 That was just right. Beautiful job. That spoils, that spoils the old job, though. Trouble with Rome is you can't get any good at that. In Rome, it's awful good. Yeah, man. Max, so enthusiastic how he was going. New idea every minute, you know, you're digesting and hitting on it. Wonderful. He's doing extremely well. He has this country boy way about him. And behind that, he's got it all figured out. And he's been very effective. Let me see everybody in the audience. But the one thing, though, that was very unusual. What's the use of it? Just up to here, in Catholic Charities, he was just close to the Archbishop, as anyone could be. He was very close to Cardinal Cook. And also he's now pining on the New Cardinal, who he was worried about, but now thinks it's going to be alright. He's worried about it, because he's one of the five. I'll take a little letter. I know you have. Yes, sir. Well, I just picked this one up. This is back in 1980. There's a lot of words of wisdom in here. I remember this, of course. Maybe he liked that. Oh, I think you give it to the President. The President certainly can take this. Well, just a tiny class here. And we'll be registering voters on the New Year's Day. Of course, as we've always done traditionally, to ensure that this country is in fine condition. We look forward to four more years. If you could step down from the campus, as I saw last night on television, where Mondale was the night before, maybe out in Iowa, it's been some high school students, and seniors. Yes, we did. I think he's not okay. How are you? Very nice to see you. You did a superb job. You were to be commended. It was absolutely marvelous. After that introduction I got. It was the best introduction going, wasn't it? I must say, being married to a governor, I stood up and took notes of that introduction. Although it was as well worth. Well, we're going to miss you around here. Well, thank you. At the same time, I know we're sure that you're going to try to do it. And then when you get in the Congress, you're going to have to have a paperweight that holds things down in the case. I look forward to that. I think it's going to be successful, and I'm very grateful for it. Go get it. Thanks ever so much. Tom McCoy. I know that. Retiring 30 years. Right. Okay. Thank you. Just take it easy now. Get a little golf. Enjoy it. Thank you, sir. Good to see you. Good to see you. Good to see you. Thank you for having me over. Well, appreciate it. Good to see you. After all, I have some gifts for you that I wanted to give you. This is a piece of oak off of the paperweight for you. It may be worth its weight in gold, I'm not sure. You have problems with the press. Here's what my own newspaper did to me. How about that? It is. Well, I was just going to say there's just another example of us Californians taking over everything back. I hope so. I want to give you your membership card to the press column. Number one, and this is a book that I want to see if you recognize that. It's a famous TV commentator who's retired now, used to work for CBS. My gosh. That's a young Walter Cronkite. It sure is. This was our 50th anniversary of your book and I would like to read that with you also. We hope to do a 75th one pretty soon. Congratulations. I'd like to do that. Wait till you see it. Somebody described it as an open roll-top desk. It's beautiful. Thank you very much. Thank you. Okay, now we're just going to bring Hello, Mr. President. Hi. Listen, we've got a lot in common. We both are from Illinois. I'm from Peoria, which is not far from where Dutch went to school, right? Not at all. We usually hitchhiked to get to Peoria. That wasn't too hard. I'm calling from your behind the camera. The one thing we have in common is that we danced and sang on the gridiron stage last May, March Together. That's right. We were a lot better than I was. Nice to see you. Well, it's good to see you. Thank you. One thing we have in common is that I'm also very proud of this review. You were... We're not going to go to WHO though, are we? We're going to do a story about it. There you are. We'll tell them that. We never thought of that. Well... We're changing leadership all at one time. It's quite a historic occasion. It's a busy time to be doing that. Yes, yeah. Of course, you on the Iowa trip there don't feel that you have to do something to make the Democrats who are so upset feel better. That's not the idea of the trip, is it though? To upset the Democrats? No, but I was amazed that they would think that they had a monopoly on caucuses. It was if that was a jewelry function of their party and not of ours. I couldn't believe it when I saw that how terrible it was for a meeting. It was strictly coincidental, right? Right? Are you going to go to New Hampshire? No, I can't get there just based on the schedule. George is going to be there. The thought crossed your mind. Well... No, the invitation to meet... We didn't plan that. The invitation came from Terry Branstad. You know that we're getting... You really did... I don't know if you believe that there was no such thing as a Republican caucus. We call attention to it. Well, you've got a lot of trouble ahead of you going to China and then Europe. Looking forward to those. There's no caucuses over there. I know. I have to say I'm looking forward to them a little. I reached a point where travel does not hold any of the order. Yeah. I have to say with regard to UPI though, one thing we also