 Mr. President, this is Admiral Thompson, and Mr. Cossack. Good to be here today. Well, I was very happy to respond to you for your membership in the first class. Thank you very much. Thank you. We know that you have a very busy schedule and you can't be with us. Next Tuesday is the 213th birthday of the Navy. Also, today we're going to dedicate the U.S. Navy to the Memorial. And during a piece of the schedule where you have to come to the Memorial will be this own sailor. We'd like to present this to you. This is the first miniature replica of an own sailor. In reality, he's seven feet tall and bronze. He symbolizes all those who have ever served in the Navy for the last 213 years. Admiral to Seaman, male, female, no matter what part of he is. This is Mr. Navy, as far as the Navy and the Memorial is concerned. I am very proud to have this. And I'm sorry too, for many reasons that I can't be there. I like going anyplace where something's older than I am. But for this reason, I thank you very much. Mr. President, we hope that sometime you can down-see this man standing tall with the map of the world all around him. The map of the world is made, it's a replica of the world map made to scale. And he'll be standing tall right down there at archives looking towards the Capitol. In the meantime, he'll keep you company here. Well, I'm very pleased to have this. I thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you for the time to be here with us and to start the participation of the Navy weekend. We have a whole weekend for dedicated to the statue and to celebrate the name's birthday on the 13th. Thank you again. All right. We're very pleased to support the Navy for the last six years first. As I say, very proud and thank you very much. Thank you, sir. One need is 40 pounds. Over here. Geez, it feels like it's more than 40 pounds. It feels like 80 pounds. Just in. Just in. Right back again. I'll put some miles on the back. This is my white bottle. How do you do that? Good to see you. Congratulations. Well, thank you. President of the organization twice. And also the first Republican Association. Well, I think we've got a great opportunity with this. Quite proud of you. Thank you again. Thank you. Greetings from the same. Thank you. Thank you very much. This is a busy project. Well, I'd like to say where you're going. They tell me. That's right. Thank you. Thank you. Don't go so far away. I don't trust him anymore on the other side. I'm not exercising. Can we just say it? Yes. All right. I'm going to be here with you. I'm very pleased to have you here. I appreciate your economic policies and free enterprises. I think they're important to us in Mississippi. Thank you. My wife sent you a call. Well, give her a minute. How's it going? I'm picking up. We're moving along. We really are. Things are going well. Well, that's great. We've got some momentum. But I think we ought to go over and have a picture with you and the business here at the desk. Thank you. I'll take this one. This is the first break I've had in a long time. I go back tonight. You're looking wet. Thank you. You're off to popular Mississippi. Absolutely. Everywhere I go. All the venues. It's really true. Well, it's really true. You certainly are indeed. It's really true. So much of you down there. You really see it. I hope I can be the kind of guy who's been impressed. I'm glad. I'm sure you are. And I have a warm start with President, but I don't anticipate being one. Please, it's in good hands. Thank you. It's a grand opportunity for me. I appreciate it very much. We work here. We work here. I have another meeting tonight. I've had two camp chains meetings today. Our economy is flat in Mississippi. Obviously. In fact, we are trying to hold the line. I'm trying to hold the line. In fact, we're making it a pocketbook issue. We're running against the Republican Democrats. Listen to their presidential candidates. Our revenues. Every time we reduce the tax rates, the revenues overall go up. Yeah. Because the economy is... Surely. Surely. And every tax increase usually results in a loss of revenues. We haven't let the businessman in 36 years in Mississippi, and that may be the last good go that we've had. So it's fine. Okay. Well, it's good to be with you. I see you have a friend here. I do indeed. Bill Walker. Mr. President. Mr. President, I'm glad to meet you again. I met you in the Luxembourg couple of years ago. I appreciate what you did. Thanks around him and him. Thanks. I like that very much. Sir. If you had many friends like Bill, if I had many friends like Bill Walker, I might have had this one long ago. Well, you have to get him around. He did two talks this morning. Now we do another one tonight. And all you ask is good government. Now you can't beat that, can you? Just a solid citizen, a business man who loves this country, loves Mississippi. My wife asked me to give you a note. You can read it later. Nancy might explain it to you. You might not understand. Okay. We left our wives at home, and they resented some wife. She put some flowers in the motel when Nancy came to Jackson a few years ago, and you wrote her a letter and thanked her. That's more than a wife. Okay. We appreciate it. Thank you so much. We appreciate it. We appreciate it. God bless you. We're done. We're done. Thank you, sir. It's time anybody has to come in. Gentlemen, this is the old office, and in here you'll find both. You're wearing a pathway. You haven't slowed down a bit. Why don't we turn it down? Hi, Mr. President. A few months ago, I had another candidate in a special election that you were kind enough to agree, and he won. Kerry's going to win, too, in Tennessee. Let's do that. Why don't you and my woman work together? Okay. Do it some business already. Yes, I do. Yes, sir. Great to see you. Thank you. Thanks, Mr. President.