 Well, Mr. President, thank you very much. Mr. President, that's for you. Chair for Monmouth County, I want to present you with our official card. Well, thank you very much. Very honored to be here. I just want to tell you an interesting story. In 1980, with the help of President Reagan, I was elected chair for my county. And I was able to beat a five-term income that was well-entrenched. And I've been successful ever since in being re-elected. Well, I'm not very good with these sorts of proposals. I know what you've done in regard to that identification and so forth. Yes, you're right. Could I just have a shot with you, Mr. President, without the hat? Oh, yes. Because... All right. Can I shake your hand? Let me shake it. Yes. Thank you, Mr. President. It's really a great honor to be down here. But I wish you continued good health and success. It's so great to be here today. Anyway, I'm going to continue to work in law enforcement and our identity kid and identity health programs. And they have a special needs program, a handicap now with a special identification. And we'll continue there. In fact, one little thing I have to tell you. Many years ago, you starred in a movie where you played the sheriff. Remember, you had the badge and the hat? Honestly, many years ago now, I'm going back... It's a marshal, I think. A marshal, that's right. Well, I have a large picture of that on my wall in my den. Well, my sister gave it to me many years ago. So you were a law enforcement in your own right in that movie. Yes. Well, I don't want to take it any more of your time. It's really been a pleasure. Thank you so much for allowing me to stop for a while. My honor, and I'm very pleased to see you and Mrs. Wright. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Wright. President, this is Elaine Klotz. Hello there. How are you? I'm good. Nice to see you. Thank you very much. I'd like to introduce to you the 1988 American Junior Miss. I love you. I love you. You're so nice to meet you. Well, nice to meet you. And I have something for you. Really from this Nancy Reagan. And this is an America's Junior Miss. Be your best self-teacher. And this is a program that America's Junior Miss is sponsoring to promote positive self-esteem for young people of today. Well, thank you very much. You'll be very pleased to have that. You sure are welcome. Yes. And I'll make the wear it. Good. Sorry, we don't have it in red. Hi, I'm sorry. President Reagan, this is 1987. I was supposed to meet you last year. Yes, well, I don't mind meeting you this year. That's for sure. We have a little memorabilia for you from our scholarship program. America's Junior Miss Watch. Well, thank you very much. Well, that's very handsome. Thank you. You're welcome. I support everything that you've been doing. And in fact, I'm a college Republican at Northwestern University. Well, bless you. Looking hard for Bushquale. Thank you. I almost wore a Bush button. All right. Okay. This would be wonderful. Thank you, Mr. President. Mr. President, I'd like to say that I was sorry. I couldn't see you at Baylor University. That's my school. Oh, it is? Yes. And I was traveling at the time. And I was so upset. Well, I'll read you a poem. You're so excited to have me and listen to you talk about Al. It really has been a wonderful, wonderful present. Well, thank you. Thank you very much. I bless you. Well, bless you. Thank you. And thank you both for my presence. I'd like to be with something a little special. I coordinate the Park and Education Program. Would you help to initiate in 1983, 1984, for the Mobile County Public School and our superintendent. This is from Leadership Mobile, and I wanted you to have that. We're not supposed to give those pens away, but at our next meeting when they asked for mine, I was going to tell them, I just had to give it a present. And I have to leave this with you. I have a 16-year-old entrepreneur, and she wanted you to have that because she's really interested in having her own production company in Florida one day. This is my 16-year-old. It has her own video, Memory's Company. So she's been with me forever. We'd love to sit down for hours on men and talk to you about the scholarship program and how it's so much more than a pageant. Thank you. I know. I know. Welcome. President Young, Senator Graham. Yes, sir. Oh, you, Mr. President. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Mr. President, I want to introduce you to Clint Peoples, who is our senior law enforcement official in America. I know. And longer tenure than anybody in today, we're going to have you ceremonially give him a new badge that no one has ever had before. Executive Marshall for the Bicentennial. This is a tent badge that Clint Peoples has won in his life. Well, for heaven's sakes, I'm very proud to please have the privilege of presenting this to you today. Thank you, Mr. President. I appreciate it, sir. We will share the same number of years. I know it. I'm five months and 12 days older than you are. Well... And you're both still on the job for America. We're going to stay on there. That's right. Yes. We are. You look great. Well, congratulations to you. Thank you very much. I'm very