have in common with that and has to do with Iowa, many people don't or recall that back in those depression days, the Fair Trade Practices Act radio could not broadcast news. That will be unfair because the newspapers have to go into print and so forth and get out with the papers that are just going on. And the owner of our station O.B.J. Palmer, the founder of Chiropractic, he challenged them and W.H.O. for the first time. We set up news at H.R. Gross and I remember he was our newsman I was the sports announcer there and the only news service was UPI. And you read the baseball script from UPI, right? Well, no. There we had a direct line of an operator who typed each play out and slipped it to me under a window. But all of our news and my news from my sports summers came up that UPI... What did you do for applause and background? I believed I knew there were some fellas and I thought since you were required to frequently say broadcasting but whenever given the call it was my telegraphic report that I thought it would be distracting that people would know it was morning because you just told them you're not there and so I just thought and no one ever missed it. As a matter of fact I have a lot of people now that will sometimes I'll run into that used to hear me and they remember that they heard the noise and heard the sound and that thing. Oh that's a credit. That's a credit. That was a great work. That was an art. I'd like to say a few words. Okay now we are going to get back to the schedule and solve it and wonder if we'll get it over quick. Wonderful. I wish the community I'm going to sit up and be back. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. We're honored and it's a privilege to have you here again. Now we serve in the cause of justice. Making sure the terrible periods of the war, the history of the war. The relations that my son had to fight about, he was going to tell him about it. And all the people who came tonight. I could tell my high position about it. But you know, World War II, the case, then, was toward having it separate as we were using tear force. So it corresponded to the base that, where I was an officer, was something of what the Army has in the signal corps. We were responsible for the training films and documentaries. Yes. We got the combat film that came back from all over the war from all our units, put it together. And I've always had a, I think a little closer feeling to the horrors of the holocaust, the story, the levels of our forces were advancing in general. We got all the film that was taken when our men first entered many of those camps. And the scenes of horror were... Mr. President, I wish to tell you, next year, 85, for 40 years after the liberation, I am in my capacity as the vice president of the International Resistance Union. I think, I think, the survivors, they are children, they are children of Luxembourg, the American Jewish, the American cemetery, because they died for our freedom. And today, when I have a population, they are born after the war. Nobody knows about this. We liberated us. And this is the time that, especially the German youths and the youths in Holland, what should be reminded. And I hope that to be invited to, or maybe we'll send some review, send a message. No. We will be very pleased to. I am speaking of those films and the ease with which things like that can be forgotten. When I left the service, I had a number of prints made of those things. I took one of those prints and showed this of the camps, the people in the camps, they had been a child in World War I. And I remembered how atrocities were forgotten so quickly after that war. And I said, someday when people tell us that these things didn't happen, I want to be able to prove they did. You won't believe this. No more than a year after the war was over. A man, good friend of ours, a picture producer in Hollywood, his wife, were over for dinner one night. He is of the Hebrew faith. He had been in the service. And believe it or not, at dinner he started talking and fell. I imagine a lot of this that we were hearing was propaganda and that now that we'll learn them. And I said, you have just gotten yourself a ticket to a movie. And I have a 16-millimeter projector in our home there. And I just took him in, sat him down and turned down this film. I thought, good Lord, in one year he, under the faith, particularly, could start to believe that this didn't happen. What's going to happen is dangerous. Yes, sure. Our generation are alive. We are the last witnesses. Because later, this is a statistic. We must use the time along with our life. And to tell it and to ask people for their benefit and from our country. Well, I'm very proud of what we're doing. In our Justice Department, we've got 47 old, old investigators. I suppose, working on cases of denuclearization. They've been catered to people. They can assure you sometimes I protect them because people expect miracles. After so many years, vehicles cannot be done. Only with the hard work, and the self-sumption. They're doing that. We've got 40 cases and a dozen naturalization cases on the table right now. I know they're telling me that we have to. We have to, Mr. President. President. Well, my honor to have you all here. Thank you. Thank you very much, sir. Thank you very much. Thank you. Mr. President, could we have a photo too with the camera here? Yes, we could. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much.