 It's just a little, it's a bookmark. It says I'm just sitting here at the office here. Thank you very much. Well, congratulations on being chosen so I can see why you're here. My pleasure. Best wishes to you. And we look forward to your work. Thank you. Senator, why don't we get a photo of the tree of the journal, quick. Here. Why don't you get them in the room, did you? They're good. Thank you. Good. The President, thank you so much. Thanks. Thank you. Well, let's be in touch and get the details in a little while, OK? Well, President Marie Fisher. Yes. Let me just face you. It's really nice. Yeah. I'd like to get a photo of the tree. I just have a little souvenir. I'm going to take a picture of that. Thank you very much. Thank you. Appreciate it, Mr. President. Just in case. She's deserted me for a few days. She's up in New York. She's making a speech there tonight about drugs. She's again them. Yeah. And she's hopefully everybody. It's such an honor. Thank you for accepting our letter, especially. I wondered if you could get the phone. Yeah, we were kind of wondering if you could get this far. Well, I was pleased. That's certainly our pleased. So you saw them in the phone? Yeah. I'm here silent just last week. That's where I am. Move on. I know you're, yeah. I appreciate you taking your time on this. It's such an honor to be here. I'll carry this with me. God bless you. No. Bless you. It's okay. God bless our flag. God bless you. It will be a gift sometime. I'm not here to get you over there. Yes. Treat me. I'm going to try to go to the same place you're going. That's it. That's it. Thank you. That's the thing. Thank you. This is a great gift. You're welcome. Thank you. Thank you. General, Mrs. Gabriel. Thank you. Good to see you. I'm kind of too happy about maybe saying goodbye. We're very happy about it. 36 years has been wonderful, only the last four. I went to a plane for Red Lake. What position did you play? Quarterback in defensive passes. I was behind Arnold Gullifer, who was all-American, but I was mostly playing defensive passes. But we never lost to Navy, and we had a couple of national champions. We got some national champions in the last four years, too. They've done a magnificent job. Well, we almost had the Air Force, as you know, when national champions had passed here. Two hundred and fifty-two missions. Well, that's... Those are good airplanes. Those are good airplanes. It's good to be here in between and get a picture and get a photo here. Thank you. Well, it's good to see you. Thanks for everything, sir. Thank you. The pants are strong as ever. Thanks for the time being here. Thank you for the love you gave us the video for the Gathering of Eagles. Everybody was gathered. That really came up big. Thank you again. Yes, just a couple of souvenirs. That's a bookmark. Thank you very much. I'm glad to do that. Thanks again, sir. Good health. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Mr. President. Mr. President, thank you very much. Thank you. Well, thank you for all the help and all of our battles here. New years have come back. Well, you've been a super manager. You've given us new life and spirit. Our sailors love you. And I couldn't have more fantastic four years. But you gave us the opportunity. You're very kind. I appreciate it. I don't need to get in the middle of here. Well, it's been wonderful. We've had a wonderful four years. And it's because of you. My husband says that publicly all the time. He says it privately to me. So it's the truth. Well, just one second. You're going to have to read a book. That's a bookmark. Oh, thank you, Mr. President. It's a souvenir for you and me. Yeah, thank you very much. We're very self-conscious. I bless you, Mr. President. I don't know whether I should tell you or maybe I have already. One day when I was talking to the Lieutenant Commander from the Coast Guard, Vivian, she was the first Coast Guard person and first woman to be a military radio operator. And I guess I was talking too effusively about the Navy after one of our meetings or something. Very quietly, she informed me that the Coast Guard is the unit around which the Navy gathers the Coast Guard. I love it. It's a great line. They selected a good woman. They've done a wonderful job and I'm a conservative. I hate to see anything change but apparently the rules are that things have to change. So we hope that we'll continue to do as nicely as it has. Thank you so much. Thank you. I bless you. I present Mr. Paricel. Mr. Cedi, you're my Governor for eight years. I am a Californian. Ah well. Well over a happy day too. Mr. Blinsterbuss from Chicago. How you doing? Thank you. Mr. Poblowski from Maryland. Mr. Poblowski from Maryland. Hello sir. I'd like to express our support. Thank you. Mr. Gichis from Philadelphia. Hello there. Mr. Stevenson from New Jersey. Thank you. Mr. Lambridge from Boston. Good matter. Mr. President. Thank you. Senator Eagle. Hi Mr. President. Nice to see you today. Mr. President. Good to see you again. Mr. President. I know that too very strongly about our continued meetings with the Soviets through a contingent. We have a very official business. We are planning to have a chance to decide whether they are going to make their right to do it. Thank you. And I most appreciate your presence in supporting Bavar River still. We have another country for Central America. And before I do that, I wanted to talk a couple of minutes about a letter which we have prepared for you, and the letter primarily concerns just one very important issue, freedom of democracy. I would like to really express our support of your activities in Central America. At the same time, I would like you to bring this issue of freedom and democracy and also the occupational forces to be removed from the Baltic states when you meet at the summit meeting with Secretary Gavrachov, and also if possible at the United Nations and also at the Vienna follow-up conference of the European Committee for Security. And I really would appreciate it. We have summarized those things here, and we would like to give it to you this letter. But at the same time, if you ask to come to the Presidents, we here, of the state organizations that would like to hand it to you this award, would like to read it for you, we really do appreciate very much your efforts in signing this very important proclamation of the Freedom Day for the Baltic states. And let me read it for you, Mr. President. The Joint Baltic American National Committee presents