 Good to see you here. Thank you very much for having us all here. Many members of my team are here. I'm not going to interrupt your lunchtime. We're just about through. I'd love to. Danny Wheaton, my trainer. Kim Ziegler. Great ode to the McDowell. Of course, Peter O'Brien. Steve Michel. Are you going to walk all the way around? Yeah, yeah, you're still a great athlete. Tom Ventura. Jeff Russell. Gene Olson-Trolley. Gary Ward. Ketcher Don Slott. And Coach Art Howe. Nice to see you. Please sit down. Who's this? Nice to see you. You look wonderful. He really does know. I have my big family there. You must. All those World Series I pitched when I was Grover Cleveland. No one ever getting ready for that picture. When we were getting ready to start it. The picture as you know started with Grover Cleveland as a young. Yeah, absolutely. Hadn't broken in a baseball or anything as yet. And finally they began having some problems about whether I was what they were going to do to make me look young enough for that first part of the picture. Nobody asked me and I was sitting there listening to them discuss me as if I were a race horse and wasn't there or couldn't hear. Finally I interrupted them and I said look I think you've got the wrong end of the problem. I said what do you mean what do you mean? And I said I'm older than he was when the picture ends. I don't know whether you all know I started in as a sports announcer who used to broadcast major league baseball. You know we know that. You know all about you. We'd like to have you know more about us by getting in the World Series and maybe you will. I know that you're a kind of contender right now. I think that's wonderful. We appreciate you following us and Larry and Peter are just great to have us here. Well I can understand why you expect this way. I know how you feel when you get out of Washington. Joe, were you with the Senators at the time? No. You started, that's right. The bill was the only one. Bill's the only one. You've got to be fair there. You mean that they know about the time that I was broadcasting the baseball game that wasn't happening? Tell us that one. I was doing one telegraphic report in Chicago Cubs and the Cards. Nothing to nothing. In the ninth inning, Dizzy Dean out of the mound, Billy Jurgus out at the plate. And in the ninth and all of a sudden the way that this was done was I had a telegraph operator on the other side of the window. A little slit underneath. And he with the headphones would get that dot and dash Morse code and he would type out, slip the thing under the window. I guess slip of paper that said S1C. Well you can't sell any Wheaties yelling S1C. So I say, well Dean's out of the wind up, here comes the pitch and it's a call strike. Breaking of the outside corner to a better, the legs of a little bit of a shoulder high and inside. And I saw him start to type at that particular moment in the ball game and I started to talk. I had Dizzy wind up and start one toward the plate and he was shaking his head. The other side and I didn't know what he meant. I thought maybe some unusual play. God said the wire's gone dead. I had a ball on the way to the plate. So I had Jurgus follow it off. He just shook his head and I thought, night thing. And on those days you see there were a half a dozen stations broadcasting the same game. So if I said we'll now have some transcribed music or something, they don't switch stations. So I thought, I gotta stay here with this. So I had Dizzy use the rosin bat a little bit. Then throw another one down there and I had the ball. I had him follow one that only missed being a home run by a foot. And I had him follow one over back a third base and I described the two kids that got in a fight over the ball. They kept going but pretty soon I realized I'm way out on a limb. If I now give up and say music, they'll know something's been wrong. And all of a sudden Curly sat up and started typing. So I got a slip and I could hardly talk or giggling. It said, Jurgus popped out on the first ball pitch. Days after I'd meet people on the street and they'd recognize me and they'd say, say has anyone ever hit that many successive? Well I'd say there's nothing in the record. Well listen, we know you get many visitors and get many things, but the Texas Rangers want to give you a little something. We didn't have time to print up a jacket like Tommy Lasorda would have done. But we do have a hat from the Texas Rangers and an autographed baseball. Hopefully the future world champions are. That's right, we both have good hands. Thank you very much. It's my pleasure. And if you can't use that, I know it could go into Larry's act of which. I'm going to have a hat collection for that presidential library at Stanford University. That would be very fascinating. Well I've got to get along here. Thank you Mr. President. Thank you for having me here. Great to have you here. Thank you. Keep the fingers crossed for the Rangers. Please, we can use your good luck. Have the best of you. Thank you very much.