 Thank you very much. Did you get the answer? All right, please, please see it. I understand that it was your idea regarding Nicaragua. I just appreciate this opportunity very briefly to thank you all for what you're doing and what you have done, and particularly with regard to our situation there in Nicaragua. The other day, thanks to Dave Fisher, I got to see some of the commercials that you have put on. I'm telling you, I enjoyed it more than a rerun of Bedtime for Ponsel. I thought you would have accomplished, and it is so important and so vital in getting more so. The information continues to come in. There is no question about the total totalitarian type of government that has come into being in Nicaragua, and we just cannot stand by and let another Soviet-directed nation in the satellite be implanted, particularly on the mainland of the Americas. What you've done is believe me of the greatest of help. There's been a great disinformation campaign that has made many of our very well-meaning people who still aren't aware of the problem in Nicaragua and how important it is that we do what is being done there. I've been told that because I only have a few minutes here that before I leave I can go over here ways and stop them, that maybe all of you can come by and we can meet individually at the same time. Mr. President, we were just discussing what we were going to be doing in Nicaragua, and what we were going to be doing in Nicaragua, and what we were going to be doing in Nicaragua is to go over to him, someone who had a question. Mr. President, we were just discussing how to get this country organized, back you and your effort, and this country's effort, to handle the Sandinista problem. I admit that I have pointed to that fellow over there, I said I didn't plug him too much, but he showed what he wanted out of the people. And Mr. President, I think the American people, if they're hit directly and shocked a bit as to what's going on, given the truth, we hope they will react and force their congressman to approve military aid, sir. I can't agree more. I think that the biggest problem that we have is that, very frankly, even of all the media that we have now, it may be because of it, great lack of information, part of the people, of some of the things that are going on. And if there's anything I get frustrated about, it's I go out and I make a speech, and then I look at the evening news, and there I am, and I see my mouth going, so I know I'm talking, but the voiceover is telling the people what they think and say. And then the subject that was the greatest moment for me to have something of this and this very subject in that speech, that never gets mentioned. So all the people really know is that I made a speech in South Suck-a-Tash or whatever I was at the time, but nobody knows what I said, except the people that were there. And this is why what you're doing and the very fact that you've been using the media is so, so tremendously important. It is a case of what we discovered in movies some years ago, that with all of our billboards and all of our teasers that were put in the end of the picture as to what was going to be seen next week and so forth, that the greatest advertising that the motion picture industry had was word of mouth. The people that said to their neighbors, hey, did you see the picture last night? Well, I found that a lot of that word of mouth is just what you are doing and can do. I'm always surprised sometimes with luncheons of groups in here on some various subjects and over in the state dining room, sitting on our table, start talking about something that to us is, well, like budgeting just recently and top business executives sitting around the table, they had no idea of what is the budget process of the federal government or any idea that that process is just about the Mickey Mouse thing that has ever been put into the state and the union that would put up with it. Every state has got a better budgeting process in the federal government, but I was amazed that all of them were totally surprised at just a few sentences about that. They had no idea of what the process was. So what you are doing is great. And I agree that maybe again that's why I've got that five minutes on Saturday and at least that does get a play in the national news after I've said we're going to say and try to use that. But his secret was going direct to the people having a career in radio that was a sports announcer some years ago and that when that was going on it might be interested to know that he had the highest audience rating of any program that was ever on radio. Mr. President, I want to tell you that we put together here all private citizens. Our budget is $2 million to support you in eight weeks, a little over $200,000 a week. It is the largest amount ever put together by a private group in support of a president on one issue. And the one man who has sensitized us and brought us together more than any other person in the past year to help you is the man who's given us these public briefings on top of everything else in his work, is Colonel Oliver North. And I want to thank him very much. He's responsible for all this problem. I did make aware of these things and what you have accomplished and it's just magnificent and believe me, here is an example that despite all the efforts of the bureaucracy, we still do have government by the people. Mr. President, would it be offensive to you if those of us of this group would organize and try to motivate and suggest a nationwide outcry and asking that we face up to this problem as good Americans? And probably started by you because you could tell the people and listen to you. And we believe that the people of the country want to know what you say and they get irritated when the media starts telling them what you said. Well, we are discussing right now, going to the TV screen, right now a couple of things imitated on our play, the budget and the tax reform and so forth, but these others. One of great importance that we should take to the people. And that is again the absolutely distorted view that a drum beat of propaganda has given the people with regard to our defense spending and the defense budget. Our defense budget is roughly a fourth, maybe a percentage or two percent above that point, above that. But traditionally, going back over the past, defense national security being the prime function of the federal government has normally been half of the federal budget. So we're down to this. We're down to a lower figure as a percentage of gross national product. And we didn't buy a 400. We bought about 20,000 hammers from six to eight dollars a piece. And then some fellow in the Navy found an invoice and included in the invoice was a single hammer at $435. The people got the invoice back and we got the $435 back and there are several other things of that kind. And right today, there has been, I think, one of the most effective build-ups and improvements in our military. We've had draft, as you know, when everyone was subject to the draft, and yet today we boast the highest percentage of high school graduates in the military that we have ever had in the nation's history. And in the three intelligence brackets that we use for classifying what jobs military should do, we have the highest percentage we've ever had in the top, the intelligence bracket. And it's when we came here, on any given day, half the airplanes in our military service could not be flown for lack of spare parts, or fuel, or even pilots. Half of our Navy vessels couldn't leave port for want of full crew or spare parts. All of this has been corrected. And if there's one thing I'm more proud of than anything, it's those young men and women of ours in uniform. They are just so tremendous. You know, I'd go out and get in the helicopter and that Marine's drone is saluted. I was an officer in war, and I know that when you're not uniform, you don't salute, and so I would nod and say, I don't know, sir, they'd still stand there one night over the Marine Corps, and I said to the commanding general, I said, I know I'm not in uniform, but I am the commander in chief. It ought to be a regulation that would permit me to return the salute of those men. I learned something about the job that night. He said, I think if you didn't, no one would say anything. So I now throw a high ball back at you to see that face break in. I think we better line up here for what we're going to do.