 The recovery, you know, has been so strong in the whole community, as I say. The recovery of the existence of income has been about 19% of the wage in south. I mean, there's some partnerships out there doing that, given the freedom of the road. Well, I've got two letters in my desk. I know I've got some incidents in my remarks here, but two of them just came since that. You love, one of them is a black man in Michigan, which he says some pessimists have referred to as the armpit. And his business, that he started small business, but he is now thinking of franchising. And he writes a very wonderful letter, and he says in the letter that his business is clean carpets. But without, it comes in between some floor, without some process. It wasn't with the big mess, and so forth. And his gimmick, this is pretty imaginative. His men, who do the work, do it attired in tuxedos. They come to your home with a tuxedo and clean the carpets. Pleased. Come here when we're pleased and barred. I said, well, how is the new president, Yale's president? But he said, I'm not here. I don't need any money. I don't think the level of funding for scholarships is appropriate. What exactly, I have a little confusion. What exactly is our military camp? No one's focused on shooting. Oh yeah, that's a very good program. It's a very good program. In the service? No, they get X amount of dollars. They get credit for what they, for the amount of service they have. They get credit for education or for education. That's a good program. It's growing a lot of problems. I've seen it for three years. What does he get? Well, I'll get you a piece of paper on that, Mr. President. I think that they can come out after like five years of service with $20,000 and then use, apply for going to school. And for when are they coming? It's a substantial incentive to recruit. Really still. But the reason we're from Jamaica, this is our program this year, what he's just telling me about through the whole income youngsters. Those that really need it. We're trying to move it from there to those that don't need it. So we're really getting a good move. And he conceded that a hell of a lot of people have been getting stuff that didn't need it. But you thought it was, you never had to wash dishes in the groove of the door before you. You don't know what your real arms should fit. Your girls don't remember that. Yeah, there was the only kind of dormitory we had that you regained. Most of the fellas were taken care of in this small school, the fraternity houses. And the school is some place back along the line, and I don't know for what reason, before I got there, and canceled out of the sorority houses. And I guess maybe in those days, the parents wanted a closer school look at us, so they had floors in the dormitory, which was the Delta, Zeta floor, and the Maconaga, and so forth. But the fellas still lived in the fraternity houses. You're... Hi, everybody. Hi. How are you? I'm as president. How are you? Good to see you. How are you? Good to see you. We're starting with how our kids were delayed, but then we've participated in meetings like this before, so maybe we can start without even a bit of the time. Listen, first of all, I just want to say something, if I haven't said it before to some of you. I'm distressed by the image that has kind of been created out of the debate, and particularly out of the press coverage. That somehow what we're asking is something that, on a given day that has passed, everybody in the school system will find themselves meeting and saying, how are we going to handle this? What are we going to do? I don't see it as that way at all. Because all we're doing is saying, in effect, that the Constitution doesn't prevent you from praying. We are saying in defense of religious freedom that no one can plant, no official can dictate a prayer or anything else. And I've tried to explain to many. I have my own picture of what will take place, is that many schools, there won't be any change at all. Now, I am an authority. I went to six elementary schools before I got out of eighth grade, because my old man moved around for better jobs. And trying to remember back, you know, those schools, I don't think in any one of them that we ever had to start the day with a prayer or anything of that kind. But I do know this, that there would be occasions, let's say, one of your classmates is home very ill or someone's mother is. And yes, I can remember when all of us would pause someplace during the day and pray for that. Or there would be occasions when it was during the war, when there might be a prayer or something of that kind. But no formalized prayer. And I'm sure that today, with all the focus on it, there might be some instances where in communities, the teachers, the parents and students would decide they wanted to do what I don't want happening anymore. And one of the reasons we're introducing this is the image that is given to young people, that there must be something less than good about prayer or it wouldn't be banned in public places. And such things as right over here in Maryland, there's a group of students. They've had a customist group of students got together on their own, voluntarily. And they bring their lunches to school and they'd go into an unoccupied classroom during lunch hour, have lunch. And more than prayer, they mainly, they studied the Bible. They had a kind of Bible study group. And many of them have said that it was very beneficial to them. But all of a sudden, in walked the principal one day and he was so done shy over what all was going on. He said, you can't do this anymore. Another one of some students out on the school that recess and so forth used to sit down together with a little group and do the same thing or have prayer and just looking at them in the windows. They were told they can't do that with school grounds. And the most, to me, the most shocking is five-year-olds in kindergarten down south. Recently, evidently, they've came from families that said grace at meals. And so in these cool lunch rooms, in lunchtime, some of these little five-year-olds would bother us and say what they heard at home. Bless this food and so forth. And a federal judge ruled they can't do it. And my idea or picture of their parents the first time a five-year-old comes home and that night at dinner, one of the parents bowed his head to say grace and he'll go, well, perhaps that's just you can't do this.