 That's a very good place. It was worse here than it said every day. Did there, too? That branched indoors. Well, first of all, I wanted to add to something I've already said to you, the body up there, the thank you for your strong support beneath them, and the great conference and the American people behind this front in our discussions with Gorbachev and the letter that I received signed by everybody that I had there at any point that I might have to use it against them, I kept it with me all the time, never had to use it against them. But, Terry, as you know, our meeting's heard in the plant and turtle. We got along well across the sky all over the sky. It's a good beginning. The differences are deep, and you know the competition, and the system will continue to. The object is to make peace, and there's still much to be done. If someone provides further evidence that our policies are working, Gorbachev needed the meeting and he accepted it upon our terms. We have to continue with the policies that brought this result in them. For that, I need your strong support, the strong support of Congress for our national security needs. I've asked George, who's just off an airplane himself, to tell you more about our discussions and progress that was made in arms control, regional issues, exchange programs, and field rights. George? Oh, no. Happy birthday. Thank you. How nice of you. Well, didn't know whether you were maybe trying to keep it a secret. I was. Thank you very much. 24 is a wonderful age. Plus, thank you very much. I really appreciate it. You don't have time to do these things. Oh, thank you. I have a little, grab one there, works for me. Oh, OK. I didn't know it was your birthday, he told me. Thank you. That's beautiful. I really appreciate it. Many happy returns. Thank you. I'm not going to call, I'm going to give to you. Do you have to do this other event first, Jim? To get that call, we now have a time of up. Yeah, I'm going to put a call through you right now from Charles Wick, OK? Oh. Hopefully, it'll just take a moment. Mr. Lane, Mr. Lane, I just want to say thank you, Mr. Lane, just to meet you. Well, it's a great pleasure to meet you and to be here with you. I can tell you my admiration for what you have done. Well, thank you very much. And what you could really do. Well, this is really sort of a climactic privilege, that's part of it all, and it makes it all very worthwhile. I understand with a great many young people in public school, 121 say the real reason they're failing. Well, we'd like to continue. It'll be more of a better reason. It's working out very well. It's really inspirational. Some of the people have been attracted now to try to cooperate in extending the program. And of course, it's very wonderful that you take an interest. Well, I do. Thank you. I work my way through a small college. Yes, I guess. I guess. That's a wonderful thing, because I think probably the greatest reason for Drop-Ups is design for medicine. Well, it's actually a lack of motivation. And I think it's not the money that's done it. It's the fact that each kid, as part of the program, has identified something they want to be. The streets don't have to pay it in. They want to be something, and they feel now it's incredible opportunity for them to get it. And that's what's keeping them on. None of them receive any money. They just receive the hopes, and now they keep that money. So I have great hopes for it, and it's a prototypical moment for drop-Ups, for kind of a hunger to start earning some money again. Well, or the fact that they don't want to be anything, the street fills in a vacuum. We haven't had any drop-outs against the statistic, that in the inner city, the minority majority gives them the 70% to 90% drop-out rate. The statistic is so dramatic and so extraordinary that it's really hard to believe. But it just shows the faith in itself and some self-esteem can do it. And each one of these kids has it. Thank you for coming in. There's no ceiling there, so you won't feel bad. Well, thank you. Thank you very much. I brought it on the desk. Thank you very very much. Thank you for taking the time. Thank you. I went to public school 121, and then the kid from then on became a successful industrialist. He told the kids in that school that every one of them would stay in school and graduate. He'd guarantee that they got to went to college. I was like that. I was just talking about that. And you know, he's coming together. He sees them every Saturday morning. They come to his office and business. Because all of that happens, there's not a lot. It's really a problem figure to them, is what it's done. Yeah, this is the American Association of Retired Pursuites. 20 million members. Just be careful of these people. They put that off. American Association of Retired Pursuites. Mr. Silbert, right? Thank you very much. Would you like to take a picture? Well, pleased to have you. See you. OK, this is John. Thank you. Nice to see you. I'm coming up the rear. Mr. Leonard Johnson. Nice to see you. Thank you very much. Please be happy. Mr. Denning, President Eli. Well. Mrs. Vita Austin, Mr. President. Nice to see you. Mr. Starr, Mr. Hawthorne, the 20 million member. Mrs. Hawthorne. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Well, congratulations. 