 How are you? You have the Boy Scouts today. You know Mr. President. Let me see you again, sir. Mr. President? Thank you. Thank you very much. All right. David Tonson. David? Hello there. David Jones. Hi. How are you? Mr. President. How are you? I'm good. Hi. Nice to meet you. Good to see you. Yes. Good to meet you. Mr. President. Nice to meet you. Mr. President. Hello. Nice to see you. Hello. Mr. President. Nice to meet you. Hello. Please see you. Mr. President. Hello. This is Mr. President and very proud to see you again. Hello Mr. President. Thank you very much. Nice to see you. Hello. Thank you very much. Hello, David. Thank you very much. I'm glad to see you again. Al Breathless. Mr. President? Nice to see you. I've heard this letter. Indeed, tissue, organs, and so forth for transplants in your project that you carry out. I appreciate it very much. Mr. President, we have a couple of presentations and we certainly appreciate the time you've given us. In particular, this is Reagan coming down to the Jamboree last summer where there are 30,000 youngsters. Three meaningful to us, we appreciate it. But David here has a report that he'll present here. He's a hero on the Boy Scouts. And he stayed in his family during a fire. And so if you present to the President the report, you're David Thomason. The President will receive it from you. Thank you. Can you just give that to the President if you'd like to, Dan? Thank you. I know what you meant to say and I appreciate it very much. Dan has the donor awareness program for human organs for the President, which I know is a special concern to you. Yes. And these are your membership cards for you, Ms. Reagan. David Jones here has a little momentum of scouting. I would also like to give you. I have a great pleasure presenting for you. I think David wants to turn it this way so they can say it to you. You're saying that's very nice. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. Incidentally, just a few words. Thank you. Let me get a few little souvenirs of you. Your presence here. Let's start with the ladies. The camera is with you. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Please do it and please see you again. God bless you and we have you very much in our prayers. Hope that the good Lord will give you all the wisdom and the strength of leadership that the country has had in the past six years. Thank you for seeing us. Thank you for those kind words and thank you also for the invocation. I appreciate it very much. Thank you, sir. Thank you, Ms. Reagan. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Very good, thank you. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. I'm very grateful. Your willingness to do that. I know how much time it has taken and it's required you to abandon I'm quite sure that in today's meeting, before we start, I know we'll be talking about the development and implementation of our initiative with Iran, but before we get to that, I wanted to take a few minutes if I could to share my thoughts concerning how the NSC staff should operate. I know that every president- I know that every president- No worries, certainly a pleasure to meet you. This is my wife Joanne. I know too, before you step out, I know too, that you've made a very nice picture. This is Al Wilson. This is our drug program. This is my wife Judy. This is Judy. And I know too, get the message. Thank you very much, President. Mr. President, we want to do this once again. The Maxwell Football Club is a club in Philadelphia that's celebrating its 50th anniversary. And for that occasion, we have casted this medallion, which has Tiny Maxwell in one picture, and Bird Bell, one of the founders of the National Football League and the other. And as our number one citizen as the president of our great country and our great president, we want President Ronald Reagan to have position number one, and that's for you, sir. Well, thank you very much. Since it's a football club, but I had it maybe because I was a right guard. We all watched a lot of the movies of the football days of the past, and we're very pleased to be here with you. I think you are aware we have our FAD program, which is our drug program in Philadelphia, which we're doing a lot of good work in, and we feel so good about your interest in you and Mrs. Reagan, the interest that you've shown in say noted drugs, and that's exactly the direction we're moving in. Say noted drugs and work with young people. Well, I think it's great. I was going to mention that. You had brought it up. I know what your club is undertaking there and what you're doing. I think it's just great. Thank you, sir. It's very nice to be here with you. We're delighted. We have another little present for you, which you might want to wear the next time you play golf or tennis or something of that sort. It's a shirt that has the FAD logo, Fight Against Drugs, and the Maxwell Football Club. Well, thank you. We are now one of our members and we're delighted to have you as such. Well, thank you. I'm pleased to honor myself to be here. Thank you. Pleasure. That's because you were alive, Mr. President. I had a chance to prove it, though. Please get rid of that. Yes, sir. What was the question about that? I was the head football coach up into this year for 10 years at Delaware Valley College up in Doylestown, near Doylestown, Pennsylvania. He's now the athletic director. But more importantly, he's going to be the executive director of our FAD program. And with that in mind, well, I don't think I'm one of the top players. But I'm not a top player. I'm sorry. With that in mind, Mr. President, I wanted just to announce to you that Smith Klein and French Beckman in Philadelphia, the major drug company, as recently as of yesterday, made a major grant to the Maxwell Football Club FAD program for a $500,000 for Russell and Martin on a national FAD program, Fight Against Drugs. And using our chapter costs, even working with kids, 7, 8, 9. Oh, get them when they're young, while they're clean, working with clean people, and working up the ladder that way. I think that's great. I want to announce that to you. From Nancy's experience, you may find some of those Terry young ones. There's no question about that. That's exactly where we have to go. She came on one day at one in school, 8 years old, not only a user, a pusher, and wearing a beeper so that they could get hold of him when they wanted to make a buy. I mean, that's 8 years old. Terrible way. Well, I have a few souvenirs here. I have a few souvenirs from the office here. These are bookmarks. So we'll have to read something now. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I'm really honored. We're delighted to be with you and to be here today. Thank you. We'll work real hard on our drug program and support what you advocate. We'll win this one. All right. Great pleasure. I feel good. Yeah. I always say that the first time I see you, every time you do it, right? Thank you. And then I continue to pray to you every day, sir. Thank you. I have to believe in it very much. Thank you. You left right. Must be working. And has Ms. Reagan? Oh, just fine. Great. She's been to California for a few days. She's been there. Nice. She's been here. I don't have any idea about it. I don't have any idea. Well, they say we enter in the order of senility, or even over in New York. Now, it's your first. At the office. You see my, you're strong. Right here, right at this time. Mr. William Kanega. How you doing? Nice to see you. Nice to see you. I'm Brian Rothman. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Well, the National Year of Thanksgiving NYT project has been underway since 1985, when it was first suggested to them at the Congress that they should pass a joint resolution that would be declaring 1987 as the National Year of Thanksgiving. The purpose is to create an attitude of gratitude in America for blessings of life and liberty of the world's oldest living constitution. The NYT project received broad national support. The Boy Scouts of America passed a resolution of support and will be distributing Thanksgiving proclamations for local government officials to creative associations, schools, and places of business. The General Federation of Women's Corp. be incorporating the NYT theme into their various projects and programs for 1997. And the Bicentennial Commission voted unanimously to grant official recognition to the project. Saturday evening post, we'll be sponsoring a nationwide essay contest entitled We the People with Thanks. And in the fall of 87, there will be groundbreaking for the erection of We the People Thanksgiving Monument, which is modeled after the Christie painting in the Rotunda of the U.S. And that's enough talk. I think it's time to start writing. The story that you do, the sign of the wall is hard to do. And only one survivor can go to the house of the state. It's a drunkard coming around.