a while to get off the gate. That would be even worse. It would be a hard time. It would be a hard time. They didn't have us on the computer. The car was cleared but we weren't. So that made it up. So it's the car. So it's the car. So it's the car. It's the car. It's the car. It's the car. It's the car. And it's Scott said, send the car in and we'll wait. You may remember the waste paper basket that we have with the bumper stickers. Well these are the bumper stickers that I didn't send you. These were the ones that I had that I wasn't willing to give up. So I thought you might enjoy having that. Thank you very much. And then I thought you might get a charge out of Sandy and Tom's wedding. They kept teasing about whether you, that was four years ago, whether you were going to come to the wedding. So suddenly Scott made a big announcement that said ladies and gentlemen the president of the United States and then came Tom's brother with supposedly the secret service frisking her little Dennis the menace doll that she took to the wedding and it was a riot. So I thought you might get a charge and this is for you. Thank you very much. It's what they call a time capsule in a bottle. Well for heaven's sakes. And it goes on with dates and so forth and headlines and stock prices and so forth on your date of inauguration. Stand for now. I can't match all of this. Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. That's nice. How do things go in Moscow? Just great. Did they understand the friendly persuasion situation? Yes, I think they did. Did they get the whole film or just the points that you were trying to make? Well I think they run some American films there and I think that's what originally used that one. That was one of them. Wonderful. I counted on that. But as far as the people were concerned, I have to tell you that it would be a surprise for my life. They were so friendly and warm. They were just quite a hundred. They wanted to shake hands and ladies were hugging Nancy and so forth. Not the government people. That's what matters though. That's usually what matters. The government people are going to say wait and see, right? Yeah. But they had a good reason to, not only that, I mean they had a good reason to change. Well I think this value is different than the other previous speakers. That's how I meant it. I think it seemed to come over beautifully on our television. It really did. It really looked like he had a great deal of respect for you. Well today those people that still worry, you know, they mustn't go too far too soon. I tell them my philosophy is trust everybody but cut the cards. If only they would realize that they never have any problem, whatever. That's for sure. That's for sure. Can I get a picture of you? Just a snapshot? Thank you so much. I just want to say when you leave, it's fast coming up and you'll be busy. I haven't contact with this. Unless you want to lose track of me, it's 45 years. You mean where? Well, I can't give it to you exactly yet. That's still in the process. So I wouldn't. Just so I don't lose track. I'll see you get it. Sometimes when you feel like you want to throw out a doodle thinker, sometimes. Would you please? I'd love to have it. I've been here for about six years now. I haven't done it before. You lost time. Really? It just seems like in the meetings I came about. Is that right? How about that? Well, you'll just have to spend time. I'm going to doodle today. Wonderful thing. I loved an answer. Please go ahead. I sure will. Thank you. Good seeing you, sir. Thank you.