 Well, I think we ought to have a family picture, you ought to be between us. All right. This sounds really good. I'm going to be there tomorrow. Okay. Okay. Right here. Thank you. Well, that'll wreck your camera right there. Not at all. Thank you, Mr. President. A couple of little souvenirs. Thank you, Mr. President. A couple of little souvenirs. A good knife, pocket knife. Thank you. And a set. Thank you very much. Thanks, too. Thank you, Mr. President. We keep you busy enough. Thank you, Mr. President. Lucky for us. Does he take good care of it? Well, I'm sure he does. That's right. What do you want? This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Marcel Jovene. This is Dannary. These are all our esteemed professionals here. That's Marcel, Mr. President. A good see-you-same. We got something for you. Thank you so much for giving us this time. This is a letter addressed to you, which is a gentleman's survey it is talked about without taxpayer money. Thank you. And then some time ago we won the program for medicine. So, this is a complete set of all of theheze Aud pork steak. I get to get a mixture of anything. Mr. President, the sculpture is an immigrant from Italy, and he says that this is the second most important day of his life, because the first was when he got his paper. And then when it went by president. Thank you very much. It's a great honor. Thank you. I just left your homeland a few days ago. Good time with Venice. Yes. On the other hand, it's a very wet season, because when I look down from the helicopter, all the streets seem to be flooded. It's always like that. That's pretty corny. Mr. President, that's one of the most beautiful sculptures and metals that we've produced. I think we're going to get more favorable comment on this than anyone in the society that we've produced. We're very especially pleased to be here. We're not going to go to metal because you'd perceive us and perceive us and accept us. I am most pleased to have these. Most handsome. Thank you very much. If you want to get a picture with. Why don't we turn the metals around so we can get a picture of the metal there. Tighter. I thought we'd only kill it. Thank you very much. I know you might be interested to know that one of my meetings didn't have to do with the summit over there, but I met at a home where, and there were a number of our American friends there, and it was that they were there because Italy has now decided to also have a private sector's initiative there and do the things that we do here under that going through government. They didn't have one? They didn't have one? They all started about a year ago in a thing in Paris where there was an international guest in a number of European countries that wanted to find out how we were doing that with the private sector. They have started, and their first chore was, there in Venice they built an American Italian friendship park. That was great. Tell the president, tell us on the way up about what you want to be in America. Well, the first came to the States and said, you've got to decide the two things that want it to be. I want it to be a capitalist and a republic. Well, I think that's so right. I've succeeded in both points. Thanks a lot. My friend, we came five years ago to give you the Capcom metal down here. Barbara Carnable had written this in, and Bill Frenz and I were in society. We look forward to seeing you another five years here somewhere in another metal. Well, thank you so much. Thank you, we're honored. Mr. President, introduce Colonel Paulson. He's our national president. Well, listen, I'm pleased to have you all here. Good to see you again, sir. God bless. God bless. The team said I'll be from Arla, Arla Way, but back at the Fort Des Moines. General Sandler from the Army. Nice to meet you, sir. My pleasure. Good to see you. I was from Des Moines, I was with W.A. Show. I thought you wanted to know that, sir. Major Paulson from the Air Force. Well, sir. Nice to meet you, sir. Chief warrant officer of COVAX. He looks down on everybody, sir. Doesn't look that tall to me after I photographed a few weeks ago with that Navy basketball. Oh, terrific, terrific. And I see the picture, I can't believe it. And in the picture I measured just his head. From his head and my head in the photograph facing him. And his head, in comparison to mine, went all the way to the bottom of my neck top. That's great. That's great. Right here. Right here. Well, listen, I know what the reserve is made of are more defensive. I also know all the help that you've been on the thing for me. A-Wax. A-Wax. And the budget for defense and so forth. And I need you now more than I've ever needed you because up on the hill they're just planning some things that would just cut everything out for a minute. If we are finally built up to a point where, as you can see, the Soviets have decided they got to do this. Yes, sir. And now in the face of all of that, in the face of the kind of negotiations they're up there planning things that would cut us to red. Well, Mr. President, I want to offer our association's help. We're highly concerned about Central American Avenue and all the other problems. Call us just like on the A-Wax or whatever. You tell us when and what you'd like us to do. Lean on