 easier if we had discovered this, and this is not your knowledge before we discovered it, but maybe the superstitious spirits of what people have and being exploited wouldn't exist today. But I'm also inspired by the fact that some critics want to call a fork-bearer or anything, and I'm determined that we're going to continue to pinch reader-reactor, because I think that is the added future of this form of energy. So I'm grateful to all of you, and other various groups and organizations that you represent, declared China syndrome, right, I think I like that. The President has a presentation. Mr. President, on behalf of New York, with the use of nuclear power for peace of purposes in this country, many, many, many customers in the majority of our states, we wish to present you our nuclear power agenda, which is discussion delivered earlier to the White House, which lists some of the items which we think must become involved in a national nuclear policy for the AIDS. And we commend it to you. We appreciate this opportunity to deliver it to you as a symbol. Your words, initially, of your personal support for nuclear power, your personal commitment to the French River Reactor, mean more than anything we could ever do, but we assure you that we're going to redouble our efforts to do our part, communicate with the public, and to work in partnership with government and labor in the scientific community. So I thank you very much. And this includes women for me. Mr. President, I'm very pleased, yes, I made the statement on October 8, 1981, about the Liberia Reactor. I had to, I just can't resist, I had to tell you one little incident, but when I was doing the General Elections Theater on television, it used to know all the GV plants. They took me to Hanford, Washington when they, when to one place where they put white gums on us and felt boots on and so forth. And we went to do that and finally came back and took all of those things off and threw them in a designated spot. And then stood in what I call a slot machine. Well, one of four dials, but one dial would need continued clicking. And it was getting up to where the dial was read, and that was on my left hand. The manager of the plant looking over my shoulder said, it happens all the time. He said, I think nothing of it is the radium dial on your wristwatch. It was 200 miles away when I discovered I don't have a radium. I think I'd better go over here so you can continue business meeting here. Thank you. We also want to convey the personal best push. Also, the call that I made, as I was told, is truly expressing to you from Ertig Holt, who was in Vienna, a slum of Channel 13, helped the rule for people in California, just moving into a new house. And I thank Bernie Meiss and the president of Mones, Steve Stemmuss, the executive vice president charge of public relations, excellent. These are people in addition to those who are here who were part of our committee. And Fay Canan, who's president of the Motion Picture Academy as you know, has agreed to join our group on August 15th when she completes her tenure of office. All of us, I speak for each and every man here, are very delighted that we're able to serve the government on a voluntary basis. We expect to do a gilab and every man knows that much is expected of us and hope to posture this in such a way that after we step down, or aside, or whatever happens, there'll be a contending ongoing relationship and committee that can handle duties and supplement the work the USIA is doing now. I think that's great. I think it's wonderful, anyway. You know, we tend to forget back in what I call the go-getter, probably what an effect our pictures had on the impact on the whole world, just not from the stories and so forth that we talked about, but I remember having people from firms like Sears Robot and so forth tell me that after a picture, maybe with a certain garment or sweater or something of that kind would be shown that they would have to order, that they watched American pictures that played in the foreign countries and based their orders on that because they knew there would be a demand for these things, that this influence that they kind of would have had a great influence on. You have bothered a long enough, you know. And I know that you're ordered. You mean that possibly bedtime preponsors could have done that. They're doing some air brushing on that. Mr. President, I know you're in big skids, but I thought you ought to know that what they are doing is you recognize you're a terrible concern in the industry today. Most pictures, tapes, records of this piracy is depriving them of billions of dollars. They are entrusting to us, with the safeguards that we are prescribing, and until they learn different, they will give us the benefit of the doubt of contributing to us for a utilization of high-nation curtain on different posts around the world, motion pictures, as well as motion picture actors and others. As you know, particularly in third world or rather behind the iron curtain, this is a way we used to meet people that are easily followed up with. So they're making a very substantial contribution. It's worth literally hundreds of thousands of dollars. And so I'm in the best voluntary spirit of the year, so you know, probably, I think they're coming through this phase. Well, I think that's great. That's wonderful. Charlie? Thank you so much. Thank you for helping him. He's doing a job there. One more thing. There's an Al Snider who is with us. He's a man that satellites your speeches and is working with this group, and he's doing an outstanding job here. I can't, I just have to tell you a diplomatic talk here. I just had a conversation with a young congressman, and I think he needs developing. And I mean, in the best sense that we should make much of him, he was with the delegation that recently went to the Soviet Union, and with all of the efforts to be diplomatic and everything, he just told them that he thought their policy stunk. Later, one of them who could speak some English said to him, he said, I suppose everything smells sweet in your country, and he said, no, not everything. He said, I represent Kentucky. He said, we're famous for horses. He said, of course, if you have horses, there is another substance you also have. And he said, as a matter of fact, it's very much like what you've been giving to us for. That's great. That's great. Very good. I'm going to nurse him. Well, thank you all. Thank you so much. Thank you. He looks as if you're holding something up. No, I'm just climbing, and that's all I can do. Sit up there, it might be a little easier to... I don't think it's gone that badly, Mr. President. I think in the debates, in the arguments that we've had, I think we've done the better. My problem is that even the best German Geneva, that doesn't mean that that's Moscow. Moscow is the best. I know, sorry.