 That's great. She was brought in at Google. What's that? Professor. Professor. Professor of agricultural economics in Chicago. It's 48 to 49. That's a good question. Professor Emeritus at Chicago. Nobel Prize winner. Member of the National Academy of Science. And he was the first to as well have a major cultural influence. Johnson on your right. Also, he's a major cultural economist. Carl Burr here. He has worked for secretaries of agriculture. On his other activities. And again, Bruce Gardner is one who's relatively new to me. University of Maryland. And I've worked here. I've been at the University of Chicago. University of North Carolina. And I was here. I had been here at the Council of Economic Advisers. So they're the farmers we brought in. The reason for bringing them in is that we thought you might want to, at the summit, when they have a session that's probably unstructured for people to bring up a lot of long-ranging issues. But you might want to bring up agriculture. Several subjects we're going to propose to you as possibilities. The one reason for suggesting agriculture is that there's been a dramatic change in attitudes toward agriculture in international, of course, discussion. Very often. Okay. Let's play about a book. That can put your arm around your brain. The first thing we're going to do is, okay, you can move it more this way. Good. Excellent. Good. I want you to look closer to the lens. No happyness. Good. Good. You want to relax just for a minute and then check the wife and then work on your own. You've gone too far. Good. That's great. Good. There. Great. Good. Good. Good. Watch Chang chip system. Objectively. Good. Now George is laughing. Wow! Not too happy. That's fair. Good.어야. So we need to show that we care about the roadmap. so I think that in the general they've seen is a fairly positive one. The scene is a fairly positive one, the way in which the meetings at least are supposed to flow, and the heads of state may alter that. Jim and I have been talking a little bit about altering it as far as the finance and foreign ministers are concerned. But if you can see the first box up here on the left under heads of state, it is thought that you would discuss east-west issues there and terrorism. Meanwhile, finance ministers would be talking about economic things and foreign ministers regionally. And then the next morning, you have another meeting of heads only, where more or less the same things would be getting discussed. And two statements that have been worked on, one of which is pretty much agreed to and the other of which is fairly well agreed to would hopefully be finalized there and then issued at the end of the morning. The late year. Oh, no, it's fine. It's fine. You'll be able to call a bell. And you'll send us twice in a day. Hello. Maybe eight hours. Oh, all right. I'm sorry. Mr. President, we thank you for seeing us today. We, on some time, have wanted to discuss to you the concern that we have about what's going on in the energy-producing areas of the country, which have responsibility for bagging our necessary domestic energy for the years to come. And I know you're aware of a lot of it, and I haven't gone back over it, but we've lost approaching 200,000 jobs in Houston, Texas in the last two or three years. And we're not really complaining about that. Those of us here are free market people, and we understand that. But we feel that there should be a concern nationwide for the loss of high-cost marginal production, which, when plugged, may never come back. And that's a resource that we are concerned about, the stripper wells, the tertiary and heavy oil type wells. And then we're concerned about maintaining, in place, a basic infrastructure of drilling capability and exploration capability, which, when it's gone, will be very difficult to put back in place again when prices do rise. We're also concerned about getting the government out of the way as much as we can, and I know you've always expressed sympathy for this, and there are a lot of things that we can do in that direction, like peel oil and fall ground off the sides, and deregulate natural gas, which you have sent you to support, and we apologize for that. We're peeling fuel inside. I may not be unanimous on that, but to give a chance for unblocking as much as we can in those areas that are possible to us. And that will save administrative costs and a free of extra money, but we feel that we need extra incentives for the marginal production and extra incentives that we don't have today for the exploratory type activities that I mentioned. One thing we're not here to do today is to improtune you about an oil terrier or an import food. And we made that clear with our group. We weren't going to come here for any political purposes other than to tell you what we see as the problems and to encourage you to let us work with you on a plan, hopefully some sort of a Reagan administration energy policy that will take into account these problems that we have today and let us focus on how it is. Hi, how are you? Let's get a picture here together. Thank you. Well, good to see you. Thank you. Hi, how are you? Good to see you. Good to see you. And John Lewis. Mr. President, how are you? Good to see you. Well, nice to see you. How are you? Just fine. Thank you. You look fine. Well, I feel good. We're very proud of you. All right. Is that moving down to the ground? Mr. President. Hello, I'm here. Frank Hill. Hi. How are you? Good to see you. Thank you. Looks like you've done this before. Mr. President of the Orange County. How are you? Well, Orange County. Where the good Republicans go before they die. That's right. Well, why don't I get in a little bit of a loop? Yes, sir. Please, where are you? Just a minute. Can we go back a long way? Down against the 76. Thank you, sir. And you're on one for reelection? Yes, sir. Yes, we are. Yes, we are. We're going to take over by 90. So we're going to read history. Absolutely. That's great. That's what's really wrong. Fifty years that the other side has been doing it. When we draw the next lines, we'll take back the six they stole from us. We'll add six of our own and five more because of the census. It'll be in that swing of 17. You would have won the Contra vote. Now, we're going to spend between three and five million on assembly races to take over the House. So I think one of the silly things that will demonstrate to you the power of entrepreneurs is that the market is great. That is so great. That is so great. Oh, that is so great. He has to be patient. That's great. Governor, your president has a story for you about Gaddafi was injured. Yeah, and the rate, he was getting a drink of water in the toilet seat and he was yelling. God bless you for doing that. Absolutely. Proud to be an American. You know, there's one thing we can't rule out that one of our bombs accidentally hit those civilians. That's a civilian target. But at the same time, nobody can write off the fact also that they could have done it themselves with their own missiles. Because we had planes up that were offsetting there electronically so that they could not, their radars would not target them on our planes. So they were just shooting them straight up in the air and they were coming straight down. And there was a picture up here, and they made the picture available of one of them, part of a booster in the street that they claimed was a plane, part of a plane of ours that they shot down is the booster from their rocket. So those things were coming back. After all the rumors he's committed, you don't have to feel defensive. Yeah, not a bit. Not a bit. I'm proud of you. You sure are. Thank you very much. You've been an inspiration to all of us in being involved in politics. You know, conservatives, especially I think our parents didn't look too kindly on this getting involved in politics, but you made an honorable profession. Well, bless you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks very much. You're off to the parties? Yeah. I was out to Bombay first and then to Tokyo. Then we told them about 22,000 something miles. Can you get some rest? Yes, we're going to do it. We're going to stop overnight in Los Angeles. That's three hours difference. I'm going to go a couple more and stop over tonight. Two nights in Hawaii. And then we go on to Bombay. Well, we refuel to go on, but they go on to Bombay. Then from Bombay, when we go to Japan, that's back an hour closer to it. The whole thing is, we're still trying to pin it down whether it's 13 hours or 12 hours. Trade? The big issue? Trade? That can be terrorism. I think it's time for us to do these serious threats all together. We miss you on the Ron Charles track. You're done here. It'll be time to go. It'll be time to go. Well, for now, you're going to do some congressional races this year? Oh, sure. Your visitor has been weather. He's in the top place. Anyway, we've been opposed on your time long enough. Thank you. Mr. President, we're visiting with us. Thank you very much. Thank you. Good to see you again, President. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. President. We have a budget system here. If you had the blue pencil, things would be a lot different. Do you have the blue pencil? 1260. He beat your record. Yeah, 943. He's a headache. Thank you.