 Well, welcome, and I'm sure that all of you found this year in our nation's capital a stimulating, rewarding, and much too short. Hopefully, much was demanded of you and much was given to you in turn. The goal of the White House Fellowships Program has been to present many interesting and challenging opportunities. I know you've responded with all your creativity, enthusiasm, and intelligence to make this experience productive, and intelligence to make, well as I say, make it productive, and one that you yourselves and the government which you serve, which you all benefited. I hope that Linda Tower also gets a good rest before the next crop of fellows arrive. And congratulations on your service, as White House Fellows, and I want you to know that I appreciate very much all that you've meant to our administration, that you've contributed to it. Now I think I'm supposed to go over here some place. I'd like to introduce Paul Gigo, Mr. President. Mr. President? Thank you very much. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. I had the privilege of working on your welfare reform proposals. Oh, bless you. Mr. President, I'd like to introduce Christine Langdon. Mr. President, thank you. It's a pleasure working for you. I was the National State Council, and I'm with the General Caledon. Thank you very much. Thank you. Mr. President, I'd like to introduce William Lennox. Thank you, sir. I'd like to introduce him, and I was working for Secretary Bennett on the drug program. Oh. Mr. President, I'd like to introduce Vicki O'Meara-Masterman. Mr. President? And Susan, how did you possibly... On the end, you just back up and say, yeah. I just hate space. Great. I'll be afraid to smile. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, sir. I have a real story I'd like to tell you about the group photos. You know how it's supposed to be in the center here. I learned an acting lesson early on in Hollywood. There was a Frederick March, a well-known motion picture, a star at the time, and any group picture at a Hollywood affair would always make his way over that end. And I couldn't understand it with everyone kind of crowding to get in the middle. And I asked him, and he said, well... He said, no one reads the entire caption under a picture. All read stars. That's right. I haven't managed to get over there. I have another little one I have to tell you. Since we're in this room, you know, over there on the mantel is the Nobel Peace Prize that was won by Teddy Roosevelt before he is bringing an end to the Russo-Japanese war. And I have always delighted in his family. This is the only one that was ever made available to the White House. They presented that that we could have here in this Roosevelt room. And I've always delighted in saying that he won that in true Republican style. He was on a yacht when they made it here. Well, listen, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Good luck. Thank you. I know there are a lot of proud people over on that side of the room. They have every reason and right to be proud of these young people who have been here with us. Thank you all. Mr. President, you hang in there. Thank you.