pleased to have this opportunity. I'm very pleased to be able to do it. Thank you for being here. It's so nice. It's so nice I didn't even take up your time. Couldn't take it up or any more worthy cause. Thank you, sir. We, as I was telling him, tell his wife now, that we were behind Junior Miss, and we were in front of Miss America. So we were right where we should have been. How old? Two Junior Misses. Oh, that's right. Last year. Good to see you again. We'll take care of you. Take care of yourself. Bye-bye. Thank you, Mr. President. We know Senator Rudy Bochwitz. I sure do, Rudy. My wife, Helen. Yes, hello, Mr. President. Thank you, Mr. President. This is Gretchen Colston, who is Miss America. Congratulations. Thank you. I'd like to have one with her, too. Yes, yes. No, no, no, with you, too, Mr. President. Oh, with Ellen too? Yes. Come on, Ellen. And with Ellie. Come on, Ellie. This is Ellie Ross, who kind of is Gretchen's keeper. She's my mother for a year. Well, do you want to come over here? I'd love to. All right. Can I touch it? All right. Thank you. Thank you. Can you give you about as busy a schedule as that? You are exactly right. In fact, my first press conference, I thought, now I know what President Reagan feels like. All the microphones there. I go to school out of Stanford, so I'm familiar with the fieldwork area. Yes, I know. And I'm pleased to say that when I turned eight two, you were running for election. And I got to cast my first vote for you. Well, thank you very much. I wish you were running again. There are some of the administrations in Stanford that don't vote for me. I know that. And I was surprised to find that out when I was out there. But I was. And you had plenty of support. I think what's happening in the campuses is that some of those radicals of the 60s now become professors. That's right. It's very true. And our main rival is Berkeley. Berkeley tends to be more liberal. But we're holding in there. I'm still supporting that side. No question. Okay. It's a pleasure to meet you, sir. Well, nice to see you. Thank you. Thanks, Mr. President. Nice to see you again. Thank you. It was a nice meeting. Nice meeting this morning. Thank you. Thank you. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Thank you. Mr. President. Mr. President. Hello. Hello. Mr. President. Well, thank you very much. I used to have you. I think very well about to turn around and face those cameras there. So why don't you turn around, too? No, you take that shirt. So please turn your shirt. Please. So please turn your shirt. You won't be able to take the picture. Let's have a look at it. Okay. You have it all around. Sure. I can't be sure. I think you want to see what's in here. I think so, too. I can get another piece. We'll leave it there and then you'll prepare one. Which side of bed do you sleep all around? What? Which side of bed do you sleep on? Why don't you go sleep down there in the house? You care? That's part of your skills that you made one time. Well, for effort's sake. Remember you said that? Yes. Well, thank you. This is just magnificent. Thank you very much. You're welcome. How good? I'm sure you're looking forward to making it for you. I don't know if we can get over people like you. Pete, did we get that? Things like this. Do we have it? I just wanted to... You didn't get my letter on this. I'm going to get so many letters. I made this because since you have a whole world on your shoulders, I thought you should have a coat from the coat cabinet. From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? From the coat cabinet? Well... That's from the coat cabinet. Well, I thank you very much. You'll put that on the couch. There you go. Okay. I remember when I thought you should bring your shoes back. I thought you should send them on sometime with your coffee. Well, thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Is there anything else? Is that it? Will that be possible? Do you have a cold? Do you have a cold? Are you not feeling well? Little allergies. There are things around here that kick me up a little bit. Okay. This is her. This is she. Years ago. Other dogs. Years ago. You went for it at the same time. And what is your first name? My name is Anne Bylor. With or without an E? E. With or without an E? Yes. Well, I don't think I have a really good time. You don't think you have a good time? Say this is hard to write out. Hey, why don't you put it in the front? I'll just put it in the front. That'd be fine. I'm sorry. Okay, thanks a lot. Thank you very much. I thought I had a book in that box. And what? A man in a smoker? Is there something else in the box that you said? I thought I brought a book along for her. But it might have been this. I guess I must have been there for a while. It's okay. I used to see them all the time. I was there as a sports announcer many years ago. Thank you very much. You can manage it, huh? I can manage it. I'm giving an handshake for her. I was sorry she couldn't be here. Well, I am too. She had to go up to New York. The anti-drug program. She's a visitor. She's a visitor, maybe. She's done a good work. Thank you for seeing us. Thank you. And I want to thank you for listening to the voice of the Christian people in America. I thank you for that. I fancy myself as one of them. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. Thanks a lot for your time. Well, I appreciate you taking a few minutes to chat with me. If I could, I'd like to just remind you of some things that we've talked about before, but not recently. And I just to be sure they're in context. About, well, sometime back, I approached you with a request that you issue an executive order. Prohibiting the sale of sexually explicit material on federal property, on federal office buildings, and on military bases, embassies, and so on. And that idea originally occurred to me after the chief executives of a number of private concerns took that step. And in fact, I was greatly encouraged when I happened to be talking to the head of a large grocery chain, well, the 7-Eleven stores, who reported to me that after he had amid a lot of publicity banned the sale of these magazines, that Playboy and Pet House and Hustler and so on, that he had been contacted by you and that you'd told him that you admired him for doing it and thought it was the right decision. And so on. And of course, Jack Eckert down in Florida did the same and highest drug stores and some of the truck stop operators. Well, it's so good to see you. It's good. It's good to see you. Good and loud, Jonathan. How do you do with the family? I know there. When I do just fine and I'm glad to see you. This is Meredith. Meredith. Hello. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Everybody, you say, Robert. Hello. Thank you. Well, hello to you. And I'm the taller half. Hi. How are you? Well, why don't we get a family picture? Well, thank you. I want to get the middle. And I think so. And we'll see. All right. Right here. Let's make sure we get. We're going to do it like this. Very good. Good smart. Look at the camera and say cheese. Cheese. Smile. Cheese. What more? Cheese. Thank you. Thank you very much. I want you to know they are all born during your administration. And we came to Washington in 1980. It was just the two of us. So we're delighted. So these are all President Reagan children. Now, Lisbeth wanted to tell us. Lisbeth. What did you want to say to the president? What did you say this morning? California. She doesn't want you to go to California. Oh. I have to. That's where I live. But they said you could live in our basement. They want you to be president. But I got a latch out there with a lot of horses to ride. So who's going to be the next president if he can't stay? George Bush. George Bush. That's right. I think that's just fine. What do we say to the president for giving us his time? What do we say? Thank you. Well, thank you all. It's nice to see you all. Say goodbye, Lisbeth. Bye. Give him your eyes. Bye. Give him a kiss on the cheek. No. Okay. Thank you. All right. So Grace, this is very great. It's a great pleasure. Thank you. Louis is my cousin. How does that answer your question? Congratulations, you're on a council meeting. Thank you. This is Reagan. Mr. Zeemers. Will. So happy to see you. I'm Zeemers. Yes. Hello. Nice to see you. I'm Vera Zeemers. Vera, how do you do? Hello. Galina. Nice to see you. Galina, hello there. Nice to see you. Of course, I know you're Americans now. That's right. Thank you. Hello. Do you want to go in there for us? Thank you. Hello. Welcome. Well, you know, before we sit down for our visit, if you would, we'd like to go out on our White House press corps there, and we would like to get pictures and so forth. So when we go out, we'll go down a couple of steps and we'll land in there just to pause and tell people who you are. And we'd like to have, when we get there, you would be beside me, you would be beside him, and then Nancy will be on the other side. I'm between. You're on the outside. You're on the outside. Oh, no? And then you are... That's you. That's me. Yeah, but I'm not on the outside. I'm on the outside. Yes, that's you. That's me. We're saying that there are negotiations on the hostages ongoing. I've never been able to... Well, now you know what the White House press corps is all about. This is all this blue shirt. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. When Lyndon Johnson was president he made a statement among us. He said, If I left the White House and walked down to the Potomac River and walked across the river on the surface of the water... Yeah. The press would report president can't swim. Well I'll tell us about that. Have you got a treatment? I've had things. I can start work and then I'll go in the next attack. happen. They have to do some tests with my eyes. But now I feel well and very happy. The attacks may have something to do with the test. Also the admission to leave was the best medicine. I remember you're saying on the phone that after you got the permission that he was like a new man. Is that young lady going to school? Two schools. Two schools. The musical school in Boston. The last time we saw you was at Spice and House. How was that? I was then absolutely hopeless. We thought that's the end of the story. We told them they had spoken hard over their word to us. Things began to happen.