Congress. Yes, sir. We can handle that. We've done that before. We mentioned Fort Des Moines. Yes, sir. What is Fort Des Moines? It's still there, sir. It's the old commander and now commander there. And we've still got a major reserve unit there. But no active. No, no reserve. No, it's a major reserve unit. It's all reserve units. It was the 14th Cavalry. Yes, sir. And after that they had the A-Wax and the Wax Corps. Well, they come back here every year now and have a reunion. I'd say something here about that. It's going to be a little embarrassing for one here. No, no. Mr. President, it's a different embarrassing. Yes. Well, I tell you what, we had the ceremonies here and it was just terribly hot and humid and on a progression from the 1907 Marines collapsed. But they were all the male Marines. Yes. The women of the 80 Marines killed them. That's terrific. Mr. President, next year we're going to dedicate, at number one constitution, our holocaust, of which you are a member, along with a very select group of people. I want to give you the personal invitation. We would like you to do the dedication. President Truman is the man who, of course, has been first eulogized there. And we kind of think things ought to be put together and balanced. So I want to give you personally that invitation now. And if you can find it in your schedule next year, we're going to do it when you can do it. So we would really be blessed and honored if you would try and fit that into your schedule. Well, I shall certainly take this up with a simple response. Thank you, Mr. President. But that's the place where I have the least. But that's why we want you up there. It's a part of that hall of fame to dedicate. We appreciate the opportunity to have us in here. And we'll certainly do everything we can to do this. I never had an opportunity to tell you when I stopped being in service. And that was about two-thirds of the way through the picture, co-starring with Errol Flynn, and I received a letter I didn't even have to open in the red print on the outside of the area. This was shortly after Pearl Harbor in the spring. And they said, immediate action, active duty. I don't know if you remember, but there is a certificate at our Reserve Personnel Center in St. Louis with your signature on it, discharging Clark Gable. When you were a captain, and he was a major, discharging him from the service. That's at the center. Anytime you go down to the Army Reserve Personnel Center, you'll see that. This was Errol Flynn at the Air Force. That's all right. Sir, our old Peltier case, as he is in the news again today, and we're still going to continue to fight it. Leonard Peltier, I was the one who handled that as one of your U.S. attorneys. And for 11 years, we've been hanging with it. And the Department of Justice is going to continue to make sure that thing sticks. Justice will continue to be done. God bless, sir. It's so nice to be with you. Thank you for everything. Thank you for everything. What was the win of the year? Thank you. I think we have one souvenir that's going to be of great quality. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. You know, I give it up. You have someone that you could give a tie about. She's got a man. I'll make him wear it in all our time. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. Good to be with you again. Good to be with you. Good to be with you again. Good to be with you again. Good to be with you again. Good to be with you again. Absolutely. Thank you. Professor Gordon Byer. He's going to be presenting the other people from Markham Foundation. This is Dr. Poe, the official biographer. The treasurer and head of the 40th anniversary events. And this is Mr. Ross Melheiser, the chairman of the board. I'm going to see you. I thought maybe you'd like to get this from Boris. It's been 30 years. Yes. Well, this and I are most pleased to have it. And I appreciate all that you've done in this. And I have increased appreciation. And since my return just a short time ago from Europe, in this 40th year, because there, they were not there. They are still honoring this and recognizing this for what it did. And in Germany, particularly in the museum, dedicated to this, because I have always felt he was the basis for the first peace settlement virtually in history that did not lay the foundation for the next war. Always the winners would see that the grudges remain and so forth, but we've had 40 years of peace because of it. I know that he's waiting for us to get it kind of. I'm so proud to have this. Well, I was so sorry. I couldn't be present at the dinner. Professor Eisenhower, he's been what, 15, 20, 30 years ago? 54. He came in to see President Eisenhower and presented a signed copy of another book he has done. Well, I'm just so pleased to have this. Thank you for your film for the event before last. Oh, and thank you very much. Thank you for receiving it. I know the Marshall Plan stressed productivity. Thank you. Thanks again. I met several old ladies in Germany, very elderly, and they were there, part of the museum, and they were part of that organization then, of women in Germany, that got together and cleaned up the building, and so forth in the rubble, to help start the rubble. Thank you, sir. Thank you.