20 million members in 27 years. And I know it's a work place like that. There are so many fields. I would love to see it. Be careful about my own. And Chief Shackdown and Midway Kentucky has a tobacco reed created in the back hall. This is in particular the railroad running through the little town of Midway Kentucky with little caboose and kind of salt. It may even have little Christmas atmosphere here. No, thank you very much. Mr. President, last year when you were in China you said come see you in 1988 when you'd be willing to come around. This is just a matter of the past. And it says 20 there, 20 million there, Mr. President, but in 1988 it'll be 25 minutes. The value of God. All right. Well, thank you, and thank you for this. Thank you very much. I have a few answers to that. commercialism. One with your name in front of that. It's going to be the 40th President of the United States. Also one for Vice President Bush. But I think we made a mistake there. Mr. Bush, 40 percent. Well, I'm honored to meet you, sir. It's been a pleasure. Thank you very much. I'm going to say this in high school. I'm a very wonderful bunch of young people that I talk to. And as you can see over on the table there, there is a footnote named the Cougars. That's a Cougar, right? This is the year, the Teddy Bears, right? Dedication last afternoon, right? Five o'clock. That's what we were told. Wasn't there a dedication to this? Stomach tree is gone. Stomach doll of us. They mentioned what was the Vice President, something relative or related to the Vice President. A dedication. You know what? You know what? These are our people, not the press. Oh, yes. So I can tell you something. An experience that I have treasured back in those riotous days at the campus, which, thank heaven, the difference today of the young people at the campus is just amazing. The rioting and everything. And I was governor in California. One day I got a demand, literally, from the student officers, the nine campuses of the University of California, demanded a meeting with me. Well, I was overjoyed, because if I tried to go to the campus, I wouldn't be around here. Well, anyway, they came in, and as was the custom of that day, t-shirts, some torn, some of them barefoot, and slouched into the seats there, in the cabinet room where I met with them, in Sacramento. And then one, as a spokesman, started without any pre-answer, and he said, Governor, it's impossible for you to understand us. He said, you cannot understand our generation. I asked it off, I said, we know more about being young than we do about being old. And he said, no, he said, I'm serious. He said, you can't understand your own sons and daughters. You didn't grow up in an age of instant electronics. You weren't growing up space-traveled, journeys to the moon, and he went on with all of these things, and jet-traveled and everything else. And finally, it just dawned, usually, you think of the answer once you're home. He talked long enough and I interrupted him and I said, you're absolutely right. Our generation never did have any of those things when we were growing up. We invented them. Thank you very much. Is that a gesture? We ended up just talking about it. Come about. Thank you very much. Oh, it's a great pleasure. Thank you. Thank you for this. No, that's fine. And include the elderly and the people of people and the internationalities. We go with the teachers and everyone else. Yes. The only thing I'd worry just between us about their teachers coming over here is afraid that some of ours might convert them to communism. Thank you very much. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. How are you doing? How are you doing? I'm hurrying. I'll show you, sir. A lot of my hair. A lot of my hair. Get out of here. Get out of here. Get out of here. Good to see you. How are you doing? So Mr. Fargo? You know, they're just take off. I've been here to protect him. Doesn't they walk? Let's go off file. Yes, and I will take the brawl at his museum and remember, here they started it all. That was the time limited. Each one of us wanted to have a word to say. I wish that we had had more time before they bill got debated voted on and so forth to really explain our position on it. We did bring some information, perhaps, that had not been given to you. This shows what would have happened if the pledge that you had made back in 1980 had been agreed to that in market growth. This is really what has happened. And this, of course, is the graphic display of what's happened since the car years of imports. This shows the increase in the textile and apparel trade deficit, which is now approaching $20 billion. This very graphically displays and shows the loss of jobs, black line being the loss of jobs, the other line being the increase in import. And, of course, I could go on and on with the effects to this. I know that your advisors are advising the veto of this bill, but this does mean a great deal to our states and our region. This is not just a regional problem as indicated by this chart that shows the employment and textile and apparel around the country, including New York, California, and as well as the states represented here. Of course, more pointing to the Republican administration lack of bizarre for the American worker who will create doubts in the voter's mind about.