 I saw you on Saturday Newsmaker, whatever it was, you did a good job. You didn't get one straight answer. Dr. Jesse? I can't resist just taking a minute to settle down. I'm continually amazed and more so since I've been in this job because things come to my attention. There are people who have little hobbies or something that just show an amazing ability of doing something. After the show Saturday night out here, it sounds wrong. One of the guests in there handed me something. But out of his pocket, handed Nancy, then handed Marvin one. That is a dollar bill. I can't in any way figure out how that folded. No card. Yes. No, no, no. But then Nancy's was in Marvin's, was his initials. But there they are and that's a dollar bill. Look at that. That was interesting to do something like that. I know. I made the form of an elephant. I wonder what he's saying. I got a someplace stashed away. What I was saying, I've got out of the ranch. I've got a very handsome seal, great seal. It's unwooded with what looks like a dull kind of silver. Inside all the little things and pulling every star and everything until you look closely at it. The wood is there, but what I thought was silver or something, are nails. So close together that there it is just perfect. Every little star and everything. And every one of the individual nails just packed together so thick that you know it must have had to use a punch. The time. The time. I know they invest in it. Mr. President, the Prime Minister of I.C., Nice to meet you. I'm very glad to meet you. We have a small talk for a while, but there will be three waves of press. Let's do it. Do us a request. Take the most record of it. Please, he and you agree more closely on East-West relations than you and the Vice President of the United States. I'm just more of a suspicious type. Mr. President, is the only way you can get Contra Abe when you accept the bird proposal? I'm supporting the dull proposal right now. But it doesn't look like that's going to pass. Who's your candidate for running mate for Vice President Bush? What? Who is your candidate for the number two spot? I don't have a candidate. At all? No, that's up to him. You want to get your national security advisor? If you want to watch out, he's standing right behind you. Vice President, thank you. Vice? We have another move to go. He ran over to the other side. The other side. Not the outside. Let's go, please. Mr. President. Just that way, please. I'm from right now. We appreciate it very much. Mr. President. I was wondering if there is any possibility that Iceland and the United States would make some pre-trade agreement in the near future, maybe similar to what you have done between USA and Canada? But I think it's something certainly for us to talk about, because I think our relationship is a really fine one with Iceland and something of that kind could probably make it even better. Mr. President, what do you think about the idea of the Icelandic Foreign Minister about the Reykjavik Foundation as an international peace organization? I said in the meeting about the Reykjavik Foundation, I mean there is something that I... I'll have to... We've had some talks to find out what you're asking for. First, for an Icelandic Prime Minister, and I think you and I have discussed your visit demonstrates the strong and beneficial relationship that Iceland and the United States enjoys. I think perhaps since our last meeting had to do with summits with the East-West relationship that perhaps I should say a few words about the most recent trip, the Moscow summit, and we feel it was a success. And perhaps most gratifying was the opportunity we had to speak directly to the western values and traditions with the Soviet people themselves, not just with members of the Politburo. You know, my encounters with Soviet citizens, young people at the Moscow University, people on the street, dissidents and refused nicks and writers and artists have helped break down, I think, some barriers of misunderstanding. As a matter of fact, we were all greatly surprised by the attitude of the people themselves, just the people on the street that you met. There was a friendship, a friendliness and warmth in their greeting that was very reassuring and somewhat different than sometimes we get from the members of the Politburo. But we agreed to expand exchanges and people-to-people contacts, especially among young people. I think the General Secretary was quite enthused when we made that proposal about taking our young people, say, at about high school age and having them spend some time in each other's country, living with the families of our people. We-the Soviets still have a long way to go, but we're encouraged on the progress that has been made on the human rights front. And we welcomed the Afghanistan Agreement, the first phase of their Soviet troop withdrawal. And we're encouraged by progress toward resolving other regional conflicts such as the Iran-Iraq affair, the Southern Africa and now Cambodia. And so we signed the INF Treaty, as you know, or the Instruments of Ratification, I should say, in Moscow. We had already signed the Treaty. Progress toward a START Treaty, that's the 150% reduction in the intercontinental ballistic missiles. The progress is slow, it's much more complicated than the first one was, but we'll go as far as we can during the remainder of this year. And we won't, however, avoid setting any deadlines as we think what we want is a good treaty and not just get something to meet a deadline per cent. So however long it takes them, we'll stay at the table there with me. We won't, well, we're pursuing our strategic defense initiative. That was the thing that came to a head in high school in 1986 when we met Beijing at the point of difference where that was the price they wanted us to pay for, just anything. But I think we actually tell you that we've gone far enough in the research and development of that DG Defense Plan. We're going to be very confident that we are going to be able to come up with a defense. Somebody gets in the office and be a little different to it. He's saying those things that we're going to use against him in the campaign because I don't think that... It's a strange thing. The other sides of the legislature, the Democratic Congresses, have always, even when they're presidents were Democrats also, they've always for some reason been against defense spending. Many people don't remember that that was Franklin down in the Roosevelt. The Great War was going on in Europe and the world going up in flames, and we had to recognize that what else did happen was finally we were involved in it. We, just a few weeks before Pearl Harbor, our army, our military then, was conscription. Now it's volunteer, but conscription. We were only failed by one vote of wiping out the military draft or when Pearl Harbor came, if they'd had their way, it wouldn't have been much of a military. There are two. I'm sorry. No, go ahead. There are 2,000. Mr. President, my name is Delano Lewis, President of the Great Washington Board of Trade. Well, let's get a... Thank you, sir. Nice to see you. Thank you. Oh, my pleasure. Mr. President, it's a real pleasure for me as President of the Great Washington and my terms for a year to give you an honor and membership to the Great Washington Board of Trade. You're one of our leading citizens, one of our largest employers, and we want you to have this honor and membership. Well, thank you all very much. My pleasure. I appreciate it very much. And incidentally, I want to congratulate you on the job that you're doing because here in your area, the unemployment rate is only 2.7 percent. And I know your efforts in promoting jobs and so forth. Well, it's a surprise in this area that more people work in the private sector than they do in government, which is often forgotten. As a matter of fact, I have a little hobby on every Sunday. Sunday, the help wanted ads, that's when they reached their peak and every Sunday the Washington Board was dying. Count the pages. Believe it or not, they're getting larger. No, they're getting larger. They're up there around 70-odd pages every week. Full pages of employers looking for jobs. That's a good index. We're doing pretty well here. The biggest challenge to find good jobs. Now, I've been trying to help you see by seeing if we can't cut down the size of government. Well, thank you so much. Well, thank you. We're really busy today. Well. And thanks for seeing us and accepting our mission. I'm very honored. Thank you. It's a privilege. Thank you. Thank you again, Mr. President. Thank you all.