 I'm going to talk to them. All right. And it states that has a sign on the door beside you. How many people are going to have it? Well, this has been a quite a trip, though. You've been on the road for a while. I think one of them, you know, was a Canadian, not a Canadian. That's the ILO of the Soviet response. What was the reason for that? Well, it was to increase that. It was something like a homecoming to me there, because I've been on the government body of the ILO for most of the decade of the 17th. And at all times, we're very closely with your place from the United States. We've had a mutual interest in trying to fight the politicisation of the organisation by the Soviet and the likes of the ILO. I've been mounting a very significant campaign in the last few months to try and virtually destroy the basis of the ILO as capacity to attack. I don't know what you're wearing. We don't wear that. This one. I've seen the last one shot. And we had a weekend opportunity to visit that. Very beautiful country in all of us. And then they took me out and showed me the tech room, which was filled with motorcycles. And no longer urdin the cattle on with the horses. And I can sort of talk extra a little bit. We just, on the 19th of May, pulled the people down a major economic staple, in which we had to do something about trying to get the economy in a slightly better shape than women here. And it involves the coming back on some expenditure programs and pay them a few new taxes. I think that was done on the national side of the state of Washington. Well, I'm delighted that Prime Minister Bob Hawk has been able to come to Washington so early in his administration. We've had a productive session reviewing bilateral issues as well as world developments. And more importantly, we've had a chance to put our relationship on a personal basis. We find we have much in common. But that's no surprise between friends and allies. The bonds between our two nations are of long standing. Our ties are a precious tradition reflecting our many concerns and shared values. Australia is a great nation that plays a vital role in regional and world affairs. It's a key ally upon whom we can count. Ours is an alliance of trust and friendship. I'm grateful for the goodwill expressed by Prime Minister Hawk today and I welcome his wise counsel. I've been looking forward to getting to know him. And it was our first meeting, but certainly not our last. We will be in frequent contact in the future and I wish the Prime Minister and all Australians the best of luck and again, welcome. Mr President, I join with you in expressing the appreciation that I have for having placed the relationship between our two countries now in terms of a personal meeting between us. I, like you, have been looking forward to this meeting. I have been able to convey to you and through you to the people of the United States the fundamental importance that we in the new Labor government attach to the relationship with the United States. I was able to remind the President that it was a Labor government during the last war which fundamentally reoriented the international relationship of Australia towards that alliance with the United States. It was an alliance which served us well the United States and Australia during that war and in the period since the war that relationship in general and particularly in terms of the ANZAS Treaty Relationship has continued to serve both our countries well. There is no country I have suggested to the President that this country will be able to rely on more as a constructive ally than Australia. It will be a relationship of deep friendship and as is befitting between people and nations who are friends. It will be one at times where there may be differences of emphasis in our perceptions of particular issues. Those differences if they exist will be honestly and directly expressed but will in no way diminish the fundamental depth of the relationship between our two countries. I appreciate the opportunity that I have had to discuss with the President matters of immediate bilateral importance to us, matters of concern in the immediate region of Australia and issues of global consideration. And we have found in all those areas an identity of interest and I have expressed to the President as he has to me a firm intention on both our parts to ensure that the relationship which has been strong and productive in the past will continue to be even more so in the future and that will reflect the relations between our countries and what is now a firm personal relationship between the President of the United States and myself as Prime Minister of Australia. Thank you Mr President. Counting those Japanese cameras?