 Now you're saying somebody's saying, just say no. That's what Nancy, let me come down here to talk about, is just say no. Where that came from, Nancy was appearing before a group of students, students like yourself, and a girl in the audience told them, what do we do when someone offers a drug and just say no. And the day they are over 10,000, just say no comes. From schools and campuses across the country. Well, I know that I've got to move on and get over to the forum and the meeting on this subject that I just mentioned. But again, I just want to say, very heartwarming. You make me very proud indeed, and I'm proud to be here today with this warm welcome. Thank you very much. 73% of those employees using this to satisfy your statewide, I status the governor's council on alcohol and drug abuse among children in youth by executive order on January 29, 1986. This council supports education and prevention and treatment programs to reduce alcohol and drug abuse problems among children in youth and helps develop legislative programs and public existing within the civic organization. I propose to you that we pool our knowledge as we run the day. We pool our knowledge and resources, share our experience, and develop a state in helping to reduce financial human costs. The federal government is not enough to buy a pro-screen program for this problem. I believe any program that is going to be affected must have the involvement and cooperation of all elements of our society. Educational institutions, rehabilitation centers, as well as law enforcement. We are tired to do something to improve your people with that hell of addiction and with God-given miracle. St. Matthews said, blessed are they that hunger and thirst, we hunger and thirst, for how we can bring more people into that fold, how we can find some process, learn from each other as we've done this morning, as we're doing today, sharing with each other. We hunger and thirst for how we can help people. As I mentioned earlier today, I had the like so many Americans. We watched with greater and greater apprehension during the years, when too much of our media and too many of our cultural and political leaders sent out the message that using illegal drugs was okay. Well, thank God those days are over. A few weeks ago, we learned that America's students are saying no as never before. For 13 years, we have conducted annual surveys of thousands of graduating seniors in high schools across our country. What drugs have they used? How often? What do they think about drugs? Since the surveying began, a substantially smaller proportion of high school seniors, one-third smaller, acknowledged current use of cocaine than did the year before. Use of marijuana and amphetamines is also dropping. The professional basketball court may seem like a long way from the average officer factory. But as I heard those personal stories before I came out here, I couldn't help thinking how similarly we're to a story about drugs in the workplace that I was planning to take. A few years ago, you're in minutes of a great career swanning on drugs. Today, David Johnson is putting his life together. We all pray for the success and we have this warning. In his words, you never feel like you're going to be the one to get hooked, he says. The end of it, and it's very hard to get out of it. David Johnson was an extraordinary athlete, but a long-term typical on-the-job of a drug user. Injury and accident problems don't want to work around someone who gets high during the day. Perhaps because drug users act the way they tell researchers they feel, they don't want to be at work, period. One other thing, as I heard firsthand today when it's all over, drug users look back on the wreckage of their careers and their lives like David Thompson, their advice is, never, never try.