 How are you? Good to see you. Good to see you. Good to see you too. We have of all 50 Seabrie's Salutes of Spirit of Young America Award winners. We're very honored to present you and your husband with this award, the Spirit of America Award. And we're very honored to be in a presence today. And the determination, dedication, leadership, and courage have been an inspiration to us all. I don't know. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. No, I'm not incorrect. I think I want to do that. Right? Yeah, something else, please. Oh. I think that one, we have another thing here. This is a postcard signed by the 11 representatives of the 50 winners. Oh. Thank you. You're welcome. I'll tell him. Okay. I give him 11 kisses. Thank you very much. Very much. And my husband, thank you. Also, and I really, all of you said to me, I can say right back to you, because I'm so proud of you and all that you've done, and all the courage that you've shown, and the compassion that you've shown, and the integrity that you've shown, and the hard work that you're doing for the drug program. I'm very, very proud of you. Very, very happy to have you here. Thank you. Thank you very much. Pardon me. I'm pregnant. He has five? He has five? He's all recovered. He's all recovered. He's going to be seven and six tomorrow. Isn't that great? What are you planning for? We're going to have two couples in for dinner. What are you going to do? Secret. A big birthday cake. Pardon me? A big birthday cake. A birthday cake? Sure, of course. What's the birthday cake? A birthday without a birthday cake. Pardon me? Is your husband feeling well enough to do a whole press conference? Talk to him. Have you seen him in a while? Well, you've seen him? We've seen him. He's not had an opportunity to talk to him in a while. Well, he has been cooperating, you know. I don't answer any questions. I don't know anything about a press conference. No, I'm just curious if in terms of his recovery and his recovery, whether or not it's gotten back to a point where he can resume the kind of contact with the press, even in photo opportunities, that sort of thing, that he hasn't been doing in the last few weeks. Didn't I see some photo opportunities the other day in the paper? We've seen both photographers. I'm not a photographer. It's not important here. Oh. Yeah. We heard you. That I was actually in the reporters? No. You wouldn't do this. You know that's not so. You're here. Who is holding him back then? Is it the doctors? Is it Mr. Reagan? Who might it be? Well, I don't know that anybody is holding him back. There was a recuperative period that he went through. Everybody has to go through. As a matter of fact, there are people here who got through the same thing. And they went back too soon and got into difficulty. He's had the feeling, though, that he could deliver the feeling from the reporters. Well, that's incorrect. Does he not want to talk to us? Oh, he's dying to talk to us. And he says, I'm just dying to talk. And the last thing was going to go to bed at nine. A few weeks ago, in fact, there had to be a period where the president withheld his comments on the Orion contract there. Still, certain things came out. One of those that you mentioned was the Senate intelligence committee before. That's now out. In terms of what you were saying before, is the way now clear for him to comment on? See, I'm really not. Honestly, not the person you should talk to about this. It's my understanding that the Senate committee or the Senate report isn't completely out. Is that info? The intelligence committee reports out. Of course, the other committee goes off. Yeah. And the Tower Commission will be out on the, what, 17th? 19th. 19th. 19th. That's all I know. I don't really know anything about what. Well, I'm just curious if he was waiting until, say, the Tower Commission or some specific point in time. Well, I think, yes, I think he would, as I said before, that he would rather that all of this get out before he makes any kind of comments. That he thinks that's the most responsible thing to do. Do you think, Joe, that the House now, in terms of being part of all the stories that we're getting in the scandal? Not what do you think, though. Intellectual. Well, then that's over the hump. Well, you don't know what to do in hand. No, you don't. Which is a good reason for him not to, you know, save him. Well, the peeps and valleys that you told us. The peeps and valleys, yes. The peeps and valleys of all of our lives. He's just waiting for everything to come out. He wishes everything would come out. Tell us a little bit about the approaches in 1976. Last month, of course, there were a lot of stories that came to that he might have lost a step that he might be slipping as he ages. How did you feel about those stories and how do you think they've been put behind him now? I felt they were ridiculous. And anybody who's been in some meetings with him lately would tell you the same thing. Mrs. Reagan, there's been a lot of staff changes. I just got out of the White House. How does he view those? Well, Mr. Casey was ill. Mr. Carlucci was there because of what happened. So you can't, I mean, I think they've said, people have said there have been a lot of staff changes and they've not taken into account that one man was sick, one man was let go. And Larry had this great offer. But still, I think there's sort of a gap. I know that there are gaps. No, it doesn't even have a gap because it's been filled in. Frank Carlucci is there. Gates is there. Somebody will be there. Larry's place has been filled. I mean, there are no gaps. What about Don Reagan? Are you expecting him to stay on? Come on. I don't know. I don't know. Has he shared all those notes with you or any of those notes that he takes? No. No. Thank you very much. Do you keep a diary? Do you keep a diary? Sometimes. Thank you. Thanks, please. Thank you. I should have left and had you all question them. Oh, you did? Of course, you were wondering why you were going to come. Goodbye. Thank you very, very much. Goodbye. We're going family tomorrow. Pardon me? No. No, no, my favorite. My favorite for the drug problem. No, tomorrow we celebrate the birthday. Because we won't see him. We wish him a happy birthday. Gee, I'm glad you miss him so. I think he has. I think two or three. Have you been looking at that house again? No, I've looked at it a couple of times. You don't like that one? No, I like it. I didn't buy it for us. And we made it. I'm so looking. Thank you again.