Baltic Freedom Award to President Ronald Reagan in recognition of President Ronald Reagan's commitment to the aspirations for national freedom and self-determination of the people of Al-Qaeda, Stormy, Latvia, and Lithuania, and especially for his continued support of Baltic Freedom Day. The Joint Baltic American National Committee on behalf of the Baltic American wishes to send the President for his accurate description of the evil empire and for his continued disapproval and non-reignition of the illegal incorporation of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania by the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics. Thank you very much for everything you have done. Thank you. Can we pose for a photograph? Why don't we pose? Okay. Oh, come here. There we are. Can I have a welcome? Show this hand some self-reason. And Mr. Lombard, please. Okay. You have your hand and I think we can do all this. Thank you very much. And I will continue to come on. I mean that we have the willingness to express ourselves on this. And as I say, I once appreciate you doing this. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. President, I can't believe that that would be not very appropriate. Mr. President, also if I may, I have given this twice before. This is the third time. You must have a draw for it. And I am giving it to you in free and independent Latvia. Nothing better than that would happen. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. This is why, thank you. In Virginia, Latin is to be a major power plant and they're of the same type as Toronto. And as you know, the country is very critical, but fairly small in terms of the population. We're open to that international commission and we respect those plants and so it meets the people who will save them. I was greatly encouraged when George expressed his desire to have an international thing now that you do that. They've also apparently just learned that they're taking Latvians at night to go and clean up the Chernobyl plant. I mean they're taking them out and they're covered in darkness without any protective gear to clean up this plant. They've just found this out in the last couple of days. But yeah, I mean it's a real problem. Anyway, it's great honor to see you here. Thank you. I've finally solved the problem of what to do a few days in time, Mr. President. I was reading... What to do with me when I... Yeah, I've got a job here. I've been reading Thornton Wander again. And I was struck by the way he describes in our town, the soliloquies of the stage manager. The similarities between the prose and the descriptions you give at Dixon Hill alive in your book. And the idea came to me, this would be a dandy part, a revival of our town in L.A. Chuck Heston could direct. Do you ever see that play? No, no, I never did see it state-of-the-art. Oh, that's a fabulous play. It's about life at the turn of the century, between 1904 and 1914. Grover's Corner's New Hampshire, which is an imaginary town. It's about life and marriage and death. It's a very philosophical sweet play. And the whole thing is organized, held together by a stage manager, who just comes on and talks and introduces the characters. You don't know the part, you don't know what I mean. I'm going to talk to Chuck Heston about that. I don't know whether I could go back to that business. I'm going to switch to a chance to come down. I'm going to take a picture over here, so I don't mind. Yeah, I'll probably be covered, I guess, right now. I'm going to go to the next round. And the thing I just want to take a moment of your time on today, I don't know if you can believe it, but South Dakota is in the water. I guess it's probably most of the water. Yeah, you can do some of it. We have probably the most rainfall we've ever had in at least 150 years. And it's a particular part of the state. The farm management of the water, they just simply come to a stand to farm equipment. Here we have it, but in order to qualify for the program, it's important that you call deficiency payments. You have to punch your crop. Now, you can punch your crop, you can flood it out. You punch your crop, dry out. And you can collect your deficiency. And these people signed up for the program, who received 40% advantage payment under deficiency. And when I'm about to see the fertilizer, I made all the plans. I'm still waiting and trying to get it out. And what I'm, in my head, built that I've been certainly in a number of appropriations. And some people say that these people signed up for the main square, made all of these things, just because they couldn't use the fine crop, they didn't qualify for the 40% of the people. They don't want to live in the land. They didn't use them. They formed a profit-sharing protocol. But then they finally put it in the first time. And my people have two days to live. And they've never had this story, but we've never had this change. And that's good. Yes, guys. All the time now. Well, I've had a chance to it, certainly at least. I was once over to the recommendations, the commission, and I think we all support them on it. And I know we've got some horrendous problems around and so forth with those people at NASA. And I also have a letter for you, and you hear about it. I would kind of like to have a follow-up, maybe some kind of regular scorekeeping that sounds very appropriate. Mr. President, I think you did the right thing by setting up the Rogers Commission. It's a pretty comprehensive report, as you know. But the recommendations or sound, we support all the recommendations. Some of them can be already started and we're going down that path. Some of them are going to take long with the motivation of people and the reorganization and so forth. That has to be looked at very carefully. But to be sure that our goals and concerns are our goals and concerns, we want to get NASA back on track again and we'll do so. It was too great a record, a success to have a lingering feeling now that has changed. I can understand them around, but I think the people had such pride in it and justice so, because it was a great record of success. Mr. President. So I was looking for a reorganization to get about 100 of them. And where is this? You only get so a benefit. What is the purpose of this? It was to get back in there. He was 27. But other things, it's too far to be taking the patients so far because they are in dying condition and we are not enough available today. So I was asking you to let us help them.